The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 1, 1899 Page: 1 of 8
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HISTORICAL SqCIET/,
TUT OINLY A6SOC14TEO PRESS P.4PEU 1!* ©BLAH On A,
8
r%
rut FIRST PAPER PUBLISHED !N OKLAHOMA
VOLUME 11.
TlIUr^DAY MOltXIN'O.
(JUTHUIi:, OKLAHOMA. .ll'NK 1.
TiiriMtAY MOI:M\<;
NUMlJEIt 27.
great extent,
i lull crop me.
expor :
Nearly Five Hundred Delegates Present
From tire Western States.
'J t *
OKLAHOMA !S WELL REPRESENTED.
The First Address Mads By Pro(. Morrow and Others
Placed on Prominent Committees—The
Addresses Made and Resolu-
tions Ottered,
anything. >nly pr .huts manufa *turou
from i But w. h . n °t r d tti** !
stage. Two lull crops in success on do-
p.t'. prirm often
chuig >>f <*'•
ninrp than J. " 1
l.'nder present «
th. surplus in full crop >. i- s cssi n-
tial. Our experts nr.- grow ng rapidly.
During recent years wo ha\e sen! i tub-
er countries an average of over 150,000,-
000 bus .is annually. ugaU«t nn average
of one-th'-d his quant'tv during the ttve
years 1R00-M. Our exports :•> Kurope of
corn m«*tal have largely mf ' , In 1S! 8
Gn at Britain, lVuimark and Germany
took more than half the -tot.il export of
corn meal. (Canada Imports more In
the grain «rd grinds this In her own mi Is
than was formerly the. ea- O Y« : the
great mass of the people of northern Ku-
rope have never seen nn earof corn
never knowingly tasted f od mad.- from
corn, never saw cannea corn, make tno
use o/ corn starch as food, perhaps for-
tunately have a prejudice against Amer-
ican Whiskey.
It Ip entirely possible to cultivate n
ta^te for a good article f foo 1 n >" omy
by an individual but bv a nsitie* Oa -
| meal was unknown as a gencnU article
J of food In th's country less than lorry
years ag >. Sweet corn was li'tt! • grown
none of 'It .tinned. A Host of cereal pro-
ducts have come into ge eral use in Ill's
country within the last fn vaers. Many
America'', products iiave ved d nvn for-
eign Ignorance or of pr -iudlo against
them. Tli's may be done, as regurd
Indian corn.
It is sometimes objected that increas-
ing tho use of corn as food for man
wi:l decrease he demand for wheat.
Were this true it wouMI sltill l e a ques-
tion wlie.thor We had not betler suffer
some decline nf exports of the crop in
regard to which we have such close
oeinpetltlo*! if wo c aid thereby Increase
ifhe demand f >r the erop which we can
produce more chea.ply than any other na-
proilts
• losses. I i
Imperialism involving th
assimilation of seml-civi
which would be thus <
; etc with \m ! m
t lie w ant- .'f a h n ' <
I dO believe 111 i ,
which will give us the
markets which will
oklahoma wheat ai
The oklahoma ■
seated on committe
Or. 'ientlal.s ■« "a: >
wern open at
rated and some
er products on
J W. McNeal
K«
otlie
at ions F.
mod
rd fr
fine;: w h eh
us to exerciae-
MIn such a
support of
w >uId me
ning and r
ous emploj
gent labor lead'
ri";e the nisei v
A meriean
keepl ng
nt.
agreed on by
| speeches in the
• I Flynn, and other
Oklahoma had <
i s pianks were
he delegation, after
delegation by Clarke.
- by t
I |
I y be
will
•n sp1
at a
In
tii
r< ruM
But it
i'd f. I ■
ab'e that
prom lily «
mixed w
apen* I suddenly
him see it and see that
us an.l he wll o nulet
l>iisin' I prop
•out In u-
inielli- I
not
i,| ..ver forty delegates, ten
more man the maximum vote alluwe! a
rtate or territory.
1" f ti. |<: Morrow of the A. and M.
0 i!er.e. addressed tho oongrese as fol-
vill cle:
t he «tm
in which
a the
aid. I cad in the tla'
ir commere al supre
that a little
phere and show
• can pres.; for-
In the march
v No country
on
fa •
■ f the
ho>
< h re-
has
tiny
NIGHT BEFORE
4 The Thorn Comes Forth
With Point Forward."
The thorn poir.t of disease
is an ache or pain. But the
blood is the feeder of the
whole body. Purify it with
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Knlnevs, liver and tstotr.ach will
once respond ? No thorn in this point.
Blood Potecnlng —The surgeon Bald
when he took out the brass shell received in
wound at Han Juan Hill two weeks before,
that it would have poisoned me if i* had
not been for my pure blood. I told him it
was Hood's Sarsiiparilla that made It pure."
j tir.oHoK 1'. Cooi'iH < o. <i, L'ath U. S. Inf.,
W ash it fit on Barracks, Washington, D. C.
tiii" rimiT I Rheumatltm Mywir :■« friend
THE FIGHT.,A" Other Routes compared and This
n ^ . r . We would not be without it." W m. H,
rrovccl best, j i^kptkh. tK> Leonard St., Kail River, Mass.
Commission Sent to Examine it
Makes Report.
MUCH BETTER THAN THOUGHT
."—TP
•,1th
lor Ba
ck iroin
rKansas,
%v'irtiita, kfma.s
liufll ici— on ol th< Tran M
P'M-merc.Al congie - opened h- i • ia a
B't"*ni..g urMh 8tt delegates to i-tt nimca.
two hundred n..: - are expected tomor
row.
Ex*ery state and 'territory w< t uf the
Ml«rt «ippl river, with the . >. ■ 1 of
w«(fhng- an. Nevada and ItHalto I n
tentiTd. Governor Murphy h ads the d 1-
rga-Uion from Ariz ina: Qov
from Okhi1v mn, Governor
Jvajnevis ex-Gwe-;.nor T'rin. •
Me-clro. and ex-Governor F
Arkomsi*. Governor Jo-ie^
Hid ex-G<ov« rnn-r Franc.s
v,.h additiion.-r' .vd'-u :tr-s are ox cctedi
l^- mo r r * a f t e.r n.
A party of five hundred arrlv- d 'rani ;
H .ifton. Texas, ths morning n a special '
rullrwifi and the rrlva car of V; o
rrest-'.cnt Quinton "f Hons, -n nn 1 T \ is
Ontral. They were met a-t the dep.-: by
Sovenror Stanley and a eommitt e of c t j
Irens with I.he W:'-dh;,ta band. Hon. lfunh ;
pnalg of Ban Pfanclt > preeAd • I e
fv.njjre^s flailed t'o c me larwl vtcc p1' •
fleru Pmce caWed ti" congress t > ord-r.
Poverror Sbui'ley, ol Kansas. der*-e "el
tiip ndidress of welcome. Tie said that
Kansas contributed mnre In a primary
r-'v to th . woaltti and prosperity of the
find-on than any other state in the ur' n.
fha thl« sta.te was glad t wel.-ome i ;<
rcsentaiivea of rhe richest and b sloit
Bccilon In the world.
May, r Ross sfiok" of the city of W chl-
1a and the Wichita board of trad.- '' n-
gressman-elect Julius Kahn of San Fran-
c seo and Governor Murphy ■ : Nri/ aia
4 responded. After this Mrs. Rose Ryan,
^Irs. B. Bryan and M- I!. \ Greer of
Houston, Texas, presented all tho speak-
ers with bouquets of ma-rn a i M - om«.
When Mrs. Greer pirn, d ,>ne -if the
flowers on <!ovfrnor Stanley'-; < ,a: the
govrnior sn d. hoi ling no a sunflower
badge. "Kansas recipro ■ it, s w ith sun-
flowers."
At this the audience sto l and cheere 1
!for several minutes.
R BSO M TTI ON COM MITTKI '.
A sharp contest came up over the se-
lection of a committee on resolutions.
It is named as follows:
George R. Brown, Arkansas: Governor
jr. o. murphy, Arz : Julius Kahn, Call-
fornte; I. T. Chenry. Ooloradn; R. J.
Haus, Commercial Travelers ^saoclat on;
J. E Humphrey, Indian Territory; C
F. Baylor, Iowa; J- B Fro t, Kansas; .!,
H. G. Pitkin, La.; John i\iuliUehl, M nn.;
M
«)klaho
.1 D. O'Donnell, Mont.; J. M. I
Henry ...ever. Neb.; A. S. 0< e
II B. Maxon, New; F. II. Grec
ma; J. M. lrvin, Oregon; Wesley
SteiMrt, S. D.; r sley K. Ewing, Tex
and Walter Gresham, Texas; J.
Smith, Utah: <*oh nei Constant, Wyo.
THE ADDKK8SES.
black i read gral
keep ng up exports
supp
ort
■ large dem i > 1 '
we had
pops.
Th.
first address
by Prof. M .r
ultural Oolleg
>f Corn In Eu
of the session was
w of the Oklahoma
on "The Introduc-
Tline, work m iney are essential to
<ure. .- '.n eft rt. to Ir'trodure new food
-duets. Our diplomatic representaT'.vpw
ir l other American r sidrirts t'.n Europe
in do much by the personal use f corn
PROF. MORROW'S SPEECH.
"EXPORTATION OF INDIAN CORN
TO El'ROPE FUR HI MAN
FOOD.
(Abstract -f address bv G. Morrow,
pros: ' nt ..f tlie Oklanrvma Agr eultur-
al O liege before the Trans-Miss. -
C'onimerc al Congress.)
Tlie 1'i.iied State® produces abou: five-
sixths t the Indian conn grown in h'
world, ab ur one-fifth of the wor1 I' ;
whoa- product Corn i« the chief grain
product of th
r the
Ameri
*tising
mi
rph i Ing-
lid pa?
Establi
sho
for the
uuntry.
'.oooo.uoft acres
over 2.000.000,(i't<P buf'hels.
Vd for ti:e last four yr
ue annua.'y
A full C-w*
The a vera go j
ana has be^n j
•e for the flvo j
vi a rs l '. i-!«4. was aboil' 400."0^,000 bushels
1 as, hn'f of th!s great crop s grown
west of the M'ss'sslppi. Iowa. Missouri, !
Kansnis and Nebraska each may pr~>- j
duce more than n -tenth < f :h > crop In I
a .-'avorable year. Illinos Is the only
o-ther state ranking in this class. The ;
rapid growth !• tb • production of Kaffir
and o her non-swe -t s* rghums used for
the same purpose as corn has almost tlv
samo effect as adding an equal acreage
to the corn belt.
The United S-iaiew can now use 1,500 -
0u< . « i) to l.rt V>.rtOO,tMK) bushels of c UTi eac>h
y.ar It Is the chief fatten ng food for
all classes of farm animals In Ameri-
. ,i. It lias high value as food for man.
N ■ suited i-> be the excusivediet for any
c e A given sum of moor y will buy. at
customary prices more hewt '«nd energy
producing food In corn than in any olih-
er food used b> Americans It can be
mad into a great variety of nutr ii u*
.Mid palatable dishes. I«arg. quar.-H s
are used in the produclii'ui of s a ch.
glucos., and alcohol. A multitude of
mi ior pro lucts. some of gr«at value, arc
made from .the gra'n. The leaves and
stalks have much food value as well as
utiTty for other purposes.
The lea condition wou'd be to use all
the crop In this country. exi>or1ing. If
comm •
failed. Mann-
he'* corn food
r* Interested in
others might
t-) the work. It
com growers
"hip to
oe of corn wt!!l help. But uoth'tng,
pr .1 ' ly would mor' certainly and
qti'ckly bring goad remits than glvirw
Europeans importunity to see ami eat
American c-, rn dishes at the great exp^si
ti >ns. The Paris • xpos' ilon of 10<«i wll
offef unsurpassed oppor'unl to
su -h prac 'eal demri r;:-* on. the G'k
tow exp sit ion r.f ^ T' 1 and ma, \ tliet
great fiilrs should als" be utii.'
j The lndlontifons n'ow are thn« a r, v nde
i dilate showing call be secur I onlv In
j Indlv dual. mnn'c.ipa1, i
' zanizatlOnal aid The
I do something. Eff rts
I Propaganda to secure i
, i^c'is'atur* s ha e
facturers of me.il and
; mil'er1.'i Is. < xnor',-rs. t
I fracsportat n l'nes. i
J profitably give dlr°ct a
interest among ilnid-lvh1
j wmould be difficult to awa'K
as they do n ' directly export
; distant po' :ts in our own • ouai . '
I Francis B. Thurber of New York city,
chairman of the American Exporters 1
Association, spoke on "Wider Markets j
I and How t • Get Them." lie -aid in part:
THURBER'S SPEECH.
Mr. F. P Thurber. of New York, spoke
about "Wider Markets and How to Get
Them ' He said in part:
"The importance of having the policy
of our government supplement and sup-
port the efforts of our producer
he t >o st ron si y emphasized.
"Every efforl of an English manufae-
tur r to re.un new markets find
resjiorse on tne part of the British b>,irl
of trade i department of the government
—lo support him. Diplomacy is not above
In tield, f re ts. mines and fae-
the Unite 1 St.i ■■««. No nation
h a command for the great
forces that now control 1. , world, steam, roW
elietri. ity an<. machm tv No country j
hn< such an ingen "ib. nt. iigent, en *r-j
getlo and progrewriva p pulatlon Burely |
the precedent an 1 ex ••ennire of the)
other great section of the English apeak-I
In grace we can solve 1 ie problem that |
now confronts us and reah/.e the d. s-1
hich an over-rul ng Providence I
to have created for us."
Ex-Gonressamn W. B. Slosson of Texas j
spoke on "Kansas and Deep V\ a er ^
on the Gulf."
Kred W. Bentley of W.eliita, spoke on1
"Equitable Freight Rate ."
At the evening session Hon. George H j
Maxwell of San Francisco, representing j
the National Irrigation Congress, spoke I
on the creation of an inland empire, lie j
urged the policy for the reclamation un- j
der settlement of the arid region that
being advocated by the .National Irriga-
tion Congress, which Is that the federal
government should give t the west its
share >f the river and harbor appropri-
ations for the building of great storage
recerv >lrs to save the wa.ters which n
flood times now go down In great v-
umes. carrying destruction wi li them:
and that title to the public lands should
be ceded to Ind vidua! settlors only, and
n.,t ec l.-.1 t" the states; also that the
grazing bun s of the west should be
leased by the state* at a low ra.te and
the proceeds used for tne construction
of Irrigation cana'.s.
Mr Maxwell said In part:
"If this policy were adopted those who
are now tilling arid l-a" I ■ wltk insuf-
fie ent v iter supply Will '• VC wh.u U ev
need and new settlers would (lock t 'the
west as eagerly as they d'd to oklaho-
"The mi n who broke fhe prairies of
Iowa and Illinois did not have much
money but they had grit and industry,
and by their labor they bu .1 homes and
iated tw states. Open the anl west
the same class of men bv balding out
the magnet of cheap lan,I and fr" water
and a new tide of immigration will flow
into the west."
Illustrated lectures were delivered by
T>r H C. Frankenfield of the l'n te l
States weather bureau and T ■. Newe'l,
hydro^rapher of the United State? geo-
logical survey.
Dr. Frankenfield spoke on Hood
flo..d problems.
A resolution introduced by T> C. Lewis
of Oklahoma, condemned Atkinson of
past on for h s paphlet against the war
n the - hilippines. and asked the Na-
tional e ingress to encourage exportaflons ■
of negroes to the Philippines.
Other resolutions were:
By Ex-Governor Prince • f New Mex-
ico, asking for the establishment ->f a
e. nartment of mines and mining, to cor- |
respond with the department f agri- j
culture; also for government aid for the,
merchant marine.
By Stuart of South Dagota. a king for
government aid to build reservoirs for
storing flood waters on the upper Mis-
Oolutnbtis, <-M iy II—Wltto Senators i
Foraker and llannn the Ohio republican I
congressm* n and other lenders all here
tonight thein hcatlons are that there may
bo two opposing slates on the state
ticket arrange! before the republican |
stat.) convention thai asecmbles tomor-
SAYS OKLAHOMA
INDIANS ARE BAPTISTS.
San Francisco, May 31.- At five after-
noon si- on of the Baptists, Itev. Ro .ert
W'hitaker general misionary spoKC oi
California* us a mission fioid.
Rev. «' T Douglass, of l'asadeua. gener-
al missionary of Souiuern Oaliforirta, fol-
lowed. pnventing ,the nersls and possibili-
ties of that llcJd
Wll!
nn?
tie
we
presented bv Rev. \\'. E. Ra-ndull, Reii-
eral nnssionay for that state. Ho t<j l
of the gre; ; wealth of mountain and for-
est, the harbor facilities, wild the encour-
agement for planting the gospel in that
state. He as ifsdlowed Ivy Rev. A. M.
Allyn, gneral missi< nar>' for l-Wisncrn
Washington and Northern Idaho.
The Indians * f Oklahoma are gradually
being converted 'i said. Some are bap-
tised every month. The Churches ought
to b planted In a hundred different p aces
where there is none now.
Dr. Moorehouse read the ollowing
! telegram which was s'gr.-eri by the First
. Rapt's-t. dhurch at Skagway. A a sua:
} "Alaska stretches band t*> God. Pray
! for and help Alaska "
Tir. Moorehouse then artked all Bale
ti ts who could to at:'end a convention
in Skagway next year.
ESTIMATED COST $118,113,790.
Revolution* In Mcni-acua and 4 osla
Iticu 4 uu* cd .llueh Pflaj in
Nurve) lint Ollicrwiiio
florU wax MatlS'
factor).
\\ ashhigv >n, May 31-The suua d part-
inl cnt today nvade public an oi ictal
alMLiacl of the report of the Nica.a;;ui.
• f«n-'l commsssluii as presented by Admi-
ral U ilker, the head of the commstton.
'1 he report itself cov-rs 13ii •typewritten
p.mes and is accompanied by elev.-n ap-
pei.dix*-. It la umUertJlood lo be tne in-
tention of the Prc.^abtnt t" submit the
full report to congress i Jt the beginning
of the next sessam. The synopsis as fu:
nisi'ivd to the prt«s today Mays:
The eoiKmlsjfcio-n underataml 'that it
w i- requirvd to
Ifo.xt'H JMJtc >• .ir« IItpi III* the n"u 'rrn ttnjj_an<l
Mily catImrtlf to uk-' wltli llotxli KarsapsrUfiT
ial which repre«
•nts cost of
>.:g and con*
■ mslder all rou'; li ti- j
tot*ok proposed, having any tiM-rlt, th . |
new routes that appeared to ihave nier.tl
• h u | he de^'elopetl. and the entire r u-
. >n of cemai powalbHJtiae ehouhl be x i
I'niut'd wth suffioient thoroughness to
i liable a ju-st and camprehena.bl compar-
ison of the various routes to be mad •
and the most «esirabl - one selected. Wi.b
t'Vr's view, th-- comm s-1*. ai mad . a careful
-tud: Of all da tin 1.--arng upon the N li-
ra go,an catiaf qu'os^l ti a id ,'fganlzed a
la.rre force.
Nicaragua and Oneta Rico. The <
pr.dits, weir uikun.
\* Mast"r . f Linooln Neb.,
ie of ■ I-.e interis'lng charaotere
i <"lty Decoration Day. He
•ars old an Englishman by btrui,
;•> yonina s' of a Mjuad of sharp-
in the Br sh army before
Viciorla and t royal consort
n iri led bile j et a joung man
ie , America and s 'letl in Offio.
• d In the Ohio regiment for tho
i and was tho oldest man In the
nt. w i . his sen was the youngest.
h army he carried a flint
i' d in the e:\il war a Springfield
lb- was a sharp'-'lioorfer it", thu
alaaii valley campaign. In 1870
nt to Nebraska and has resided
U 'ln fur the paast twenty-seven
A chapia.'n of Farragut P st G.
he has preside*! at the funeral of
iiis comrades. He has witnessed
\yt procession to the grea^ btyooi
ill b"p«rs his age lightly
t World: Bra men states o>n
iy m ,r stalwart citizens were
i the oilJclals of :he
romi i > our city in a special
pr rint • i dent Dolan a nd his
overland from Rra-
llnckw ' an«i « r«-ssed thetn-
vveil | ' a -. ! with the beautiful
id growing prospects *'h1eh
i i • Super i.n<! .• Dolan
will "put th r.aid n into
Immediately, and f.om th'-re
Perry
yards and give
id facirttes pos-
pleasng
and will be
Murphy of Arizona, asking .-la
C. A*
nlllK
1,1,. int..
the right
i of traders. (
steam lines
hand to protect
Liberal pay is a
for the carriage of ocean mails, and
the entire national ;nfiu nee is constantly
exerted in this direction.
"Our own government 'has been making
progress in this direction and our diplo-
matic and consular representatives arr>
not lacking in patriotic interest: hue we
are far behind in organized effort to
place the merits of our goods before the
c nsumers of the wor' 1.
"Perhaps this is not surpr sine, con-
sidering that our home market is the
best In the world; and I. for one. would
proteet and develop to the utmost this
outlet for our goods.
"But a nation which controls such re-
sources in fields, forests, mines and fnc-
t' rles, as the United States controls;
which has mastered the forces which n>w
control the world steam, electricity, ma-
chinery ar
be satisfied to ignor
the ot><er thirt- >n hun-
million consumers nn
But to f?et this market
let the people of the
A lively fight Is o
t on st s on t he quest
e Irriga-
of bull Ung reser-
arld districts. One faction
lr,l by Gov. Murphy wants crsslnn t-, the
st.Ts and ptHtc reservoirs. Oppose! to
this Is a fart'on fiivor;nsr the storase of
water by the government reservoirs
Hot Sprlncs. Ark : Cripple ,f k, < o ;
nn,1 Hons,on, T^t.. nre after the
congress, e. A. Fellows of Topeka.
Thomas Patterson of Denver, arc c;
dates for president.
dally
were
' our late
i ng and
Indepcnd-
took the
l. with a
which to
e of her
victim to fever
imp at Chlcka-
i had no Idea tbit
se than In good
; The ad-
. s the c'iira.icle of klc<v-
iry paid our poMoe
Ufy the pay-
r.iry by nsserting that
t . Territory up for So
member of 'tie B .Lrd of
water «'oil g v But with
r (• dishonesty falls to stato
rd of five is only avowed
for p< r diem and expenses,
nt -urn of pe.r year.
:..4 ;.lio a^ventuici^s
erl the:
dred and ?
the p' «he I'i?
it Is riecess
world know
have easy
the
erbs
the
(AKRVAI.L BY W ASH INOTOJI.
The most Interesting re! ,• that of recent yearn has beprj addel to the hls'irle
collection at Mount Vomoi wa recently pre en ted by Robert M Broi I, of
'| hilaiiolpli.ii, aud k* u t^rr>all used Ly W ashing ton ar: l bl:* family for many years
for light service. The vehicle has no da shooe.. d. a: the ikriver aat with his Iprs
jcvrr the whlflletree, supported by a small fofctf^st. Th© pu*.-angers climbed In
j|hr«u_
its la cMuu^te.
thing neces ivy s public tv. It i
less to pro lu< • good thing nnle
let the world know It. From tlrr
•rier. whether In
called man to trade or |
ng press and th- pis'-
k the public crier. I ,
liar spent
11 yield, a
So matter
how crude nor how 111 d re ted. the sum
total of results in the great majority of
Instances will be on the rit?ht side
"We must .ive a place to dump our
surplus, which otherwise will constant y
depress pr res and compel the shutting
down of our mills, throwing our lab r
out of employment asid changing ®uv
mortal the publi
,>r minaret hi
prayer. The pr.
venture to sav that ev
In publicity ha* yielded,
larger return than any
MRS. McSUIRE'S PARTY.
FOriiTKliN i'DUri.KS KNTKR1 AIN-
I.AST NIGHT AT W'HIS'l
tertained four
uplcs at wli.st last night
.... Refresh m
iolln
niusic during <h
grain
all d- tall
•nip- in led t h
ded th
invited
Mrs t'oburn
rnor
and Mrs J. H. Bur ford
and Mrs
Judge and Mrs. Frank Dal
Mr. and Mrs. .! w. conorn
and Mrs. Beadles
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Thomi
Mr. and M
1 Mrs. K. W. Jonej
Mrs. Wright m
j. N. K. Reppetto
Spain t' ia
Bake
route and fram t
rvilled T.ull
|ow>s t h "• left
Brut
divide
o l ake N" am'.'
he lake at
upp
'arlos. theiv
'handlf
in til th
Ileal ti
o months al
rly .Wi
Mr Kneisle:
k smtt
The
Mr. 1
DEAD WOODMEN HONORED.
lodge of
placed monument
.f two of th
f tin
rhe local
struct i
I of t
I M er
ad A. <" Hisfiop. naxi'T wiw «>m - mar-
f Guthrie and Bishop held the posi-
if assistant marsl
OKLAHOMA SHOOTERS WIN.
marksmen won the
Fourth annual tournament
OKLAHOMA AT WICHITA
• as J-portsmet
The team
of the
Hon In \N"
THE YOUNG TERRITORY PROMT
NF.NT IN Alii' PROUKKDINGS
There were delegates from Oklahoma
follow
luthrle— Gov. C M Barnes: Delegate
Flynn. J McNeal, W. 11 Mer-
'unningham,
Huston i-nin Cotteral
Oklah ma
Reck em f
Kingfisherr
llepi
•fl CI> at ten slngl
arAl five
made 6
vent, ino Oklihf>-
Irecg and J
lark
M. L. Turner,
Stafford.
son falling r
ds >n
Kansas < it>
'spap<
gent for 'jhe Klow
Indians a* Anadarko has
hea- 'ng. to enatx
bargee' a gains
dence to ^Iviw that
Mr. Waf.ker hlinse
M K
lohn Grat ton
T. W. Da it
nding
mk -
Medford
wing.
Clair. W H Mm 1. W. J. Bonne
John DuLanes
.1 hn I
Burt
i hearin
nd it is believed that hi
notified of any change
ol on f! Ran d
of the agency on
Me Bran.
ramp-
I hav
'hambers
rma n
f the Ok.a
P n a City— J. Gordon,
G. G llen. Levi Horner.
Watonga—iV A
bell. T. B. Fergu
Blackwell--John
George M Ca* • i'
A the'.. Willard F
Enid—John Mur
Governor Barr"
and C. M. Kelgei
horna delegation.
another girl a* 'c homo,
is been married f<*ur tigi
13 lus iwaaty-tbird cli-id.
Tllh; PKlNtUSS ISARICL OF Oft LEANS.
ThI. charmkix «lrl. who .. a M ,er of h of OrlsM,. "Vg
French throne, h.e keen X, ■.■■e«H ..nperorof ! •'
when hi. st*te period ol n, ur,,l„, over In September. ^In^. W^e
rep,.tattoo of .being th. ..'harr„,,.t roynI dn ,^ler .n 1 .«WV.
7rA her nrop.ectlv* fste of^" the wife of un old man Is . s«d on- m
trla and Himrarv need an hetr-spimSnl, aid prm- . j-v trained iram lAfaucy
; ;o sacrtflue ut«i aeiv«a lor Use Mko wf stsie and famtiv
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 1, 1899, newspaper, June 1, 1899; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc123817/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.