The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 122, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1904 Page: 8 of 8
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TTTE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 11, 1H04.
I
-♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦
FARQUHARS
HIGH GRADE CLOTHIER AND FURNISHER.
4 It is with pleasure we announce to the Public that our Fall Stock is now in and ready for your inspection We 1i-ivp • +i 7~- T"! ti*
equipped our .took accordi„Bly. Our Id*. that there i, nothing too good for o„r trade, hae been fully carried out in our different ffi
fit eq
in both QUALITY and PH1C.E
8T
Our efforts are now on display for your approval.
Han
</ Mm
Uutd Tutored
CoprrliM tm hy Rtrt S(-h ffn*T * Wirs
West Oklahoma
Avenue
A IVeSS Dressed Man.
It is fair to assume that you want to be well dressed;
most men do. Well dressed, means: To wear clothes
j that art correct in style, that fit, that are made of
Kood materials and tailored in such a way as to keep
their style and fit as long as you wear them. That's
all it duos mean. NTo matter what they cost—no matter
who makes tljem, if your clothes don't meet those re-
quirements, you are not well dressed. You will find
various models to choose from, but for each only one
lr_ «ty'e correct. As for fit, your clothes either fit you or
they don't. As tor tailoring, if it isn't just right, it's
^ wrong; there is no middle ground for either. We know
we have the correct styles, because we have tried them.
We know we have the correct price because we sell thenii
and every customer becomes a walking and talking ad-
vertisement for us.
Furnishing' Department
In this, probably the most interesting, of all the de-
partments of a man's store, we are given more latitude, a*
there are so many nice things to attract the eye and add a
finish to perfect dressing. For instance, the shirt; how
often it is difficult to find just the right pattern or color.
Come, let us help you. We have them in endless variety,
and all the new effects.
HOSIERY. We can please the most exacting.
NECKWEAR. Ascots, Puffs, Four-in-hands, and
all other kinds.
UNDERWEAR. From the heaviest fleeced lined
to the lightest weight Cashmere, all ready for a change of
weather.
SWEATERS The most complete line ever shown
by any house in the territory.
Boys' and Children's Department
In this department we have never been able to
show the same quality and style for the price
we are now enabled t.i offer you. So much adf
v.incement is shown in tne making, cutting and
designing of children's clothing that in this
short ad it would be impossible to begin to con-
vey a correct idea of the many novelties we are
now showing. You will have to see the "Little
Buster Brownies" and the "Long Lappel Double
Breasted Suits" to appreciate them. It is just
as essential that a boy should be well dressed as
a man, because it starts him off right; it gives
him confidence in himself and does much to
make a manly man of him.
Hats and Caps
Our Hat and Cap Department must be kept in touch
with our other departments, as the proper hat is a very
necessary adjunct to a well dressed man's appearance,
and just as much care should be ased in selecting just
the right hat as any other part of the apparel. We are
well supplied with all she new shapes in both stiff and
soft hats in all the well-known grades, such as Stetsoni
No-Name, etc.
JOHN a STtTSOD (0)
Strictly one Price
and that price right
€ y 'T <-j •
r
Gentlemen's Shoes.
We have one of the best equipped shoe departments found
in any clothing house in the territory. As we devote our space Tjf
to men's shoes it enables us to show a very extensive line of
high grade shoes, including all the new lasts and toes and con-
sisting of the well known makes, that of itself is a guarantee of f
quality. Remember Stetson's dress shoes are the acme of per- I§1
fectiou, quality and style. The Bostonians equally clever. >
FARQUHARSOM,
High Grade Clothier
and furnisher.
Plain figures, the same to a!f.
Your money buck if not suited.
Polite treatment.
***** * * ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ • 1 • ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦- 6^4 * * & A A A A A A . ^ ..A AAAAAAAAA A A. A -A A- A •«- ^ - * -
NEWS OF THE
RAIL ROADS
Mr. Hawley was made to resign an
a director In both the Southern Pacific
and the Pacific Mall steamship com pa-
■ nlex. Whether Hawley was then allied
j with hte Rook Island group of finan-
ciers is not known. It was generally
thought at the time that the reason
for Hawley's resignation from the
Rock
Island is Blocking
Alton Transfer
publication he had received In connec-
tion with D. J. Sully's operations In
cotton.
ARE TROUBLESOME
TRAINMEN ARE UNDERGOING
TRY1NG EX PRR1ENCR.
Special Dispatch to the State Capital.
Topeka, Kan., Sept. 10.—Schools and
colleges all over the country are open-
ing for the winter's work and as a re-
sult (he trainmen on all of the rail-
roads are undergoing trying experienc-
es. Trainmen d not have any use
for male students, especially when the
New Tork- Sept. 10.—From the students travel n droves. Every train
way in which Inquiries were met by In- ,,,at pulls through Topeka la loaded
TO UNION PACIFIC
Howley-Alton Fight Dates From
Last Spring-Holdings Must be
Deposited hy Sepiemocr
28 Under Agreement
make as much trouble as they can
while on the train.
W hen Santa Re No. 6 came In yes-
terday it was loaded down with young
mpn and boys bound for the military
schools of Missouri.
commission is prepared to do either
or both if It becomes necessary.
The plan of campaign will material-
ize on October 6. when *\nother meet-
'ng will be held with a view of re-
Hnrrlman boards was because of the I clothing.
were old students and wore their uni-
forms hut Ihe majority wore citizens'
Some of then, ceiving suggestions from the railroad
"Talk about trouble," said one of
the brakemen while engines were being
changed at Topeka. "Why, I never
saw so much trouble in my whole lite
and I've been in four wrecks too. The
young scoundrels were all on the train
when I came on. Since then they ha-e
done nothing but raise the dickens."
only the brakemen said something
stronger than "dickens."
MISSOURI PACIFIC LANE
CATTLE DRIVEN THROUGH IT
SPREAD FEVER TICKS.
Special Dispatch to the State Capital.
Topeka, Sept. 10.—The Missouri Pa-
cific has a lane two miles long fenced
terested partlea today the deal pro- wltl! HtU(,ents^ ami according to the j in between the stock yards at David-
hv <. | conductors and brakemen It Is the sole son, Okla., and its southern Kansas
of all of these youths to
jected by Kuhn. Loeb & Co., represent- ambltlon
lilt; the Harriman Interests for sale of
the control of the Chicago and Alton
road to some unnamed Interests, pre-
sumably the Union Pacific has met
with a serious hitch. To John W.
Gate*, Edwin Hawley and the so-
called Rock Island party Jh attributed,
the blocking or the deal. ^11 of these!
Interests, it would appear, are now
large holders of the Alton stock, and
they have held back from depositing
their holdings with Kuhn, Loeb & Co.,
under tho purchase ofTer of $50 for
the common and JHO for the preferr-
ed shares. September 2S is the time
limit set for the stock deposits and,
us yet, it was asserted very posi-
tively today, an amount representing
tlie control has not been deposited.
Representatives of Kuhn. l.oeb and
Co. and the Harriman interests and
the Rock Island party declined to talk
about the situation. A Harriman rep-
resentative merely replied to the que*- and
lions asked of him: "We will let Char-
lie Gates do tho talking." He referred wornen ever attained, the pro-
FGRWOHEIt
vr^o CANNOT BE
'CUBED OF'
| FEMAtE
WEAJtNES
.representatives. F. G. Ewald, engi
neer for the commission, is preparing
a complote list of all grade crossings
between steam roads or between elec-
tric roads or between steam and elec-
tric roads in the state, and will pre-
sent th elist to the commission with
his recommendations.
OCEAN TO OCEAN PROJECT.
Fort Worth, Texas., Sept. 10.—To
build a line from ocean to ocean is the
aim of a company which is endeavor-
ing to purchase from the trustees the
Coahulla and Pacific which line is now
191 miles long, and extends from Sal-
tillo to Torreon. To reach Tampico
the objective point on the coast it
will be necessary to construct 380
miles of track and from Torreon to a
connection with the Occidental road
over which an entrance to the port of
Atlanta may be had the distance i*
about 250 relies making the total
length of the proposed line 820 miles. 1
The Occidental road is only thirty-
eight miles long, and during one year s
period the traffic, both passenger and
love, there remnlncd for him his profes-
sion. for h<r, omy obliteration. It was
was dteinistinp. Thnt was the gist of the
"Bachelor Ma' ''s" article. And she prov-
ed it by tolling about miserable, sick,
Forely trumpled women she knew, who
declared that love was a sham, domestici-
ty a hell, and motherhood a alavery to
the sham and the hell.
Then a "bachelor'' wrote. Ffe, too. was
a pedagogue. He had not married be-
cause be had never experienced that per-
fect equality with a woman that be
yearned for. The Idea of marrying, for
the sake of marrying, was hateful to him,
a feeling he seemed to believe was pecul-
iar to himself and not shared by most
modern n<*n who only marry because they
fall In love.
Marlon Marland replied to the "bache-
lor maid " bet with no distlnet impression
except that she would like to shake her.
The la°t article, however. Is to the
blessed point. It is the story of a girl
who was ambitious for a "career." She
fell in love with a young man, who looked
forward, also, to n "career." Tliev were
wed. but with the agreement and the be-
lief that a voung married woman could
study and "arrive." in a profession, as
well as a maid Her great passion and
ardent hope was her dee nnd she culti-
vated it. with Intervals of visiting her
husband. In time, she reallr.ed that their
separation made him tmhappv and gloomy
and. gradually the wish to be with him.
all time, grew uppermost. She found hrr-
•j.-lf preferring to be a constant wife.
|or tbe periods of living with Tier
I husband, the harder it was to leave him,
■ i tin 111 v she welcomed the career of a
'mother - I cladlv abandoned the career
of a profession singer. And she is very
hnnpv v ith her children.
•bachelor maid" will ss
of them both? What single man can
realize that?
| Therefore wemen of splendid mind nnd
ability, who seem fitted for "careers."
are content with their homed, husbands
aind children. The man is is much part
of them, created by them. In time, as tho
j very children they bear—often more.
And no woman really understands a
•man until she marries him. The supreme
, test of manhood Is to enjoy the respect
of a wife and realize that the strength
of one has been grafted on the other. The
bosh.
Backed up by over a third of a
century of remarkable and uni-
form cures, a record such as no
other re.ii«5dy for the diseases
weaknesses peculiar to
line and drives cattle through it for
shipment. Tho Davidson yards are
south of the quarantine line. County
Attorney Torrence of Cowley coun- freight amounted to $52,433. This road I if'
ty, claims that cattle break out of was designed to form a part of the Si-
the lane occasionally and spread Texas nalo« and Durango system, projected j "nw
fever ticks in that county which it ,n 1880 by Robert R. Symon. Edward U ■
above the quarantine line. He filed 11 Adams and associates, whose vn- T
suit to compel the railroad to aban- rioua concessions were declared for-1
don the lane, claiming it was a mils- fc'ted August 3, 1891. the little lino now know. There is the profound paradox of
a nee. The road won In the lower court ,n existence being the only practical
and he has appealed to the supreme rP8,ll,s °f eleven years of promises and
court | projects.
The live stock sanitary board has I T. D .
quarantined several pastures In Cllau- n Sanctum Sanctorum.
tauqua county near Rodders for learl fnver 1 ost-
of an outbreak of Texas fever.
days ago a Missouri Pacific catt
' one reprinted
to a Chicago dispatch which quot
ed Charles G. Gates the son of John W.
Gates who Is now In thut city as de-
claring that his father and Mr. Haw-
ley would block Harriman and the
Virion Pacific. John W. Gates was n t
at his down town office. Mr. Hawley
sent out word that he had nothing to
■ay. It was learned, however, th it
whatever Mr. dates may have ben
doing In the Alton matter he has not
been acting for the Rock Island In-
terests, whose position is entirely dis-
till, t. It w is Intimated that Edwin
Hawley might be allied with the Rock held sacredly confidential.
Island men in the affair. According t<> if , . , .
Wall street report the Rock Island. . X?.. ^ advice
which includes the Moore brothers. \\ don * ^ai1 write Doctor R. V.
U. Leeds and D. c,. Reed, now own Pierce who will give you the
40.000 common and luvferrrd ahnre best advice possible. Address
° The Alton ilBhi. „ ,or M, HhJ EM«.l0, N. Y.
ley n coneiTiii i it wu, reported todayI Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets
reniiy times h.i, k m I <«t sprit.* wt,-n are a ladies' laxative. No other
the Harriman interests discovered thai
Mr. Hawley was endeavoring t<> s -, ure 1
the property. The result was that tleness and thoroughness.
prietors and makers of Doctor
Pierce's Favorite Prescription
now feel fully v~. ranted in of-
fering to pay SoUO in legal
money of ine United States for
any case of Leucorrhea, Female
Weakness. Prolapsus or Falling
of Womb, which they cannot
cure. All thoy ask is a fair and
reasonable tr'al of their means
of cure. Ail correspc ,1ence
really tn
article on modern
The on!;
... . ,, ^ few I matrimony, among those ■ttractfnR atten-
Missouri Pacific cattle train I ,i,,n 111 Independent Maira ine Is the
was wrecked at Rodgers. It was car-.0I1'" rri>,|nt« •! on this page today.
ping cattle from the Raw country be- ful com men I*!' 'by T'woman ^mf^s^on
low the quarantine line to the Kansas! the pmtitud.s about wifehood and moth"
City market for immediate slaughter Im ",dii,Sho •"oer"ed to feel that conven-
Sixteen of the r.ttle escaped Injury 1
and ran over the adjacent country. i°']y un<' P"'n. which the man p-
Three of tham are still at larse. The
cattle all had a few fever ticks on
them.
i him
big a careei
helor wife" Is
...... But why should she? It's
invmoiu story. It Is undoubtedly
ti N nerfeetiv natural. It repre
[he vast majority of women.
truth Is that men or women, who
ever been married, are not compe-
don't
ns of married
life producing subtle conditions that the
inexperienced do not realize exist.
lteflned women and manly men never
discuss their personal experiences which
involve telling the subtle things. The
bachelor thinks he knows nil about wo-
m< n. perhaps, but a moment's reflection
will brine tho realization thnt he never
heard a married man. whom he respected,
reveal anything of the privacy of his per-
sonal experience.
Married life works decided changes In
bop' rpen and women. The man single
and the man married are as different as
is the man at ?o and tile man at or at
l'5 and • t 'tr. The character the chang-
ed man depend* upon the woman. What
unmarried woman can realize the re-
markable Interchange of qunhtles be-
tween wife and husband, and that. If all
Is well, thi se finalities will be tho best
TO PROTECT LIVES
ILLINOIS MAY FORCE GUARDING
OP GRADE CROSSINGS.
Chicago, 111., Sept. 10.—The state
railroad and warehouse commission
has determined to try to compel the
steam and electric railroads to protect
their dangerous grade crossings
throughout the state In the country |
I and in the cities and villages and to
| prevent the construction of such cross-1
j ines in the future. This decision was
reached today after a conference be-1D
t ween Commissioners Neville amilg
French and representatives of nearij ♦
j every steam railway in the state an I %
c several of the more important elec-|§
trie roads [n rder to carry out their ♦
I pur pose it may become necessary for'5
j the commission to appeal to the courts 'o
.in a test case and a > to petition Hu , jr
amend the law wit!
view to giving them m re power
NEWBRO'S HERPIODE
The ORIGINAL remedy thnt • kills the Dandrufi Germ."
GOING-' G-OIIMG-! • GONE ! I!
1
Cut Rates
TO
Southwest
AND
California
$25.00 California, one
way, daily, September
IS to October IS. Good
in Tourist Sleepers,
berth rate extra
F. J. BF.ST, Agent.
old words, about being one. nre not a
platitude, but u reality. In that lies the
power of monogamy. And therein polvca-
my has ever failed to produce ' tho
strength of the one-wife European races
Put the manifold Intricacies, the ex-
quisite refinements, the delicate process, <
never can be told. No novelist has evef
undertaken It. it Is the most real sanc-
tum sanctorum In the world.
ORVILLE T. SMITH,
LAWYER.
108'/;. Harrison avenue, Room 1. Tele-
phone 654.
Special attention to the law of Corpo-
rations, Real Property and Insurance.
Guthrie, Oklahoma.
mors EXCHANGE SHOP
Blacksmith for 38 Years
Exchange.
We do all kinds of general
blacksmith work, such as re-
pairing of machinery, wagons,
carriages. We wish to call
the attention of the farmer to
our special work on disc plow
and drill sharpening.
We guarantee all of our work
MIM'S EXCHANGE SHOP
Corner 7th and Noblo Ave.
Phone 278.
West Guthrie.
DO YOU WANT A RURAL MAIL
O BOXT
State Capital Hat the Bar
gain For You.
sc.
:
Herplclde will Save It. Merpicide will Save It
THE LADIES OBJECT
to n giimmv nnd stickT hair drcusmp, r r
our th«t is full of mliincntury chemi-
cals intended to dy«- the hair. That
inarxril prrfrreuo* for a dainty drt^ —
iin* parttciil rly oae that overcomes e%.
ce sivr oillinrM and leaves tlie liajr
Too Late for Herplclde.
!i«ht !. nd fluffy, i-s reflected In the
eli. Tin. I> sale of N\ « bro's Herpiclde.
I.artiei l.^vom • enthi.-iantl over its re
fleshing quality and ■ xquis.te fragr.m.-o
It destroy* th- tnic-rb c growth Tn the
-alp. cure*dandruff Mop* falling hair
- ••• |>unri in |
control over the grade crossings. Tliej
Dru0 Stores, $1.00. Send 10c.. stamps to HERPICIDE CO.. Dept. H, Detroit
Mich., for a sample.
C. R. REiNFRO. Special Avo it,
TO HEAK TS TO BELIEVE.
Our pianos are brimful of melody.
The music of the spheres Is hut the
poet's dream alongside the soul-pleas-
ine strains from
The stylo, workmanship and price
are surprisingly good for patrons,
peculiarly pleasing to money savers.
Hear your misfortunes with fortitude
and adorn your home with Hie piano.
Write if you am Interested. Will sell
on easy payments. Will exchange on
old organs or pianos. Phone 3G2,
E. H. KNAUSS.
Guthrie, O. T.
E. H. KNAUSS,
Offer on Boxes.
The Pond Steel Box and The
Weekly State Capital ind
Oklahoma Farmer, one
y®ar $2.25
Tho Bond Steel Box and Tho
Daily Stute Capital, oi<o
year (by mail only) $400
This box sells at 12.00; ao you
. •« >n the above Dally offer you
gat this box. with two keys and
lock, free. Why buy a box when
you can get it lllte this?
THE STATE CAPITAL CO., Z
Guthrie, Okla. £
j)
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 122, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1904, newspaper, September 11, 1904; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc125583/m1/8/: accessed May 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.