The State Democrat. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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Historical EoeUtF
• < M i 7
X"HMAX.(M.KVK1,AXI> (QI,s,„;
11, loin)
Democrat gi.ss,,!! ft. ,owi8a asweU ,, a„ tte llomc ~
I 1 \ -r 1 ^ 1 ^— "
H e a c 1 c r x i n
tor I ini31emen ts
-IS AT—
MAGUIRE'S.
"Fie. Original
and ONLY genuine. JONGUELESS
^NEwD^ULTIUn
Annual Address
11 Hour. K. ,\sp, ol lllitlii-l,
ilclivcrs the Annual Adilrci
to (ti** l.llciarj Societies
of the ruiversitj «>r
Oklahoma.
Constintly pursued, but never overtaken"
Anything you want Irom a Hoe to a ^rvester
The largest stock of Wagons, Buggies, Hard-
ware, Stoves and 1 inware in the city.
When you want anything that is kept in a first
class Hardware Store, come to Maguire.
JAS. BRYAN.
-dkai.kj
Ice delivered to any part of the city.
Agent for the Celebrated
Anheuser-Busch Beer.
Livery
ROWNTREE, & MARTIN,
Peed and Sale Stable
BRAN MEW * RIGS.
Double or Single ,|„ckH Carrino.-s a,,,! Snrr^ Goo„ s,i(1(1|f
Horses for Ladies and Gentlemen.
Drummers Carrie! to all Parts of the Country.
Charges Reasonable Main Street, IMear Depot, Norman! Ok.
Mr. President and Mi-mi,i:ks
t"E Litmrary Societies 01 rut u
ver8Ity oi- Oklahoma:
I am glad to be heie to-day. 1
teem it a great personal privilege to
liave this opportunity to meet you hen
in the L niversity of Oklalioma an in
stitution that is to lonn a part and par
eel of a ,;reat State.
This Univ. rsity was established In
the first legislative assembly of the
Territory, and while some have vigor-
onsly Criticised that body, (be estab-
lisbment of a territorial university will
stand as a monument to its wisdom.
there is no state institution that will
have more to do w itli tin: welfare of the
future State than this. While it is now
i'l its infancy the time will come when
it will be one of the great institutions
of a great state. Here will |„ ,
ed for all time the youth of the state
who shall go from here with inspira
and sentiments gathered witlnr
tbesc walls to control its affairs, dinn
its policies and mould its destiny.
What the influence of this university
may be upon the future of the state
Will be largely measured by the fidelity
a"d wisdom of its instructors, and the
industry and integrity of those who
shall in future years look to this iusti-
tution as their alma mater. Le t m
liope that it may become in future
years to the W est what Yale and Cor.
nell are to the East.
While Oklahoma ib the youin e-tter-
i itory, it is iiot by any means the least.
It is the home ol three hundred thou-
sand J
that our forefathers onlv watchnrl <ii« I ♦ , ~~
porting in the clouds has fcenduinov'ery
the tune has come, when in order to i
■ mil made to serve to the comfort and
convenience of mankind, and that is
now m daily use. serving the purpose
of commerce, lighting the homes and
t ie busy marts; driving the engine and
the C. arIt and ministering to thebealtb
ami happiness of mankind, which was
'"ier hut the unfathomable mystery of
the elements.
i bis is the result of education and
s'ciiius. 1 lie old post-chaise has given
" 1 ,la' l,ala«' car. The journey
>t niontlis is now compassed in a day
and the world goes rushing on with
n. w discoveries and new developments
tnbuting to the comforts and pur
pes. of mankind. All this is the
a success in any avenue in life educa-
tion is a valuable help, if not an abso-
Into necessity.
It were useless to undertake to enu-
merate them, but to the observing
mind it is apparent that the new .lis.
cove,"ics open up new fields of laboi
and fuinish additional opportiinitn .
fo. employment, to as great an extent,
i CaSii' ,US 'a')ol'*saving machines
'tike Idle hands; and these new „ve
'•ties can only be filled by skilled ex-
l'r, ,s- take the old line of prof,-s-
sioiis —the lawyer, for instai in
del-to be successful be must have a
wide range of universal knowledge.
• and tiii>
bring t
law
>f supply and demand; when to Out of t«n af« what tbei
nit! when to selh how ..... i
:" aml of patient I he uses it in el-erv'Z .if
l nmvi«ll e^'',M? , /''I'"'* ""•"" >« H.Xoi-l.t!: he
were oMivious. 1 ver^'dav^reMriT"" "l""' fiU-ls ;,"-v «ive« c;7se',
' MI) (,ay records I the more sure he is t g... .1 .
son,,, forward step ledge and in point, and tSeceiu li!,. 7b e , „n
ti-., ..... j , 1 " reveals to success not in Irving to twist
*'^,;:e:ri,'^<i,!r:,^!;;;ls:f rf "t«
— *"'■
1 • ^.th-J;::-
in "itt'S ^'rsonmstCr; "l"
ndless possibilities. It insimes ti. • stiongn nostrum.
■<1 effort, to greater research, and | and lil-raTXSl'ion a knowledge ™d I S""' V .V ,he U'M P'^'ails to
human nature. He preaches tohunnn .In ' ,Y i i" far,ne,s wllu pro
fails to us^ that do not n V"' " K"';"
'road and general knowledge ,|1;,t is I ov, ''" a11..
!.).u"K. .t |p him by edncati together no, as necessafyTf ffanl U ™
">> and when to sell; bow to buy and
sell; and by industry, foresight
and economy and taking advantage of
tbe conditions by which they arc sur-
1 ounded, they have built up a business
" her. on n of less skill, less training,
" I"' have not studied the surround'
1 '"K conditions, have failed.
I know of i,,, profession in life that
"ill enable a young man or young worn-
t" jump suddenly into fame or for-
time Success through a profession
be reached only by long continued
'"Id arduous struggle. Industry is the
l'i k'c of success; and take the world
over i conomy is sure way to
gain a competency. Education makes
'tie way easier; trains the mind and
III lushes the motive power. If you
bav, a heavy train of cars to pull up a
-s , ep gta.le, a railroad man would sc-
oct the strongest and best equipped
ptill the load. In the same
way the best equipped and strongest
jiimd reaches the greatest success
1 bine heard the question asked
many tunes: "If 1 expect to be a far-
of « hat benefit to me is an edu-
cation? Will an edncati tiablc in.
oI'more potatoes on an acre of
evil, useful or
tion.'
Lord Hacon s
perfect when it
years; this we c:
effect, but an
And Milton:
Rood
e, I uca J
ti
llnH
I
ally custom."
all that a coin*
Biicourages the ambitious in that then
possibility of reward.
It is not my purpose to dwell in the
•louds. I have called attention
matteis merely for the purpose
' '"-wing the possibilities of the fn
ture.
After all, the problem of life that
conh",mtsjis all is, how arc we to get
fed.
bis
... , . / v.v..n aiiu
wim ins common sense, h<
usefulness.
[t is true education from books is
not II I the education we must have, but
't widens the scope of view, it trains
we to be clothed and the mind towelgTLdanaWw'it 'l
d how ue we best to enjoy life it with wisdom. Take tw '
, ■ • 1 "i'7 inr n mill Hlsiltiin T
W h.it field ot work shall we individual-
l> « n^age in that will bring ns sure re-
turns of comfort and peace and happi-
educate the
per
N. MARQUART Pres.
8. B. OWEN8, ViC
J. W. HOOKER,
D If I TORS. J T. PM
ID. L. Labsh
3d, w
S. B Owens- B- Hi;
THO CITIZENS BANK OF NJMM,
CAPITAL *.">(>,()( (>.
(In.!Hr| )mt.!.l umler tho|ljm ufi.okfah.uim.]
Ike Hu-luws nf this Bank provides that no Stock nan be
'ssnnl to non-residents of Clere/ami Count//.
W. E3. MOR fLR,
Successor to Dunn Bros.,
Dealer in
Chamber Suits, Book Cases, Safes, Tables,
Chairs, Rockers plain and fancy.
Iron and Wood Bedsteads.
Children's Carriages in many styles.
Sewing Machines and Supplies.
Carpeting from best Wilton Velvet clown to
Strjw l\7atting,
Undertaking in all its phases.
w hom are American horn; gather.,
here from the intelligence, euterpris,
and industry of the greater states ol
the I tiion. Oklahoma is not the home
those who have taken their little
bundle and broken their allegiance to
monarchy and despotism; whose lives
have been dwarfed by the shadow of
anarchy; but it is the abiding place of
those who have been born under the
shadow of the Stars and Stripes, who
lov e the country in which they live,
and who are inspired with all the am-
bitious and all thepure motives of good,
true, loyal American citizens. And
herein this institution of learning,
conducted in the spirit and with the I
genius ol Amei i. aiiisiu hovering about, I
you are gathering that knowledge, and
that education, and that training, that
is to scud you forth into the world, foi
weal or woe to yourselves, and for cred-
it or discredit to the institution from
w hich you go,
I here is much iu Oklahoma to inai I;
it as an historical spot; a dcpaiture
from the old and established way of
iloing things. It was settled ill
1 be rush lor homes on its fertil
ries can be likened to noil
Ihan a cavalry charge. It lies ou ci
r side of the old Mason and Dixon'!
line, and hero w ilbin its borders m..
the extreme sentiments of the Nortl
and the South. Here, side hv si,!, ..
the farm and in the work shop, .,,,
those u!.o wore the blue and ti < grev.
and here their children incet in so. i .1
harmony. All are engaged in a com-
II purpose, that of l.uildi;: up -i
at state, with old differ, n.. s f,,i of-
ten, inarching on, hand in h
• by side, to the music of a
intry, loving and rev . reii.
Iti the tendency of the times for
men and young women just
i.n fin, out in life to seek some pro-
'e 1 t! that will quickly lead to fame
and loi tuin , and we are prone to shut
■' t. til, tart that the great dis- I much more succ<
l."g<-ly the product of long might have been in
and neglect the education of the other
put flieiu ,n the same voca in
life, and the educated man always Ii ,
the advantage.
They sometimes point us to bri dit
examples where uneducated men have
euteied the lists and achieved lame
fhe ."e- T'-'se are the ex. eptious
tlie mle. and no one ""*• 1
intelligent and enterprising man as a
lawyer or a doctor. I never could 1111-
'Ii i.stand why a farmer or laborer, otil.l
not find comfort from knowledge, or
" liy they should not exercise the brain
that 1,0.1 has given them the same as
1 '"en. To illy mind the idea that
laiiners have nothing to do but to sow
and leap is a great mistake. In order
to lie a sue 'est fill farmer it is as nee-
' u ''"t is going on in the
, Vs ;ls ""'('ss;'i'v to know where
tin product can be marketed as it is
Jor the merchant. It is as necessary
'"i them to understand what product
can find a ready sale. It ii a place in
flll ,, n lite where brain and brawn must
£ led "'-'I as in illlv "C
t ,M lc' life; and it is as necessary
i b.
an. I patient endeavor. The humbler I ceived the ben, id i
' : ''t'- are discarded and look* tion, or how i!,o'.d,,■ ,'"V in "r,I«
1,1 ••• menial. I lie wonderful usefulness they might have had^or " 1. 8" y '"dustry and economy
' -- -C' n 1110* '"nch greater benefit they ' ndght Niaye nottced^hat ^the^farmet
rapid
i:;,, ! i1"i111 about, and the
strides that have been made
'■u■■ ;"id development have a ten
;l« to make each one of us ambit-
t ■ jump quickly from obscurity t
! • ' i from poverty to affluent
I he tende
fast
> cl 11
have been t„ mankind, and we must
not shut our eyes to the fact that
dustrv ' s^'11 * ^,IMU b'dge, and in-
dustrj can only be successful
They tell us that the world 'is
>f the times is to want I ieeking'einXyinent'■ that 'i"' ' '"""'l
to want to get on, of | brawnKare i& w;,i,hi;!,
, . rs* "III III 111 awi
and into the battle of life and to .1., \, i
tie fbaf 'is essae„Sar8ti0n f"r ^hat- j Industrial con^ri/0 the"^c.rVd
U 'l,'d l.v'a ttelm'enrimthePaceI ?onpf^d7oddT.™ver the cause""*!
anxious to fly on the wings of the "','"sl1 Ial ilepressio,,. and the causi
lightning. ' K 'f I °iAhLCOndition," that cover the land
r"lisa„!"!"'! Vf„ <h° Stores I want uponUie"'!,,^''' Thly"""!! T.I
from this fact.We'try to'crowdTnto t18 in the ranks of ti,,'
hours or a few v i tramps arc found sot the best ed
o, a few days the accom-1 ucated men. It is hard to tell why
better
ud and
XHIllIln
. ing th
sum. ii.i,
When I receiM-tl the invitation t
address you to.day. I In itated. 1 felt
that no man who had n<jt n
education and tr.miin ; of tm i11' t r uti ;i
this kind could pi j eil\ .ra i. tin-
full II. life of Ii;,. | , , , | i!;'
rived from it. 1 i„lt ijnooual to the
• «I felt that no evf
•ritic's ear so quick t<
mind fresh fro
W. I". MORTeK,
NORMAN. OK. TER.I
CENTRAL. BLOCK.
dueatoi
that I
Mild hi
from an exp
bleated mind
nu t I
[ill '-i'l. of ol a purpose to which others
I"' <■ rati' Idly given long years of stu-
dy and toil.
Again, sometimes, we get into tin
wr ng place in life. When I
boy my father was a mechanic. i con-
cetved the idea that every boy, t<> b,
I lop. rly equipped for the business and
cafes ,1 life, should have a trad,
' ' t. to fall back on. I did not dream
ot ever being a professional man.
' " 1 " 1 ' 'etory and learned a trade
Vea™ 'as engaged iu mak-
''1T'i' "'s and tubs and churns
'do the work all right, then
la- no ti oiibl. about that, but when it
fcame to filing the Ja«s and grinding
til. ■ Ins, I and setting the matcher
was beyond my power to learn. At
I discovered that I did not bav,
" 1 "''' 111 • 1 ' me a mechanic and
till:i. before nie I couilneliced
the study of law. Therefore, I may
truthfully state that I became a lawyel
be,Mils, I did not ha\, the sense to b,
a mechanic.
. 1 / ' "' are many examples «.f this
4 1 '■ '•'",!lK Ulan with mechanical
1 : i'i. v illi nati\e ability
i " ,:i " Ii "I that direction, would
' take a i, .,t mistake to smother that
and take up a profession; yet
the t, udency ol the times is to do this.
It is ., hard thing for the world t,.
understand tli.it i' is much bettor t,> be
a ""I fiddler than a poor lawyer.
One who has a genius for music
,a1 na1111y make a great mistake
1 moiii. i that genius and dig through
tl„' "lusty volumes of the law or med
i. I..L to find between the lids of tin
i' 'luirwps only faili
• n I> t veiy yt.iing man and young
' ■ gift a special apti
i ticulai < iilliii^' in life,
niche in life they are qualified to
1 lit difficulty is sometimes in
th« place. I ut no matter what
ilieie is n i field of labor iu life t
'' ■111) >1 uiii; man ov youug woman
turn that cannot be better accom
I'd by having a broad, liberal edu
but generally y„„ ran trace the cans,
her to riotous living or proAigac) o
to weakness of charact,a that Las 'led
them into excesses, destroying ti,,,,
focu ties and robbing tbetn ,,f their
manhood.
I think if we could know the history
•t each individual tramp we could rea
d ly understand the cause «,f their mis-
fortune.
It is true that in the ups and downs
d life, in the changes that come
arymg conditions, sometimes from
ue cause and sometimes from anothei
Industrial depression brings upon al
great numl.e, of people temporary mis'.
f'r„"."e, I'"1 it 's apparent that much
of this might be avoided bv prop, ,
foresight and economy.
To sum it all up and to prescribe a
W.ii. MoOALL,andOo<
tin
Does a Genet al
Transfer Business^
Your Pnlroiiiigc Solieiter]
mistakes in dictioi:
, ideati I shall try t<
pn!y try to give ye
j sill^ oil tlie sul'ji'i
I he rid is wi,
j battlefield. Histo
I grcss tbut has Ik t i
and the a«lvance ol
lighteniueut that h
I 'lucation and genius havt surroundt
j (hf people of-the world with coinl'oi i
j Uliil ill no pliiCf ;i| |he world is this - v
j ciuplificd more than in our own bebr.
• ti country. Tlu lionieipuii garb In
| which our forefathers wen- ria l has
, given place to silks and satins and the
finest textures. The h lituin flash
mean by this that
■ I \'iui books, that you
i stain! that there is nothing
: "it <1 in tin world outside of
ids of youi school books. What
t" Iiupre upon your mind is
1 ducat ion i desirable to broaden
■1 ' •1 ti11 enlarge the |lerceptiiins.
' >"U .ut ti) have the full measure
■•'in-fit it is to |)« used by you
practical, evcry-d;
of
bc
atiou
life
out
i yday life. If
ised merely for the
to split hairs be-
nd that, to take you
"f reality and fix
in the clouds, to
your e\ . to Hi,, past instead of
r"t, to furnish a east-iron rule
fin Ii everybody and everything in
s to |„ gauged, you will not get
f education what is intended.
tlii theory .
of the domain
r abiding place
remedy for the failures that
would say that the one thing that w ill
'"ore surely prevent individual misfor-
tune is a sturdy, rugged, character, ;
sturdy, rugged, honest manhood ;
pure, modest, sturdy womanhood, am
It IS such a Character a proper e.'hica
Hon builds up. It has bee,, said by
one of the greatest minds of the ,
try that "The time has Comcwhcn less
f our young American energy should
be given to the forming of syndicate,
and more to the building of chain, ter."
^ ou gather here from the pages of hi
ton the inspiration of great men and
gieat lives. ^ on gather trength to
say to the stubborn obstacles surround-
ing your pathway in life, as Kthin \l-
len Saul at Ticonderoga to the Hritish
commander, "In tli.i name of the ,i
Jehovah and the Continental timer.
1 command you to surrendei
In this country no industrial dept.-
sum can be so great but that t, |
mind and a rugged, hone I chain, ter
can find .something to do. A ti nned
mind enters a profession „„h
stern, rugged industry and econoui\
wins to, itself a place. A .killed,
trained mind takes up a trade, l:,
studying the conditions sui i, uiidii,
>.v be cultivation of jls „
builds for itself a place. A trained
mind goes u,t„ the field ..finer,-I,.,...I,
ing. Educatio bservation and in-
tlustry builds up a business. \ ) , ,,|
mind reaches out and giasp tb, , ,
ditions and takes ailvant.. • , I ,r ,,,
routidings. It studies the law ,,|
ply and demand and ev. rvthin ti
bas a tendency to bear upon th, l.u
■ss and it. - nee, ... and t., build it ui
It lias been said that men are th
architects of theii own fortune. Tbi
In a general way is absolutely true
studies the conditions of the market,
wb;, understands the soil and what it
w ul produce, who diversifies his pro-
ducts, who carries only part of bis eggs
to market in the sain, basket and exer-
ci es Ins intelligence, is always sur;
'ounded by the comforts of lib- and
lv, s the life of a king. The best
brains of the world have come from
Hie faun. I he men wh
to the world the best id,
""■nt have come from the farm, when
Hi" pure air and exercise have devel-
oped the luain and the muscle. Par-
mer boys have developed into generals
stat,.smeii, presidents, and who can
tell Iioiv many of the merchant princes
ot fins day have gone from the farm t.
tb. counting house. It has been to,
much the tendency of the times foi
tlie young nu n and young women t.
ant t,, get away from the pure air
pun influence and invigorating atmos-
phere of the farm and to look with en-
vy upon city life.
II is also t,„, much the tendency of
tbe city bred boy and girl to look down
upon the country cousm. I want to'
say here,and now that whenever a
"Ing man or young woman becomes
! ""lilted will, the idea that honest toil
and honest labor are beneath them,
Iliey are on the highway to misfortune
W o are all made of the same clay
"d if there are any differences they
,,line as the result of education and
Iiidustn and strength of character
One of .lisop's fabk
point:
"A sage philosopher
versed in all knowied
" eli as moral, w as one day found in „
cemetery deeply absorbed in contein-
plating two human skeletons which
lay b, lore him, tbe on., that of a duke,
tbe other of a common beggar. After
some lime lie made this exclamation:
II k i If ui anatomists have made it ap
"Ml that the bones, nerves, muscles
II,I en11.1 lis of all men are made after
he same maimer and form, surely this
convincing proof that true
nobility is situated iu tbe mind and not
m the blood.' "
I he diamond that comes from the
,""M must he cut and polished before
It bi t nines the jewel. The iron that
lug from the mine must be melted
"^l moulded and worked and tcmpcr-
1 d lief ore it becomes steel. The t lav
I" the field must be worked and inoul-
I' 1 and burned before it can be useful
" ' ' "l( •' 1 '•*' t of the building that
belters ns. And so it is with the
minds of men. They must be educa-
\ on may go where you please in
the 1>i i.u| world, you may meet the dif-
f' rent races of men, and they are a
tbt ami so far as physical struAui
i eoncei'Ued, The minds of grc.
men are as the polished diamond,
it great because they have cul
I tin natural talents that (iod
'',l - en them and used them right
Mt n are failures and criminals heeaust
th, . 11a\ e perverted theii talent
br.tKeii the harmony of their lives. It
} I .'tin that it is the mind that con-
plete education which fits a man to
Perform justly, skdfull) ,„d maguani-
mously, all the , lliecs, both „„l
private, of peace and war."
Herbert Spencer says: "The edu-
cation required foi the people is that
W hich will g,. e them the lull command
of every faculty both of mind and
body, which will , ill into play their
powers ,,f observation and reflection;
«hieh will make thinking ami reason'
■ "f tlie mere ercatuies of
impulse, prejudhe, and pa- ion: that
'!• sense, will give them
bjecls of pursuit and habits of ron-
du« favorable to their own happiness
and to that ol the , ominunitv of which
tliev form a part."
J«!"i Stuart Mill says: "The very
corner stone of an education must be
" i< < ogiution of the principle that
'I ,s to C„ll forth the greatest
ipiantity of intellectual power and to
inspire the intensest love of truth "
"ne of the greatest of living men
' ■"' "" '■ certainly true that
"'years T'rf trained
Mais of study , and do, outlast
their unlearned rivals."
These men have correctly expressed
m> thought and what I would have
l"" "n,i0,Iti'1 ' I'-iv. made my-
self, I.M, | haw said that this institi-
tion is hut a training school f,,i #
battle ,,f life; this fact cannot be eii,
P'tasi^ed i supj,„sn (||js
purpose brought you here and that
tins is why you are members of these
societies that cultivate art and elo-
'I'!',"" freshen your hearts with
ity sentiments.
"" "t be in a hurry about leaving
institution ,,f this kind: There is -
'""■ '■"""Kb for the battle of life, and
tb, better e,pupped you can be tbe
sure you will be of success
. "ay think 1 have faked too ser-
lous a view ,.f life. I.,|, ,, serious
tiling, and the young man or young
.;u yit I
ft ' " I"""1 " to KM the b, st out of
lf'' tl,."r" f. I d want you
blunders and that the,,- is no sun-
shmeorthat lif„ lmlst ,,
u der a cloud. The fl„w,.,s gather
beauty and fragrance from both the
clouds'" the
lo uis Nature teaches us this lesson.
" nnd gathe, here
strrngthofc.|, It.Ill", and b,and
~s of mind which will enable
have give„|^',r0f"S,Oenj03'thebe't
lf Id to feel that 1 am
S";. standard so high it e mnot be
"••"'"■d. or thai 1 f, el I , ,,able of : iy.
jr3 ai:::S!;;:;:,!=
would have wished, and I feel my im-
perfections. I will hlame y.n, if
you say of „,e When I am : on, "if
you know ""I,"ch, why have VIJU s„
httl, to show for it?" It is „„t half so
hard to state good, sound doctrine as
S'limiM1hae^j"7
<r - Cu^r"?
do not claim that the ideas are new
only as the truth is always new. There
is much sweetness the,,,| from
K'l,l"'r it "I an and liter-
a jure and na the sweet consciousness
and failures
and disappointments in life we must
depend upon the broad mantle of char-
hatV 'J "i' sej,,listless
Hint Ue have done our best, and while-
we may ,"" 'dl b" I"", „r gr,,,t, (here
S no p ace m tbe world that is more
ti" ''' is no position in tile
""lid from which we can .haw more
comfort, than II,at „f being g |„va,
rue■citizens; loyal to the flag „|
■"""to : l"val our homes and our
fir. sides; and, I . t but u,,t h a t, loyal
I true to om selves individually as
title men and true women.
*h,
I
illustrates
' who was well
natural
Or. Price's Cream Raking I'owtfer
Alost Perfect Made.
SPECIFIC
For Scrofula.
e the
i and
much
Slid-
Pessimists bale said that ill",
creatures of fortune and
the tendency of th
be looking for some cl
denly acquire fame and fort
Observat has led ma
that there is no such thing
I" life. That men have been sui
ful business nil.„ because they nude,
Stood tbe conditions of tl,ei, trade- t|,
It i.
mind.
I ti,,* p,
miiH
I inott
If i
char
11 ti'oui actions, our purposes, and
- us in every transaction in life,
•lucation that strengthens the
broadens the judgment, enlarges !
reeption and enables us to deter- '
nliat is best to be done to pro
our welfare and happiness,
ver there is a time in the life of
any man or woman when this ought t<>
he understood and fully appreciated,
i- in the school and college days of
out h\es, I.et us see what some wise j
men have said on the subject of edu- j
cation:
l.ockt ays: "I think I may say
that of all the men we meet with, nine '
hildhood, I have b<
Mulcted with
sores, which
sufTeriiiff, I
to bell
terrible
iinablo
worse
1 began
AYtR'S
w bet-
n bottles
nnpletely
I" in v I
1-puriller
HMMIAIIT,
cured, mi thai I have n,
or pimple on an\ part
for the last twehe \
cordially reeomuiei
parillft as the verv In
in existence."—•(}.
M,>ersville, Texas.
i thf OKLY WORLO'i fair
Sarsaparilla
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cures Cuuyhs and Cold*
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bixler, Mort L. The State Democrat. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1896, newspaper, June 11, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116850/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.