The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1900 Page: 2 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL: WEDNESDAY MORSIXO. MAT !>. 1*H*V
Do you have periodical painf? Frequent fea:kachc? Arc you nervous? Axe you continually
exhausted? Do you suffer every month? If you answer "yes" to any of these auestions,
you are suffering from ills which Wine of Cardui cures. Do you .ipprc.t^e what pcrfect
health would be to you? After taking Wine of Cordu: thousands, like you, have realized
it. Wine of Cardui insures freedom from female disea-::. At each recurring menstrual period, if
care be not taken, cii^ht ailments will appear. Nervous strain, loss of sleep, cold or indigestion start
dis orders which are not noticeable at first, but day by day steadily grov.- into trublesome complications.
Wine of Cardui, used just before the menstrual period, will keep the female system in perfect condi-
tion and render it invulnerable to disease. The medicine is taken quietly at home. There is noth-
iike it to help women enjoy good health.
Questions for
costs only $1. Test this remedy which is endorsed by 1,000,000 curcd women.
Cairo, Ky., Sept 6, I89Q.
I tak? Pleasure In writlM a few !irv« .n prabe of your wonderful mediant. Wine ol Ctrdui. It is
the Sett median* I ever heard of. I am years old and have been 'ck all my lift. I had a dozen
doctor*, but none ol them dtd me eny good. I have taken one bottle of Wine of Ctrdui and will take
arvot-Ser with Black-Draught. I hive hern .named six year* and have a baby live years old. I had womb
and kidney trouble My monthly prri * « so bad th:t sjroerni.es it came twice a month. I was too
sick to do work for a family of three. I vas in bed uhen I got the bottle of Wine ol Cardui. Now I am
up and can do most of my v ork. When I sick I could not «.!ccp at night. I sleep well at night now.
A friend of nunc advised me to use Black-Drausht with Wine of Cardui Mrs. ETTA KiLLMAN.
For <lvi«< in r e« raquma lapeetal d.r*e.
IK-:.i. (trice •Ticp;.<n,> th* tad.fV
A -v I*partmant.Tl>a<.li ttAacoM Med*
Ic'oe Company, CfcMi&nooja.rejiu.
:~ZI23SEZ22EEa!
Si
! & NOTES & OF dt THE dt WHEEL s I
Items of Spccial Interest tc State Capital Readers
♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦ *♦ .+4. * •*
The accompanying illustration utinw*
. Che outgrowth of the home trainer <>r
cycle construction device as conccivesi
end put into prartlrM use by an en-
terprising reataurant keeper ol Win-
terthur. Swltaerland. who last-winter
placed a number of those machines.
made \ by a Swi*« firm of Basle, in his
aaaenjbly hall, and by connecting them
{fcy traa*mle9iou belta to the miniature
^ra.e coars e, having duniBy figures, as
£ Shown, and starting several real'riders
oa the machines, reproduced a regular
[it** track.
^t.Thc Illustration chows clearly tbe
^fttkOd In which these race* are con-
^/flucted". Th* public, by watdhlng tfc«
of tbe figures on tho mln-
course, can tell at a glance
hfc lOSitiofi of each rider. The riders
jhtfe&*ei<ret. by watching the course.
ttff! their exact populous as com*
l-tfltfe iheir rivals, and as a Onal
Mjjfcafd, ^ttae indicator connected ... ..
v| arht apparatus demonstrates the i-tia Inducement* would be lost.
pfcey of thf result shown on the
f fcotfrsc. This idea <> found such
|{. AjBon^ the laboring pop ilgtton
vlfatsrthtir that it 'was ver> n
ih adjointn* district and la
i'dfr* 4Udict or mtdlkin rluer is sol-
demi drkiK-tcruwed to a ficxible hand
or cable, and travels' with It like a
catt* car %ith Its steei rope The tab\
coftsequogtiy hat a« "raaay s ot« a.>
lh^«'krc u be cora pa ti to ra. The mia- be 'devr>t«d
t^tnr* (eUtale flg*uresiare paiuted iu v
cadoQi^e -nth cotcrs of the reai ' tion,'owin^ to);the war
jnf^ca^ifnb are working away ot vh<"M- Jan «xcMle^'?flaid , .v-4
faigV.Hvo fev. inng Jmmt The iafe-^r '
kfi« •arev! cot only wt^h fhe rOMcujinr
Indicator l vice. ti! with-'tfet
cables ng icier the!ttai'-' *<>
fention recorfl or 1:59 1-5. Stevens
won the first heat In the Eeries In
2:06 3-5. and Lawsou encouraged his
friend* by taking the second in 2 12 J-5.
In the final and deriding beat Stevens
beat out his opponent by a wheel in
2:12.
THE HOME TRAINER TRACK.
moTed. a'large portion of the publics
interest and all the proprietor s flaan-
T® Prm Ifoi ludi-mnlts (ate.
The cabinet room in the white house
wis the scene of a long discussion th*
other day between President McKin-
ley. Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania
and T. J. Keenan, president of the
League of American Wheelmen, re-
garding the negotiations which the
state department has been conducting
with tlw Turkish government for a
settlement of a claim made by the de-
partment of $40,000 indemnity, grow-
ing out of the murder of Frank Lenr
in Asia Minor. President McKlnley
listened with deep interest, to the story
of Lent' fate and said he would in-
struct the state department officials to
press the case to a speedy conclusion.
May Toor th* World.
The international exposition of Paris
may prove to be the first milestone !n a
trip around <h? world by th" American
racing.met .Nearly a score of the
American fhamp ons will be there dur-
ing tbe.seaaon of 1* \ and should all
or a part win money in the great races
scheduled, to be hold in Ptirope. it ia
cot impret^able a portion of this wril
to a trip to Australia.
South.Africa is jiow :v qU.-5.
Australia {?
California ia
fait devetopinc into % Arft<kim w:nt r
and spring*wampum: ground for the
to sewchaAcr*.
, ^ , Tom Cooper and Earl Kiser hare
tha< fte Iuocy Cgcrea by their rfia- tJtb set their>hear- u.-or. a .vtUinu-
OCe or. ti. t,;a. '■«. show
the
diaHAi* and tie'dnmrnks the.Mt'ii* the firat real in-jfcit-c- that «u-h
trip w«s c cn-ii.r r.oo ki Far'.ir •
Thl?.p!cj' of'fnd«rting *^Tola for-"' that he wc ild'pc tt« !y g
lnf-jfija. 90s?.i hail' has its charms to •'t11 oi in:* wathsu:
^r^pnetors i!~*eutraPy leca.ed pa
v, aare of their frtp from Parts to Aue-
KtStcr< graphically erery stage oft) trail a ^ad th«i>- I© California. Last
i riaf* ^Th? indicators check Ihf < sumner HcEaHaod and Stevens gar,
the/itH4
cf hr ■ ^aar
feet arf at a premium Thf table with
tt^ cbt:c? sumulatae the gai «
iKevie Harry Blkins ia known to
have aa ami>tiien which include* rac-
ing a Australia and little Arthur Ro&?
Ill raee wherever E'.ktc does for
Wblttler to Cm 11 Hamilton.
No lapse ol years dimmed Whittier's
steady friendships, writes Samuel T.
Pkkard. who contributes the second
installment of a ssries of letters that
psssed between Gftti Hamilton and the
poet, in the Ladies Home Journal
One of the letters that Whlttler wrote
to Gail Hamilton Is dated September.
18S?. when the poet was in his 80th
year: ' i was gladdened last evening
by the sight of thv handwriting if i
do not see my dear'old friends often
1 new forget them In these lonely
latter days I love to recall thy pleas-
ant visits to our Ame-= :ury home when
Klltabetb was wiUi me. 1 am gettlcg
to be an antiquity. I seem to have
pretty mu h outlived the world The
last year has gone hard with me. I
have as usual spent some weeks in
New Hampshire but tare returned
without the usual beneSt. Why will
tfcee not drive over tere tto Danvers).
or better still, come to Amesbury ani
•pead a eight as ia the o!4 time* I
expect to be there the firs' wesk in
October. God Mass the?' Think of
me always as thy affectionate friend.
'^il^Vpk-cpdnaitie* of. patrons ani.oX yea'? to W M '-
ler'having retired from the *^«ng-dia-
' unre sport ro enter thc.fK&eed ractng
(*xe and be-eg determined to race
onal^rtders cf/.be *X*foat Blkea aat'J he finally *r^:.«
• eoetd rart nt sv"*: en;ly apec4? ar.4 chaapjonahsp '*
«lf5c(entiy Jw* kaewtit'to 'cr*w ?p« - «ak* the rrr V. )♦* sa
♦vt^jryt propriercw colleett
kit ro'^kT.y or. the we'l-fcnewn Pari«tsp
•V\ca "^tifh .enable? t;-v to ?e.are
•a < «iary rp-e
profes.
W tter*« or B«aaor.
"When bis energy was net expended
ia k:s art work it found veut in many
t umorous sallies. He was also foad c?
laurs when no greater ^xerr.en is rr-
^a*r^a o bec-rr.* wttn cf *►*
^ac.e than to step lato a cafe frcm the
bonkrrarc.
1 An l n4fotal advantage to the eye •
iMtol fraceraity \t :h- opportmOty for
•arolv.c an t.■- during tk v.
,afch:ch the plan effe-- for tho* minor
stars'of the t-ack w:.a?<? light ' e« net :
a Li a* strcrc er-.cvi t surr. rt the '
larye erpecses of real velodrome ex-
^tt-.tloma.
i . Tbe dfTflopsnt f spe^d on tha
^c*tn« trainer -at:- doe? L.t, o! '
cowrve require ail those qualities of
headwora andactty a^d preser.ee cf
tniai wk 'IE-- ke ihampK>n of f
track'son:- thing f a hero Th« racing
Is redcce'i to the much sttnplMed art
of turning pe^s ur-l-r unvary rg . *-
ruartanv^ bat the percentage ot
^arteians who are wiliiag u siusby
armtt r weather, to a*, ept this stu.;<L^4
form of raclag as a goc-.i subeuuite for
a bicycle rae< «*enis to N' v ISctentir
large to uphold the financial end of the
dlvernca. and who shall say but what
the continuance ol such and sisal.ar
Sports during the off season stay bave
a conalders^ e efl«st to prt^tnt u«?
public interest in fcicyclrs and bicycle
racing fTcm iagalng afe« at other sea-
sons. In the United Stat* tbe laws
prohibiting gambling and pool r& mi
would probably interfere *er o .sly
with the a!.p*i>n of a * r p'-
for. wfti the gaming oppo itity re-
al tt>fe her
ta Eur
tits alrsady a:
: ultimately reac
I gr> trith th- bu
ceraaan ahrui
will gv to reti
the antipodes.
pon.the'inoxey
no* 'season
i may also
;oklng He
K depends
remark that
he makes
play the pta
i}or Taylor
r iy a gr^st
at k
The waggish
Bali %lll
the ta t that
aad Z:m-
all. During
sarceaafal.
ratatlsn In
them angriij
IVMD.
marching ar
OS Ang* as
ia:ors. Iter
teacher •
>nld never
But." be i
to
'*« of ih.s ren.ark lies la
leriioa could not play at
rehearsal of the Rlen-
Dresd^a the trombones
In««'ead of rebuhtof
he said, with a '.aug'.
re ar- in Premie a. not
ind the walls of Jeri-
mF • ' ii'tb note,
aa-.: that th S.tg
Star' was wrongly har-
sh ou'.a be &cbstit.ned
Should apprtcUt* Cyri# Pttki
Jus'i.e Nash of Rc-chester. reoea'.y
returned a verdict in favor of the de-
fendant in an action brought by Wil-
liam Fair again.-: Fard Covtll. for
}T 500 damagf? for injur tee he claimed
to have received by beiag run tfewt
by a team driven by the defeadact
rear Brocapert. ia September. lai>i-
The defease preved that there was a
sldepath for bicycles at the place wbera
the accident occurred an^ that Fair
instated upon riding la the street,
even though It was crewded with
teaa*s returning frcsa the county fair
at the time. Contributory negligence
on the part of th* plaintiff wis aet
up The decision of Justice Nash,
while not favorab.e to tbe wheelman
is looked upon by all aa just and reas-
onable.
ORLAKT>"> STEVENS.
He as
er N
r*tu to C#1 ftoar Rv«ril
T 4 r giving ip h..- record break1 ng
ittecpts In Washington to ride his
r
y Orlando
i day this
•Ida cttm-
umt year
P-t i
CtpIo P tas la Aeitnl^
The cycle path a cement is grow-
ing in Melbourne More than $1 :•
has been collected and a lot more
promised toward lay ng a path from
Me'V me to Sorrea'o. a portion of
which is alrea-iy comp'.e'ed. This wilt
form the nucleus of a fund tc whl<*h
the gei. ra'. b^dy rf Victorian wheel-
men will be asked to contribute The
committee has be n gu 4e-i by the
movement in America and will. In ad-
dition to the Sorrento route, and a«
funds permit construct paths to other
pep* ar cycling res.ra Tc aaslst the
rr. A -- Ag -r „ y
cf MeihMrne has presented a bleycle
wbich wi'-' *e drawn for by subscrib-
ers of twenty-fo'i- *ents and upward.
Rl, ktrdloi'f Pr*|r««« Arr u 4 a««t-« U
Surprising news l« to hand regard-
ing Rjchardeoa s progress across the
r-eter of Australia. The last aews re-
reived from h.m was from
Powell s creek, on the overland
rnMe route, about the end of Septem-
ber. He was then setting out alone to
croes a 400-mile stretch of wild and
fcurren country. Recently the Dunlop
Tire Oo. received a dispatch from Nor-
tnanton. at the baso of the Gulf of
Carpentaria, announcing his aafe ar-
rival. Richardson has now accom-
plished the worst part of his under-
taking. and the success of his plucky
and lonely ride is assured.
Aoitrallani r.rowlnc GIooibt.
Is racing doomed? asks the Austra-
lian Cyclist, prompted to the query by
a recent meet of the New South Wales
League, at which the "attendance was
approximately 4.000." In the United
States we are inclined to look upon a
gate of 4 000 admissions as an evidence
of a revival of Interest in the sport,
but "everything is different down un-
der." and anything short of 10,000 is
a disappointment to the antipodeans.
who at once begin to cast about for
reasons and a remedy.
i
Tho Ice-Cyrlo Again.
The Illustration herewith presents
the appearance of the Ice-Cycle at-
tachment as manufactured by a Wis-
consin concern, attached to a bicycle
and ready for us«. The attachment
comprises a rimless rear wheel with
radial dogs for gaining a traveling
hold on the ice. a single runner for the
steering wheel, and a set of double
supporting runners and frame for the
rear wheel. While there has never
been any great amount of ire-cycling
as a sport in this country, the company
are confident that the many attrac-
tra-l?. two attempts were rejliy
made, and both failed on account of
.accidents to the pacing machine. The
machine was steered by Austin Crooks,
with Fournier, the Frenchman and in-
ventor. working the machinery, and
Mosher holding down the rear s-at.
Thf first attempt was started a few
minutes after 3 o'clock, and after five
miles of steady riding the gear of the
triplet became diaarranged.
The second attempt was made about
half an hour later. The pacing ma-
chine* worked smoothly and the rider
followed exceedingly well. The nine-
teenth mile was passed and the rider
was only half a minute behind his rec-
ord. and riding easily, when, on the
first lap of the twentieth mile, the
chain on the triplet broke. It was
then too late for another attempt
When he quit he was easily within his
schedule, which called for an even rate
of speed for two-thirds of the time be-
tween 1:37 and 1 38 for the mile. Af-
ter fifty minutes he was to have been
pushed harder.
riannln« More CotUenm*.
I"pen the understanding that the N.
C. A. is to establish a circuit upon the
basi* of the National Baseball League.
C. Rosa Kloaterman of the Coliseum
Co f Baltimore, has secured fran-
chises for a track in Washington and
one in Atlantic City. The Coliseum
Company waa one of the strongest sup-
porters of the N C A. in its fight
against the L A. W and is getting ia
early. Tbe Atlantic City Coliseum is
to be a six-Lap. built near one of tbe
popular sections of the board walk-
The site for the Washington track has
been secured. The s< h^me of the N
C. A. is to grant franchises in the vari-
ous cities after tbe fashion of the
baseball clubs. A me-ting of the track
owners is to be held ia New York Feb-
ruary 1. to develop the plans and
frame regulations for the sport, after
which a schedule is to be arranged.
BEST BOOKS
FOR A SONG
We j?ive 70u your pick at the wholesale price. Our UNIVERSAL
LIBK2 4RY of paper-covered novels contains the best wx^Ts of the most
noted novelists and writers of merit, and beinff publjst-^in neat and attrac.
tive style and at a low price, leaders will find it^" e most satisfactory in tho
market. Price, lO cent*, postpaid to any oddrcaai three for 23
cents, postpaid. Order by number, >-3mln$ "Universal Library."
7 !.-.zy Thougtsts of a Lazy Girl.—
tions It offers as a pastime will create
In the near future a goodly demand for
auch machines.
Tho Intent Wm Good.
Charles E. Shaw, a bicycle dealer of
Frankfort. Ind. was arrested recently
for riding without a light, and was
found guilty and fined by the mayor.
He appealed the case and demanded a
trial by jury, by which he was ac-
quitted, having proved that when he
left his place of business his lamp was
trimmed and burning The Jury held
that he had exercis-d due care In
obeying the spirit of the ordinance.
Admired Arabian Hnnr*
1 One of the most eut'auslaatic admir-
ers of the Arab horee was the late
Abbas Pasha, viceroy of Egypt from
, ! 4S to 1864. As a child Abbas had
! lived in the desert, and his religious
.reed was another tie with the great
borse-brecding people of tie east. His
r^al in collecting Arab stallions and
marcs amounted altnoe; to a mania,
-ad his agents paid auch prices for
animals of the best strain that long
after he died Abbas Paaha s name was
remembered with watering mouths by
the Bedouin. At one time the viceroy
bad u as a thousand Arabs in
hl3 stud In 1160 the remaant of it
was scli by auction at Cairo, but at
this date it consisted of only about 3e
I hcrces The sale occupied three weeks
—or waa spread over that period—and
was probably the largest collection of
Arabs ever sold at on* time. Colts and
fiilies brought from 3W to 700 guineas,
brood mare# 20 years ok! brought from
IfO to 250 guineas, and at one day s
sale twenty-s>x lots were sold for an
aggregate of 5.000 guineas.
1 Abbe Conwtantln — Ha levy.
2 Adventures of a Brownie.—Mulock.
3 A Good Fight.—Charles Read-.
4 Alice in Wonderland.—Carroll. ^
6 Allan s Wife.—H. RMt Hacgard.
6 Amer.can Notes— Rudvard Kip.lng.
1 Annie Grey, a Novel.—
i As in a LookJng-Gla -
F C. Phillips.
® At the Green Dragon.—
Boat rice Harradeo.
10 Aunt Diana.—Ro*a N. Carey.
11 Aunt Ursula's Misfortune.—Ohn~t.
12 Autobiography of a Thief.—
Prrarles Reade.
13 Averi'.—Rosa. N. Carey.
14 Bachelor's Dream. A —The Duchess
16 Besfcie the Bonnie Brier Bu«h —
Ian Maclaren.
16 P.ethrothed, T^ie.—Sir Walter Scott.
17 B«ele Jane Ward —
15 Beyond rhe City.—Doyle.
1J Blglow Papers.—Lowell.
20 Black Dwarf. The.—
Sir Walter Scott.
21 BUtheda!e Rotr.ance, Th".—
Nathaniel Hawtft->rae.
22 Bolivar Hornet.—Dr. M. L. Byrn.
23 Booties Children.—
John Strange Winter.
24 Britde of La.mmermoor.—
Sir Walter Scott.
25 Bryant's Poems.-
Wllliaan Cullen Bryant
26 Bulldog and Butterfly.—
David CliriMie Murray.
27 Burke, on the Sublime axid B-?aut«-
ful —
28 Cabin Boy. The —
Capt. L. C. Kingston. '
2? Called Back.—Hugh Conway.
SO Carwile.—Alexar.leT Dumas.
J1 Cardtnal Richelieu, as He Appears
In the Play.Bulwtr Lytton.
S? Castle Dangerous.—Sir Walter Sco t
33 Obaxtofft- Templa—Mrs. Rowson.
34 Choice Selections for Speak.ng aj:d
Readint
35 Chris — W. E. Norrt*.
36 Clemen?eau Case. The —Dumas.
37 Clerk Barton's Crime.—St?..e Pen.
3S Clouds ar.d Sunshine.—
Charles Reade.
39 Coming Race. The —
Bulwer Lyttcn.
40 Confessions of a Publ.sfter.—
John Strange Winter.
41 Cook's Voyage Around the W. d.
42 Courting of Dinah Shadd —
Rudyard Klp'.ins:
43 Cricket on the Hearth. The
Charles Dickene.
44 Crown of £Jhaene. A.
rxy
Jenny .Wren.
7 • legend of Montroee, A.—
61 r Walter Soott.
SO Life and A ventures of aa Arkan-
sas Doctor.— -4**
81 Light That Palled. The.—
Rudyard Kipling*
£2 Llse Tavern ier —Daudet.
85 Lowell s Poem? ■*
S3 Longfellow's Poems.— / i* r
Henry Wad--worth Lonpfellow.
84 Love's Cruel Enigma.—Bourget.
85 Lowell's Poems.—
James Russell Lowell.
SO Loys, Lord Bcrreaford —
The Duchom.
87 Marriage at Sea, A —
W. Clark RuasslL
8S Mas'er of Ballantrae —
R. L. Stevenson.
89 Merle's Crusade —li-^a N. Carey.
IKi Mine Own People.—
Rudyard Piplln?.
91 Misadventures of John N cholson.—
R. L. Stevenson.
92 Ml.-" Ibosejr*! Ixiver.-tC. K. Braema
92 1! r .. as t" ir. ;i in the Cslebraietf
PUy.—Bul-.v?r Lytton.
94 Mcrphine, a Novel.—
Dubut De LaF^lPst.
Stan'.c-y Huntiey,
9« My Husband and I.—Leon Tolstoi.
97 Nelson. Life of.—Allen. , y
98 Olver Twist.—Dick cm.
90 On IIor Wedding Ifcrn —
C. M. Bnimi.
100 Only an Ir-sh Girl.—The Duohesa.
101 Our Beme.—Rom N. Carey.
Paul an.l V'rcinla.— Sa nt Pi -re.
F--5 Wofflngton.—Charles Reade.
104 Phantom 'Rickshaw.—
Rudyard Kiplinj,
1AS Piccadilly Puzzle.—Hume.
106 Pierre ? ?oul —Ohnet.
107 Plain Tales from 'he Hills —
Rudyard K;pdm.
10! Foe's PoetVal W.:-rk«
Kdgan Allen Poe
109 Pride of the Paddock —
Hawley Smart.
110 Rah ar.d H s FV*ends. —Brown.'
I i Bdged RamMaa.—
Dr. M. L. Byr*.
112 Rassela? —Samuel Johnson.
113 Rattlehead's Travels —
Dr M. L Byrn.
114 Representative Men.—Emerson.
115 Romeo and Juliet, a Tale of Twj
T«>ung Fivils.—William Black.
X -r
Sort of Cp-io-DiU M reppa.
A boy named Veasy having escaped
frcm the workhov.^ it Hinckley, Lei-
cestershire England, the porter was
ordered to proceed to Stanton a neish-
loriag village, and bring him back.
Tte porter went to Stanton on a bi-
cycle atl Cnd:ng the lad tied both his
arms wtth a rop^- and attaching the
end of :t to his bicycle, dragced him
back to Hinckley the r:ar. riding at
gc-ed speed. The aSasr has created a
creat sensation in the district, and a:
tke recent raeetlrg of the Hinckley
gugrdians the hoard expressed Its
strong cord mnat c8 of the porter's
cosdnet. One ajea ber of the board
said the boy was exhausted by the
t-*atjneat meted out to him. At the
•• *s- partsr*! nalpii ta was
•enderei and a'cepted the man's ex-
planation for resigning being that he
i it* care for the treatment he re-
• Te4 from the vagrants—New York
Press.
45 Cyrano de
4< Dee/h of Ivan Iiutrh —Leon T *~cr.
47 Derrick Vaughan —E4na Lyail
4< Dolly Dtalogne* — Anthony Hope.
4* Doom.—Juitin H MflCarthy*
60 Dr. Jeckyli and Mr Hyde.—
R. L. Stevenw>n.
61 Dr T^aenenn.—Oer r* - Ohnet.
62 Drtmrr.ond s Addresee*
(3 Elisabeth, or the "f SVti
—Madame Cot'.in.
64 Bmenoo's E*-ays —
Ralph Waldo Emerson.
R? E*eher —Rosa N «."Varey.
66 Evangeline, a Tale of Ar--ad " —
Henry Wadsworrh Longfellow.
6" Fatal Marriage. Th".—
E. M. F.rar«*wi-
65 Fog Prtr.n«e<i — Fh>rence Warden.
63 Forging the Feeter* —
Mrs A>exander.
CO T>w Her Sake —The Dutchess.
61 GrantMwher'a 'ha r —
Nathaniel Hawthcrne
<2 Har.dy Reliable Cook Book. The —
Mrs. Warren.
IJ Hatmted House, The —
Bulwer Lytton.
64 Her Only Sin.—C. M Braeme.
ti Hiawatha —H W L^-rf« ~
6? Highways of Literat r Frj-de.
6" History of France -Tonge
6« History nr Germany.—'T nge.
ti House of the S v r. Osb>s T>e—
Nathan >e 1 Ha w i h • me.
TO Idyll of Loodcr. An
Beatri.*e Harraden.
TI In Black and White —
Rudyard Kip Ing.
T2 Irene: or, Deach B- K n B i". v. - - -
Mra. B F Bae;
TS Jack of All Trades a Matter -f
Fact Romanre —Charles Reade.
T4 Jean de Kerdren —
Jeanne Sctri"x.
75 Knightsbridge Mj«ter>- —
Charles Rea-ie.
TI Lady c4 Lyons, The —
Bulwer Lyfoc.
T7 Lady cf the Lake.—S^ott.
llc Shppho.— Daudet.
11" Iy t*T. Th-—TTaw^h«rne.
11? Sv" dow of a Sin.—C. y. Breeme.
Florence Msrrya . 119 Ship? That Pas-11 in ve N ght.-
■ac—Rostand. P trie! Harraden.
120 Sv pllf*^r The.—Ge-rg'- Ohnet.
121 ?',-r f the F~ur T> yte.
1.2 S le-« Thr-e —R i.lyard Kipling.
123 Sorg of the S'R-on. The.
George Ohnet.
12' Snow Image Th-- —Hawth«>rne.
125 Stabbed in the Dark -
Mr E Lyim Lyft*m.
12? ?t^r>- of '.he Wedding Rir.e. The-*
r. M. Braeme.
127 S:udy In Scarle* —D yle.
12S Surgeon's Daughter The —
Sir Wtiter « ?o"t.
1^1 Sweet 1s Tra* Love —The Duchess.
- v . - Lavender -A W rfer.o
ri T > of T Lions —Hnggard
1*2 T il =!xsn Th" Sts Wa? xr Seott.
133 Tang lew ood Tales.—Hawthorne.
134 Ten N ghtd jh a Bar P. ■om.-
T P. Arthur.
13? *nh P*wr. ■"«—Sirs T5w'.ng.
136 Through the Locking-Glaas.—
Oarroll.
13" T4rr>e Shall T-v —'Th-^ Du-^hpoa.
138 Tom Brown's Sdh&-1 Djy-.—
Thcnnaa Hugh«Bt
129 Tour of *he Word In S? T>^,ys —
ibKsome <llrl. A —The Duche£fcw
T>Vd Ti!«—Hawraorne.
Orphan.—D'Entwry
mn-.eirciai Trailer.—Diekeaa
?e D ,-oitara—KJpltng.
: s of a Wife Hunter —
Dr M. L ByTtU.
" • e WinJet —Kipling.
-der Book f- r Girls and I j? —
Nathan M Haw?h fm.
>--d;e'irh Orange—C. M Brrwne.
ork itta Ye Bavattt Lig*>t.—
Leon Token.
Grid's Desire The —
H R i r F-rr>rd an.J
Andrew Lang
orr of the Ocdsbje.—Kiz'Ma*
.■>-ben. :■ The Hetkly State Capital, re-
in all) to us diredt— not 'h-ou.rh agenw*—wa
Tli* Pnrtttad* f an laSian Vathar.
The f,-"owing incident m the native
warfare of India is relate1. Allaaad.
a r.itlve ch:e* belnr baff'd In the
siege of a fortress aad enraged at the
failure of h:s w^U-planned measures,
•-a-: the -•■b of *>.? t .'.adar or war-
den wc had fallen into ale handa.
before the *aiis and aummised tke
garrison to surrender Give up the
k*ya he sbouted to the warden, or
your sen s head shall be cut off The
intrepid wa-den repilfd If I lose my
son I can g*t asctker. bet honor lost
1a neither *o be recovered nor re-
p'.acad Th-s no * eyee-h is related
with as ax4, pr.de to this day
upon tne horde* but it fouad no e*ho
then in the - ■ riar and vindtctive
heart of ▲ *4* 2 Sinks' he cried
to the gnarda and the ycjth head
ra «d .n th« da t before kts fathers
eyes A * s* from the garrison re-
plied to this atrocious act but Alladad
^re athed akd having plun-
dered and f red the town retired to the
kllli as rar- * 7 as he had -*otae
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1900, newspaper, May 10, 1900; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124112/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.