The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 246, Ed. 2 Saturday, February 2, 1901 Page: 2 of 8
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10
WILL KING FORGIVE AND FORGET
®
When Young Wetmore Goes to England as Member of
United States Special Coronation Embassy.
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITATj, PT'NDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, inns.
THE STORY OF
THE CITY DAILY
(Continued from Pago Mine.)
CORSET WEARERS
Law Proposed Against
Thera in France.
"CTMMOS OF Tliro COm'E IV
maud for advertising space. It aomHlme*
hapi'Cns that $ 5,UK) will be taken in from
adverting lu.d nnes o; pi|« s i i^.niHr
for a single Sunday. The in-t;ik«> from
advertising alone in n Sun-lay special
nuini. 'r i.ujj g Ha beyond $30,000 m «t le.ift
three newspaper offices In New )ik.
Il If were not for the*e great Sunday
pnpera the prof'ts fo cvo-y la g- u ws
paper of N(w Y, rk would be . Imo*, wip vi
nui .11 several matan es whol y wiped
out. The rnornng and evening editions of-
ten do not pay for themselves. The com-
mercial value is in a large m^imir> the r
influence upon th<- circulation una profits
of the Sunday intpcv. And lor .hat they
are Indispensable.
Assuming that tho circulation e.t>oul
tni'i-tb the white paper b l.s, ihers re-
mains, in not t« o round numbers. V<f. 00
a wtok, of Income for alve e'sr..', m iv
is expended upon the making j' ihe j.n-
i>er—upon the tethering of matorili and
the us< of tna; h m ry r.r ih • Ink-Imp-cs-
slons on these mlleu upon tnlies and tons
upon tons of paper.
The lurge.st it: ms of expenditure are
the commereal and m* ch a rue t:--jiOUf a
week for the business ottict, llJOO for tho
sterotyplng department, *l,.,<y) for the ,
pru: room, fo cable and Ulegtapn, !
fe.OOu lor crculaton dt ;. trtrnent, S7,v.v> for
the composng room, etc. In all, perhaps I
$15,00o to JS.uO or a week will uc
spent In these ways.
"Incidentals," under that K'neral head to what tMs dixstor torrni^
are such Items as $iiu,uou to jaw.WK) a year ,lP tt^millnJ;'' * ***<* unm
lor postage. or womiainlho xl.
There .s no business In which skilled Dr. Majvehfc.1
labor Is so well paid. In the World, Jour- TSJn„., . , ,
nal and Herald establishments, for ex- ■'-ton woud no.* lead otn • to cou.v
mple, there Is not u grown man working of mere sonsatloniallam: yet th •
who gets less than 51,500 a year; | cftargKtt ttaait he brings :ig:ur.st the cor-
sets in a recent lecture
* ir>ru->Arfuui_i-l
hundred yrnin* tm., wV> wwir* r,rr-
In the yea aw th«t have cfcapsed si ce a®** oorly ti'.:i'irty reitndn perfect heallth.
Catherine de M*pdlc4 Introduced corsets *^e 'aw Mar-chad !sa e n-
iffiitio lOita/noe. ii.fclirlam otf the ai't.cle and t*aivoiIng" to ihavo pafsvd la divided In-
of >the we*nu*n wearing It has not been to ree articles. A tic e 1 forbid* any
lurking-. Indeed. H wus n >t long after under -ti .Irty to wear n oow,
tllie deo/.Qi of Catherine wifren a wie-
bit ited Pretuch tav rv give the pubHc a
Ketnuro In- hts dllessnctlng troctn at the
Hoitiel Dleai to demorn«t.u e tlhe "crimn;"
o«f WhJdh f.ihe coittt' watt gujlty. T
JeotUTKa raised jtjucIi cUfl'Uf don ft the
time, amd ;hey ptirhap", and not corjutt-
ry end «tiw fnrminlne love of < li«.i riff;,
j were re^pon -i )e for the loos?, llo itin,?
lin^w of ifrje W itl'ie u p'lea.t, or, a ce ti-
ury laftwwiard, flor tlhe &> itumeB of t..e
Dinoc tJotre.
Now. arKiti' <?"" ocolb ",trd Fveno>i d c
toa* ha/? reiturn.1 d to tih>e charge, and. not
coailtiend wio>) l "•':,uir8ng end de:no*.,9tra
Inig tlhe e'.-tfita of c*>n?e ts h ns go- e ro fa
ns to fcirm a bill wth-eh it is lut int n-
t.'ofn "to ptreferJt ito the chamber and
whlitc<h, In tihe oase af Iti- b-ec .mlng
of u.ny dftveriptian. Apy woman con-
verted c;f ('Kj1(rjg so clhfedll be punished by
three months' Imprisonment, if th*«
delinquent Mhoud be a minor her pt-
"rJl* ov g^rdttiaois as weM a h a II De con-
duircned to pcuy a line of from 100 to
1,000 frames.
AititUde 2 perm/Us any wom#m ore*
tEiinry to vv«. r u.ny o mt she wshea.
Artk/ie 3 provides for Hhe m st vigor-
ous foiynlaUti s uri ..untilng the rrv.inu-
factui'lng ti.iwl sale of oorsets. Kve y
one 11« u-inacid 'to «V'fl carsois s!'taill be
obfltged to 'take the name and addre^a
tunid age of cvo. y buyer, fnd sthaj^ be
subject to fine and confiscation of bus
Jnie«s In rase <vT ilQeg-ail sole.
Altlhooigih Dr. M-arechal asks thart lr*
icAiat-lon sham cnJy t:ike c gnizaroe of
LONDON LIKES WHITELAW REID
law, would mi st enwiufty put "slop , to'S «" prfe^' ^'js by ""
~ ,1 | to t t0ip t/!iei e On. his desdr^e for droits re
"t'iie citinve
T Rinrr Krtward wlirni? to oridlcnt"
'■"th"; "uVft M "tat1";,6,' c""? "ur,nK hl" ll,e Um"
f. Tho appu mm ,t St y, J"v S ' B It """"T, "f k"k' > "'1 tM
This Is the Interest
country.
t.ho king'
•oon olve tho iutcirctfting point.
an old mid ce and forrret Ms kingly vow
received in court during hi- "
BREAKING UP
A FAMILY
The agent of the charity orgarls itlo.ii
climbed1 flight atfter flight i>f greasy
stairs, fihe was led on her way by a
faint, despairing wail, growing ever
loaider as phe approached Its FH unce.
This wall, coining in gasping sobs, had
attracted her fioan the «pe ifii- er ani
that le<l her Into the tern ment house.
She 'listened to it with knl orows, and
hen begaai' to move toward It.
"What Is the baby crying like that
for?" a.«ktd a fat wonvin who stood
to the doorway of her apartments as
tM agent parsed.
"Dunno", readied the fat woman,
Stolidly. "Cried uk nlfe'tot same way."
When she opened the door which let
her Uito the presence of the wall, the
*#enl miw one of those squalid roonw
of the very poor that baffle descrlptiOM.
TUe plaatered walls were black yet.
upon them hung various pictures a!
mn&t inojstin-guishabje from their
fnani^B by reason of the dirt that cjv-
ered them. The boards of the llooi
•were invitilbic; heaps of old clothing.
fouil and rotting, were strewed b ut
A little boy of G years his crippleu
shoulders up between his earf. his elt
like eyes shining arge In his aged lit-
tle fox:e, Siit silently watching. A
gaiunt, haggard1 girl of eight was hold-
Inu the wailing baby and up and I took
One Day Out of the Life
of a Charity Organiza-
tion Agent.
*iri-*irn'llVLAJ>JL
the luther worked. There she had to
find the foreman, and get permission
tor t\e man to acei ni|iany her. Th v
went fc'iuk to Llie tenem nt. wjie e
tliey found the ambulance, a physician
and tivo policemen awaiting t .em
lihey weoit up to the room, crowd-
ing the miserable Utile apir.ment
when they were nil in. Then tho task
of persuading the omthrr b 'gin. Tiio
•husband seemed to have no Influence
"He d*) bent her and knnck her
around fearfu ly when he gets drunk."
said Uie fat \Von«an. who held folio we 1
the pro e slon, and woa lookii g 00
with client ititerest. "It were h. wot
stepped on the little fuMer and crip-
pled 'lm, wen he wor a b. by."
But the girl. Annie, rnnv came out
strong,
"Mother, mother." she pleaded in
tones a most as frenzied as the wo
man s: "you must let us go with the
lady. Oh. d« let us go w.th the hdy
You know we're cold nil ihe lime. You
konw we re hungry all the time. Yo
kmnv you nan't take care of us. oil
you must let us go."
The welrdness of this child, rea izlni
like a mature pers m. the necessity o
"breaking up the family, was s.vd I
look upon.
Then Annie changed hc-r tone. She
ftw «.e narrow room V WmT j i^erT^^eT^ey"" ""
"Now you go and sit down there,"
eyed woman who wrung her handa and
imatterpd to h rself.
"Mad a March hare", remarked
the ch'aj-lty organization ag«nt who
miss also a trained nurse. She ex.ru-
ined the baby. The poor lltt e w e«Ch
pave forth a drea<lful cry with every
breath. She found Its back and limb1?
covered w!,th blisters.
"How did the child get burned?" sh
asked.
"Totminry had to mind h!m last night
and he dropped him on |ho stove," te
plied the girl apathetically.
Toanmy was the Are r#«r old crlpp>.
The C. O. S arent took the m ther's
hand, and sold gently and soothingly;
"I'm got oik to send for au amhul ncv
to take the t>aby to the hospital. Then
yo'H send the other childr en to a good
home, and we 11 take you somewhere
where you <-an have good care and get
well. I Fee you are sick."
Instantly a tempest raged in the
room, the erased woman seized the
baby, and pressing it tightly to her
breast, stnode up and d own the room.
iSeolaring that It should never be tali-
en from her; that she would not b«*
separated from her children. Her
frensied clasp caused the sufferl-g
child the -most exquisite torture and
his cries became more heartrending.
The C. O. P. agent argued, pie tied
begged t&_no
she said sternly; "you st p that
screaming and go sit down there and
KPep .still amd behave yourself. Aren't
you ashamed of yourself?"
This child of eight had been forced
"to live with this crazy woman and
protect, the younger children, and s. e
had learned her leason well.
Eventually the gasping baby was
taken away and sent to the Post Grad
uate Hospital. The the C. O. 8, agvni
breathed more freely. Those gasps
had worn on her nerves a little.
Meanwhile the agent hid telephone
to her district office, and Instructed
her assistant to go down to the chil-
dren's court and get Mr. Bauer to com-
mit the girl, Annie, to one of the 01-
phan asylums subsidized by the city
The assistant no warived wi h the ca-
pers from the court, and was Intrusted
with the task of taking Annie to the
asylum, where she would not be 'Volu
all the time and hungry all th * tim^".
The Orthopaedic Hospital had b en
communicated with, too and the pe -
p e there consented to take in the crip-
pled child* on the chance of d^ln-
something to modify his deformity'!
I^ast of all. the mother was car 1 d
away to Betlevue, resisting era si I y ev-
ery Btep of the way. One of the police
men was a big sympathetic man. and
in th.-
full tlrrr
und many of them get ♦J.iWU, and
$3,iK)0 a y«-ur. Pressmen, at r<'utyp<*ra, eom-
posltoru, all uru backed by strong unions
which are nltelllgently managed, in the
nia.n, and not oniy know what they want
and what they can venture to demand but
uifjo how t demand It. A newspaper must
come out every day; these particular tu-ws
papers must come out every few hours.
JUid they must have Intelligent ev-m in
the purely mchanlcal departments.
I'or example, It will make a vast differ-
ence In the sale of a paper whether It
be clearly printed or not; and that point
depends ususally ujion the way paper and
Ink are fed into the presseu. An Incom-
petent press room force would wreck a big
newspaper In six months.
Three facta or group of facts will, per-
haps, glvo u better Idea of the proportions
of the mechanical department of a news
paper than would detailed description.
r Irst: The press room of any of tii^se
biggest newspapers has a capacity of 750.-
uuu eight page papers an hour—printed
cut foldi d. counted, ready for the mail
and dellvehry rooms.
Second: One hundred tons of metal are
kept in stock for making the stereotyped
cyllnorlcal plates from whlcm the th< pap-
er is printed. Seventy tons of metnl are
used for making these plates for the Sun-
day paper. In printing that paper alone
I no less than 1400 plates ure used, each
| weighing about 50 pounds.
Third: Each of the very big "New York
newspapers publishes on Sunday enougn
papers to make a weight of from 200 to
tons; und about 30 extra large express
ears leave New York every Sunday morn-
IriK before dawn with upwards of Sou tons-
i,tou,U)0 pounds—of papt r for out of town
readrs of New York Sunday newspapers.
Of the $07,000 a week which we set out
to aeount for In a general ana necessary
Inexact way there remains between $18 (W)
and $25,000 a week- a million to a million
and aquarter a year. This sum Is expend-
ed upon the editorial and news deprtrnents
—in the salaries and expenses of reporters,
artists, correspondents, news editors, car-
toonlsts. editorial and feature writers.
1 he man of highest salary will probab-
'y lll£ 1S3,torlaI manager with his *15.-
ooo to $-o,0(M) a year or more. Then will
come the half dozen news editors with
!.rir "8S,Hlants, and an editorial editor
with his assistants—these with salaries
ranging from VOuu to a5,000 or Siti.tuKJ a
year. There will be one or two famous
cartoonists at $12,000 f. $15.WW, several ed-
itorial writers und correspondents of rep-
utation with salaries of $8,000 to $10,000.
linn there are the artists, reporters, copy
readers and feature writers who are paid
from *200 to $ 00 to $7ooo a veur. N\,t long
age> twenty of the principal editors and
writers and business office men of a one
pnt newspaper were assembled at a lun-
cheon. The business manager whose Hil-
ary was not far from $l* .00o a year.-whis-
pered to his neighbor that the "talent" at
that table was costing the proprietor $170 -
1 r, an averagi . ;• ban ir
live of the men of low-r salaries had been
absent the average would have been above
There are three separate stafTs—the
morning, the evening and the Sunday—the
last devoting Itself to getting out ftie Sun-
day supplement- the black and white r. a-
ture supplements, the magazine in cuors,
comic weekly In colors, sheet music,
games, etc. The morning and
ng stall's are sub-divided Into day and
night forces, these divisions persisting
throughout the establishment, Including
the business ofTiee and the various me-
chanical departments. In all, counting
the regular out of town correspondents
both abrooad and at home. there aie
about 40o persons regularly on the editor-
ial and news pay roll alone. And to these
must be added scores of retained eorns-
pondents—who can be called upon when
needed.
We now have noted In bare ont'lne the
colossal structure reared
r- pe:
form. He has a good tlea! to say
I the subject of li'gh he-Is und p ont"d
pmypjctian who^e toes, of tight gilnnnee ,n-nd 1 nig skirt*
In shont, he cftai'ms ■ifhat woman's dress
haf caused a fr. g^h Tu physical detexl
oration in the humon species.
_ , . He s coruvimcod tV.ajt <Kirs'"its h«t«i
m-re atrlngfrnt thm th e e,r u ter?d veils and various ether Items of the
St a;' !-^r-. feminine wardrobe are badL and has
Marec.haj. m k vs the come to the conclusion t'-.at worn n
artMil ti.nK os.scrtl.n, an I p e'ends u> | «CW unt be persuaded to <Jl c.ird thorn
beUi «t up by eita.tlatlca that out of a | they should be foreed to do *o,
COGHLAN PERSONA NON GRATA
I'hlldr
To Prince of Germany Because he "Hocked the Kaiser'
Once, at a Banquet--Hc is in Command of Navy Yard.
m
is
The apolntment o? Wh'telaw Held as special ambassador to represent th«
United States at the coming coronation o f King Edward, gives great satisfaction
In official and unofficial circles In England. Mr. Redd is much liked by our
neighbors across the sea on account of h is many persona! efforts to promote a bet-
ter understanding between the people of this country and England.
No Nead of Sneezing
if One Only Takes a
Care.
HOW 10 AVOID
CATCHINO COLD
A famous E-ngHrh doctor once "wrota tween 60 end TO d grees—p efei-ably
tr. the ljancj*t. A c'llly nan 1 a slcK nearer CO dfxr e« than 70 decreet*—one
aioin.' rr thilt is t.-ue ihe per rent g- must grin and bear It an I do what on«
of .nvalld# In the Ameilian publl: la can to oountfract the Injury Al le<ist
wmewhat appall ng. A New York d c- let the air be puiv F„,il a'lr I «-r*e
tor. when asked about his Hnglisn than a draught. Indeed if a man Is
confrere's 9tatem nt laughed, but guv in prime condition,
his indorsunumt. 1 not to harm him
"Of course th!at doesn't mean that ot thl.
every man who fel s co>ld is seriously
111." lie >aid; "but, as a matter of fact,
only very exceptional exposure is suf-
ficient excuse for a well man's suff?r>
Lrjg frc«m cold in any climate ito w ich
he Ih accustomed. If ord nary expo s-
ure in this climate can nuke a person
uncomfortably co d. there Is something
wrong with t. 'at person's physical con-
dition or clothing.
"Taking cold Isn't a nutter -of tem-
perature. It is a question of phyeioal
cortdltion. Fat gue causes more? colda
.than nil the draughts that blow. A
draught isn't gxvng to harm a min
whose nerves and circulation ure in
perfect tone. A :nm goes home, fag-
ged tarnd jaded at the end of the day.
J'e got".-* to an evening function .n
dress clothes, takes iberties with his
stomaich or nerves. He I; chilly, -takes
cold—and swears it was all a matter of
temperature or draught. If his blo-jd
was pure, his nerves steady and his di-
gestion good, -the temperature wouldn't
have affected him.
draught ought
<~>ne great physician
generation used to turn cold
droughts of
paitient'n body until ! e got t e patient
into a eond ti' n where he could ■ ndure
the cold current on hi- whole b dv
"Few persons unde-stand how des-
perately ti e skin ne ds v ■ .til t on. A
large majority of my jati nts, I verily
bel.eve. do nut exp se thejr whoe b d-
les to the ^ir once from Se* te h ?r to
June. Now. that is ridiculous. It
would be eulcideal for a per jn who
wasn't used t it to take off all his
clothes and loiter around In a ro>m
at ord nary temperature, but the t lug
may be done by degrees, and the body
needs an air bath at leas' once a da>,
if the skin Is tj do its duty by ti «
blood and nerves. For the same rea-
mm the skin must have its diily water
ba.th. I favor the coid plunge for few
persons. I think the warm tub buth
should be used sparingly, but a sponge
bath followed by vlgo ous frict'on, ev-
•rjftody should have oni § a day. ( old
water is preferable, but that, like t .u
air bath. m:.y be a matter of educst
"Quite aside from tile problem of tlon- Bathe one portion of
•ftrMLlV-aw bf^tln?®^^? T,1!1 wh0 «<•« «' MUl.e , -torm
asked to ,„5 :in active "art iT^^h^ r. eop' . n ^ fi.?,r,bl!bly not
:lon as commander of th. Brooklyn N y Y lhI -vi ni ,.;..ri ' J-''"
do so. it is believed that Coghlan la persona r~ • - y enUtus him
nder of th
believe
account of his uttoranc
"CC&CCCZ
When war finally came Rrgland
ready to press a c aim for all of L.
non grata In German circj
what we call co d.s, the ordinary sen-
«ations of cold seLd'om have an extern
al cause. Their cause Is Internal. T .«•
men and women who go shl.cring
along our streets in winter weather
ought no.t to be cold, axile:?s they have
some disease that --apj«4 s their chil I-
iittas. They think they c?.n remedy
matters by piling on heavy elothlrw.
It can t be done that way. Nat rally,
warm clothing will help to offset
the
body
f the
topld water, keeping the r<
body covered As the shoe
with habit, bare more of th • l ody at
one ti toe. When y u ar hardened t
exposure to air and tepid w te , grad-
ually lo^-er the temper .ture of the
water until you are taking a spunge
bath in cold water. That wo d spmgo
bath is a mlsn< m sr. i hate sj. nges.
They are germ and filth carriers. U-e
your hands, or better, a rough ash
low temper;!ture. but It wi.l not make '«* t,iat ^'11: create frlcti
MH! nan be
r^^VtSThieh'^f'T^:.1 lanf-but ahi-Bot o,,iy that .fit
i week days and four cents on Sundays I 0Hst rlvcr- This she tool: v;Ilh
vaail. Hh< understood j he kept savin* over and ovoV
at U Was ',,e*a'1 t0 take kindest tone:
eTe'i-
do wn to th* street, telephoned f r an
ambulance from the near-*st pay sta-
time.'
oon and the n sought the f.ctt.ry wii.7. a* carTr hoL.^"'
"BUG EATER'S"
GENEOICGV
and whose usefulness toit
«nded a few minutes aft
v«-ry stf'i> we have sen possibilities
ouh extravagance—a business manager,
by conceding to the manufacturer an
elphth of a eent a pound on wnlte rap. r.
rruy disrupt ihe finance for i venr; a eir-
culatlon manaKcrfi bv over-con-Menee may
■;' "d out too many papers and :ausa i )st'y
"returns" amounting easily to hundred*
or thousands of dollars a year.
Hut more dangerous to an instltutl m of
trus kind than extravasenc* is economv.
rhfre rrmrt. b. boldness. eagem.Ra to tat':t
risks. Indiff-renct to - xpen-ie, or th r«-
will be Inevitable leeline in 1 failure. So
It happens that In thesv newspaper of-
fices the pendulum is constantly swinging
sharply from reckless extrava*an< t >
panic stricken economy. One week
through special efTVrt on some new* fea-
ture, the telegraphic cable tolls will ri*e
from an nvera c of perhaps C2«X) to 11" o,
to tir>.oeo, oven to 120.000. Tb.« next week
a nrws editor will wast" hours In eount-
Ing and cutting the words or every tele-
gram he lends. Hut—we have now assem-
bled the plant, and are ready for the pro-
duct.
as river in a canoe made of a buffalo hide
" and was tak n p isoner by the F each
when he reached the Mississippi. in the
London cdtiion of I>u Fra'z. punish-
ed In a note and.-.'hriiucrnfwyp! 113-1 fl
ed in J7T4 the same facts as to Hnva d
are published in a note and lefe tn *
given to an official report of the gover-
n r of Virginia. The vi lt'of Howard
this time than the tentative and Spl" cfnZnt'lrch.lnfm !h*'V'
matlc English of r eht. tit e tion™d 1. thi ,.« • X !? ?■ ""
French^Indlan" w«Ul'*°S« Ob°lil ,'l' I " H e*P!t'rat",:' ,0 the r:'v«
In the ilfth year of h„ ? „B of^mish ^ ™ «.™
granted unto S.r R cha d Heath, h s
r> n't use iTie
s some pfojtlo
my
umpru
nurvhaser Is | Ui concealed determination of t lc 1.7
buys It At - the re^t when occasion offer d. T •
n'L'!"" I war wIth the Americans urset 11 uch
calculations, and shut Ergi.nd out of
the Mississippi river va ley fo e r.
There is nothing more
boiled bet
wash r
do. The thoughtless un
fully three-f urths decent people is beyond
hension.
"Take the matter of undeiwear.
That's right in line with the « old cure
discussing. Nino persons out
Jlled underwear next ti
a man warm If there is, as is u-uilly
the ease, some Internal reason why he
is oold.
"I belie-ve that
of our people wear too many lie vy
clo'hes In cold weather. They fee.
ccJd weather. They f el cold and t'i
only thing the think of doing ii to put
on another thickne a (ft flannel. Warm of ten w
Clothiw !« nil right, but ho-vy cl th- sk n. 1 adiinlt that laundry Ti is wo^d
Ii - Iwit. and the coid flttln? flan- keep many, save rlut.-rri' fr m
nels that are so universally worn are changi
an aloinination. They keep the *k n course.
from breathing and the moment the well v
- ..!«« «v <■ p
he colon
g every day, which 1:; th ideal
b t it l a i underwear may be
.... n til at eel between wn-, rina*« r
skin gets out of b oath the owner of advise kup.nf; tm, suits
the skin wil be cold, even if he wears Wear a suit one day
thick. It will be i
the next £
A lite; nate t
fhi.r.'nel and fur
the province of
SPANISH THE FIRST
TO SETTLE OKLAHOMA
(Continued from Tage Nins.)
pi r!v
who faced
I do not approve of the name of bug Frankly
eaters.' which i s e applied to my Ne-
hra«ka neiRhbors by the eistem p^ess.'
says Repren, ntatlvo Calderhead, ln con-
▼eraatlon with the Stntr- ('apitai vvaayi-
Ington correspondent. "It Is a atrar«e
name to m« J wonder if tha man who
uses It. Isn't mistaken." added this vet-
eran from tbe realm of Jay hawkers "I
will go over and Mr. Stuk, who Is
the orlvInaJ ponulist ^•on Nebraska If
tnot name of 'bug eaters' is not a mis
Homer "
rorthwlth Judge Calderhead crossed
the oenter aisle into thf enemy's coun-
trysnd addressed the portly Stark
Explained by Stark to
Webster Ballinger
i r> r> ii _ - .w_u-
the
It on th« west.
B
, , ,
a.olmti, came into i. ; ue of
hands of Dr. Daniel Ooxe. who was. in known
the opinion of the attorney general of
England, true own r of that provl ce n
the year of the d'ibervilie discovery.
169S.
Col Wood, of Virginia an Fn :lbh-
man claimel to have discovered at li -
ferent times, several of thf
going at once.
Put I: where
nt! ited In fresh a:r
den a se.ond suit,
sui's until both are
Allied. Then have 4 non deal. Thl-i
rule wil be w rih m i;rfo you—but
be BUie to h;mg the .-ulit you ate not
woarnns out in the trvin air. Don't
tu,l.'k.u a"'a>' In a dark close!.
"Wide wo are t.-ilklng bout under.
If not. he must offset It. a, far as dwIve^o'wamiTaura^vr^™"'
he can. by single end r ti ,nal mean., can w«Tr. Jtr aba S no
^eTh^li T,iti0n W"y have ««! in wwrlng flannrt '
Pt lsh hls bloo<l- Then he mu<( board. If all wool in n-at
not be ... fuw <"r gastronomic Indulgence and
Dt a g •aterjcu.t plain foeid
KuHmu""""1"" U* tury"'?I P«r -#y m no, we
b ythe middle
century. I n ti after
of hat cenury here
whether thpre rnlgh
stream running West.
yal.
• was p«?f ctl >
t the eighte nt t
e flrat quartei
is doubt a< t >
lie.
years' war left Her facing the M ssl-.slp. I branches of the Ohio river. t>r. Hani I
ast and the French. Coxe. who appears to have heen on r.f
grmt | have been called Baron
k as a
e skin
much light-weI.Tht -ilk und wool
mi. ft mt i . pure ml*tu,,e is quite as good. In cose
The fliat plunge into wintry air. person simply
'varm house, wil alwa-s make eiik is the ne
'V
It originated
In a peculiar
Back in 1R74
years a*o
9 Incident to A np ech
nd a the most active among the Eno '.ah - nn
doubt, rhe revolt of the color.i s is all who were urging the right or tivg « ,
that Prevented the; neat step m he de- oerupaney. claimed to hav. the evl-
ve.opment of the l-.mtllsh p<) icy for the denee, in the >h«pe of m p. of -h-
hart" h' i°f V°U!",ani ,That p,''05, ~untry. ehorm, Ihst KnKiihir.en l'ad
had heen clear,y Ind'e.itel a centu y "Cone uj. the M|.s:ertp-t to t , Veil--a
or more before th- Brl::eh line .each d or Muddy river, o-.he.-wl ceilej the
MIkou-I". and that an eapl,
el rf 111 had tiaveled from New F. Kl i d
st th ng; but most
the M i Issl
England from th
he Atlantic to t
outs t e al*'
Po.clfl
swarm of grasshoppers | ground that the dls o ery and posse
descended upon our fair state and fle- j slon of the eea coast w j thf isvove >
and posae>sion of the country and as ii
weil known he-grants to Virginia Con
nooeicut and ot. - r colonies were froir
"The name Im applied to us* *aome- ' °"am*nA^°u«. excIaJmeil oi.nn ,
• * m* 1 hA"^, (ow you have the history of the national intercourse, mak
hrimw. asters.' "
•s in the eaat,' answered Mr. Stark I luffirot f Si«
point ltO .e gue> w a; of 'he Arltaii'a
river, and reached New Vexi.
Cox e e'alrrs to have himself made <ll«
coverlea by sailing up the M|s«; si p
river in 1Thl-- wa® probably tie
English corvet-te met by Bienville at the
ocean to ocean It wa not so ely up n "Kn>r!l«h turn" These s utem . i
ti! h.°T"Ver«',ft °r' U Urlt,ln re:l"'' Dr- Coxe are found In his "Mm, .,.1 •„
I" h'r dlploam-c it uWle w tb Kinit 'AMI lam", fit are un uppirt.i
the French e put forward ela mi „ by .my other au'hor.'ty exce t t!.. fa t
-aiim 11~ i, t " d s^Vl ry ad tte cqui 'd by of the voyage up t • Y.\ s s'noi v- ei
.allroid trucks -Why Indian pu chase, t ut al of the e cl lm the doctor come In e>-ta t w ♦ h D n
l__«rurto.p- ! were ,o tllm., tha, ah, could nut, wit, Till, and m. de he 'Willi tuPn-
any reaard for the decenole, of Inter- There an En, Uh trKJUlon "at in
th. R, k « • , ■ , r,y 0:i® 1"*' John Howard crewfel the mo nt-
mtt"< bail "f • declaration al w*r. i aiaa of Vlr.lnia, went down the
out of
wrote „ book on the ...t^" SfV'S ^ and w^'u'an""
S S! SaS^Si?K ^ p«dVhe — -
"est for eighty day" w.th
of con,in* ;o th end. T
n'""-'nyh"„' ^«"u,J^tt1"yi,'r„1'tV': "' ,7 | "ln "M'r r, br n* aho-.it this hspnv
ru* P«ty ! until .,h„u, the middle of tho -ev"n ! 7'"(,IMo"- m " > ""« t"ke .are of his
" - *• nth century when the "re«rUnd " -: ! " his e)-c ,1 t
the and the blood wil
it r.ny aign^ j f«oe with a rush,
tl:>gllng glow.
>w bock fco the i
proelucing
spoiled everything Crops were ?Wrpt
away before the army of Insects a;:d the
people were left destitute. An appeal
went up foe- aid, and some of our e!i>-
U «t N.bra-k n . o:ir . «j ^;,.t t' pi a l
our cauan. One of tfTeae eloou nt c i ■
In a fl prbt f spe « h de n el t a;
the voracious grs ho: p re h v. . v n
-he tlrec off w g)n wheels ).n/l
enten
were devour!
our people have noth
per* and bugs, ^ was tne climax ot the
* Mr. 8t;irk
nr ni« 10 talIC n flef,nl:e and tangible exercis
ii. .'' I on 1P wapa of the world.
a™im?°of !l,nnS wfP/r" ohoaP en
I I,. Kn-ht's nf I'vthiis
at I,awton on tho <iih .if February.
T'I Reno hr.s pr.nted a street rall^tv
franchise to Henry I msen. This tn ki s
territory to have Ki-et
beauty of it U thst
plo
ity o
entilu
three cities In tin
car prospects. j,ne. .,v,
ihey all look genuine
A shoot nt ske -i
El T . no Democrat:
ter Watts.
p"l
hut that he will
Ob.ol H.'.J"no ,h"
body and enc ura/re
Pure air, wholes
fcrequcavt bathing
Hon of the skin, ani avol la^i
awolterlns clothes will put the aver-
age man where he can defy any wlnte
Wt-nth.r th-:. clmate e,n f-jrn h
his nose and flnfera do Ket cold t« m-
porarily In extreme cases, they wii.
warn, up qui/ i:iy and reneral prol ne-
ed chill.n.'ee will' he u.rikn n to hln,
| "Our hovttj rnd offices are t ho
I neoiie fmm the ; Q-' know tha 3o far .<j p lbl
vo chut poaunin- . we ahould rem«ly It; but. utir rtun
ta2Ly,.'t '",wfty y* t. «*pe
the poHtrnnsti r ..f I ! J: . «-P rfcmsnt house or office
H-xt four yenrs K he i nmldlng. When one can't keep the
« <t«nim< natura do*m to lOme .point be-
ra of he ;t.
which ths
9 by gre^it effort and car-
ry It away fnm t e body . ftaw: as It
Is pitroiped up. Wool, being a poor con-
ductor, el.ows the b dy to pre® rve Its
warmth for its own purposes.
1 ■■ ently it • • srsi n tthem ettleg
a most sensible ""llati has been adopted
for ti e por« e;nen In winter a p 11 -e-
n.an Instead of putting on woolen un-
derwear a fo;>t thick, wears two full
nults of very light weight wioen un-
derwear. The ld-!'i h b sod o . scler.-
If1 tiflc f^ct and has worked most suoces#-
fully. The two light, loose suits allow
fretly and ujafet
tliorough skin ven-i-'ation a porolb 1 ty
wltlig rsatiy Inc-sised cold resl tan.^
nr. a rwpilt, T myself hnve adopted tht
Idea and find It edinl ;«1. I onn't say
mough ftgadnit tht e! ng. tlght-ft lng.
ribbed underwear that s ems s d *4r
to womar-klnd and is sinfully put t.pon
many children. It Is opposed to ail
pules of health and comfort."
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 246, Ed. 2 Saturday, February 2, 1901, newspaper, February 2, 1901; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124324/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.