The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1903 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Hie Oklahoma State
•y Th State Capital Com.
FRANK H. GREER. Ej
<Japital.
Im lor.
SUBSCRIPTION KA/rtS.
Dally by Carrier In City.
ST
r.ih .
C.vtf 1
Dally by Mall—Strictly In Advance.
One month 10 O
Three months I
6tx mciOha 8.00
Ota yep r < < )
No aubacHptlong will be aent by mAii in
th* alty of Guihiic.
Sunday Edition.
#a« xmi by mAiJ
Weekly.
&a or.Lbs
year
THE INSPECTOR'S
SANITARIUM REPORT
The r: port of A. B. Richardson,
ial ir. terror sent by the interior
I department to Investigate conditions
la the Norman sanitarium, is peculiarly
! gratifying to those who have all along
ined that this institution has
h abused for political pur-
TFE OKfcAlTOUA STATE CAPITAL, THTBSDAY MORXIXG, MAY 7,-1903.-
I
and ra<se the 912,000 srtlil necessary or but without
an opportunity to help the ciU's fu-
ture will be irretrievably lost.
THE PROOF OF
|l.vfl
. 11.11
success. Then they re-
newal negotiation* in Ktis«:a, through
Kr, :, u channida, but again witUou' C;
in -sri, the 9t. Petersburg papers ay-1 r
ing openly that the Ru.- an tlnan Tsf "
were proof against andishmen s. "
U|C nPMnrD*rv When Mr. Balfour made his first a
nio IJLMULKAL1 j noancement of the intention of
EDITORS TAKE NOTICE
GET READY TO G
WEDNESDAY,
will be heli) at Lm\
Tho*. of
invited s ji!,j
Lory of the
Respectfully
Hobart. Okla
LAW]
cd tfant
BLINKED!
, S-o.
The strike of Chicago laundry work-
ers has led to the popularity of "wash-
ing bees" a* six ial functions.
.Mr. Rj. hardnon made a thorough ex-
amine on fn connection with the san-
: trium, talked to the patients, con-
(1 with the management concern-
ing the.r methods and after all this, he
reports that with the exception of an
; ' ""'"r ""i'"11' "" ne"*1 <l «ive some idea at the
for inon- attendants in some «rf the
wards, improvement could hardly be
made in the situation when the tem-
p >rary character of thn present ar-
rangement is considered.
He ivrf ho found the food supply
!. :• • m i al car- pood, that
only mi b mild forms of restraint are
used ;i are in use In all like Instltu-
• ne. and that the added room which
the new building now in course of con-
struction will give, will relieve the
present overcrowded condition and
thus remove one of the few objections
thai ho finds with the conditions.
TI.'- report. should forever set at
• the . "firi'-n of mistreatment and
inhumane londltions which political
Brooklyn democrats recently held ai Brltla& government to Join in the en-
celebration la commemoration of the Novo ye Vremya ^aid:
cr J?" Mon™' one or r'™'
principle speakers being Edward M. the Baghdad railway. We with them a
Shepard of New York. In view of peasant journey. Their co-operation
the fa< t that Mr. Shepard waa proposed not affect lho Position at all, so
r.gers and yellow news-
There U ground for the belief that pa,-r, ha.- ,> delighted to tell the
the weather clerk has en ered int.. ,P;. during the past two years,
a combination with the fellows who Whether it do this or not. it is an sh-
are trying to boo.--* the prp «• of cotton. ( iuti* vinii:<-ation of Governor Fergu-
and his administraiion, insofar as
■ >un- tion with the sanitarium
rned.
demonstrates that the boards ap-
nt' -i by ti.e Governor to make quar-
y examination of the Institution
e honestly reported things as they
With trouble imminent In Manchuria
Russia might g.'t real busy If she at-.
tempted to make good in her promise' '
to whipping Turkey if the Pone does-1
n't reform.
Guthrie must keep hustling until the
railroad bonus ; raised and It would
be of great benefit if some of the fel-
• lows who haven't been hustling would
comment e.
is be<
at this meeting at* a presidential can
didate, his utterances are of interest,
Inasmuch as he covers political ques-
tions generally, from his standpoint
upon
hlch he would attemnt to make the
campaign, in event of his nomination.
He first referred to the expenditures
of the last congress, twice as great as
those during the same period in the
Cleveland administration, as paving the
way for industrial hardship and disas-
ter and took the position that "every
dollar of this is a burden on Ameri-
can labor and industry and well nigh
half of It represents the waste and per-
version of the results of such labor."
In these statements, Mr. Shepard
clearly shows that he is a believer in
the old democratic doctrine that the
tarifT is a tax, and that It Is now his
idea that the people are being heavily
taxed because the expenditures are
large and that in relieving them of the
tax (through tarifT reform) be would
prevent large expenditure by the cur-
tailment of revenue. He, however,
overlooks the fact that despite what
bo is pleased to term a burden on the
American people, they are more pros
perous in every way than they were
during the days of the last democratic
administration and that in the face of
heavy expenditures the present admin-
istration finds some funds to use in
. and that the greatest care (the payment of obligations contracted
•r Is (1 to See that the man- in the parlod between 1893 and 1897.
The wef weather la delaying the
completion of the railroads now build-
ing into Guthrie but It Is doing much
for the crops that the railroads will
this fall haul away.
Mr. Baer Is sure that the coal carry-
ing roads do not discriminate in freight
rates. Dealers who compete with the
preferred companies know that Mr.
Baer has no right to be so sure.
The Columbia may again be the cup
defender but America feels no alarm on
that score as she/has several times
demonstrated her ability to outsail the
product of British ship builders.
Hawaii ia becoming thoroughly
Americinlzed. The newspapers have
reached the stage where they refe
a man as "spurning an enemy tm u
legislature does the people's interest
That bunch of 25.000 children the
president waa steered up against the
other day will probably go along way
toward convincing him that the we;
endorses his opposition to race sulclti<
The newspapers boosting for a con-
stitutional convention, counsel the ex-
clusion of partisan ideas from its or-
ganisation but it will be noticed that
they neglect to follow their own
gestlon.
There Is a feeling that the alum In-
quiry In Missouri is at an end.
haps Prosecutor Folk intends devot-
ing his time to the extortioners
operated during the dedication c
monies at Bt. Louis.
President Roosevelt probably re
members a visit to Colorado that was-
n't altogether pleasant, but the at.*
once of r< -aid he } a.t r< Ived in the
Centennial state this wee!, will prob-
ably influence him to forget it.
The Pennsylvania supreme court has
decided that Christian Scientists can
not practice in that state. The faith
cure iolks can get no consolation or
relief from their imagination in this
case either.
It remains to be seen whether Ken-
tucky authorities will be strenuous in
attempts to secure the conviction of
the men who assassinated an attorney
because he was determined to inves-
tigate democratic election frauds
The dispate
Cleveland roc
■with a newspaper corespoc
he would like to have his oh
but it is not plain whether h
to the sheriff's office at Buffa,
other place.
ato that Grover
ft the Impression
agfmerit, faithfully lived up to their
contract for the care of the Insane
It further shows that the manage-
ment wishes to do every reasonable
thing itf their power to make the In-
mates Of the sanitarium comfortable,
us Mr. Richardson says he finds the
business manager and the resident phy-
sician capable and intelligent men in-
terested in looking after the wellfare
of the patients. He further finds that
they, without suggestion on tho part
of the territory are proceeding to add
another building that the overcrowdod
conditions may be relieved.
The people of Oklahoma will b« glad
to learn from so authorial Ive a source
that, conditions are not what they have
been represented to be and that the
unfortunate are being well cared for.
Governor Ferguson is to be congratu-
lated because tuc report indicates that
he has seen to it that the contract Is
faithfully observed and thus honestly
discharged his duty.
GUTHRIE PEOPLE
MUST WORK
Arrangements have been made for a
strong soliciting committee, composed
of twenty prominent business men, to
this morning commence active work
to the end that the bonus for the St.
Louis, El Reno and Southwestern rail-
road be raised before the close of the
present week. Eenergetlc work on the
pari of this committee will do much
but they are ureatly in need of assis-
tance from every cltlaen who has the
city's future at heart. They have |
therefore requested that everyone who
is Interested < all at the Commercial
dub rooms this morning and Join In
their effort for Guthrie.
There is no reason why every prop-
erty owner in the city should not either
respond to this request or simplify tho
committee's work by calling at the
i liib rooms this evening and voluntar-
ily subscribing his Just proportion of
the amount nc essary to secure the
Taking up the question of the anti-
trust litigations, he said:
"The president seeks to divert the
attention of the people from the real
question in two or three picturesque
litigations. He waited until he waa
convinced of tho political expediency
of tho Northern Secureties suit. Such
prosecutions are in the end futile. Re-
strictive laws and lawsuits may do
something to prevent monopoly but
until human nature is chauged and
the basis of civilization is altered they
cannot do much. They can prevent the
manufacture of one kind of Wall street
securities or make necessary the man-
ufacture of another kind.
"They may indeed, or rather they
do, accomplish another thing, for they
consolidate in the hands of the presi-
dent and attorney general a discretion-
ary power dangerous to the last degree.
Mr. Roosevelt is already congratulated
by his party associates on this—that
tho great corporations or tho i-ountry
will now bo So afraid of his power that
Jhrough tills fear lie may control their
political action. Ho has himself talk-
ed of 'good trusts" and "bad trusts;"
that is to say. ho assumes to decide
what combinations are good and what
aro bad. He and his associates and
their successors, however pure and ex-
alted their motives, are given control
with Infinite possibilities of unwhole-
lome centralization of power and of
orruption."
In the criticism of President Roose-
elt's ho intimates that there is
far as we are coucerned, for, no mat-
ter who finds the mone>, the Baghdad
railway will still remain a German
line La er on Mr. Balfour, evidently
waa converted to this view and revers-
ed lvls former decision. The wonder
Is that he was so nearly caught.
CURRENT COMMENT!
mO&e power for president.
A Ll«a for mater pow#r for the . x«cu-
. e by Henry L oml« Nelson In the May
c*ntury w!U be Interesting teadli.* i<>r
'hoa* tlmur-.iig *ouls who affect to U ;
jrehftlisivu that our fl"W ocra-y mi, ..rift
nto h d^potlnm. That this fear w ..-
greatly Intensified by the exercf«e of ex-
traordinary powers by the preaJdt-nt In
meeting the > .,nlinger.- .«s of th- wuv with
spntn was mad. plainly apparent, not
withstanding th<* popular asaent t th-
prompt and vigorous meanurt-s ad pted
by Mr. M. Kin lav.
Mr. Melion calls attention to the fa^t
tt.at the framere of the constitution did
not Intend that the president should t-e a
powerful executive, but. says tho writer.
• comparatively powerless as the fathers
intended the president to be, he Is le.**
than the Intention." His power.- as
enumerated In the constitution are: Com-
mander In chief of th- urmv and r.avv;
granting of pardons and reprieves for
offenses against the United States, ne-
gotiating treat las. and the nomination of
officers to the senate, and the appointing
with conthmatlon. of such Inferior officers
as congress may have authorize d him to
appoint.
Notwithstanding these powers conferred
by the constitution. Mr Nelson cont. nds
that our president la under such limita-
tions and restraints, many of them in.-
posed >>y political Influences, that he is
practically a powerless . x> ;tlv. By the
practical working of our system the prosl-
!* . 11 lnero ghost of a commander in
chief, says the writer, and in the matter
of pardons and treaties he hampered
and hedged about by many ■ <>ngrrssl( iial
chocks and restraints. When It come* to
appointments the powers of ratlflactlon
~~d confirmation have l en so abused I v
i senators that the president lb n<>w
entirely dependent upon their pood will.
He cannot name a person for office with
out the assent of some senator of his ow n
party.
The writer closes with tho declaration
that it will eventually bo essential to give
to the president tha power which ought to
accompany responsibility. Many writers
of cours>- will challenge the deductions f
Mr. Nelson claiming that our president
- much more power than the presldi nt
° of King Edward of England —
i of the C'elevland boom ;
4 —ev#n admitting that
■ngett man the democracy could nom.-
•" there Is that the habitation of
horned majesty will freeze over durlu-
■ prea-mt cold snap.—Giar.d lupldk
raid.
VIRGINIA MAY GO DRY.
'.ere is a gfetr deal of talk In VJr-
•nrui aboot the temperance wave that
«eir >• to be hw pir.g the whole state
d the possible it It may have on
• e next election. It is « on ceded that the
lor mtta &r - at odds with the demo-
1c party as at present constituted, and
-•1. :ld they thr th- lr weight with the
re, ,bk ans ther maj. ha e to be ma: •
more e'ats recorded to be many mor.
-e4,r recorded to that party when the
next gen rai assembly convenes
The M *nn bill was a distinct victory
for the teftoperanc. people, and th >igh it
waa not a« drasilc as they wished, still
It emWdle* their Ideas of the correct
legislation In rega'd to the lkiuor traffic
The legislature w.i flooded with petitions
In ravor of the bill, and it was support..1
by many members who were persona
ugaiiutt thv measure, but were n
by the belief that hteir constituents de-
manded lta enactn.#nt
How far the current will go before It
turn* back can only be guessed There
som who bell<*ve that Virginia will
hlbltkn rtite. but before this is
out It may l>e that the pedu-
lum will awing far in the other direction.
The local option people are hopeful, but
the opponents point to the fact that there
have been scares before without any dis-
astrous results.
The temperance movement apparently Is
gaining strength. A week does not pass
that Home new section is not added to the
territory controlled by the "drys." Dan-
- thirty-three saloons have been put
f business Wythevi.l*- has gone dry,
Aahland and a whole district of Hanover
• mty f .lowed suit. A number ot other
-.-ti.-ns are hanging In the balance, and
thus far Charlottesville is the only place
the movement failed.—Washington
Tiroes.
Price to dealer
$36.00 per M.
^ Ther cost thsdMj.
UM higher grado
totMureu, Uum gir-
a.HoSfrsx
F fo*aa to produce
tobacco of flr.e
je a nrol
jrougnt f
„ . . quality ersrr 7e r.
tasrsfore, it kas U~ n tua
polit y Iatr-'r ft. -.of* t'.rarr*
Uas1nsu5a^'good tobacco 1tor°£e
l§m$"
SINGLE
BINDER
STMWm^5«3IM!MT
THE PROSPERITY CHORUS,
The prosperity chorus still rings
throughout all nHrts of - this most fav, re l
land. It is the grandest, the most tri-
!'^Ph^ntjy JubUant_chorus this nation has
aftei
of progress
e of the c ...
notes of the calamity howler mellowed
" shame, gratitude arid
tiling har-
How much longer U this situation llkelv
o last .' is a question often asked, but
'•bid. fortunately for us all. cannot bo
definitely answered. There l9 no limita-
tion of tho human mind more ben« ti -.-nt
than that which limits mans absolute
knowledge of events to the nresent nnd
the past. While It is true that. In
tain sense and to a varying extent, "com
Jng events caiit their shad ws before." i
•j one of the great and ever pr-s-nt fact
that so far is posltiv* information .* t.
tn> future is concerned, the fool and thi
philosopher nr- on equal trim.!. Y« t it
is deemed a matter of immense moment
^be able to forecast the futur.- with the
Ible approach to accuracy.
OPPORTUNITY.
who art thou, with more than mor-
tal air.
Endowed by heaven with gifts and graccs
When restless, winged feet forever on-
m Occasion—known to few at beat—
And since one foot upon a wheel 1
Constant my movements are—they
not be repressed.
"Not the swift <
Can equal me
bright:
And man who sees them
zled by the sight
"My thk k and flowing locks, before me
thrown.
Con ceil my form—nor face nor breast is
shown;
That thus, as I approach, my coming be-
not known.
"Pehind my head, no single lock of hair
Invites the hand that fain would grasp it
there;
But he who lets me pass, to seize me may
despair"'
"Whom, then, so close behind thee do I
name Is Penitence; and heaven's
"And thou. O mortal who does vainly fly
These curious qeustlons thou does not
descry
That now thy time Is lost—for I am pass-
ing by."
—Translated from Ternarl by William
Young.
OKLAHOMA PARAGRAPHS.
The News announces that Arapaho Is
to have a gypsum plant that will employ
eighty men.
Tho Cordell News says: "Triplets are
getting so common in Oklahoma that they
don't brinjr more than a thr-•- lin<- press
notice. Why don't some ono .---ring quad-
ruplets on the public?"
The indications aro that It will take
more than th. train load of separators the
J. I. Case company 13 shipping down here
thresh Oklahoma's wheat crop this
For this purpose
pends many million on the malnteam * of
statistical hureaus so that tho light of tho
past may be thrown on th: darkness of
thi; future. <me of these establishments
—and ono that performs it* tabk with
commendable capacity and fidelity—is tho
treasury bureau of statistics, whose >ilef
. P. Austin, has recently added fr
'The longer w,- run a newspaper and
.. .ite about people and events," says the
ent i earwig Jourr I. the mor we realize
' ow utterly impossible It is to scratch ev-
ryman on the place where it itches."
The Lawton Enterprise is authority for
!ie statement ti at tiie Comanche Indians
ave learned how to tak - care of tlitlr
now depositing It In the
"real trust question" but the people j !■,
are left to guess just what it la. The 1 V1',v.z!,'*\ 7"r t ' -i"rit.\ and com*-"to
i * 'bo cheerful conclusion that it ha«- i nn
Inference drawn is that the president jy - k ot connden- e ar.d not upc;
haa the wrong Idea of the question and ' j"' ""
oad.
It Is unneceasary that the committee
required to spend time In furnishing
rguniont to convince the people that
th road will be of benefit as every one
Guthrie knows that there Is but
remaining portion of the terrl
ho farther along states that his idea
is repugnant to the Wall street lnter-
eata because of the fact that it gives
| the chief executive too much power. It
j has hitherto been the contention of
Mr. Shepard's party associates that the
republicans did not desire the enact-
ment of legislation which would em-
power the president to proceed active-
ly against large combinations and It
lb hard to understand in what way that
contention can be made to harmonize
with the statement made by the possi-
ble democratic candidate.
As a matter of fact, while Mr. Shep-
ard has called attention to a number
of things he deems wrong, he has not
furnished evidence that his mind con-
tains ideas of constructive statesman-
ship, Inasmuch as he does not even
suggest remedies for the wrong prin-
ciples he charges to the administration.
. ospei
erful concluslor
k of confldenc«
of speculation.1'
Chief Austin says thnt lie
studying statistics
ty years, and he
time In which they Indicated great
Ivlty in agriculture and manufacturing
in any of the producing induatri- - o
the country, than at the present. 11.- de
.-lares there is nothing in sight at th«
the
•t all
ir tiul
Jtu nlg^qual'
An. an u fart n
11 to m.uniat
quality of tbelr
cts U th*' they
Swerve atoSTjo ti!
No other clt
FRANK P. LEWIS
Manufacturer
Peoria, Illinois.
paper last
Governor Fergusoi
said: "Some time .
the papers that Kdgar Jones, of C
rie. has been request.^ by the interlo
partmtnt to take th. -vldenco in the
larlum legislative investigation to
paper will give fl.ooo for the I
any autiiorised letter from |
Three Special Perlnes..
For one week only we offer
3 Special Odors 3
La SILVIA,
LILAC SWEETS,
and THELMA.
No more and no less than one ounce to eacli.
purchaser at
35 Cents an Ounce 35
These are our Popular Odors, and well known
in Guthrie.
F. B. LILLE & CO.
DRUGS, WALL PAPER and PAINTS.
204 Harrison Ave. Phone No. 7
eli Ne'
production 01
the depart me
Bob Neff has been guilty of
fenaes during his check- r'-d c
the following from his Blackt
is the worst yet: ■ Indictment >
is the way the Daily Oklahornan heads
an account of th. quashing of an indict-
ment at Lawton. W II. we must acknowl
edge the corn that "squashing" an indict-
ment beets anything we ever sav turnip
in a court before Lettuce hope, however,
that peas will reign from now on. but
L*t us not overlook the fact that the
lawyer? who cabbaged that decision pulled
their client out of a pickls."
©3
INDIAN TERRITORY NOTES.
The Pioneer wants an oil mill built at
Paden.
Keveral circuses are enticing fares from
the unwary of both territories
Salisaw is enjoying a building boom and
many new houses are going up.
The green bug is said to he Injuring the
wheat in the vicinity of Marlow, I. T.
Muskogee and South McAlester swltch-
i' n have formed a protective organiza-
tion.
'e a .brand new depot
-Q
Guthrie
Laundry Co.
(INCORPORATED,
Agents wanted
in every town.
Up-town office at Paul Newman's
near the Postoffice.
Sapulpa Is t
nd eating
enough.
ids
We
lis hci
Isen in that town
A Tulsa giri Is feel
oil upon her hair las
Chickasha Te
the ten itorv as helm
dating its birth from
'OPHTHALMOLOGIST"
r defects and their relation
Eyes, theii
tanks.
The Tir
i-Jo
vole
the pentlment
great many Oklahoma people in the
roii wing: "If /. i « Mulhall will announce
to the gaping world that his daughter is
the only living oklahoma girl, who rides
and delights in cowboy life, Ok-
. will f ,1 br-ttfr about It."
- that "It is a high
ling honesty of Okla-
la.om
The
tribute
ivlcts
entlar
nd depc
that
fro
La icnte:
It Is
East are now
all the coal la
H. C. Frick.
W. Gates, of i
deah Tho pri
Indian Inspe
Governor Mos
tlon that tho
1 that big flnanci- :
nt time, at hoi
i judgment woi
pessimistic In
id. which
iry '
:i^ w hich Ciuthrle has not direct ' 1'V'lV r^ e'' ^ ^ !R 0,igil>le as
a democratic candidate, however, by
onnection and that this pro-
?d roa.l will furnish thaL
PrecMent Parry Is relieved fron
neceagity of nttrlbutlng Senator
ira's statements QOncernlnx orga:
labor to a prc-Hldential ambition.
Ohio man's emphatic d ;;!al of hi
cildai y is unmistakable and will i
what he Is ptaasud to style "his io
friends.'
Guthrie's futi
Jobbing center
advance in
will follow such
which rest
of contracts for
roads which are
The city ha
•is a railroad and
i then assured nnd
operty values which
isurance will surpass
.Hi from the signing
lildlng of the several
>w nearly completed.
London nwspapers headod
Interview w ith Carnegie ' i
Everything." The fact that th
tnan refined to talk of his gi
>lague tribunal or Amerlcar
might persuade that the Engl
nallats don't consider either
•Uuli". :.ii oi i^yiiiCllL
agreed to give the com-
pany a bonus of 125,000 to build in
here and the money must be raised
or the railroad will go elsewhere. The
tlmo limit for the bonus raising has
bee* extended till Saturday and at that
lime Mr. Henderson, the representative
of the railroad company, will return
io Guthrie to close the contract. The
-niis must be raised by that time and
ielay Ja very dangerous.
The committee will commonee work
r.imptly this morning and the citizen
■i. ho does not Join them for at least
■art of the day, even though he have
o make personal sa< rlflce, will not do
proof of his democracy. ]|« is long
diagnosis though ehort on prescription
and this has come to be the first re-
quisite of democracy. The part
many national ailments but it Is not
a success as a producer of remedie
thut will effect their cure.
on Adv
anticipating adv.
die or for.
enf<
Inion is f.irtifl.-d wn th-
•asing export and imnor
.1 by Secretary <\*il
al department, and |
y Armstrong of th.
that the
of tn -ney
lted himself in the prls-
pany of the sheriff "
The tracklayers on the Eastern Okla-
1 will r.ach Ti < umseh this week.
If the following story Is untrue the
with the Perry Republican: "A
i th" .-hap* of a four-legged
s hatched by the incubatoc at
'in.- of Mrs. F r Mayhew yes-
It has four well shaped extr -ml-
i ties and perfect feet and toes. The >
blamo
curiosity
chicken '
Newport, Tell -:
yler Theve .«•
i original towns
If
O" are nervous, eidtable. easily friphtened. feel irritable, don't
sleep well, have dyspepsia. Indigestion, constipation, female weakness Dain-
ful periods with sick headaches, conjunctivitis iuBamatlon and smarting or
Maning of t.,(> eyes, twitching of the e.v lids, headaches, eyeache or neu-
ralgia I say you have symptoms of eye strain. These I relieve or money re-
funded. ' c
C hildren's Cross Eyes Straightened Without Knife or Med-
icines. Consultation Free. "imo or iviea-
R, HOMRIGHOUS, Ophthalmologist.
Room 4, over Bank of Indian Territory. Guthrie. Okla.
til, i
nd the
clal i
o ir
vative JHSPm
of the country's pro:
hess gentlemen base ■
'ding their prediction!
e even the notabla
)f 190J.—Washlngt'
>erl-
n 1'ost.
ANY ONE TO BEAT ROOSEVELT.
The two men prominentia before the
ublir eye -ite-rduy at the dedlcatio; x-
rci*e« nf the St L.-uw fair weie The. :.,r«
too . velt, president of the T nlted Ht . es.
nd Gr< v*r Cleveland, th.- iilv llvlr.g .-x-
pident. Tho form, r is fresh from his
ctf of 1I\
Standard Oil
| .VH.SK'.?i - . ! |
' > Edgar Jones to make authority t r tto
•t of the story that t!,- tank il.ie h id
< -it had summoned him I autborltv v pi
n.® Watonga Republican, | rs as Intruder-
in
vide
Wtit and Northwest
rcelved by the people w
of favor and growing p
"4*'~ *' '■" i^ueslIonably
Ith
ularity. ...
leading spirit In the cunservativ
f tho democratic party todav, ni
oye the distinction of being tin
emocr at i president Bin e the
Bin hannn.
e is ;-1 ♦hi!' time r.o dont.t
BALFOUR VCAS
NEARLY CAUGHT
Whatever views the British minis-
try may have entertained originally
concerning the Baghdad railroad
scheme, there was never, apparently,
any doubt in the Russian mind as to
the pra<*tlcal ownership and direction
of the line. A year ago M. White warn
ed Kuseian capitalist* against investing
In a scheme which would be so preju-
dicial to Russian interests as
to Baghdad and the Persian Gulf, and
the Russian press has at
Ject from the Unit.
that tho Germans Interested in the
Anatolian railway first applied for thp
d and
The
Lii\x L^r ft tvw Urv-at ftrU*Ut and the InlteU a:
Theod
niaton
k:,;"
In ti
pted fc
Ircles \b t<h
e editorial In the Ut
■BRMfnli
y bef
king h
fourth j
Ing up the
again
.K1?
palgn
land " U r >do\
wt
This
RooMx-ell
Kou
oneldered that
Boa
In the opp
■Ith
irMM
In {be \.'lii
SORE FEET
SORE HANDS
Inflammation, Itch ing, Soreness,
Tenderness, With Shapeless
Nails, Quickly Cured
by Cuticura
N, R CHEADLB
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER
IN ALL GRADtSOf COAL. ,
Telr City, McAlester, Canon City and Arkanaai
Anthracite in StocJk.
Phonefl.
Terms-Strictly Cwh.
Office and Yard«;
424 O KL/MGRHA.AVSNUE.
Soak the feet on retiring in a strong,
reamy lather of Cuticura Soap.
Dry, and anoint freely
with Cuticura Oint-
ment, the great bkiu
Soak the hands on retiring In n
strong, hot, creamy lather of Cuticura
Soar. Dry, and anoint
freely with Cl'ticuka
Ointment, the great skin
curt and puraat of cure and purest of emol-
emollients. Bandage I, . .
liKhtly In old, .oft; th<J
cotton or linen. For I night, old loose gloves, or \
itching, burning and j light bandages of soft old
r « / .« eczem1, | linen or cotton. For red,
>/ { V raphes, Inflammation
' ' h ud rhaflnc of the | rou«b> P^'PP611 ni1 su™
feet, for reda<
redness,
roughness, cracks
and fissures, with
brittle, shapeless
naila, this treatment Is simply wouder-
fnl, frequently curing in oue applica-
tion.
hands, dry, (Insured, Itch-
ing, feverish palms, with
shapeless nails and painful finger ends*
this treatment Is practically Infallible,
Often ourlo^ tho most distressing cases
In one night when all other method!
and remcoiet fail.
....
(/tirjwumBKuWi rept^ntlonM
f ot CrauilKK strtaoc-1 uu-td
all uver the Oo {tw e t>, and
wr pay cptcraJ .iMeatioa to
visitors to the Capital City.
Barber^Qhkop
and.BathJRftoiaa
IX^EtijanS^I
l |4
• 1 .t
,wmr
Habit Cured
in Three Days
i
Braa«h
U>* Il(«ryari
cBiSJZ fit
Km - ■■ r
|WI bwltln (In Ute form of
!>. !• I,..m1OO, Oi
DK
Id thronghni
iMt , P ni
Hi:*l. a<-.* 1.
the rlrl iaed world. PRICBB
Dr. J. J. McKANNA,
i
*-e* the SOLD OUST twins a'o y our work
( -
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1903, newspaper, May 7, 1903; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc125072/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.