Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1909 Page: 8 of 8
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■>it "Outlaw" Hushed lurllf Mulhall nt
thr Independence? Knlr.
Lucile Mulhall, daughter ot Col. Zach
Mulhall, proprietor of the Wild West
show, was Injured by riding a perform-
ing horse at the Independence fair.
"Johnny on the Spot." an equine out-
law, whom no one has ever been able
'to ride, was also ill the ring. The dev-
il seems to have entered into "Johnny
011 the Spot." Without any apparent
reason he dashed savagely at the horse
the girl was riding.
The shock of sudden contact threw
ner horsee off his feet. He rolled com-
pletely over 011 the ground, with the
j irl under him. She picked herself up
ind limped out of the ring. The saddl®
she was riding had a big inflexible
jiorn. which rose several Inches above
*he seat. It is believed that this saved
her life. Colonel Mulhall said that his
daughter was badly bruised, and would
bo retired from the ring for several
days.
" 'Johnny on the Spot' took a dislike
to Lucile some time ago, and it looked
like he tried to kill her today." said
he man of Wild West fame. "But we
•lave a man who will ride him tomor-
row, down there in front of the grand
stand, or die in the attempt." It wai
said last night that Charles Mulhall, a
son of the proprietor, would make the
dangerous attempt today In tlie race
'rnck.—Kansas City Star.
Vn Opinion From One Who
Qualified to Speak.
Seems
UK VISION ITW vitn.
•What the New Tariff Taw Reallj Is.
Judged By Fip'rts.
iFrom the Reviews of Reviews.)
The simple Tact is that the Payne
tariff is the most thoroughgoing Uigh-
protectionist measure that has ever
been enacted In this country or in
.any other land. It is far too intri-
cate for the understanding of any one
man, unless he has' devoted himself
.for years to the sole and exclusive
study of tariff details. For lion-ex-
perts who have given several solid
months recently to the tariff question,
Mr. Payne, Senator Aldrich and oth-
, ;rs In Congress are quite remarka-
i-dy well informed. But it would be
■ridiculous to insist upon the view
that these or any other gentlemen in
Congress actually made the tariff
schedules. In this tariff as in all pre-
ceding tariffs, the schedules have
been worked out upon the basis of the
technical knowledge ami the urgent
demands of. the people actually en-
gaged In the numerous Industries
seeking some form of benefit by vir-
tue of some particular part of the tar-
iff enactment. Readers who would
really like to know what the new tar-
iff is,—in comparison with the Ding-
t From the Boston Herald.)
Western women arc more capable
house-keepers than the women of
Now England."
"Western hospitality is like that for
which New England was famed and
of which New England possesses none
today."
Education in the West is more ad-
vanced than education I11 Boston. We
have lost our leadership."
"Nowadays it is the West that Is
typically American. Boston is English.
New York is Preachy."
Mrs. Ellen H. Richards, proffessor
of sanitary chemistry at Technology,
has lately come out of the West,
where she has been teaching in the
summer season of the California State
University, and with her she brings
these observations. She also brings
observations of a more general sort,
the meaning ot which she has been
explaining to her California classes in
household economics.
"Woman's business has been man-
aging the home," and slie has done it
very badly, and I'm ashamed of her!"
"Woman's dress should be standard-
iied, as men's has been."
"Women are afflicted with inherited
fusslness. They have less concentra-
tion, less progressiveness than men."
"Nothing is more important than
housework, and when people realize
the meaning of It they will positively
love housework. They can't help it.'
Surrounded by the tubes and bottles
of her laboratory, for even in summer
Mrs. Richards will not be separated
from them long, this brilliant little
professor, with the smooth white hair
and the twinkling blues eyes, told
good-naturedly what she thought of
the West and of the East, and of
much besides. Whatever subject she
touched upon, she knew it thorough-
ly. Education? She was a member
of the first class graduated from Vas-
sar. thirty-nine years ago. American
conditions? Born in New England,
she has traveled America from one
end to the other. Public welfare
problems? She conducted the first
sanitary water analysis ever made in
the United States. Economics? She
has written books on the theme.
1 151.M I M J01NT1ST I'VU.KH
l<ngan County News.
Considerable excitement was exper-
ienuctd last Saturday night at this
place when County Attorney James
Hepburn and Constable Muxlow came
over from Guthrie and pulled a couple
of negro joints, making quite a haul
of booze. The breaking of the law
along these lines has been so flagrant
,.i —- in the pa-st six months that there
ley tariff which sudtlNily disappeared (seems to be little surprise that the
on the night of August 5.—will do County Attorney has taken the steps
well to read carefully the article | he has and the surprising part is that
which we have caused to be prepared it w as not done long ago.
for their enlightenment, and which With the pulling of these joints it
will be found beginning the present
issue of the Review.
CORK RAI'S "ST VM' PVTTKKS."
I.aFollfttc and Bristow Better Than
Protection Ocmocrats. He Sav*.
General Kxodus from Europe to the
United States In Recent Weeks
Paris.- An unprecedented inflow of
European immigrants may be expected
In the United States within the next
few months as the result of mislead-
ing and exaggerated dispatches which
are being printed In the capitals of
Europe, and copied by the smaller
newspapers throughout France, Eng-
land. Russia. Austria and Italy.
"The Payne-Aldrlch tariff bill mak-
es work for all," Is the drift of the dis-
patches coming from the United Stat-
es with a regularity that Is so sys-
tematic as to arouse the suspicion that
the source of the advice is In close
proximity to the trusts and large cor-
porations which put through the pro-
tective tariff measures.
The effect of the repeated tales of
American prosperity is that hundreds
of thousands ot Europeans, particular-
ly Southern Europeans, have turned
their eyes toward the land of the Stars
and Stripes.
In the overwrought imagination of
Europe's poor the United States has :
suddenly become a land of gold. And
it is all due to the passage of a new !
tariff bill, so the reports say.
Hundreds, and even thousands of the (
poorest classes are selling what little |
property they have to make the start
for the United States, and many who,
do not have any belongings to dispose'
of are borrowing money fro mtheir
relatives confident tnat once they
erach America it will be but a short
time until they can return the bor- j
rowed steamship fare, and possibly a
sufficient large additional sum ,0 aid.
some of their friends and relatives to j
engage passage across the sea.
The cities of the United States like 1
Pittsburg with its strike of car build-
ers and Cleveland, where the dock
laborers are fighting for more money
are pointed out as places for immi-
grants to go.
This is taken as an indication that
the employers at these centers are try-
ing to evade the contract law by ad-
vertising, through secret channels, in
the newspapers of Europe in their ef-
forts to get laborers to take the places
of the strikers.
The following are but a few of the
headlines and news items appearing
daily in Paris and simultaneously in
all the capitals of Europe.
"The note of expberant optimslm
everywhere prevails."
"In the west an dsouth. as well as
the east, the cry is for more workers.
"Bridgeport. Conn., given as one of
the similar instances, has issued an
emergency call for 3,000 women.
"The* departmene of labor at Wash-
ington is receiving daily appeals for
laborers. One firm at I^aCrosse, Wis.,'
naively asks the department to send it
immediately 'ten of fifteen families of
five children each.'"
GUTHRIE
TUESDAY
The Only Ci cus Coming. Only Show Giving a Street Parade in Guthrie
T.
waa
X!S®!2®?
World Its Field
Its Triumphs Reach Beyond the Seas
CAPITAL INVESTED, $3,500,000
1280 PERSONS, 700 HORSES
100 CAGES and DENS of WILD ANIMALS, 40 ELEPHANTS
QF* DOUBLE LENGTH | AA ACTS, FEATURES AND
OD RAILROAD CARS 1UU EUROPEAN SENSATIONS
KAROLLY'S GERMAN HORSE CIRCUS
The Funny Dackleford.Most Comical Dwarf Horse
See the Ponies on the Revolving Tables
60 AERIALISTS AND THE 10 FLYING VIENNESE
60 ACROBATS AND THE DOLLAR TROUPE
60 RIDERS. THE GREATEST IN THE WORLD
50 CLOWNS, THE WORLD'S FUNNY MEN
A FAMILY OF GIRAFFE^. ONLY TWO HORNED
RHINOCEROS IN CAPTIVITY. 1000 WONDERS A
FILLING 8 ARENAS. THE HIPPODROME
AND THE DOME OF THE LARGEST
TENT EVER MADE
r.VE!4WElOUS
MUSICAL
ELEPHANTS
THEY PL AY AND DAtfCE
IS TIME AND Tl/NE THE
YOST WONDERTVL ACTIh'C
.--f.-'-V
\
AT TE.N O'CLOCK EVERY MORNING
Big New, Free Street Parade
ONE 50-CENT TICKET ADMITS TO ALL
Children Undar 12 Yaara, Halt Prlca
I FerUrmaacei Daily al 2 a< 8 P.M. Doom Opta al 1 °<l 7 f *
j The
• THRILLER
SUPREME
CIATM DEFYiNC
LEAP FOR
LIFE
■> NERVE TWWT1NC FIAT
Muskogee. Okla . Sept. 6.—Thous-
ands of persons today saw the largest
I,abor Day parade Muskogee has ever
had. This afternoon Senator Gore
and Charles l«. Daugherty, state labor
commissioner, spoke at Hyde Park.
The blind senator said that he would
rather see men like l^iFollette. Bris-
tow*. Dolliver and Nelson elected to
the senate than "stand pat" Demo-
crats. meaning those Democrats who
•stood for protection in the tariff ses-
sion.
In discussing the tariff Senator Gore
said that the people would not judge
the new law by technical statements
made by tariff experts, but by the
statements they receive at the first of
«^*ch month, and that before another
•Section the people will have amI>1:
■jiroof in these statements as to wheth-
er the tariff has been revised up or
•Jowwn.
checks the matter up strictly to the
citizens of Crescent and that is do
they want to have the law enforced or
will they do a lot of talking, kicking,
etc.. and wink at its enforcement?
There has been lots of complaints
made to Ute officers both city, county
and state and also some have roasted
us for not going after the jointists
possibly we should have done so. but
there has not been a person in the
town who would swear to a com-
plaint and this has made the officers
hesitate to make the raids but it be-
came so bold that County Attorney
Hepburn personally made the raid and
caught the Hill and Rerkly joints with
the goods on.
The offenders were taken to Guth-
rie .Monday where they gave bail for
their appearance and trial later.
Admission tickets and reserved seats will be on sale circus day, luesday, Sep-
tember 21, at Wallace's drug store at exactly the same pri-.;es charged at the regu-
lar circus ticket wagons.
t AMSONISM 0\ THE WAXE
Aldrich Tariff Bill they will have a
. , * ti il. SnMiVor is i heavy load to carry in the next con-
lYashingtou Believes the Speaker is
Slow It Hanging Himself.
Washington—The Fowler letter is 0>. p vMC.„
another piece of ewdence tnat Speaker
gressional election.
Cannon is going to have a hard time
holding his organization together at the
next session of congress. Fowler, him-
self has many followers and his remo-
val from the chairmanship of the com-
mute on banking and currency wasn't
in itself an incident of much signifi-
cance for his ideas on currency reform
are not in line with those of the re-
iftibllcan majority. But whatever the
merits of that particular affair, the
to wait until the steamship pased her
she could have made it in an hour.
Accompanying the girl in the swim
were her two sisters, Beatrice, twelve
years old, and Vera, fifteen. The
youngest proved the heroine of the
day. She was caught in the current
OX "TARIFF
Not only have I succeeded in — — — -
quiring some little knowledge about of the incoming tide and was carried
;ince the Dingley tariff far out of her route. She swam ten
miles and remained in the water for
these matters
law was framed, but I have also ac
quired a rather more generous inter-
pretation of the industrial and com-
mercial situation of 1897 than I was ^
accustomed to in those days to put , fourth street
into my speeches either in the House Brooklyn
of Representatives or upon the stump.
If I were called upon now, in the
four hours and twelve minutes.
All of the girls are the daughters
of .Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Due. of Eighty-
and Seventh avenue,
which time and place any person inter-
ested in said estate may appear and file
his exceptions in writing to the account
and contest the same, said estate being
ill condition and ready for final settle-
ment and distribution.
In testimony whereof. I have hereunto
set my hand and affixed the seal of said
Court this 3rd day of September. 1909.
(Sea!) J. C. STRANG.
County Judge
John Adams. Attorney for Adminis-
trator.
Reg-
speaker has added another hard work- j caim light of twelve years' reflection,
er to the ranks of the insurgents. Can- to say that putting wool on the free
non can not afford to pile up much ust resulted in closing factories and
more opposition. ^ hile the speaker
was sustained on every contest in the _
recent session, on several occasions he try, I should hestltate to do it
barely pulled through and once, on the j a very wise man who can tell
destroying the flocks of the country
and running the busines of the coun-
It is
what
MtW POSTMASTERS WIl-L
AT1EM) THE MEETIMi
HO YOl' OWN A GOOD RAZOR.
If not. all you have to is to get one
is to go out and secure FIVE Sl'B-
SCRIBERS for The Kansas City Week-
ly Journal at 15 cents a year, and send
the names and money to us and we
will mail to your address a splendid
razor called "The International." This
razor is one of the very finest made
;\tvd is fully warranted. It is mailed
ia a nice case. Just get 5 subscribers
for The Weekly Journal at 25c each
and send the names and money to us
and we will mail you the razor FREE,
postage prepaid. Remember that the
subscription price of The Weekly
Journal Is only 25 CENTS A YEAR.
Write for sample copies of The Week-
ly for canvassing. Address
THE KANSAS CITY WEEKLY JOl'R-
NAL, KANSAS CITT. MO.
Chandler. Ok..—H. B. GUstrap. presi-
dent of the Okalhoma Presidential
Postmasters' association has just been
notified that Postmaster General
Hitchcock has fixed September 27. 2S
and 29th as the dates for the joint
meeting of the postmasters and em-
ployees of Oklahoma and Kansas. Mis-
souri. Iowa and Nebraska to be held at
Kansas City. .Arangements were com-
pleted some time ago for a combined
convention of the five states named,
and the date was left to Mr. Hitchcock
selection. In order to Insure his atten-
dance at the meeting. This will be one
of the greatest gatherings of postal
employees ever held in the West and
undoubtedly result In much good to
the service. Oklahoma will be repre-
sented by a large number of postmast-
ers. both fourth-class and presidential. (
and the people of the older states will
be "shown" that in excellence of her
postal service as in other things. Okla-
homa la fully up to date.
(First Published in Oklahom.i St;
ister, September 9, 1901V •
NOTICE.
To John Daniels, W. <J. Hagar, Sallie
M. Nelson. Patsy Davis and Nancy
Dallis, owners of the following described
real property situated in the County of
Logan and State of Oklahoma, to-wit:
lx>t one (1> in Block live t5) in the
city of Guthrie.
You are hereby notified that the above
described lot was on the twentieth day.
of November A D. 1905 sold by the Coun- , Hanking* House
iv Treasurer of said County, after due ® 4
... , . . , and legal notice of such sale had first! r umiturc and r IXtlireS
aelp of the democratic votes. His pre8Sion which burst in a panic given in the manner and for ihe 1 nue from banks
course on the tariff making increased • the l nited States in all departments ( ^^ulr^by law.jror^the Uxe ^ | ^ ^
the opposition. of its affairs in 1893. I have become laXe3 were due and unpaid, and the said \
The increased duties on gloves and satisfied that we. as Republican P rtt- j S.,lJ'fh(.b^lg:0hlLtb>anJ ^8t
hosiery in the House bill were exceed-1 sans, finding the argument too con- ] for for the sum of *2.70, the amount of
First published in State Register
Sept. 9, 1909.
Report
Of the condition of he State
Bank of Meridian, at Meridian
in the State of Oklahoma at the
close of business September 1st,
1909.
Resources.
Loans and Discounts $18,698-38
Overdrafts secured and
unsecured, 389.41
Stocks. Bonds, War
rants, etc
I organization of the House, only by the j was the cause of the industrial de-1
154.5<)
1.200.00
450.00
903.86
1,812. 7 i
hosierv in the House mil were tuv™- sans, nnaing iuc oisumcui u>r ior u.e .... .... .
noMt-i* in i accumulated taxes, penalities and
inglv unpopular and when it became ■ Venient. have exaggerated the relation. COJ}t8 and charges then due on said lot,
known that the speaker was Insisting of the tariff controversy to that proper "('o
on the added dutv on gloves in the in- industrial crisis. It always a little j Burasdale and said rerttflcate was on
terest of his friend. ex-Congressman | dlfflcu„ to connect the panic of 1893 , l-ecember^th. ml duly assisneU to A.
l.ittauer, as a reward for political help j wUh ,he tariff act of 1894. in view of | And v-^he^by further ( notified
given in the rules tight, then the house the fact that the event seemed to pre- sUd is maae by you on or before
was on the verge of a revolt. I cede the cause in such a way as to . ju,y
Thf I'rrent Deficiency Hill with its j put almost any ordinary n-.an upon , and holder of said certificate of purchas.v
" * i From a sneech bv Iona-! will demand of the County Treasurer of
i.—From a speecn oy jona i ^ abov(, nam(Hi county, that he issue
Dolliver in the United States to A. S. Banvick. the undersigned, a
I proper and valid tax deed for said lot as
' rc«iuired and provided by law.
A S. BARW1CK.
numerous appropriations of suspicious suspicion.—
merit added to the distrust. When J than P. Dol
Childr®nT Cry
FOR FLETCHER S*
O A S T O R I A
Congres adjourned a Pennsylvania
representative who had always voted
with the organization, declared he did
not believe that Cannon could getSO
votes for speaker if he were to come up
for re-election at the opening of the
long sesion next December.
I Cannon was elected last March for
ears. There will be no chance to
unseat him unless an unforseen contest
develops, but he is going to have more
and more difficulty in putting through
his programs when tney conflict as of-
teu as they do. With the rublic wel-
fare Cannonism is going to be a grow-
ing Issue and wise republicans are rec-
ognizing that in connection with the
Senate.
GIRLS BlltVk shimjum; record
New York.—Hail it not been for the
presence of a steamship. Ethel Due,
First Published in Oklahoma State Res
ister Setpember 9, 1909.)
NOTICE.
xr - State of Oklahoma. Logan County
seventeen vears old. might have estab-1 in County Court.
I In the matter (if
Ilsbed a record In swimming in
stralgt line acros the Narrows.
She swam from Hegenman's Dock.
Fourth Avenue. Fort Hamilton, in a
straight line to a point on the Staten
Island shore between Quarantine and
Fort Wadsworth. Her time was one
hour and twelve minutes for the dis-
tance of a mile and a quarter. As she
emerged from the water the girl de-
111 t-UUIIl.' V
In the matter of the estate of I/>utsa
M. Strang, deceased.
Notice is hereby given, that (, \
Wn'-ker. the duly appointed and quail tie,
administrator of the estate of l^ouisa M
Strang, deceased, has rendered and pre
sented for settlement and filed in said
Court, bis final account and report of
his administration as such administra-
tor and that Saturday, the 9th day of
October, A. D. 1 !«>''. being a day of a
regular term of said Court, to-wit: of
the October terra A. IX 19W, at 10
o'clock in the forenoon of said day. at
the County Court room in the city of
Guthrie. In said County of Logan, has
merged from the water the giri ae- Gutnne, in saw
B . , 7 . . „ .1 been duly appointed by the said Court,
lared that had she not been compelled for lhe settlement of said account, at
Total $23,608.86
Liabilities.
Capital Stock Paid in $5,000.00
Surplus Fund 500.00
Undivided Profits, Less
Expenses and Taxes
Paid i93.(>7
Individual Deposits Sub-
ject to Check 15,110.19
Time Certificates of
Deposit 2,505,00
Certified Checks 300.00
Total $23,6o8.86
State of Oklahoma )
Countv of Logan |
I, L. V. Ford, Cashier of the
?bove named bank, do solemnly
swear that the above statement
;s true to the best of my knowl-
edge and belief, so help me God.
L. J. FORD, CasUier.
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 1st day of Sept. i90g.
SEAL J. W. McNEAL,
Notary Public.
Commission expires Mch 8,1912.
Correct-attesl:
L. W. Baxter, Director
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1909, newspaper, September 9, 1909; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112666/m1/8/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.