The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 275, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA HTATE CAPITAL: FRIDAY MORNING. MARCH 23, lCNJi).
The State Capital.
by ihe State Capital Printing Co.
I RANK H. <JR LR, fiditor.
• L'Mk'RiPTlON RATfiUL
Daly one year by mail j*. r*
Dal.y tlx month* by mail j.21
Dally thr«« non h« b7 mail 1.71
I>* Iyy.n* mon'li by a ali <0
One w* k by carrt*r h
Weekly on* year st
Weekly six mnn h« z
?fo ffwhiTipf!'. n* taken for three, *1*.
w rr'.sth* In town* whtra w«
fcav* th# earner
A«14r*«« *>.ita ''«pi a Printing Com-
pany, Gu'hrle, Oh ahoma.
CITY Til ti KT.
FOR MARSHAL.
Henry If H'ynold*.
npflT WARD
Tm alderman Wpfp -j PmPh.
For ftchool board-K O. Barker.
wncrisn ward.
Por «i<Vrmnr - a P Aaunder*
For school board--ll M Fielding.
TTIIRO WARD.
For abVermaft—'T. I: R>u-r
For school bomi-Jr. n Renfrow.
FOTRTH WARD.
?nr alderman—ffenry W if
For school board-W. II. Morten.
FIFTH WARD,
For ald*mian—O. N Pfrkhw
Fm fhool h'larrt- Wa«h ngion Avery.
Til Id IM THE MF.*T
Of all frhe erit;< rrrrt rrt the Sbelron
• eriftloo. thfe la truest expo l' oft of
' the- mission of a dafty The
, Chldtfo Record rays editorially: The
j fxperim^ftt w In Kama*
last w**k. when the Rev Mr Sh^'don
ni Topeka undertook tlx? uMlcaSlos
of a m w^wper ahn* Hn a «.f what
he fottre red to ba an M«*al <"hrmia«
policy, ha* not b Tt wHJhrrrt Important !
The *xp«*rirrj<-n4 fisw '■ m- !
plated ami th* six Imii edf *d by Mr
^heMon have be*n given to the public,
whlcfe haw stud** 1 rhom wtrh ev*ry
*vdene* of T.onrrdn-}*dne«* and Intel-
ligent euri*.*! >• The *lnrerlty and
purRy t/f Mr «hHd'<n's motives 1 in
a ratifying to rv, te. hare not be«n raJled
Into qtteStI<x\ even by tho«e who vnott
radially oppos* his theor'es.
"The trouh'e wl h Mr. :jh Idon'a
fh«ory, a* rtxnen in th* reatHto of ha
experiment. la etmply that In try rr? to
r*->ndt* t a. newspn p-r alone new line*
he rjnom1 to !f^u« ne^f|>ape^* Th*
nxM^rn dally fulfill#* a ap^lal offl'-A n
^vlliwion a-nd It f^nno- oeaiie fo ful-i
fill tVn ofTI' f without d#*w*r« ylTi«r Ita i
Identity aa a n<*wapai>'-r It la r-'rw*i-
tlaJly a recor*l
Paints Paints
But What a Wonderful
Difference in Them
REDMOND LEADS THEM
NEW HEAD OF THE REUNITED
NATIONALIST PARTY.
THE ACME HIGH-GRADE HOUSE PAINT
Every gallon
baa be«n U t*d in thla climate for ten yaara w th perfect result*.
Rkiar^ntead for fi* y^ara W^! ] coat yo u no more than cheap paints axd 25 to 80
cent* lea* per gallon than what othera cal 1 "the best."
PRICE $1.35 PER GALLON.
Th* Lone War Among the Irlab r rlla- K
ment*r^uu That B«rau with far- ^
neU. Dow* fall U«* (oa« to aa v
5
w
Eo<l.
Harrison
Avenue.
IE.
Edward Nichols,
Proprietor.
The different factions of the Irish
Nationalist party, which hare been
warring among themselves since the
death of Parnell, have finally become
united and by unanimous vote they
chose John Redmond as their leader.
Since the deaxh of Parnell Mr. Red-
mond has been one of the foremost of
the Irish leaders. Americans hsd an
opportunity of bearing his eloquence
and of gaging his earnestness. He vis-
ited the United States in 1896, and
'• w Mc.VKAL, President A. J. SEAY, Vico-PrMiaeat
W. J. HOBSFALL, Caihier
Guthrie National Bank
Capital, $50,000.09 Surplus, $10,000.00
First National Bank organized in Oklahoma.
wee-tern market* ought a! .fw> to mak# 'T^wey*' « K«n at Cleo and forcibly mawle a tour of the principal cities with
up for the difference «f om of Mmw IT.j. h?IL h""kand out, and ir.w th? hlH lecture on "Fifteen Years in the
In ih" west and th" # aat.
REMOVED
To Corner or
Division and Oklahoma l*s
day today, and f« va^ue o humanity
Mta^tly proporlio>mite to ft* bruth-
fiiln'«i, a/bllIty and hornety r>f purpo*e
with rh < h It pre^ntl thla rf-cord If
conducted on high prlnripte^ ft may l "
marl" an In^aJeuVa-bV* Influence for
1: If *vm*luctf-d uA^cnifm^ymsly It
Sunday closing * f the Part* falf 1* may become a vt/n-nt Inf1uf^ir« for
rw t fair to the bread winners who bav harm. Rut In no rnjfr> ran It wurremW
Ito work all ihe weHt. | thla prlrrwiry purpose withr_ n; Imparint?
mmm j both Itm t^Tle'ency fia a nw i>'iw and
Oharl-y Curtl.' rfnomlni-MJon for ron- M „n ,n
rr«H. pI'-awM <>UUh.,m p«,p!e a munh ,IMr r,„b„r oplnlon ((n,. (1<^ nM nm_
Wholi
Bl
lAf the Guthrie club lor>k after Mr. marriage a failure,
T>a\ia, the Induxtral a!ger* of the San- wotnan.
ta Fe. Guthrie can give any natural _
TTiey are still talcing up claims «u
arlvartag-ea any town ran along th* the public d^ maln in Wood- county. aiizes just wlien aud how ^ d<> lt- He
flairta F , and a« for /rtJb^r aeahrtiam***, The Ofce«.n Piagle says: Rev Sherwood can speak for a day, or for days, if
f ttie world w 1 If from the citizens Should w -o It that non*1 a vacant land in -he eoun- ®eed be, as he did on one occasion
IVy"""' Ar..pah - noun- British Parliament." Mr. Redmond'*
excited on personal liberty. „ speeches in parliament have ever an
a.id th« new attentive and often a thrilled audience.
He is a tactician who knows the value
of obstructing business, and who re-
are tnore generous.
llliFLPt T IO VH OF A HAlHRbOK
Th'
(From th* New York I'mwa.)
women that wear the big. loo-e
as the people of Kansas.
BerrH*ry Gage has again explained
the provisions of ih^ new fum-n^y law
What Ik rcriily needed Js a war map of
lb* altustIon.
mon a lawyer to treat a c.lee
The Kfn'ticky b-gialature has ad-
journed sine die. nnd there's no logla-
loitive b«Mly with which the country
rnafld m< re readily pari.
That Is good. A Reno. Nevada, foot
lw Jll t< rtm refuerrl to j*Hn a golf e-bit* on
1hv enainda lhn.t the jralne !a deadly.
Polo'will be (Considered dangerous nex'.
fever, nor la a doctor called In to aid
In strnlgh eninr ou ? a l<tral covnpl'ea-
t'on. Nor, excepting aa a powerful
auxllla-r>', 1a It a. newspaper's Irtieln^fs
to d<> the work •.snlen'Ml to ^h/ great
religious publications <r f • he perhM. Mr j
Sheldon produced a publication full of i
instructive and « nllght<n<ng matter, I
but, h<rwfver good ft may have been, it
was not a newfi-pmpcr. nnd It ooit'd not
wield the Influence wields| by dintt of
hsrltlmate new-vpjt,per method*
"Mr. KhHd'm's th^ry rested upvm a
misconception, first, as to the office
which a newspaper fulfills, and which
If must fulfill If Ita very reaerm for Its
exigence is n* t to be destroyed; And
His pon-in-law had recently got
g< «Td claim near it and has become a
citizen of Woods county.
Th" Midland Farmer's alliance of the
box coat* probably haven't got any country about Kl Reno ha« taken ac-
shar>e to their backs anyway. tlon denounr- rcg the resolution of the
National Live f*tock Mssor atlnn of Fort
If you look at the unmeeerful man'' Worth Tex., favoring the 1ea?1nir of
sb f? you will g^neraly And that ho 1h«* pubHc lands to the earlcmen,
hasn"! hoth/e^-d to blnolcen the heM^. <bat of Ihe Oklalbrrma Live Stock acso-
— clktlon at KI Reno denoun'*.n{* the bill
to proh'l)it the manufa'*tnt*e cf o'ee-
rmwgarine. The resolutions of th al-
1+anee declare that the action to secure
the leasing of the cattle lands rtwvws a
purpose to prevent any new eourt'Ty
from being of ned to setthment Wl'ih
regard to the resolution on oler margar-
Ino they df hare that It Is in "h** Intrr-
ests of nh^ par-klncr houses and a"slap
at the farmer's wife."
try wo." of Fairview. W.*x1s <-,vmty when he wished to hold the house on a
and tMik « t«,'Pw in* trip 1I 'ou--i question vital to Ireland. It was In
S ~ thil memorable speech Mr. Redmond
gave to Charles Stewart Parnell his
title of "Uncrowned King," which has
A man with no love affair Is as unln-
f typhoid fereetlng to -the women on a rrtaraz
w th no corset adv
men.
i-ti>ernents l to th"
About four woim* n. whwi thHr "bus-
bands rvvmn homo at nl-gh1; m^ them
with a kiss for every one Ifrak doee it
with a hot dinner.
When a man vinY*** aklmblntfy at a
girl In a crowd, If he Is good looking.
sh« Is so tv-kled that sh" ba« bard work |
to look Indignant.
TERRITORIAL EXCHANGE GISTS
A« went Bryan, so went Nebraska.
Now, will the national f<onv*ntVm go
s/a Went Nebrnsfcn'* If So, silver will w,r' "d as to the feasibility of 'improv
prove a dfoss to the eastern democrats. ,r,*f a paper's Infloernre as a moral far- j
I tor 1n civilisation nrnd Ignoring much of
CNKAliiO RRWN ritl VI RKH
An act of
an act of heroism.
JOHN REDMOND.
The Danderine
Barber Shop....
The Only First-Ciass One fn the City. New Porcelain
Bath Tubs. New Fixtures.
IHE MOST EXPERT WORKMEN 33TAM8LE
JAMES MILL, Proerleton
FREE MRU MARCH
• ® —
Dr. 8turgiss, in Ord*r to be Fair ar d imnartial to All, and for the Benefit of
tola y Who Have Not Availed Themselves of His Liberal Offer,
Has Decided to Extend the Period of Free I reatment
During the Month of March,
T^rry Fnterpr «w -Tlme?: Before he
1«*ft for Alva. Judtfe HaJner notified
Warrv McCandleas that he would have MrvJved the great land leaguer, and
•harlty usually discounts brought into court <m hia return w^ich has been considered one of the
home and show reuse why the letter rr- uicst felicitous epigrams in public
oeivod h#*re jvaterrtay directed to the sp«!aking. Mr. Redmond's style is de-
Tf mA er hurts the value of gold to "Father of the Only Boy in Oklahoma*" liberate. He has wonderful reserve,
all 1' filthy lucre. elw^uld not be turned over to his honor.
Usually the harder a man work# tohc
m'ore he earns for others.
Krug^r has two hundred blood re|a« the ervll in the world, giving only "tru>
t1v* s In the Boer war, and says he news <rt the good." In the first Instance
•Would rathm* see them nil klllc 1 than h* was mlsbvl by an error In reasoning.
give up fighting as long iu< hv- has life. I And in the f*cond em-d in judgment.
j Admitting that the reports of orisnea
It appn,™ to imr be n found -hat and 1h.- w<u-B and thtrw frlvtou- «r ,v
""V'™1 IK>ly* Tnou p .nimaMe™ have ,] aonietkme* occupy 100 daiire a -hare
h"*n In 1'tah under a| it the puWIo «i:t«rttlrm, MT. fhel-
mljoippreherwlii.n «• to their family ,|on wrlouiWy bellev innt the modem
eta.tiiK. j n wiMp«p«- failed to dI*.•!-- H' ihe evil n I is rsnjp Khitp refearvblew marriage
the World, fuller! to m«'na:rf the corrupt
of exposure, the world would be any
better? In keeping oivilix itlon fully ad- j ment plan.
%>ised as to Its roal status—'without ex - |
ax**r* atlnsr or glossing over any v tal
faoU—a-nd by chronirllnig the history
and the crlmlnl 'wlnh a constat* threat
of the day In the manifest spirit of
condemnation of the wrong and com-
mendation of the rlghit, does a news-
pap«-r really perform most offe-r'Hvely
Ha mlslmn ns an ngency In human pro-
'' saiwar
Perry Enterpri e-Thne«: John O'Neil
and Ohas. fJ-arrett are ba k from their I
trip to rhe foicmer'a claim In 'Pawneo
Poverty drives so«me mem to drink county, aind John is now engaged In or- |
and keeps others from drriklng. pan'zlng a (fVon*lo tninln«r om.onny
ovlth a cpltl of $100,000,000 for the pur-
Whevi h l aby cries It never shrds <*«<• of develolng a l aui and zinc min"
suffU lent tears to drown the noise. | nH^Ptosed to be on said <ialm.
The tenement hmiie fhat hln.1 «unh a
dl.-uetrotf* fin. Indoiurtvl to « r*rea«^ier
Wev. tnieidon erttlelyed the man who
inwn.d the "Are trap" without kmnvlnx
Who *he was.
Twenty million dollara nddrnl to out
ulmldy rolna,it.' «,f allver Ik pv.inif tn
make email nlmmre plenllful. The pop-
ular pnclcet win now Jingle, If, Inrjoxl,
It doesn't bulge.
ani when he opens wide the gates of
hifl oratory his power is superb, yet
never overleaps itself.
The new chairman of the Irish party
is 44 years old and a Wexford uian. He
wes educated altogether in Ireland.
He stepped almost directly from the
University of Dublin, whence he was
graduated, into the house of com-
—. „. - " , mons as representative of the borough
The average man has more money ^aw-nee Democrat: Th body of of N R K
lww-k of him than he can see ahead of Jf>rr>' Wilson (Indian) a*yed 18 year^. a t , f «. ' fterward
Mm. son of Mary Wilson, arr ved lac-t right elected for ***<<%*, but since 1SS#1 he
fro*n BoonvMle. Mo. A few year^ has sat ,or tht cit? oi Waterford. He
Cupid's pictures Te^evnible him a/bout bee;m>e a bad Indian and wont 'fi a meniber of both the Irish and Eng-
to stealing horses. He was sent to the 'ish bar, and a lawyer who under-
reform school it Tt^mvlb for fve stands the origin of law as well as ita
The world may owe <a man a. llv<ng, It wms there he died of con- theory and practice.
i but he has to collect R on the Install- eum^tion. I _—
Hr conMnnes to mike thla offer for the fame reason that he has been making it for the pa*
three weeks—in order to become rapidly acquainted with all sufferers with chronic dia.
eases and to convince all such that he can cure
the most stubborn and complicated cases He
does not ask the prop e to take him on faith
He wishes to prove to them to their uwti sat-
ihlaction that they have at last aci ured U)e *er-
vjecs of a u-ue specialist, ho wrli ki o vn has
this become that even now the good he is do-
ing has spread amoug the people and many
who VIKit h.9 Oflu-e do *> wift,. ut reaard to the
trrc oner, but serk his aid because they are
sure they will receive mhat they require in the
way of a cure, aa many have already been beo-
entted or cured by his superior aeatment.
Dr. Sturgis' treatment is vastly
different;! from that ot many
other physicians.
Catarrh ? tJca,trnent is mild and agree-
*, °* «ble and based upon scientific
principles. A cure guaranteed in all cuacsg
It makes some people ml«era«ble
>d a.nv
expended,
f Ponca mty Tour er: Frink Marks,
•who Is quite well known bene tells a
A Worthy Charity.
The Hospital and Newspaper society
Catarrhal deafness
cot teen neglected o long that the ear drum
and auditory nerve have been deatroyed
Rheumatism !n forms permanent.
ivtjcuuidusm iy curedt in cur4bl#
Diseases of W men Diseases of Heart,
lor meUioda, d ing away with much of the pain j methods, with resu.u, that are marvelous.
«o often experienced iu the ordinary treatment ; Kidney and Bladder SJS?"
Special Diseases *1dn nTf^ZTZlj;' Blood and Skin '
lyj cured speedily and permanetiy. I r*r\ v*ulu
I erad cated.
hu.
Uiorouyiy
There Is a wide difference In time «nd
rod I tlon bet wen Oom Paul and Pa.tr ck
IWenry, but the declamtlon'. 'Vllve me
liberty or give mo death," fits Oom
Insul a mouth well.
There's i,. doubt lha' your* Cr.r-
■russjiian Overtreet of Indiana la fair-
ly entitled to thr pen that signal ths
rold staudtard bell. He has been. Its
ffodfather from the start.
ATter aR, Kipling Is more of a"flxrr"
than a' man of genius, and his laat
poom of the shamrock and Kngland's
F^ierrrdty In lrttlng Ireland vivir -It
day In the yn*r ah« ws.
THAT CflTTO\ Wll.l,.
Tn "he lornl columns orih's 1<^wtre w'll
be found an article stating that the
Rsnta Fr contemplates avwistlng In the
establ'shlmg or a cotfton mill someiw^ere
In southern Kansas or In Okltfhomia. for
the purpose of absorbing fbo rvytton
product of tire terrWoy. The matter
ehould be looked after by 'ha ONfthrie
club. The establishment of a ooton mill
It Is n I ways dtfflcwH for a mam to un-
dera'tand why a woman doesn't like
him.
It some time* happens that a homely
woman doubts th*
•went our to enjoy an evening shooting1.
They ea^h carried a pump gun e nltraln-
Ing six loads. The e twelve loaid* net-
ted the hunters Jtist 102 ducks, besides a
number which they were unal 'e t0 pet.
The truth of the r s ory is vouched for
A man's p«
but he'a an
rmtfnlttvl.n her
^crmraey of mirrors. ^ 0f reputable citizens of
Red Book.
etry may win a woman
xreotlon if he's able tc
on ft.
And notw Tte^-. TalmaKrs Is for a, "Re not yr't secured one Neither Artoansaa. | irw r<nirtah'P-
form Amusenvnt association." If there Missouri or Kamcm h.iv.-anj ll
Is word In Shakesj «are r anywhere the tnui>fen-rw-e to the wef
else with a double meaning, he la for class nf 4nduatry 1 hat ha* until
fU'bKtItuting a word, presumably, tvith years, when tbe a<ru th began t<
He meaning at all. the cotton mill h4riong«sl where he cot-
i ton is raised, wae entirely absorlied by
find anvihing i.'-m ann'ovlti' ih 'n"ihev «""* «1«1 «Te"n ?f New York 16 a mo8t w"rthy charity.
w th envy . About two wwktuigo w-h. n Its object Is to furnish reading matter '
durke werf p'.-ntif •! Mnrk-'aid a Mend gratuitously to the inmates of hospl- i
tals and public institutions and when-
ever the need may exist not only in
New York city and its environs, but
in any part of the United States. The
sailor out on the sea, the bedridden
and the convalescent invalids, the sol-
u*er at his post, the light-housekeeper,
the prisoner in his cell, the crippled
child—all these know of the society.
In the past year the amount of reading
matter distributed was: Books, 5,812;
magazines, 26,777; weekly and Illus-
trated papers, 71,140; newspapers col- j
lee ted in the boxes of the society, |
about MO.OCO. Two rooms in the Unit- j
ed Charities building are used by the I
society. The walls are lined with
shelves, and the women interested in
the work spend many hours every
express companies handle the boxes at
reduced rates. From twenty to twenty-
flve packages are distributed weekly
among the beneficiaries, numbering
over 200, scattered through twenty
states and territories.
Permanent and perfect Cures guaranteed in all cases undertaken Fverv form
.<J'",ase successfully treated. Patients begin to improve almost
frcm the first day. Call or or address,
DR. W. E. STURGIS, SPECIALIST.
CfBce Over the Le.der Office, 107 West Hharrison Avenue -Office Hour, a
to 12 a. m. and I to 6 p. m.; Sunday, 9 to 12 a. m. '
Blackwell ?poon: A*a Troxell, who
has been llv ng at the Bayles homr.
—— seven miles tweet and two rn1V«t *ou'h
An Ignorant man ctmuld alway* re- ^ piaj-lorell died .hv Vfimyeanr'v
main allenl. Iurt If h.- know* onough to RT>rt 1h(l fUT,en;iI ww* nonducted liy P v
GREAT
do so. he isn't Ignorant.
A soldier's flrrt rngagerrTent Is of 'It-
tie consequence; It's the battles after
m-arrhuge that count.
Some men would rather eat at a res-
taurant than at home—because their
Sears of Nsird'n. Ti'tie l« lc" rf
the history of the der d nwin. Whether
or not he had reWutlves or wb> no hf
esime from, is not known. I* Is \ • -wti
that he was born In Iroquois county,.
711s., in 1R".7. He came to th* S' rip In
Ms/roh <>f 18R4 and ha« worked as a
farm hand 1n the neighborliood of Nar-
din ever s nee.
The
COMBINATIONS
--WBTII--
Pioncer Paper of Oklahoma.
CSSSSE3
In Oiytlrrte would W . rx>t wwrtihy mat- I "rii®r" not
t«r It would he «,e .Vret ln ,he A m,r, wtmt ft„
moi«'hw,-.t. lexae ha- been aKlha-'Imr l...r he in nn'll hwife becln- to re- chler an,l wdvlaw of the Wlehlta Tn
the matter for several v«' ir- and ihItwI him <>f the promises he made dur- d an** n mrvlnwed a*t th- n*11 ■ fr ei
F,! Tteno Pell- T>nlt««ii Jim
hi"
th nk
Another biir «ult mine iViie eolit in
Mv«Mern Kanaa . ^ <-.m.i famine H>
fWwnlae*!, ir not entire «• tnrtlou of
<hr fuel in the near fuiun*, hut the prrt.
Utn-t nf eult trnnw 1/1 ttc UN plentiful as
like "Halt of Ihe eai^ch."
dt may not mean murti, but alnre the
Knsrlieh We , nrvtlnumieiy vie.
torloua, tlici r la niuoti dla ru.:-i [. J ;T.V
Inrlnun, there Is not near ae much din- I
ouaelon of Ihe •MaMJmi on the rint
DOTM-rs. It la ant a plnaunt «ul<3eut. J
Tlie report that Mark llantm Is ap-
prelienalve li t tl.c Oar nurl'-F' luk row
may hurt the republlnana In the mm.
Ii« campaign la pnulaibly due to a reo-
MMotlon of 'hv fact th.i< It >wu the
memorable 11 oine#wt,Mid met*, when (Nit. |
n<Wle anil Frink werr working twellwr,1
■ hot •trad muiii to do wUh ttie d<-f«ait of
I^swddent Harrison by Grov.r Cluve-
IimkI In 1892. The Ua.t .would anein lo
t> on Uh* tntwe- h* thla time, (urwavi r,
w ta lUrre no truth in tlw nihm that
Mr <Vrue«rti) 1 prr-purod u> Curnlati « ha
liixemu tut Uic Uryau aauiivui^ti I uiwl 2
*efday on the question v>f allotmerr1.-
The rhW I. e vorv <r tert«*n« d
he staled thait tie Indians, the 'Wichi-
ta*. ere hard worklltar and T>ro<rr' s-ive.
At all timet' the 'nr.- peaeert.le n1 bon-
e*l In their deallnirs. htrt hn.rdly nnd.
From nil appearand* thla 1s ro'mr to yr< ll"v" thP r
reiairn .when ithe iimiba
OKLAHOMA PARAGRAPHS.
New Ktigland. The cost of shipment of
the raw material to New Knx and and
the cost of shipment of Uhe gotsla to
9 th
<vf the peach trees will have to be prop-
ped up.
mi d
Tills CAPITAL NA-
T10^AL BAMi, OF
CiUTHUlE, OH LA.,
CFLLUSTO DtfPO.S-
ITCHi EVERY FA-
CILITY M II I C II
THEIU BALANCES,
BUSINESS AINU «E-
SPONS IBILITY
HAUUAINT.
fearful thai a llot-tlng ' Ihem now
bo a detriment nnd put Hhem "back tn
the ss'me condition a.s the C,h,e>rennes
and Arapaboes A f'-s* more yr:u - an 1
If Ml Itono desires lo lurn Ita hark rh(*v W,,|M r,'rut>' ,r> «"'k" 'tw'1- >>lnrB
1 llie I'eerynHena ej- rjuajrela tt atnnarstde Hhe whltv m.an in agrii-ul'-it.-iil
should IsenberK of Knid lo move work'and cattle raising.
tile
Nome C'hareh M«mb«ira.
Isn't the church rather innocently
and complacently blind to a good deal
of the worldliness that eddies in at its
very doors? The church of today some-
times reminds the Brown Chair of a
good country deacon in the midst of a
group of sly and sophisticated city boys
who are playing their pranks upon
him. He thinks he understands them,
but as a matter of fact he understands
neither their motives nor their actions.
Ixx-k | His gullibility is simply delightful. The
s
so
1
oo
1
oo
1
oo
1
oo
«1
50
75
•Psvne County PnpnllH}: Sol S
The IVrst edition of the Braman Ftar of MtrUP(1 'lowmh p returned last Pa* - boys wouldn't hurt a hair cf the dear
urday from a six weeks' trip to Old old party's head for the world, but
Mex'co. While there he worked for a they do love to pull the wool over his
month as enrlneer on fb* Mex'es-n r-n- | eyes and impose upon him. In like
anner a good many worldly minded
edited by W J Krebs, cume 'out with
green c verlnjr Ju>- think of It; It was
luarto dally in Braman.
l quarto.
"trm
Perry street sprinkler began work ->n
Tin «lay and now the youiwr Indies wl h
la*wn rtmseH and the young tnvn wl h
■'uek pa.ntf are etrwetsd to appcur as
latrblrxrtm of spring,
Jailer Prank D'xon of Okl 0">v
bus now fi r snfe keeping > ebln/1 "he
liar*, awaiting transfer to the Ivanstng
pen ten 1ary, fourteen nrriv s f om
Chandler «tv •' convicted prl-un-
cas from that county. ■ ■
A won an can never rn.rry oult her
IRIaekw"i«ll and ftUIwater hnve men of reaolut*on to sn\ b another vmtan If
the same name. This week John R. she meets hr«*r when she has on her now
TaAs of st-''I win or lis Med Blackwell and hat.
Hayaf John R. Tate of that city closet- --
ed with him and the two tried to 1-lwry man oufrhj to lay down tihe
Scnvpa Up ablatiotsdwp, burn oould tu>t. rule that he won't iii g up his wife's
Tower bids 'till she leta him wear this
A woman named Christie ontercd t*a «0rl«« overcoat.
tra.l railroad Mt f krv*be"k
♦he TTnlted and <Tkln
oartteulsm. I« ihe Iw«l' ooit^'rv to I've
n In o'd Mexloo be piild f r a sul1
nf <wwrtinit'^e#i>- v rn 1 an-^ J" ke*—r «d
e-n ordlnarv ehlrt cip t.\: u-cut oft? or
tob*r>oo se eeafrs1, •hoe** t*>- l*oaril $7 p r
Week: cotmnou Me« oan Mho- Is on.iil 47
" >nts per day; Crelerht eiwueers rw'w
ti75 ner mon'ih: brlcklnv^rs oer d -y,
In Mexlcnn mourn' and oilier kl led la-
bor Is In proportion.
people like to impose upon the church.
They appreciate Its social advantages; i
they appreciate the standing the com- i
munity accords to church-goers and |
church-workers; they like to be known
us church people. Rut bless you, '
their motive is wholly selfish at bot-
tom, and they are no more what the
church takes them to be than Alaska
sparklers are diamonds.—Zion's Her-
ald. I
Deaf Mutti In America.
Seven out of everv 10,000 Inhabitants
of the United States are deaf and
dumb. The affliction Is much Kiss com-
mon among tbe negroes tiian amoug
the whites.
SEE THIS GREAT COMBINATION:
Weekly State Capital, per year, ....
Enneag City Live Stock Indicator, per year, - .
Special Farmer's Institute Edition, par year. - .
The Poultry Farmer, per year
The Farmers Mutual Insurance Journal, per year,
Total publishers?' subscription pricc, - .
Our price for the whole combination, one year, .
Another Proposltloni
ALL of the above five papers, and either the Weekly
r* New York Tribune, the Toledo Blade, the Cincinnati
Enquirer, or the Oklahoma Live Stock Inspector six
papers—one year, for $1.00; that is, we will KjTe yOU the
five paperB in the first combination, and any one of the
last papers—six papers—for one year for the small sum of
$1 one dollar $1
Comp'y,
Address,
State Capital Printing
Guthrie, Okln.
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 275, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1900, newspaper, March 23, 1900; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124071/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.