The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 13, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITA!SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1900.
BEATUIES
RAZOHBACKS STILLWATtR JIANV PtOPU
OF EL RENO VICTORIOUS THE WINNER
HAVE
CATARRH
Capital's Correspondent Details j
Town 's F atures
STATE UNIVERSITY IS
CLOSE SECOND
Standing of the Clubs.
60ME PROMINENT CITIZENS j ♦
Politice Comes in for Nudge by
Critical Observor — El Reno
li Nominally a Republican
S ronghold While Canadian
County has Few Democrats
fc pedal 10 the S4Hte (*apn l.
Kl Jte-nn, Oklu.. May in - Piiretn
InsrtucMoiui received from the editor In
cUisf, 1 herewith lnukt* a report of how
1 found things In thn beautiful city uf
li! lteno during my vlalt there this week.
I landed In Kl Reno via St. I«ouK l£l
F.eno and Western railTnud In.st night.
This ri«il through u llm . oun-
try tnd« un •very hand 1 noticed us line
t rops an ever grew out of door* The
conductor, Major ('harlo* Brady. pointed
out a number of flno furms In ixigan.
Oklahoma, Kingfisher ami Canadian
conn ties and gave the name* of the
owiero. Navina Is a nice little town and
I v/aa tokt a greet shipping point for
oaUle and gut in. bockrldgo has grown
rwpidiy durimg the past year and fx bless
rd with a tine farnvtug country itround
it. Piedmont la another good little town
and the inM-chants are ull doing a good
t^eliisa*. Hlonlund Is a email place bin
It hns plenty of room to grow, and from
what 1 have b«en told, it will boom this
fall providing the bountiful harviwt now
growing is harvest«d In good shape.
There le a rumor afloat that the Fort
Smith and Western will itbeorb the St.
l^oula. W lteno and Western If 11 does
It will be a grand thing for all tne towns
along the line of the road.
Arriving In 101 Reno 1 put up at the
Auattne hotel, one of the bent the
end met Hon. Thomas Ridge way Reld.
John W. Clark. Frank Kraft, Clyde Mat
IhMwenn and other gnnUeoMin who were
. deekous that I should go out and
tee city under the electric lights.
HM Reno ljs one of the solldest cltlM
!n Oklahoma. for Uh siie. It hux more
substantial and costly building# than Any
*.ther city of its sl«e In the territory
For instance take the Kika home, two
la^ge trick schools, eleven handsome
church edifices. Carnegie library, over
twn hunrtred large brick business house*
A fine electric Mflht and gas plant, and
r ithln a few months hate a large and
handsome union <U*pot. a county high
St hool, opera house and canning fkudoiv
There la no use in concealing the /act
that Canadian oounty in strongly Im
; . <gnated with democracy. while 111 Reno
a* a general thing Is strongly republlcun
The democratic candidates are first In
the tlcld this year. The republicans arc
waiting patiently for tli * passage of the
statehood bill, knowing that It Is going
to conie, and they are not overly anxious
to Mquander their good money paving fot
announcements when the . linn en are
there wll be no election next fall
I Just anked a few qui«tloii to be
t>o>.'iable Mk* and learned the following.
to-wHt "Tom' ItaM, the receiver of
the El Reno land office, saya tin- farm
era are pa living up on their farms and
/or the last year there has been very
few veltnqulMhinenta. "Tom I* no thin-
ner than he ws« two years ago. hard
l.-mest toil aeeiss to agree with him
l-rank S. Sickles, register In the land
«>/th", spend* his evening* after four
o'clock on his farm, a short diet a ic e
from the city Like unto my old warm
ai d esteemed friend, Hon. "Hill" (>rimes
if Kingfisher, Prank is a great brlievei
If eifaMa. lie has a tine held of that
noted fat producer almost ready to cut
•Colsnsl diaries 1* Din. olu is praoth
Ing law and is not losing any sleep over
poet office or other eiocliable matters. Th
colonel will represent Corporal Tanner at
the next territorial encampment of the
G. A. R which will be held this month
Turner Bradford Is spending hi* time
In racing ot er the Hock Island railroad,
looking after nis cotton Interests Tin-
ner drops Into town mn e u week to keep
rates on his brother, Harry, alio is run-
ping the First National bank.
Otto A Shuttee, ex-member of the
World's Fair > omtnlMly. and also ex-
member of Oovemor Tom Ferguson's
"bug-house" board, is taking life easy
c'typing coupons and guiding the dentin-
ie« of the Oltliens National bank
Senator CS. Washington H Uunn Is .it-
t id4ng strictly to bu«nej* In U— K1
P.eno State bank He a*vs he has •
chewed politico but might be urged to
g a* a delegate to the constitutional
ti nentlon which will be held In Outhr.e
>• i. w 11 • • ti tt *
Tulsa ti ft G-«u 0
♦ l-'t. Smith 4 . {6.1 ♦
♦ iuthrie . >■> |S1 ^
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
WHERE THI^ r*LAY today.
Ft. Smith at Chithlie
VI. McAlester ut Shawnee
Muskogee at Tulsa.
'•rter three days delay. Councilman;
Walker's petition to congress for the do-'
'ilion of a section of land south of}
'. • i rIe for the establishment of a water
shed has been sent to Delegate M.-Guirs,
The council passed the resolution un-
crlmously last Monday and It was not
si i to Washington until Thursday
"•glit.
The matter was laid before the Bus-
• Men'.s League yesterday and the
foliowtirg resolution were adopted:
The Business Men's l>eagus of the
City of Guthrie gives full eiiiktrsement
of the request of ti,, 'dty Council of
Guthrie, for the granting by the Govern-
r.'nt to the City of Guthrie of the school
se-iuin lying south of the city, for water
works purposes.
2 We believe this to he the only way
to obtain sufficient water supply for the
city For many years we have been
stiuglin to recover some means to ob-
triii a sufficient water etipply, but so
far the supply has not been nearly ade-
quate to the tlemand . and the quality
un bad.
V\ e tM'lleve the only means for n< '
ting sufficient good water for the «• 11>
Im by a reservoir system And the only
place adjacent to the city for this system
I.s (his school section With this scc-
ti>. we believe a reservoir could be con-
structed which will give ample water of
hast quality for this < ity. no matter how
r.>uch It may grow.
'• Whatever value there may be to
tils section, has been added by the de-
velopment of the city of Guthrie, and
ti request that It be used for the pur-
pose outlined Is fully Justified
HIGHEST SCORE 47 POINTS
Darling of Norman Was a Star
Backache, a Warning Symptom
of Kidney Trouble.
Pe-ru-na Is Invaluable in Such
Cases.
Prominent Persons Who Have
Been Cured.
' my appreciation of your excel-
But Lost 220 Yard Hurdle by!
Mi. J. H1 y ■ 1, nu n Sir.. . [). v m,. [i . <•.
writes
"1 wish to
lent remedy
"I have always enjoyed excellent health, ex-
cept frequent and painful a Hooka of bladder
tiouble, w, h doctors failed to relief or cut • .
"Upon recommendation I used Peruna to
my utter sat.stactlon, not having had,an at
tack now tcr four or t ivo years," J. Bi ylor
OOOOOO CO O O 0 O O ,0 O O 0 V o V O v ■
Falling—Central State Normal a
Was Third, Kingfisher Fourth £
and Northwestern Normal Waa o
o
I o
o
o
Fifth
Special to til
Oklahoma
Agr icultural
Stall Capital,
y < >kl<< May
Mechanical college
1'.'.—Th
Mcalester 14; shawnee 8
Special to the Shite (>apltal
Sluiwnee. Okla. May l'J Today's s or.
It. H. K. |
South McAlester .14 i ' i
Shawnee H86
Huttarles Porter and White; llaney.
Hlte and Moore.
tulsa 6: muskogee 4
B|«eclal to the StAte t'a^dtal
Tulsa, 1. T. May ij Today h si oi •
It. ii. i:.
M.fskofea 111:!
Tulsa i l? I
Hatterles Craft and Nfcsi. Smith .mil
ts s fine lawyer and wnen w are gi\en
statehood on or about June 16. he will
stand an excellent chance ti. get the
cicslre of his heart.
SUNDAY ST I 'PH* HI. ltKNo
CanoAlan county has one of the larg-.
t !*t Kjrm is unluus.:!i t in* territory, and I Stlllw
and
scored the highest number of p .irits
the inter-collegiate track meet here to
i:a . The Stillwater team had forty-
o\en polnts#to Its credit TI- S: r
university came next with ).'■ points.
(' ntral Btate Normal with 15 points.
Kingfisher fourth. KI points. Northwest-
ern Normal fifth, : point*-
Perhaps 1,600 people atended the event,
which was pulled off at Colcord park
under most favorable c!tcnmsluneea. The
only protest was that reg.xtered by Still-
water on the ground that a misfhkc was
inude in naming the winners in the 100
ard dush.
Orvlllc Fran Is of Guthrie wan official
starter and Mr. Stratford of Enid, rcf
eree. EnthJsIusm was siiown by the
spectators.
Darling of the 8>tate University team
won the loo yard due11 with Nichols of
tho Northwestern normal second, and
Noble of Norman, third. The time was
10 scconds flat
Clark of the Agricultural ••ml Median-
ical college won the shot-put. W.imslcy
of the Central State normal was second
and Campbell of the same plate, third.
Distance ;W feet incites. The tcriitoriiil
record was broken by Wamalty, t tic pre-
vious record of 38-J belnb held by Camp-
bell
The .'jo yard dna.i wus captured by
I>.trllng with (idlliLKlier of tftillwat
Noble of Norman trailing n clos
ond and third. The time, jj seconds, was
one-fifth to the good of Darling's last
year's record.
Hughes of the State ifliiversity won
the 120 yard hurdle. J5\ereet of the same
college was second and Talbot of the
Agricultural and Mechanical school third.
Time 16;2-5. breaking Talbot's record of
BLYLER
CHAPELLE'S SUCCESSOR
Kev. Blenk of Porto Rico Fol-
lows Late Archibishop
Wjujhitigtoh m.u i: -niviu Rev. JuI1—
II Blenk, bishop of Porto Rico, has heeA
H polnted archbishop of New Orleans
till the vacancy created by the
o£ Archblsliop Chapeiie.
Panama hats at Petsrs-n's *
NEW BRICK FOR WANETTE.
Special to The State Capital.
WUIMH Okla Mdy' 12—0.
lias commcncea co «c*v«lo prcpiraiorr
to erectlilK 4 S«rtO l.rlrk building In
l>!.i■uf tlin hulldlngs that w,r«
ilc.ifojx] i)y [|r, rtcentlj. TLI, ji«w
building will be completed by July 1st,
ami * J1 be occupied by \v. o. Ijusion of
Ardmore.
J Ladies' Sunbonnet for 9c at the Fair,
Underwear it °*tersen's.
ANOTHER DEPARTURE
Likely
SR/qMPJ:
Dangerous Kidney
Diseases Cured
WHEN the kiinev.s he .
by catatrh. either from
work, or au extension
this?,
>f catarrh
Lill to per-
( from sfime othei organ, they
j form their normal functions.
sj '' i liie work of the kidneys to rx-
.•reie from the blood many, of the poison*
whit h aceutiiulate in tne body.
If the Hldpeys fail in their work, the
poisons accumulate to such an extent as
to cause convulsions, which often prove
fatal.
I'eruna. b> relieving the kidneys of
their congeste 1 ui,| catsrrhul conditions,
leaves them free to act in a normaJ man-
Clark of Htlllwater wop the hammer
throw In 114 fe^t, 7 Inches; Armstrong of j "
Kingfisher ami Wilson of Stillwater f. l- | l! al"" • • «tii« hm ti,.. tion of the
lowed in order i equalising t!ie irculatlon of the
The 440 yard dash was Darling's In I bIood 1,1 a" iariB of
51:01. Woods of Stillwater was second
und Lowe of Norman third. Last ears
recoid for the race was ;,2 flat, held by
Burns of Stillwater.
The dis us throw went to Stillwater
through Clark's hard one of lu«-8, trim-
ming the 11Iglies', prev.ou* re. ord by ?
Inclie- Varlow of Central State normal
second in this event ami Wilson of
third.
A remedy- that relieves catarrhal de-
rangements of the kidneys should cer-
tainly lie considered a ho isehohl rem-
edy. Peruna is such a remedy.
Hiqh ( ommendat.onfor Pe-r -na
Mr. c. R. Flier. Mt. Sterling Ky
, is reported tjisi
large mill 111 < v>rii
11 w, 11 ti Varlow took the r inning b id Jump
% Hi an eh*- | scoring .-.'J Varrid of Stillwater and
va.'O". j Teeter of Norman atiie next. Curling's
Krom who I <■ t u 1 • I learn t o- moruls of > "id for the Jump wus :1 tlat
El lteno ai <• about its ^ood as an be Stillwater had the half mile run to
found anywhere. Taere a e very few • itself, Wright of that team winning and
I ersoius In l i l and the married no u ne | Spalding following closely Thompson of
writes:
"I liave suffered '
i kidney and blad-
I>asf March i com-
menced using your
Peruna and continued
for three months.
"I have not used it
since, nor have | felt
pa I
der
j.ible
i years past.
I believe that I am well
and therefore give my highest
commendation to the curative
qualities ot Peruna."
Neglected catarrh of the kidneys is
apt to develop
diabetes when
possibility.
CATARRH OF KIDNEYS
CAUSED MUCH SUFFERING
OOOOtfO-OOOOOOOOOOO
O Mr. Leopold Brandl. 246 Bleenker O
O street, Brooklyn, N. Y . writes: O
OOOOOOO "I wuk sick three months with O
O catHfrh of the kidneys and lungn. I was treated O
O ' y my home physb an and relieved to some ex C
O tent, but after I had worked again for two weekH O
O my old suffering -backache and pains in the right O
Iniik returned. The dreadful coiig'h w ioh 'bothered O
m" day and night lasted six months and no on« O
couldxhelp nie. ^
l triid thre different patent nicdlcn - w'tli.. :*
a- .i l. I could scarcely eat any tinng a and slept on I.. O
a few hours each nig it
"A friend toid mo to take Peruna. I did so and o
. the second day my apDtitlte had improved. I
' to >k a teaspoonful of Per una every hour, day
«* a id night, lorthren weeks. Now I have taken O
* rivo hoitles. lean eatenou«h for two peopln .
O arid am able to sleep well.'1 O
O Whenever I met a sick person. I advise him to O
O ' ike Peruna. 1 thank you a thousand times for \ our O
O med> cine, as ii wan the only remedy that saved me. v
O We continue to keep it in our u family. Ivo- C'
O pold Brandl. O
ooooooooaooooooooooooooo
received such a volume of enthusiastic
letters of thanks as Dr. llartmun for
Peruna.
Wright's Disease or
ire is almost an im
We
fllf
ii,i:iy >-siiii"uiials like
the "lies given here.
We < an g \ e our readers
glimpse of the \ast array
endorsements we ar> r«
month /
No other physician in t
only a .slight
of unsolicited
.eivlng every
REVISED FORM I LA
"For a number of years requests have
come to me from a multitude of grateful
friends, urging that Peruna be given a
sl'iTUt laxative quality. I have been ex-
perimenting with a laxative addition for
quite a length of time, and now feel
gratified to announce to the friends of
Peruna that t have incorporated such a
quality In the medicine which, in my
opinion, can only enhance it ■ well-known
beneficial character.
"S It. HART MAN. M P."
doing better than they have done
several years. There is no gambling go-
lug on that can be discovered outside
of a quiet V£ine of draw, the men folks
Indulge In while their l etter halves
>l ei!d their spare time in playing the
seductive game of flinch.
1 nless the Census taker oas slipped «
• stsiifw here, K| Reno has within her
jes !• 457 snub all lionattdo residents,
nut! from tlie l<s>k-> of the adults and
nehool children. It must be a pros-
pet o us community
. bad a short talk w.th Judge Joe
I/owe late of Washington county Kan-
sas. Joe tetls me lie is a candidate fv>r
tie legislature but Is willing to wait
far s year ff we are to have a state
1«gUlS-ture. Joe served In the lvan> «s
lSfislature. sMMSiOn of 1883. and did <•*-
cee<l4ngly well.
Colonel Randolph
HtaUwuuan. eminent
with the
Hdmond
Brooks
Forrest.
politicians crltl. lie
(pate Bill M.Oulre ha
Wsshlnston. Bird M
lawyer and poet,
territory as Colonel
of the best men to
In oklahoma Bot
eary to hear would-
work I >He-
t entral State normal was third. Time
^;08 3-j.
Stillwater took the relay-
State university second
third. Time 3 40 1--..
Reeds of Norman won the running
Kg.i Jump, Teeters of Norman second
and Clark of Stillwater third. Record
5:07}; previous record
I.a age of K ligtlsher Was : e lirst In I he
mile run, I.ovtste of Stillwater second
and Peterson of Central State normal
third. Time 4.'44.
1'olc \ault Al'IllS' : "hg Vai ow and
Reed. All of these contestants missed
the |m>!< a: l 1.01 and Armstrong took the
lowered bar ut ;t*4
Darling had the £J0 ard .'die cftiched
bui fell tit teen feet in udvan. e of the
ileld and Everest of Norman finished
Hi.- w.th I'albot second and Palling
third. Tiuio -ii
SEASONS FOR
GOVERNORS
Terms of 2D State Officials Near
ing Close
AN UNUSUAL CONDITION
btraw hats at P«ter n's.
OKLAHOMA FUGITIVE
CAPTURED IN WEST
Before the End of Next Year
Successors to Over Half the
Executives in the Union Must
be Chosen—Majority of Elec-
tions Takes Place Nov. 0th
M M. A tn],.
aid Rob,
r t>kla-
ngliam W.isr
• Herald fr«
man known
Ma
12
m v i
terms
this year or |
thl
fall
him
.Major Neal W Evans, the oldss w!
merrhaut In the two territories, looks
frisky as he Aid thirty years ugo
major has had his tips and downs sl<
Ms advent Into the souti.w-'st, but
sow running one of the largest me
thing from « neert4« to su anchor. «t
hi Oklahoma. The major Is an snth
lae i. Hhnssr ami i t thlns
men pleasure than to go up against the
f-hrlne.
August G. M- nge another old tim« r.
i.a'ing seen nlxty-four yes is of turmoil
and strife 111 this wt ked world, but who
l> as full of business as many a man
*bo la not half his age, Is the watch
<t< T of the city 11 aaaury Mi Menger
U on the flnan.e committee In the ty
(ouncil and Is the right man in that
position. The republicans wHI elect him
to the office of mayor n< m spr ug
Propping into tne wffiee of Hlak'
) ink*' and Istw. I ran a roes tla* -etiiof
ri.int.. i ./ ho fitm n«'- c 0 btaki
M Rlake k an awful
I Slid ! Wtil-r g
ran uM th.- inform*-'
M1 K. h Bloke wes
s-*ke,t what he knew
si dps Ml lUake Wll
ihc Job now
arrived ut Vancouver f
Ore . In April, hus been'lu
son. R. C by Sheriff Klli-
as Samuel Orem, who I:
the m irder of Sheriff Bui
ty Sheriff Cockbum In
tied at Nel-
r oklahoma '
r«l and Depu-
klahoma on
■dge June 30, W-
IDAHO FI«E NO
LONGER UNDER CONTROL
the
d
ite<d tt>
per depti
•ad i
ISt
I
f\o profess to h
ster In farmlne but I do
ide'hH about disging | ASt
I hUrely take In the pit nlc
J. Y SMITH
riRST WOMAN S CUJB HOUSE
«d <>klali'mn Fetle
ilsee. Sparks rr
Northern tra i
trol und the ru
are making «ffui
movable, property
many thousands
nd Point. I
disastrous
started the fire, I
beyond all con-
of this vicinity i
r to save their -
.. ,-.iw niilii and
t of poles Mild
destroyed.
i.e governor* expir
n IC'TT. and t.ielr successors must
-• n before the end of the year.
a II elect a s tccessor to tlovernor
i n on June 4, the Arkansas
will be held on Sept. 1; Vet'*
Sept. 4 Maine's on Sept. 10;
- ort Oct. and Kentucky's on
Ml the other states t boosing
. ers will elec-t them on Nov. ti.
the same dmo representatives n
are chosen T5ie states that
ivernors this year, with the names
retiring executives, are
TO TEST LOCALITY.
Special to the State Capital.
Cowett.i I. T. May 1'J There is mam
i fee ted here a determnation to test fnllj
this locality for oil ond gas Of the six
wells already put down fl\e of them are
profitable gas producers, one of them
measuring a volume of over three thous-
and cubic feet per day So fnr there
hns been only one dry hole. The Dem
tiling Investment Co of Oswego. Kansas
began yesterday to sink well no 7 on
the John Simmons allotment Just south
of t.ie corporation limits of the town
It is on ihls properly where the hlg gas-
ser Is locuted-the. one which csugbt
i n some weeks ago and birned, stub,
boriy resisting ixiii.m on for three day!
and nights illuminating the town and
Ihc prurles for several square miles a-
round about and seen at points of ele-
vation a ialf score of miles away.
This enterprising company Is now of-
fering gas to manufacturers, who will
locate here, at the low rate of It cents
per thousand cubic feci. The Katy rail-
road has agreed with this company
that freight rates to and from f'owetee
shall be so fixed as to correspond with
those to and from Muskogee and Tulsa.
There is thfrfore i fine outlook for
the early location of several manufact- |
oi^es here nd most lonspltutous am- |
thing there is u big brick plant, as t'lu i
soil found here- Is said to lie of un un
usually fine variety
JUST THREE IN LINCOIN
COUNTY POOR FARM
>M a
TI*
ke*>t I
Just
Spe
HOPPE SET HOT
PACE FOR BILLIARDIST
■nan to talk
i S ewvpa|>er
seeks nftei
busy when
IM-Ihg Judg-
sndldate for
dialed ti;. J\,dg« Milton *,
(•srber. who will t barge the next grand
|ur> In tt ** nrth distil Mr. )tlak«
ty. Mra
Muskogee
women in that i Ity,
ana. W. D. Jenks, d . Arkansas.
i so i Davis, d.; California, G. C l*ar-
tl t*o]orsdo, J F. Mt l onalil, i ;
ie at. Henry Roberts, i . Georgia
I I'errell, d ; Idaho. F. It. Ooodina.
« A H Cummins, r.; Kansas. K
Koch. r.: Kentucky. J. C W. Heck-
. ti Muine. Win. T Cobb, r.; Mas-j
s.-us. Curtis tlu-dtl Jr., • , M . hi- j
r M. Warner, r.; Minnesota. .1 A '
id. Nebraska J H Mickey, r.: I
ula John Sparks, d . New Hainp- ,
John Melsine, r ; New York. F. W. ■
: i s r North Dakota R. Y Surles {
* -son. ti R Ohamberlan. d , Penn-i
S. v^'. Pennypscker i , Rhode
i t jeorge II I'tler. i fltuith Caro-. man,lgwii«n
li "Heyward, d South liukota, I ,1()t pui^iu
I F.lrod, r.; Tennessee, John
i tns H W T Lanham d
. unly poor takes <
p« is. It Is rather queer that
the destitute had a chance to
• themselves (heir number d> -
pei cent. The so-called poor
line thing for the taxpayers,
ent that those that were for-
>plled by the commission! rs
nei essaries of life sternly and
•sent the abject idea of gtdng
Hill to the poor house.
POPULAR TULSA RAILROAD
1 to The State Capital.
Tulsa I T .May 12 -K. K Fitzgerald j
the genial agent of the Santa Fe and |
Midland Valley, has returned with Ills I
| bride front a wedding trip to Fort Smit.i.
, Aik. The pop Hat gioom w as the r<*e'p
i ent of a basketful of telegrams on
his arrival .:t Fort Smith. Most of them '
j were from railroad employes on the two 1
mails and all wers fellCltlOUS to an ex- i
| ti* mi One enthusiast wired the hotel j
l --I—the couple stopped
a< t t hey w ei e u newly
lZ4R IS FRIENDLY
10 HIS SUBJECTS
Prospects of Peaceable Relations
Between Throne and People is
Strengthened by Interview of
Delegate With the Emperor
ht Petersburg May 12. The hope ot
the establishment of friendly relations
l-etween the emperor and the national
laiiutment wa* further strengthened to-
dny by th® audience granted by Bnvpei -
or Nicholas at Peterhof to Prof Mour-
cmtieff, jir.sident of the lower house,
l'rof. Mouromtaeff returned to Si. Pet-
ersburg from the audience apparently
much impressed by the emperor's earn-
est Interest in the problems of the coun-
try. Though tne radical hotheads had
been praying that Prof. Mouromtseff
would lay down the law to the emperor
and make a scene, the half hour's con-
'.isatlon was skillfully gukled both by
tile sovereign and the parliamentary
chief, so that friction was avoided.
MANY PENSION BILLS
House Passes 320 Measures—Na-
val System Attacked
Washington ^lay 12. After passinx
three hundred and twenty pension bills
the house today devoted much time to
considering i point of order made by
Mr Tawney against an appropriation for
a new steel floating dock provided In tho
ii val appropriation b II.
Th. i hair held the point of order well
taken, in n carefully prepared opinion
Mr. Hepburn (lowai made a vigorous
atta- k upon the court mfcrtlal system of
the navy, and especially criticised the
officers responsible for the accidents that
have happened to ships of the navy.
A point of order against the appropria-
tion for the naval training station at
Lake Bluff. III., was pending when the
house adjourned until Monday.
FOUR TRAINMEN ARE
KILLED IN COLLISION
I.uncbbunt Va. . May 12. Four train
men were killed and foul Injured In a
i lllston today on the Norfolk anil West*
trn near here
Rev. Carters' Confession'
to Cause Trouble
* "'k Ma) I.'.—Tl„, question or
fi.-< ipliiO.iB or „r trying on hor<.,
' lie v. Dr. Samuel T Carter
iv ho several years h*o became prom-'
inent in an effort to have the West-
minster confesson revised, was taken
up today by the Presbytery of Nassau
at Jamucla. I, I The meeting was
t ailed because of a letter in which
Dr. farter declares that he does not
believe the Westminister confession
| to be the truth of God. but "an Jdo*
i of man's invention as truly as any
, worshipped In Delhi, Pekln or Africa.
: This letter Is addressed to the gener-
al assembly of the Presbyteria®
church which meets May 18 in Des-
Moines. la. The writer terms it a
"protest and confession.'* The letter
I is as follows:
"Fathers and Brethren:
'The presbytery of Nassau overturn-
ed the general assembly a year ago
| asking that the brief stalenient of
doctrine be subntituted for the West
i minister confession as the confession
of our church. By >i practically un«n
Imoi; Note the general assembly ro-
je. ted this overture and retained tit*
Westminister confession. By this ac-
tion of the assembly many ministers
are compelled to declare their accept
I ant e nf a confession which they do
heartily believe and many ot our best
j members to acknowledge a creed of
I which they are ushamed, 1 appeal
j from this action of the assembly to
I tho manliness and honesty ot' tho
1 ministers and membership of tho
i Presbyterian church.
"Many yen' ugo wheu 1 was ardain
ed to the ministry of the gospel 1 de*
- lured In the most solemn mannef
: that I believed the Westminister con*
| lesslon to be the truth of (Jod; I no«r
in a very solemn manner declare that
I do not believe It to. be t,he truth ot
tro ll; that I utterly reject ii as a set-
ting forth of the character of the
I heavenly father.
1 Underwear at Petersen's.
:
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
O THE WICHITA MARKET. «
+ Wi . '.i Ma| ' - The i in of ♦
+ mjf light. Tho 4}
+ Friday rectlpta are usually Htfht- ^
♦ ■ ♦
♦ ♦
4 ♦
# tho market were leaned ip earl #
4 ♦
# of the market later i-i tne day ^
# ♦
♦ . vi.- iiighei The top v i - ♦
^ sstei ^
4 ♦
0 ♦
♦ a top price of $• 16 If any good ♦
4 4
+ ♦
e week - ♦
+ i •• MJIM • Bscs -• • ♦
♦ • " ♦
♦ t.-i Jlc ♦
#♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
FOOTBALL PLAYER SUICIDES
defeated
of tv
'harb
V Id-.'
J Hel
Wine
Wyoming,
li
Mr
Pttigfrald ate receiving
Ions of friend* .n Tulaa
liny will go to housekeeping at
ngri
bt.
-Via
Ih
of decpon-
i'.incy. Malcolm McJ^eod. .i Harvard an I
institute of t«<'hn(Stwy football player
. mniltt«vi suicide yMterifay by slMiotiug
Ing hlnutolf.
The Best Guaranty of Merit
Is Open Publicity.
Rvcry bottle of Dr. Pierce's world-
famed medicines leaving tin-great labo- ;
ratory at Buffalo. N. V , has printed ,
upon its wrapper ail the Ingredients j
entering into it* composition. This fact J
alone places Ur. Pierce's Family Medt-"
cines in a r.Uus nil l>u thtm*elve*. 'l'hey .
cannot be classed with patent or sec re ti
medicines l*icaus<' they are neither. This |
is why so many unprejudiced physicians]
prescribe thetu at.a recommend them to;
their patient*. They know what the*,
are composed of, and that the ingredlsnu
are those endorsed by the most eminent
minJIcal hiithor.tie«
The further fa<'t that neither l r.
Pierce's tlolden Medical Discovery, tho
rrreat stomach tonir Fiver Invigoraior,
ieart regulator aud Ulood purifier, nor his
"Favorite Preserlption' for weak, over-
worked. broken-down, nervous women,
contain* any alcohol, also entitles them
to a place ail by themselves.
Man* years ago. Dr. Pierce discovered
that chemically pure glycerine, of proper
strength, is a better solvent and preserv-
ative of the medicinal principles resid-
ing In our Indigenous, or naljbo. medi-
; citiHl planus than Is alcohol and, further-
moie. that It possehnes valuable medicinal
properties of lt.« own. lielng demulcent,
nutritive, antiseptic, and a most efficient
1 antiferment.
Neither of the above medicines con-
tain.' alcohol, or any harmful, habit - ,
forming drug, as will be «*m fnwn a
f;lance at the formula printed en earh j
Kittle wrapper. They are safe to use and
potent to curs.
Not only do physicians prescribe the
above, non secret madi'-ines largely, hut
the most intelligent people employ thein
-people who would not think of using
the ordinary patewi. or secret medicines.
Kvery ingredient entering into the com
position of Dr. Pierce's medicines has
the strongest kind of an endorsement
from leading medical writers of the
several schools of practice. No other
iiHili ines put up (or like purposes has
am Mich pro/rsstonei endorMUient.
Dr Pierce's Pleasant Psllets cure con-
siipatton. rorMtlj>i|tjiat U the cause of
many ditessas
f ure the dts«as
ill Ti snd tw© a
gl'h sell ibeffi
good." Kaity Wo
the cause and you
■ a gentle
ibartl, Drug-
'Just as
e a mild talha-rti
■
I
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 13, 1906, newspaper, May 13, 1906; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126137/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.