The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 110, Ed. 2 Sunday, August 31, 1902 Page: 4 of 8
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12
Tlir OKLAHOMA >T.VTF. CAPITAL. -t \I.aV MORMN.. ATOTST ;.
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL.
By the State Capital Printing Company.
* FRANK H. GREER, Editor.
Sl'H>CKIPTION KATi S
r«.
ff. r*
* year by nistl • ••• ••••♦• • •
•: ,'t:- . IQ m ' I • • '
Jn-tl;.", Three nwntb* by mil &
1 v y, On mouth by mail
I*i*; y On- wvk by carrier ........ 15
We# icly. One year ^0
Weekl}, Six laonLu* •**
J HI; BIG RTPUBLIC AN MELTING
THAI OKLAHOMA CITY ENTERTAINED
In
>d there
ph in
witness "f the repnbliaar
right that ha* Iwu .toi
persons of" well-fed w *
ctlUena In the vast audlenre. There -nan
position. The peerlees position of the nat
eminent and general prosperity of the p<
position advocated liv those able orator
The condition of Oklahoma Territory
-hat " ' 1 roe^l at
re 1.1 hea. th - speeches of the gover-
i-e 'ur • ongre.-« iu OK'ahnrna an«l
auc ry for the su< cm* of the
at wad eloquent and well-founded,
ibly there was th* finger uP fate
position. Th«*re kbd the unan-
en. There was the unltui«*a< liable
■ --i' happy and pr'tspnrous
an rndwib'-raent of th* republican
on among nation*, th* good gov-
■ople are all endorsements of the
k at Oklahoma City.
<n Hi position of a->sur« d state-
The Railroad Cut
Until a wapon bridge is placed acrirs
the Harrison avenue out we will make
it pay you to ffo two or thrse block?
further to reach this store. Thia is
not a "cut rate" proposition, hut is
intended to meet the present handicap
to our buumeKto j> V > ^ >
1 WHEN YOU COME TO THE
STORE KINDLY MENTION
THIS * ADVERTISEMENT
The Eagle Drug Store
EDWARD NICHOLS, Proprietor
HARRISON AVENUE * > j * GUTHRIE, O. T.
To the Victor*.
I'll*. • vO**' U«*MW Will *<H/U mWll t a *
' K -r bud-ii.'.* grnltm !-• <-om lu
I A- - barn raor. .bout th*- lid*
Tluit taken at its flood must win.
I Tb* fair et *d. 'iw focitbuil ytmtb.
The n.od with HaUuiler I row
: u - ae-kei Iitt'-r l. wK truth.
Arr ait assembling there right now
Konie ha\> an Aim anil life m Real
To tiiese Uu; d«ya ar«* full of roll.
The threat bunch thatV in th.- deal
! Arc- beaky boye on training soil.
And wbfii the big day f ine* to «rown
The luro#-s of th. tt«-ld event*
Tlu f< low with the student s frown
Wlir look forlorn—Ilk* thirty rents.
A brave blonde young woman for. -
' ibly kissed a Greek god of a young muu
!St. Louis public street and h« haJ
h. r arrested boon a recovery fr«>-1
liU frigbt permitted Theu the udg^ i
u*ei ;> ruled tnat the bionde young wo-
man ha.-* a much rigid, to K1k t' "
Greek god young inan aa the ol.t • - :
man wan ♦*ntitle«i t«• klw ihe cow
There are other Monde youug women
on a hunt for the lireek god now and
he han palpitation ot the hear
Emperor William has put th ban
on ..heap weddingn H< has *- « a mini-
: mum limit of income fo rofHcars in
I hi-' army to marry on. It in about fif-
teen hundred dollars a year. Th* rul#*
looks lik'- nonsense at firs' but the j
j divorce court combination with modern
| extravagance indicates that there iw
| something in it. l/>ve in n <<ittas"
\e poetic but it takes mazuma t.. pay
! the butcher and the grower
mmmmi
i Renfro si..
DRUG STORE /
I l"1-
for SOFT DRINKS, the best;
for DRUGS, the best and cheapest:
tor GGARS. the finest in the land -,
for DRUGGISTS'S SUNDRIES, you
will make no mistake ;
for FINE SOAPS;
for HAMMOCKS and CROQUET j',
for TABLETS * EUtffK BOOKS;
for PRESCRIPTIONS of Pare Drugs.
hi «od at
the feptib
mm h dew
is
the hand* of the republican part
i«an party to be proud of—for the republican parly
red condition poaalble.
matter
!ia* mad*
for i
this |
In the happy condition of the huui ' t«adei of Oklahoma who have
their homes • -. r of any claim by the government the republican party
points with pride a* tt« direct accompliahment.
In the free schools that Lav. made the youngest territory in the nation
the beat educated the republiiar party of Oklahoma see their work.
In the magnificent school fi nd of th - territory Ik a lab<jr f patriotism
*i)r the iH-ople of coming generations by the republican party.
The whole . .ndition i- pica ing to ti - jMHjple The republ; ii meeting
: i Dkialioma City demonstrated that th** p.-oi give credit to the great re-
publican party for nil 'to- good hat ha* com* to GMMW ' ,r the jUs«t
recognition that i* her iImv. tln-v have laith in th- republlcgn party.
both employer and employed. What make* for tho real good of Ihe one
reacta for the real good of the other. It la just a question as to what real
good is.
The r«-biilu of giaapiug a<*lfisiine*s, no matter how th<> sigure out In
dollars and cents, cannot constitute the beKt results, it' a n:-I' hair takejsiik man
all a man's fortune for a pound of meat, he would lose not ouiy one cup
tomer but he would be barto->ng frlenda, happiness, self-esteem for a bit a,,'iUR
of gold.
Value received for value civrn should be the motio of ah busiuoss ti.>i-
: actions. If it does not obtai t some one is robbed. U is for both partP-d
to a transaction to understand that real honesty of action and design is
the only possible course in the Intimate relations of !abr- and capital- i>e-
tween the man who does the work and the man who has made it possible
for tho work to be profitable to both.
A pathetii instance of dn.«\" and
misplaced aoMcitude is noteil In Ne-
braska where a man who was ! oor
and in 111 health left t'je sUit> in f i-
ner that his wife, who was in love with
a man who had coin might secure a
divorce and marry .Mida* Then the
ommitted suicide. H hid
well made her a widow for an en-
lause in the first iostam
C. R. RENFRO,
2CX> VP. OKLAHOMA —OPP. POSTOFMCE
Tfiere will lie a prize offered at the
reunion of the .Strip openers for a
twenty thousand dollar beauty The
only difficulty in the premises is th>
great number ot such among th'
maids of the atrip couuiry. It is hoped
that th« pun-e will not have to T e di-
vided too much because of the inevit-
able tie.--
THE POLITICAL
POINT OF VIEW
THINK IT OVKK
Medford Patriot: Let tth.- vm
. w hours from Ills daily tusk
fair th.- tssiuoH of th. <:aint>'iigii •
th.* polld; and then l*-t him
>t th« ballot th;ii will imc •
ly In lieve- to hi '
In tin campaign that
I OH IHOGATf 10 fONORlSS
HON. B. S. McGUIRE.
I0G*\ tOtM^ RIPIIBIICAN llfKn
4. r«
•••
the
of the
for i-henlf.
CHA- I CABPtNTF.g.
For I'rob*:*- Jung?.
C. W. GOODRICH.
THI NATIONAL IRRIGATION CONGRHSS
THL CONDITION OF LABOR AT HOMH
AND ITS RELATION TO EMPLOYER
A BimIkIi expert in Iron uade conditions has mad* a report on an in-
vestigation of labor in the United States The report has not yet be.-n
publlahed in lufl but mm ii d it that ^ of deep interest has been given
publicity.
Mr Jean* .alls attention to the Idea thai the American workman works
harder than his British colleague, and sa>« tbis is uot strictly correcL
-They aie attentive and quid; in manipulating levers and similarly easy
work They are also much more desirous of getting tsit large quantities
than in England They are letter paid and more regular in their attend-
aii'• at the works loss of time through drinking hahitH or otherwise not
being tolerated. Mr. Sahiin In his eport says that "the American work-
man generally aspires to the higher graces of labor, leaving tin purely
manual labor to wikui.-u fioni other i-ountrio.. Thus it is." he says, thai
around American mast iiiiVp s the American i found In a very decided j
minority 11.- ma be a foreman, master tnechauic, blast engineer, loco- ;
motive driver or stove tender, but he will not work eighty-four hours per
week shoveling ore or wheeling scrap. For these duties are employed in J
th- South i!, * negroes aii'l at the m tJiern funuocs |mmifn-ants mostly
Iri.ih. Slavs or ltnliri!
* a til I lie <•••>! i-i i• V inc. Mi . Jeans ilc uti that the axei'gg.. \uu-rican j
workman, in i t «n th. ■ • ntials • . life, ,an live, mutatis mutandis, a-
cheaply as he . an Jive in the old country. Perhaps the most flattering view
of the report of the commission as a whole is that taken by the Ix>ndou
gtaUit in summariiing i' and calling ittMtion to tho import&u\je
or the human fa< tor It is all very well," says the Statist, "to admire the j
American plant the ingenuity of machine tools, the devices for saving labor
and so forth i 7 ar Mr. Snbin remarks in his special rei*>rt It is t^ t
the guns which win the battl- but the men who stand behind them " What
tht American a« ur« md honor- is the ability to do: a capacity in a man,
through h's own -auueity. nerve, enterprise and skill, to create and employ ;
a fortune Noboti> m above his work Everybody works, and for the
al..- . f v or!, and 'I r< ha '•••en pn.o td in America within a generation
an industrial potet tiality more wonderful and more to be feared than all the
'a. toni and machinery am! "j* ints* that the • workers have created.
It thi '11. '• hat At i' ii. an ..moi i.- not. more efficient, though it!
hefer pa 1 than ours, and that American manufacturing development)
, Uf. ti,. |,ti--.stent, unresting industry whicb once i-baracteiized the
U,,t.,n. hut toi v .. h trade uni.-ni.sin md athleti - have given an apparently
git .ving di t.i All the p1 porter--, how.-ver, m<mu struck with the stren- i
er
The harvester trust has iid a
lot of employes who nave been telling
MAY FIND MUCH WORK TO DO "" 1Th": ;riHI
aork in the wheat fields for a
According to schedttlue th • National Irrigation Congress will conveuo ,months eo« .1 yeir and ma.' • , i>"
to demonstrate th- gjod q : s .
in Colorado Springa on October ti for a four days' session Since the pass- ! t^,, machines they sold. It will be
age of the national Irrigation li w. however, the question has here an 1 there i sort of tompensation for the farm
been asked, Why should the cm.gross meet again at all? It is nr.- i th it
the object of its organization haf- now been accomplished, and th-u i* nov ;
lias no more work to do. That may in the main be true
seem that the passage of the irrigation law impose new duties and res-
ponsibilities on the niyi composing the congress that was so great an in-
fluence in securing that important legislation
A stock argument of the irrigation hill's opponents was that the appil-
• at ion of wteh a vast amount of public moneys to a work of this sort would
iime-
Montana has rushed iuto tii
but to xomo it wouM "*lu "f Pt>l,li. ity vvi.h an .-.im.;,! you-
vict to emulate the sad but giori >us
example of Mr. Tra< Th" Moptana
man wants to kill a deputy herifY
and then he will do the n ar ■- -mnf
gladly
Kansas iias scored another. I'p there
. fallow had a plaster bust of De-
open wide the door for fraud, abuses and wastefulness, and that it vouii ! nioBthenes. and. being careless allowed
be difficult to keep the public mind free of a suspicion thai, a big
was somewhere concealed in the thnlg. no matter how honest the admin-
istration of irrigation affairs might appear on the sur:
It 'o become scandalously soiled. His
1 attention being directed to the condi-
in view ot this lliQ" l1"' "ffl,;-v' l>"'",pj. " l,la,k
and labeled It Booker Washington,
ii is now Incumbent on the National Irrigation Congress, u seems to us, i
• nje
Hequently common.
to direct Is activities toward aiding the interior department in ever;- v.a ! it is announced that the customs offi-
posMible in the intelligtmt and effeciv- prosecution <*f the great work com- • iuls have trouble getting foreigners to
mltted to it. It should popularize the naional irrigation" idea and pr iv■■ ,tliey
. here is no such difficuliy in the case of
to the people that Its project was not a Job but an essentially w.se anu B..m.iaden Americans returning h i
honest one. The organization can do much In both these dlreciou.;. wltli i frtm a foreign tour.
cood results sure to follow. [
ill fan. <■ Hill! in the NuUouU Hom«.>«U.r of WasLiugtou ., .1 ma- , 11 " "Vw *'al",y '
patricians nose is a result 01 cu ture
tion that the i ot si bill ties 'or usefulness of the congress have only just i T|le kind with a red blosaom is :!so tin
, begun. Not one man in five hundred outside of tho arid region," it says, i product of culture The culture U e\
"realizes that the regeneration of arid America is beyond all doubt the most ' pensive, however, and the nose is cou
magnificent national question now before the American people," and it
cites these two ways in which the congress may become a liberal educator "
"It i^ not merely a question of adding to the nations' domain the le- .-
000.000 acres of arid land now as good as separated from it—more than fhis
has been done before—but It Is a question of making practicable the settling
of this area into very small irrigated farms and reating an agm ultural
population far more dense and wealthy than any large farming iiopuiation
now to be found in the United States • '* * Tho digging of a ship canal
to connect the oceans Is an undertaking fraught with jiotent liosaibiliti^s
t otlie United States and to he world, but it is not to be compared at this
time to the importance to America of the irrigation of her great afcree
of arid land. The rapid completion of that latter work means that instead
of supporting a scattered population as at present, < { some five million
jwople, the western half of the United State? will sustain fifty million citi-
zens in comfort and prosperity.
If it. will, the National Irrigation Congress may lav out for itself at tins tv.. ago, a hotel man and a newspaper
October- meeting a line of work that will ultimately prove it to be a great '' 'l"F ,)U' am' 'ou8ht
public benefactor. *
1 laht of thi
ballot, there are is-'i-s wl.l. ' Hp-i «
welfar.- nul that uf •' * >\
hlrii he in an inegrut i rt • if il.e
thousand vot>- it lir-nt eono^
n,re , about should :• iniri' ticket put in
Uple ' th.- fl«-Id, will b.-t. r-it. ri... "U
,l,i„ delates to Ihi 1 In r. th. th *
' all Important and '
' to he .I -ated. llu: t> th. .;,<•' Hi
th n uppermoat h ild pa which men -r
, tf men will hv ' i • • II" .1 11 th.:
.•]/ city i.. which tis--y v. ' I" • i •. i
t' ..,-s are u.iu.i'% - '■ I t
chilli ar*- repn-< i: I 1. ii k. t.- I.
camiMtign the republican i • * n.-ii-1 . i
represent the present iunditl« n • ti-
go\ctniment; their oppoiuats the iwerae.
milch d.1 vou jir-'P.r? Hill. th-
linn of !vm: you ui.- had republican
management of natioiuU uffabs For the
four y.-ara previous .wu had deni" '"ti
.-..ntr..; Which do you pref.-r.' Y--.•■ bal-
lot shoul fxpr.su an unbiased pr.-f.-ren >•.
It vou prefer the prosperity that th.
•ountry has enjoyed since 'be •letii.iu
uf AIcK inley iHlllei tiu. nth- ol-.-r-r
>f th-- four >tHiir of n-v, !aiul. "in n.ii-
lot will be east for the repuldi an ticket,
providing that you r xercls« the .me
judgment that j oil wo aid In bun inc.- ,tf-
fa 1:> ti- - fro mprejudice
In oklahoma, the i.rpu >i nn <
w ith i' - el.mj.l.-nt nnd expei e n- ' d • . * • • i
il.it* u. H Mt.Gulrc ivpr—'ei;t-
hood at its carllett opportunity. It r. j.
resents the statehood bill r.-.w p.n.i:' -
ln tie- senate, having pass"! th- bou-
wltti provisions thai portions of the ii
dian Territory ma> •••; ad-b-l -
the Indian lands nr cuputil- of being
nttro h"d. It in. an* 1 ' stilt
CHAS. E SEELEV.
For AHorney,
tRANK H. McGUIRE.
tor Register of Oeedt.
JAMES i>. MABON.
For County Superintendent, i.
K J. HAKKkR-
For Assessor,
G. C. NORRIS.
For Clerk,
S. J. C. JOHNSON
for Surveyor,
I1ERT KEEVES.
''or Coroner,
E. F ARMSTT.
For Weigher,
T.. V TALl.MAN.
For
W.
A. J. KRtbS.
For Guthrie Justices of Peeve.
aKf>RrjK M DeGKOFIf.
JOHN MATHEWS.
For Constable- in Guthrie.
CAPT UARNTHOt SR
G. H. SPRA1NGS.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
To the • ot.
trl-t. nkliihc
rlto
w nil
Wll
Indians
r. presertts this masu'.
■iy that his opponent
sage of th«* pres-nt
•t e|, ed. it would b
yrewti that ok. ihom
.statehood. AYhkh do
houht express > •-
i.K fOl
' of tin Third ConnoU dls
i: 1 am a , ..ndld.it. f"
ouncll of this dlstri. \
al-po.\ a 1 i f tile r-n.. . ■
K • ' .
i:pi:u s • -t-.nnin-iham.
oil want .' Y"I
i oue tt> a i
, «:ulr<
t. but
Iocs' n<
o .• tAr ■
Is a democ;
sents your Idi
and the otl~
bill
M
Fly
lias
A fashion note announces that - any
a Jtumn haw are very large with wide . V' ti.' '
brims and flat crowns. The price is up v. «i> -
not mentioned but ; will be satts:'ac- I •-. cmu-r. s \A!; '■ ' .
tory t< the millinera—and that is the . .Vii t ia? f'.'rfr,w*fchom««- "it 1 -
main thing. nut u matter of nusinessi Yoi
represents your preference I.'.t
Tht foverum.-nt i. u. illv«U- ! ">rk """ b> '
gate earthquakes There is one sched-
uled for Qklahoma in the early days of Tiii:v ai i; not pi .-:A.-r.i'
November. Mr. Cross may be Interest- 'ush u Ivh.p 1 -1
at th«' llm. to know wh.re u« „r...
is at." sional -andldatc and one- of them will
On" ot Hi.: most repi'Ptubif ■■■'. .-n. . ^Iv.VPif.'i'."
that ha sever < ome to pass has been ; n-«.ss will ,-luw up i" ti" ••
started in Way cross The;. ,i day
OKLAHOMA PARAGRAPH'-
tot.ya wants a Commercial club.
• law : - 11: ■ * n ■ liOOla will be open
[onday.
Shawnee they occasionally arrest
>tol toter.
♦nn i goliu? to • ;-uk at Hiding
•Megai%.
-Slt.ltl'
It ha«
treats.
r has . ■ eived a fli«t
alnhig thin week up In
ec t&.dOO to rat if
t ity theyi call It
Rihlgiport llanner is
look
th<
mitt'-
Mc'l
the 'iu t th"
o" ')f fltn
• they
lire ma
the pre
and hay rides ar«
tin
under-
of American life. The
i noted j
In other
present
the syst
SUCh pet
of horn I
this i
parative absence of a leisured class
pent «haracteris'.icg of th- principal citiee and
:• i Stat' In *be avemns of industry a man
r v i i- n loucomed in tlu development of
of water. Nowheie, we are assuretl. is tho
- ncouraged, more generously aided and more
ica and it is pioasant to read of an esprit du
s which one would hardly expect to find in a
?titlon."
licely to us, who, villi these testimouiabt of
• i i t attack of inegaltic. pbaiia
t . a very >arge section of the community,
ionizations ar< apparently not satisfied with
.i ntly auiiing to transplant to this country
inuividii ai effo:t witich has been brought to
Kiugdont. The tendency toward the reduction
ii) of ite earn is an cvample of this. That
-u in a great*r .nitial cost, which will cripple
of the world In the held of Inter-
nelusion were it not for the fad,
ii! ause the invention of machiu-
ind still further h—sen cost, flie
<t ttmpoivy unsettlement of the
e industry and one which, from
the employ l in'com|)etiug v. :th the i
naiional trade, would seem a foreu to
proved often iu the pas . that net. -it,
ery which will act as a c-.mnterbala .
net result must, however, he an at
basic conditions which govern produ<
the standpoint of labor Itself, will in the long run prove detrimental. It
would seeui as if the best interests of all concerned would li** In a clearer
view of the real circumstances governing production, and that the American
voramao should, like the Germar and unlike the British workman, see that
It's interest, like that of his employer lies in the cheapening of cost or at
leai-t in keeping it down tn a point which wdll allow of us underselling tn -
fot• ign producer.
Mutual sympathy and friendly co > pcra ,«>u would bv adtauUtgeou to
THK PHILANTHROPIST WHOSE IDI AS
ARE AT A FALSE ANGLE IS WRONG
Pittsburg police have discovered a peculiar
Tin
The sad but glorious tidings comes
! from Arizona that Jerry Simpson is
a caudidate for the democratic nomi-
nation for delegate to congress from
I that territory.
! A lvan«>a.-t married niau lias enlisted
ndition and a* a jn the army because he loves peace,
result they have taken in nhari-p a mnln and his trwo sisters, all over twenty That is not so ridiculous a- it. seems,
and under thirty years of ago. aud a"1 holding them for inquiry as fo their j either.
mental condition. Suspicion rests upon them because ot th'eir generosity.
Tho divine injunction, Take all that thou hast and give it unto the poor.
they obeyed literally. This is the reason they are considered insan •
These people had themselves been very poor until by a legacy they
had beta given an income of two hundred dollars a n. nth. They were
not experienced or wise in the affairs of business. Ti.- v did not think
of investing their money *u a way to make it increase in the view ot
the Pittsburg officer who made the arrest they might have invested it in
tenement houses and distilled heavy incomes out of the slim earnings of
the tenants. They might have opened a pawn shop nnd exacted usurious
interest out of the desperation of human misery
But they did not resort to any of these witse and respectable methods
of increasing their mont y Instead they set about distrh <mg their nieaus
to alleviate ihe laverty w hich they knew so well in ail various squalid , . ^ j>, inr,. „f Honor' is the tdart-
shapes -in its heart-deadening hopelessness. They were ving away food, j nrg ,>f a new play just brought
lothiug. and mouev to the lull limit of their new found means They did (out in New York. Supposed it was a
not properly discriminate between the deserving poor and the frauds, per- dime museum attraction. . vrirv „
haps, and this Is no doubt the reason why they ran afoul the professional , Sqw that Spnalnr Hanna ha*
philanthropist who has a pound of theory for each penny he bet-'tows. The | piratically announced thar h- will not
: . ..i d< leaati , , .
it is true In this aso thn
••.-t.niparisoii" botwe-a ihe t"' >
*e. mid d ippuinl.ng to ti.
craU. because taey realize that such
duetlons are disastrous to Cross - ha
..t sia<ej,8 u\ th polls Ihe i-pubr
more sanguine nnd quloti-
here ' c llOUuire's visit he-r
went round among ?V,
whole day previous to ) 'aiu
■ ling and left an excehe -n
bilu
with
people.
' While tiie president was in Boston it
required twenty men to watch him.
: 11. was the camp of the anti-imperial-
| ists and no chances were taken on an
1 ambush
A Washington official who reports
th fishing season a failure has not
heard from th« talented gentlemen who
went 'iway on vacations this summer.
Andrew.- tin Detijoit baiil^ looter
will be given another trial, and then
he may be expected to sue the courts
for damages to his reputation
THE HKHV
Chand. 'i- Now - The
Wtc> sir. taking dowt
speeches thai- Ui ■ «"; •
some literary- cur. >•'.:!
iH-cullai-ly" fusion' m • i .
Hvntax )s bnd*V otb of tr
pe. die* are nut in rna
.. ight I' v'- t ar. 1
)a.ni l dlule. t. Mier
terlal "f tha m- •-• •> «'«d '
ism. that omn;. i ' ''
Hcter. not ?d« a-.' •
lb. lasting in p. -hi
n«sa of h;s plea i I I
.it personality are -t-avn
rch.
i hat itable who do not theorize are considered insane. The man who does
not accompany his miserable : arity with tracts and labored advice is not
u philanthropist. ^
It Is hoped that the profess tonal philanthropists and the peace officers
of Pittsburg will not insist on their standard of sanity in the matte.- of
charity. It is to bs regretted that this character of insanity does not de-
velop in people of greater ability to give it scope
The insanity of the Pittsburg people is such a- awakens u- :ri *f-
t.ai-ied heart tq thankfuiuv.-- and gratitude.
STATKliUUU.
Kay •'ity Star: oklahonui w.=
lv jd. is entitle.! to statehood, and
-a.il probability will be congress ion..:.
! appareled in statehood during th- c m-
ling session of congiThis mighth<
w- doubt nut will 1 ■ .nf. •' with
hearty approval of th pc-i :
I'nlted States Such n confer. r. .
I iiowi-r uiul privil-i;" i-.ilemc.lv '.nhu' .t. •
" ! us to send t^ th- ha'. ul ihe r atiu ..
. congr. . as our last territoi i <!••..-
gat-, a broad. •>lioli*.. • ai ne.-t ;. .•! •>-
gr« • - • • laun in I' S. M> i oi.ie
nresidency it | ti I- many >ltl« i n. .. M
; tbuslasiit- choica of his P-*|,w ;
, ; h« !• a . '!' if. C" -I i',a
come dangerously near beina pr. u i i.-u
No story of the singlehanded battle ; p--opl • ,./ OMahom-i^a «'*); 41
with a mountain b.ar 1. comulete with- IJJS.^ exiirriaer.:
out reference to the Roosevelt
Thrust The summer flirtatio%^ aaa bo:
ready to clone out of husiws They 1
if American Mernlti icmtftme fo join 1 have been unprofitable, an -1«1 deal
the Colombian navy the end of tne in- j arc usually, and the siineiiiy •; it all
- irre -tlon w|ll not he long deferred. i wrthy of an also ran' i < t
ts for ihe
having tremble getting
■ ■ ..red schools.
Iroed looks
. r. Coalgate Mn*
f ,m\ to Shawnee.
:. gin putting in an
,.i FioklcnrlUs 1m
Eufaula J
. lav. A
. ;rr.^ is clamoring foi
• .v. . c-an never aioourl
t one.
t 'ity Salvation Arra^
.nine not netded t blea
to prvach
ucau the <
J . : t Smith, has bee"
in t1 .• Baptist chtircb
■oming year.
Aidmor"
,ta the the
th. •. .. ve in Jail th*
•'in..' w'ii. t chsrg
•i of a black cow.
R^no n
f.,r h r. - ••'.I
. got $150
• only got <t fln«
a ti:- four milo strip.
' i other sucker* for
'.^tbe Ira
t ; I . last Sunday's
in,. picachur who had
:: ii IIhiiIi Stailitigs -at-l
. i<>) ulid aat chnsktnlt
him Into the haht.
Altrubil
rottoji cam
. V number of loads of
in yesterday to be -m
c-enta/waa offered t
ottoti. No sab
be a andidate for the
is up to Mr. Bryan
i:\press
Altrnis
.-t and
Ark..
pile
A pair ,.f
noble he toi we- t
light and the /•ongi-egnt o«
i.' hidlorous position "f Ev
din all because n diulr lost
on the platform
*t to charter
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 110, Ed. 2 Sunday, August 31, 1902, newspaper, August 31, 1902; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124826/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.