The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 23, 1914 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE FOUR
OKLAHOMA LEADER
TFrE_LEADRR, (1TTTITRIE, OKEg.. TITT'l t *1 > A V. A T; R11. 2± J 01
BY LESLIE G NlBLACK
Established livDa. Published e\*ry
Thursday from 1O74107 1 - \\ i*nt Har-
rison avenue, and <entered in tlie Tost
office at Guthrie, Oklahoma, as sec-
ond clash mail matter.
Subscription: $1 OU thu year, In-
variably in advance.
.Published Every Thursday*
HAPGOODS PROPHECY.
Norman Hap ood, interpretei oi
feminism, is getting quiu a luiuine i
ing these days, bccau.e In ha < • '
predicting in n serii ot ie< ur . H*"1
the nt'W a< tiVItI« mmmhi "<
make marria-;o I trcipn ni an•'
^livon •«• easier.
.Most of his rI it«« • " XI 10 Uru
that Norman must l a hold. -
man for even : n •. • . iiiu . < u a '
Hold he undohted'y i , el. we- •>
n't have the norve to «*r■««
lovely women an con < i.- «l
why bad'.'
ill is prophecy really h'n'l prophe> •
at all; it's simply 1 1
within everyl odv'.; obs -nation "
daily confirming wliat 1 ■ liel
may be feminism or i' '
cost of livin or 11"" -
which conns I" women with imb
pendenee of earning power v lii« h i
the cause; but in any ev-m ii i.
plain as the nose on your la-• that
marriage is beeomin le.*. I r«-«ii,
or at least less permanent. while the
increase of divorce has < <-n a can
of alarm for years
We are not of thope. however, W<>
think that this condition will not one
day change for tin Uetter wln-n He
exciting causes shall hav* Ion. I tin
necei try .social r'-adjustmeui
Love 1 a pretty powerful t utor
in spite of its bandies: s; ami v\«-
inclined to pin our faiih t;> it in tin
long run. no matter how 1 -n ' ■ in it •
divorce statistics may read inean-
while. Love of family, love; of homo
love of man for woman round
marriage on these rorkn and it take
a smashing storm to topple tin
Structure over, especially if the < up
board isn't Iharc.
FLUCTUATIONS OF THE
OIL MARKET
The rapid depreciation of the oil
market is deplorable, depressing and
defiant. It hurts and hurts like six-
It means loss to a great many
men actually engaged in the oil pro-
ducing business, and loss to various
others of us dependent on the oil in-
dustry for a livelihood and prosperity
Hut therei s no b ultimate excuse
for an\ of us -becoming p< • imisti ,
says th" Itaitlesvlllo lAaminer. Not
a single legitimate value in Bartles-
ville is Impaired, permanently, by tim
cut in-oil. If general conditions two
mouths ago justified an\ contemplated
investment or improv inent, then ti
Investment or improvement Ik ju.
fiod i(Mlay.
The oil market fluctuates It I
always done so. Hut the present <■
dition Is temporary. I'here can In
thin
that. 1
it thing
o do
ler p
thi
>rt to sit dow
•alting policy
depreciation.
Our town Is
} it ever was
An increase of $7.."inii,eno in the
army appropriations just l>> vepin
watch along the lllo Grande, : i\<
faint hint of what it would < ost u. to
intervene In Mexico.
For accepting a rebate <,f $H"..r.7
Michigan lumber compan.. inn : pa.,
fine of > and the < and Uai i-
&'Indiana railroad on- of $li,<H'•
Perhaps if this thing np 1 '
rebate crowd may become win- to th<
fact that rebate don't when
they are found out.
>nt,
sine
and I
clause
ous
onditin
mub<
would do so
df the worst
ipt a watchful
if the market
as much today
tanks are solv-
's in a flourish-
siate 1; linen -
ual and highly
real
n nun
;rat!fying extent, and we are all hero
i«)lng to remain, and we must 1 i' <
iid move and have our belli \ Whlcl
,loans that we must buy clothes and
things to cut. For a time businc
i tain lines may el ck up, but
good bet that the average store will
>t be able to tell, from its daily re-
Ipts, that anything has happened.
Now, or all times, Is the time n
-op smiling and buck the line. Let
hit it harder than over and believe
with all our souls that we are goin
in out just precisely as we haci
planned to win out. When the trees
in bloom, the grass green, the
gun shining and the gentle winds o
prosperity are fanning our "cheeks
without a single elo.;d in the sky
then we van afford to become (pessi-
mistic If wo don't, know any better
Hut now why, now. of all times in
lit-time, is tUo psychological moment
or us to join hands and smile old Mr
.Pessimism out of our midst.
For, remerber this: Not
value has been impaired one
Philadelphia ledger: In the Tan-
am* Pacific International Exposition
will stand a giant column called the
"(.'oluuin of Achievements." A spiral
pith, siigr, >sting Goethe's^conception
iif progress, will indicate the evolu-
ion of inufi from tu<- lowest to tie
highest forms of Ufa. A figure at the
!i p is represented in the act of shoot
;ug the arrow of 8i|cee*s at tin- snti
Significant as this representation is,
i i> a notable fact th*t success is an
Hailed today as never before. The
lecessful man is a target for criti-
cism, legislative enactment and scan-
dal The successful railroad, city,
corporation or individual is an ob-
ject of national abuse. Stic< ess liufi
more opposition than failure.
Will there be any more big for-
tune. like those of Mr. Rockefeller
and of the late Mr. Wyerhaeuser? It
i nfe to sav that as the world grows
ipiKirtunitb s will increase. An ln-
i,inee ii the man in Chicago wno
i.'ys the largest in ome tax. Ho gets
hi one and a third millions a year
-dm the mail order business. There
ill always be new ways and new to-
tal Croesus was rich In his tine ,
t. his fort imo would not cut much
4 figure today.
\ financial writer believes that the
i ted States is now spending for
nomobiie < $7.">0,nt)0,000 a year which
i formerly saved. Now that a nwn-
a.-tr.rer has offered his automobiles
, the Installment plan what the
,t utry believes it may be possible to
, e will be added to the sum nun-
oiied.
There is nothing parti-uilarty sur-
prising in the report that John D.
tbckefelier owns a big portion of the
•eat mini's in Colorado. I>ocsn't lie
own a big portion of almost everything
in these I'nited States that is worth
owning from a monetary standpoint?
In Paris recentl> all tiiree sections
: the Court of Cassation, fifty judges
in all, convened In Joint session to pass
upon a case Involving tho sum of
tventy-five cents, and no doubt the
opinion banded down was as weighty
tho subject decided.
real
illus
if th-
in an article in the Outlook
trated by thirteen pictures «
writer, Col. IN" el t
reached Bueiioi \ir
received not mcrel wi'n cordiaii'.
but with euthin n
feel as if 1 were in i ol ; >1 cai.
palgn at home." Hepudialed nut n<
chastened in i irit.
That was some considerable judg-
ment, tho one entered against the
kodak company by the. C oodwin
estate—$20,000,000. It seems the
kodak people infringed on a patent
that covered a process for using films
in photography, e\identiy pn .suming
on tho weakness of the patentee, a
poor preacher down In New .lers< >
Hut the ipoor preacher was a stton-
lighter, and while be did not live to
tl\e end of the fight his heirs are
bi- winners. The Kodak people pal t
$13,000,000 on the account the other
day.
"Fire boys, when you see the
whites of the horns' eye: Tim-
did General Canton (Jridleyi/e the
it nation at Tulsa, and incidentally,
pulverize tho races.
At a dinner in London a flowery
eakor gave a toast. "Woman! With-
in her., man is a bruit." Kither a
rynieal or a stupid compositor chang-
, <! a comma and made it read. "Wom-
an, without her man, Is a brute."
There are ninety-six thousand un-
employed men in New York, and over
thirty million acres of uncultivated
land In riorida. - Florida Times-Union.
.1. Burr Gibbons, of Tulsa, is press
.•-•.eliting for Judge Sam Hayes. In a
story of the judge's career, wheezes
on "poor, but honest parents." Up tc
.lodge to kill off J. Burr.
Sulzer
running lc
again, but
will liandl
time.
aunoun
i-es the • urpose < '
i-rnor of New York
in't said as yet wfi(
campaign fund thi-
the
An article written !■ w
son in 1 NT. criticism
form of governni' nt
House the other da; \\
Wilson fliinl in !'•1 !
■portance. 1 le has le.irm >1
in the last thirt li\>
Dauie Fashion ; n
She has decr '1 I t
toque shall b i
nightgown dn v.
peared in 'Pari.-, w m u
headdress would ha «
pers and cold ei mi.
For the encour uenn -.i
en rejiders who arc :e
respect, we annomv
ment that Mi Kb-
winitiing shipper
CM ass., manuf a tut1 ..
seven, width C.
Are we t un it i -1 !
son of the Tulsa : .
equal force t<. the
homa City, MusUo-ee.
3^aw ton?
The nomination ot I
state superintendent ot i
tlon, is ■conceded Ml
condldates put in e
him, have withdrawn
The club of ti : it
to another feminist,
men and women,
to leave man an : 1 <
Wi
Ann
•ad ii
nroa
that
There Is a suspi
Hiehinond Pearson Ho :on overtall
ed himself; from which he <an draw
the recompense of a qualification for
Chautauqua work.
\ i hi< i •( art firm haft failed owing
1,'100,'itn. Probably didn't have In
,, :< a single picture oT the Vernon
astles dolus their celebrated "walk."
\ not her serious revolution i ; report-
l in South China. Yuan is finding
lie Man liu dynasty had no bed of
\ California woman i
iiung
vor(
ler so bard he broke
vill some husband in;
aeh bears?
Why
bein?*
apan is understood
cat of Vlobson «as n
\ merican friendliness.
. .;ar«l ! f
vldence <
and
ns are Great
ctions, but they
he is at least
tdolph Hearst.
advises girls tc
v men.' and out
ic< but
refusal
Some philosopher has arisen to re
mark that most persons born into this
rid must hunt jobs.
A SANE CITY
Boston is putting on city airi. It
was tickled most to death with the
results of its "go-to-chur h Sunday '
and it esteems it entirely logi a 1 that
tlifs would be followed by one or more
dean-up" days, as to which it ven-
tures the opinion that it would be a
shame if there should not be some-
thing for the men to do a well as for
the wives, daughters, and maid-serv-
ants. Says the Transcript soulfully:
Some poo, le clean house at on •
time of year and some at another.
Some clean several times a year, an'!
there are ethers who practically do
not clean at all. It is more generally
in the spring, however, that thy
housewife's fancy or sense of dut?
gravely turn- to the s< rubbing brush
and other utensils that are brought
into requisition to 'reduce the accu-
mulations of the wintry season. It
is a period of toil aftd sacrifice for
the good woman, thongh the carica-
turists and the pokesmiths have rep-
resented her as marshaling her mops
and pails In a gleeful crusade against
the peace and comfort of the male
members or tho family.
The movement gets to bo more
thorough year by year. It takes on
new forma. It is no longer content
with putting up a bold, clean face;
It washes, so to speak, behind the
ears. It concerns itself with the un-
sightliness and the unsavorlneas of
backyards and demands of them hot
only that they be dean, but that the
be useful, profitable and ornamenta!
besides. It Is the most practical mov
in the^campalgn for City Beautiful.
The zeal with which the good hous •
keeper goes about the stormy work of
cleaning house Is after all a sacrifice
on the altar of domesticity; v! en
however, she attends to washing the
face of the ground that lies aro no!
her; when the outc imo of her energ'
may be viewed in emulation with the
like activities of her neighbors, next
door, then may we expect results ( >n
vincing and complete. Eve.y honv
will stand out as an object lesson
every city lot will attempt a stand
ard; every house will emerge purl
fied and all hut beautified.
And one of these day ; we shall not
be surprised if the moral and ethical
side of cleanliness receive some at
tention; if the ardor does not coil
corn Itself quite as much with tm
character and conscience of a city
as with the kind of face it puts up
The same mind in a sane body is th
Ideal, and sanity lies very close t
sanitation.
THE HONOR OF THE FLAG
The Tampico incident appeals t
the military imagination of the
American people, since it involves
the flag. The arrest of a few
rines, who were • quite within their
rights, has caused more trouble than
the assassination of many citizens.
The Tampico trouble is fi^r the
most part a matter of etiquette be-
tween Mexico and our navy.
International propriety is involved.
The navy seeks satisfaction in a sa-
lute of twenty-one guns, lien
have the stage set for a real drama
The flag symbolizes the principles of
the American people. It is the gov-
ernment. The repudiation of
flag is an insult to the nation.
Jluerta may be resorting to a ruse
all off the dogs of war barking
at his heels, and which threaten to
drive him from the country, but the
ople will support tho President in
determined and definite policy of
national self-resfiect. Mexican impu-
dence has clashed once more with
A merit in dignity.
When tho first act is being play-
Id, the people should cultivate eool-
and patience Kvory movement
at this critical hour is fraught with
•aching consequence.
ADVERTISING HUSBANDS
It may not be really new, but Miss
pi wers, a New York suffragist, man-
aged to say it at least in a new way.
The feminine love for jewelry and
fashionable millinery and clothes she
declared to be relics of the stone age
when man, returning from war, hung
his trophies on tho woman he owned,
because to wear them himself woubl
interfere with his activities. So wom-
today. she lamented, continue *o
advertise their husbands, sort of
property hangers, as it were.
■Kvory other female in the animal
world, she went on. is sufficiently at-
tractive without trimmings. The hu-
man female alone must decorate he-
self because she is dependent upon
th" ifi?llo for a livelihood. And !* ese
were her reflection* after viewing the
Faster parade on Fifth avenue!
Woman's slavery to fashion has tie-
fore now been argued as constituting
a proof of her incapacity for tl|e bal-
lot. Put that taunt came from men.
Here 1s a suffragist storming Hgainst
ydornment and almost making It a
test of sincerity in the cause. A few
years back when women verged on
the simplicity of men's apparel in the
fashion or their clothes this might
have passed, (but 'tfoday when the
frills and furbelows of femininity are
breaking out anew, with the poplum
possibly forecasting the bustle and
maybe the hoopskirt itself, it seer\<
strangely and Shockingly out of tun .
small enoug
to
judgment to
it ration on t'
stage that
e dav
all s<
Tula
vill b<
•lean naval
o main to
olhauled by
for
the ;
ng John Fields
uublican convention
: man -and a clean i
v being talked
slasm wait ur
Suggestion for a permanent we it
■diction: "Rain if not too cold.'
in
that all of his
i that is not all
of Ala
and ar<
1 The count r
I Wilson.
is with President
autified for it
ilsa may as well be good as other
is of the state.
Johnson Cit<, ho
■writing essa '-nt!
We Kill the Fly? Thi-
son to debate t'i
; Oklahoma
two state
City puts out an average
candidates a week.
Can Job
A $.">00,000 fire in Anerd n
eeotB the ynportant on 'Hon
thero is no suspicion flint the su
getcs produced it.
Atlanta
h..ingclist Md'omit'll at Oklaho-
i City is preimrln : to draw • roft's-
.liinis front a nurabe- of gubernatorial
andldates.
> modern arni> bullet, .'leeordlii
in nillil.irv surgeons. i.< almost harm
Sounds like a recruiting ofric
arn.
WHLRE THERE'S A WILL.
In tli*' Vicinity of Dover, in Dela
ware, where the law banns the con-
ventional bcvoragoB containing alco-
hol, the silo cocktail Is now the
fashion, according to a correspondent
of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Deaths
in and about Dover were common
when wood alcohol was the onl>
available substitute for the bever-
ages made from grain alcohol and
other commodities. It is reported
that the silo cocktail "hasn't killed
anybody yet.' Whether the injurious
Jcct, it any there is, is cumulative
is a question into which the In-
quirers cortespondent has not In-
quired.
Silo jags aro readily distinguish-
able from wood alcohol spiflications
In that tho victim—or shall we say
beneficial v? - of the effect of the new
popular drink is "stone blind in the
figurative sense of the term only,
while the wood alcohol drinker is
usually Uterally llilind for a time and
then dead ipermanently.
Here is the formula for the silo
cocktail:
"Taike a tin can to a silo and catch
quart of drippings. Add a pint of
water and a little sugar. Set lh(
liquid aside till it ferments. You
will not have to wait long. Brace
yourself for the ordeal of enduring
the odor till you can swallow the por-
tion of the mixture which you regard
as being of suitable volume for the
satisfaction of your thirst. After a
•quench- of silo firewater <lo not trust
yourself to transact business within
twenty-four hours. The best way 10
enjoy a silo jag is to lock yourself In
your room and throw the key over the
transom before the 'quench.' By
doing so you avoid yielding to the
temptation to beat up policemen.
Temperance leaders, the Inquirer
inan-a resident Of Dover - sadly ad-
mits, are trying to have the silo
cocktail declared contraband. "The
police have learned the power of the
new drink," but whether by hearsay,
observation or personal indulgence
the correspondent does not say. He
does Bay, perhaps as a result of ex-
perience, that aside front the bad
odor Iho new tipple is less objection-
able than some ot the drinks slipped
through lite guard. He has in mind,
perhaps, the wood alcohol mixtures
which threatened to reduce the popu-
lation of Dover to the number who
were total abstainers plus those who
sold the drinks and knew the secret
of their make-up.
Whe e there's a will there's a way
Is a proverb. There has alwa 'S been
n will, and a way, in the driest sec-
tions of Delaware.
USEFUL AFTER DEATH
Now and then history tells of a per-
son willing to give hit* life for others.
Those who do this consjdeuousily are
called heroes and in song or stor.
go down to fame.
Did you ever happen to think that
It would be equally useful to give a
death for the benefit of the living—•
and with the advantage over martyr-
dom that it would not abridge lite':
A committee of the Board of Ksti-
mate In New York City recently In-
vestigated Bellevue Hospital, famed
as one of the best hospitals in the
country. One of the points of ii> In-
quiry was into the skill with whi h
the doctors at Bellevue guessed sit
what was the matter with the pa
tients.
The committee was surprised to
find that in this superior Institution,
with its staff of recognized experts,
the percentage of correct guesses wa
only 47.7.
This Isn't a slam at the medical
profession. The doctors do their
best; and their best Is gradually he-
coming better, thanks to the increas-
ing thoroughness of modern research
work.
The thing which has been the
greatest bar to better guessing on the
doctors' part is the impossibility of
looking into a patient while the n*
tient is alive, and the unwillingness
f relatives to permit autopsies.
If for the benefit of the living the
dead could be studied carefully,
liagnosis couM be improved and right
treatment hastened.
So, If In addition to living a lire
>f usefulness, you want to be useful
veil when death lies placed upon you
iu solemn seal, perhaps this may
suggest the way.
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OLD
Twenty-five years ago today a
matchless commonwealth was born
and Guthrie came into being.
A lot has happened In that time—
and a whole lot that should not have
happened.
But taking it by and large Guth-
rie has kept pace with the growth of
the Southwest and stands today the
most orderly and efficient city from
in educational and industrial stand-
point of any :olnt ou the map in the
ajreat middle west.
Huorta consented to salute tha
flag. Then he ssid he would saluto
if a salutation were fired in acknowl-
lenient. IJtter he specified that the
same number of guns must be fired
on each side. Next he will announce
his readiness to accept and acknowl-
edge any apology the United States
feels that it ought to make to him
It scents settled that Suliser is lo
run for governor of New York again.
However, In such an emergency New
Yorl knows, how to tiikc care ot
llself and needs no sympathy.
Sane SoutU CaroltnMns will hope
that If Col. Itlease Is sent to the
Uliltod States senate the outside
rbl will regard it as deportation
rather than preferment.
x x x x x x x x a
OKLAHOMA.
(Written in '1801.)
v X X X X X X X X X X X X X
We live in Oklahoma,
(The land of the h'air (lodi
Where, ere the white man came to
live,
Unbroken was the sod.
It was in ISistt Wl
The wondrous race was run.
That changed it from a red man s
land * Si.
To that of a civilized one.
rpon all sides the white tenls showed
Where they had made their slwK-e,
And where with very good Intent
Their happy homes would make.
Fierce then, and fiercer grew the
strife
For pistols then were plenty.
And at that lime a iMiman life
Was hardly worth a penny.
For years and years 'twas little else
Than to contest, fight and starve:
Some sold I heir claims in baste but
those
Who had the grit and nerve
Stayed through it all through thi k
and thin,
And now can proudly show
Their homes so very much improved
To what they found them years ago.
Jitjgoes will be surprised and
pointed to learn that the treaty
I'olumbia contained no apology.
quarrel is often easier to pick
i a winner.
society note in a Kansas paper
Mes the information that rhum
was played informally, it can not
played in any other way. To call a
nan a "bonehead" in formal languag
is to soften the re'oinr* to the point,
where it carries no stitig.
"A blonde Eskimo." says a news
Item, "is delighted with a typewrite
and it might have dded that blonde
typewriters are often objects of fond-
ue > with men who are not Eskimr
Slogn: Clean 14) now.
! However, there is money in oil at
I thirty-five cents a barrel.
.lacob Riis has given up smokins
These are hard times for person
ho get n living writing about Col
Roosevelt.
Spartansburg, S. C., profits by the
triumphal progress of Gen. Villa. A
dispatch from that pregrossive town
s that a second order for 1-
flghtlng cocks, at *8 per. has just
been shipped to the victor of Torreon.
The United States is to loan one
of Its army engineers to China to
work out flood problems for the new
republic. To the average mind it
„ould appear that solution of flood
problems, like charity, might well be-
in at home.
OVERHAULING NATIONAL
ANTHEMS
One of tho first fruits of the cur-
rent boom in poetry is the rewriting
of the British national anthem. Thi-
work was doile in response to an ap
peal made a year ago in the London
quarterly periodical,' Poetry and Dra-
ma. The first verse of the new ver-
sion is as follows:
God 3ave our grackiur King,
'Nations and State and King
God gave the King!
Grant him tile Peace divine,
But if his Wars be Thlno
Flash on our fighting line
Victory's wing!
The standard convention of the na-
tional hymn as such is the calm as-
sumption that heaven is on our sid •.
The new poet, it will be observed,
discriminates with an "if.' Hut it re-
mains to be seen whether a nice dis-
rimination will find favor in the text
•C a national hymn, or whether the
llffienlt job of memorizing careful
literary verse can be done by the
general public.
The overhauling of "God Save tin
King" may possrbly prompt an ovor-
nauUlng of "America.' If the orig
inal text of the English hymn is toa
breezy and bumptious, that of the
American hymn is unsuited to thi
present comprehensive contents ol
'melting-pot" and is also rather
shaky in its grammar. It. barely ap-
proximate-, good verbal construction
and it tries to spread New England
image's and conceptions over a wldf
;nd widely-changed continent. How
ever, the thing in possession is hard
to dislodge Its crudities and incon-
sistencies are accepted and digested
Probably lmth the old English ant
American words, sung to a German
tune still older, will easily with-
stand any attempt at improvement or
oppression.
At first a tent or dugout
Was all they had for shelter.
But in a very few short years
They lived in something better.
For now they raised both corn and
wheat
And everything they tried,
Which encouraged all the people so.
And some of those who sighed
H. •
Now found again new hope you see
To dig and work and toil.
For riches seemed within their grasp
If they only tilled the soil.
It was marvelous how the orchards
grew
And what splendid fruit was raised.
From north to south, from east lo
west,
We hear this product praised.
Turning now to education
Which ye will not find neglected
But in a far better state
Than anyone might have expected.
For here are schools for everyone,
And no one need complain
If he doesn't know as much
Ah Mary, Jim or .lane.
A common school for everyone,
Who only will attend;
And high schools, too. and eoleges.
When one can comprehend
Let Oklahoma have our praise
And also our support,
For in no other place
Can we find a fairer port
—Nellie R. Anderson.
There are a good many kinds of
consummate asses. The West A ir-
inia judge who, the other day, made
statement reflecting on the hon-
sty of the Associated Press is one
of the varieties. The A. P. report
often is dull and prosy reading, but
it always is as accurate as a purely
human agency can make it.
uriouBly enough, the jingoes who
were most clamorous against the
watchful waiting" policy are growl-
ing just as much over the naval or-
s. They are evidently determined
not to be satisfied by anything the
President may do.
A woman thirty years old. who has
swallowed hundreds of hairpins,
dead in New York. V short life. Hut
a merry one?
It is rumored that John Lind has
been talking earnestly to President
Wilson; but people who were con
•ealed in the next room admit that
they were unable to hear what he
said.
The only thing that John hind
known to have said since his mission
began is that ITuerta was "stringing '
the Washington government. It i*
not human to resist all temptauor.'.
Gov. Glynn's shipment of the unem-J
ployed to the farms has not increas-j
ed agricultural activity in New York. I ""V—
A TEXAS WONDER
The Texa Wonder cures rtflns}
and bladder troubles, dissolves gravel,
cures diabetes, weak and lame backs,
rheumatism, and all Irregularities ot
the kidneyi and bladder In both m«u
and women. Regulates bladdet
troubles In children If not sold by
your druggist, will he a?nt by mall
on receipt of $1.00. One small bottle
Is two months' treatment, and sel-
dom fails to perfect a cure. Send
for testimonials from this and other
statei. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926 Olive
Street, St. Louis, Mo. Sold by druf-
gists.—Adv. i
Pacific reprisal and bloodless inter-
vention are one thing. War is anoth-
er thing. If it. is war, and we pour
out blood and treasure, Mexi o will
have to pa- the price. And fiat price
is Mexico herself. Once the Flag
crosses the Uio Grande in war it stays
there forever.
QHlCHESTER'S'PSLfcS
Y. 11,1 '"AMOVU ItKAMhf TtL
/LBjUt-a! A-k ^
Tiu.« no ni In -r '' Hur j«u"r
f , C IIM ifrft.TFB'*
lUAMeNO hi; v N It I'll.LM,
«nliest.Sifnt.Alwkyi RelUll®
iOJ n BY ORlJfiOISTS EVERYWHERE
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The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 23, 1914, newspaper, April 23, 1914; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc122004/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.