The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 2, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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THI 0 *AWQMA 8TATK CAPITAL. BATTOPAY MOBJflHO, MAhoH 2, 190T
April
ay
The Wlnbeld Priico Iron Works
to Move There '
March ST,
The months when Hood's Sarsaparilla makes thousands of men and u omen well.
The springtime—when you are, if ever, to regain that lost strength, purify that ; LQCATE NQRTH or rRI800
foul humor-laden blood, get back the health nature intends you to have-
that stuson is here.
Hvery man, woman and child should
now take Hood s Sarsaparilla, the only
ENID TO HAVE
THE SHOPS
, w When
IK-Graves'
Tooth Powder
is used twice-a-day you will have
white teeth, hard gums, clean
mouth, pure breath, good digeS'
THE CONSTITUTION
(continued from page on"*)
Spring Medicine
that is worthy of the name.
Its merit has been proved in thousands
of cures; its praise is sounded in thou-
sands of testimonials; it is a friend in
thousands of homes,—where this spring,
as every spring, it is doing its great
work as a reliable remedy for all troubles
of the blood, stomach, liver and kidneys.
It purifies, vitalizes and enriches the
blood. It builds up weakened and shat-
tered nerves. It creates an appetite and
gives digestive strength. It has made
thousands of lives worth living that once were a
It is not a patent medicine.
Createst Wood Purifier.-"I «m «><• youn«.«t «nd only
living son of Dr. J. Blackmail, well known In Massachusetts.
My father always recommended flood's Sarsaparilla as the
greatest blood purifier on earth, and I can certify to the nme
thine." Nswron M. Blackman, Hotel Savoy, Danbury, Ct.
Family Physician Prescribed Hoods.- • '
ttrriWr «I.|[p <>' dlphtlieria. «ud our family physician ,ald it
lrft us with vrry impure bloo.l uml ureal ly wcak-.>Ml constltu-
lions and aclvipod Mood's Sarsaparilla as the best blooHjiurltier
and nerve strongtliericT. It worked wonders, leavlns us without
„ trace of that awlul disease." Ami* M. C«.IU IUvls.
G1 Eattern avenue, Gloucester, Mass.
nit," in number, and began nsklne 1 - „„|„K to vote nBnlnat the lallflc.illon
wltne...' If, In hi* opinion, i imaldertus ' T|,,v so "ore oiei there that t,ie
other thing-* In the .-.M. the wrilei 1 " .vwr da>. Tliey r«ll« UU
A Nurse's Testimony. -"Afl«r six years of arduous duly,
such as a doctor or nurse fully appreciate.., n,- n-rvviu. system
was In such a state I was fearful of having to give up my pro-
fession entirely. My general health wns ai a very low elib.
was weak, nervous and hid powerful headache-. It seemed as 1
though I should become Insane o' times. I was almost ,n
despair After taking sli huttles of Hood's Sarsaparilla I began
to Improve and after taking six more I «■ ompletely curwt
I cannot speak loo highly of its merits." M ttr L. braoso, 4t
Ferry street, Everett, Ma-*.
Just Tne One. " Hood's Sarsaparilla is certainly ]us! the
medicine to lake for all blood troubles and tired feelings in 111.
spring." Mas. Si-s Eak« , 428 Shcppard St., 1'ct.rsburg. la,
burden.
It is not a patent mcuiuu,. It is a physician's prescription improved and
uD-to date of greatly concentrated strength and of proven merit.
Smaller doses are necessary than of any other blood or kidney remedy It
is therefore the most economical medicine you can buy. 100 doses one dollar.
i> i lhlf fr>r its freat cures of all spring humors, blood humors, stomach,
ssec <s ssr«a«!^ ewe,
Hood's Sarsaparilla: -.
tv p One C.reat Serin* Medicine and Strength Builder. Sold Everywhere, SpJ-
Enid "ii Sure" Traveling on its
Uppers—This Last Important
Move Means Much For Our
Thrifty Neighbor—One Among
the Best Deals is This Last One
Special to the State Capital.
Enid, Ok., Mar. J.—One of tlx? West
deals of the ninny good ones In the past
year closed today by the Enid Cham-
ber of (Oltinierce with A. ('. Lang of
Wlnliold. Kansas, The bis foundry and
shop* now located in Winfield and of
which Mr. Lang Is proprietor, will be
removed to tlii cit> • There l« no long-
er any question about It. The money
in up In i bank here, which under a con-
j nni t with Mr. l.ang lie is to uao In erect-
ing buildings end Installing his plant In
Knld.
he foundry will be located on the north
side of the Frisco tracks juft west of
the Wlrst and Lyons elevator near thir-
teenth street. On this site will be erecte 1
three buildings. One. .4x10 feet, two stor-
ies high. :i second 30x10 feet, one stoiy.
anil a third 14x14 foot. The second one
will be the main foundry room.
The foundr. will have a capacity from
the flint of four tons per day. It will
employ about ten experienced moulder?
and Iron workmen, who draw an aver-
age of nearly four dollars per day. I'he
shops will be able to do foundry work
oi the heaviest kind and of a groat
. variety.
In Winfield Mr. Lang has been conduct-
ing a very substantial business for twe--
tv years. He i* removing to Enid be-
cause of the evident advantages offerd
j here and the future city all expect. The
] new Institution Is a decided addition to
the city a Industries and Alls an opening
for this line of work which has long
existed
small, the taxes will be too high .i" 1
only a few men will have to bear the
burden of taxation to keep up a county
government. Indian Terrltorletes exp -'
ed counties about the size of Osage coun-
ty, they expected two to four recording
• m districts placed into one county. In o*<c
i tion. eood health. Listen to yOUr|county over there It seems that the out>
I , . , a • T*^ bnmvrn taxable property is owned by a sawmill
I dentist a advice. He knows l>cst., ^ and he c1altnB hl> fortune win be
lost to keep up the county expenses.
In many towns business men have thosr
property on the market and want to
leave the territory on account of Charlie
llaskell s division of countle-. which will
put them out of business In najlng s;'ch
taxes. It looks as though the dovelop-
| ment In that portion of the state will bo
i retarded Instead of Increased. ,M* ny
Muskogeaiis say that Charlie's state ion-
! titution Will not be ratified and t.' -l
' Indian Territory will be a stute by them-
'in solves Just ?s Charlie once wanted it to
| be. Broken Arrow is a splendid Rood
town near Charlie's home, but the-
FIRST TO WEAR
OUT WITH AQE
Prescription Which is Valued by
Elderly People
I !■ handy metal rut or bottles. 36c-
Qr. gram'T eotti Powtor Co.
BASED ON LETTERS
(continued from page one)
answer would indicate that In his op
ion Thaw's mental disease changed
form and became more serious.
Mr Jerome then toH up the leit-
th. writ"1 • -'si h ' cr.. every day. They realise that
insane when the letters were written., constitution is ratilled the futt
Yesterday Dr. Kvans was obliged win Keep Immigration o-t
on «.ch te«ur ex,' .id- j " *, ,hc ,
lng« everything else
'•This letter shows an unsteady s
of mind." said the witness regarding
first letter. He would be no more «
nite. .
"What woul'" you have treaiedhlm
the 1
lefl-
|m\'|„7 purl of tl.o .m., .ml the devol
opment will be at a standstill-
'I d'^n't know. 1 don't think I eve
treated s patient by letter.'
Was the unsteadiness normal or ab
normal?'
JIM CROW RESOLUTION
Haskell Offers it in Order to Cap
ture the Legislature
' Delegate Haskell offered the following
"Well, it war abnormal In that it VV*S j ieiolullon and it was pawed, but no
not perfectly normal." I unanimously: , ,h._
::r
no^reach.d the .tale of unbalance or In- jbody^ ^ f#r tl ne.ro ^race;
Dr Kvans refused to even attempt to,,hat we consider this legisl. e
^ ' ....... thill II niioatinil.
ur. Itvans inuseu >■ Iimi
classify the unsteadiness, saying tiiat ii than
often took months to classify a C8"®
when under -lose observation and u
was Impossible to try to do It on tne
strength of a letter.
Thi Kind Yeu Hav Always Boujtfi
rc l ujn r.i(( imwiv..— —
QnrcntBba To ,n«.| „e -l.be. o, Ibo, w„o prefer; KlSTll?.
OQfSBtDDS medlcine In tablet form, we are now put-1 no)(1 h drtMTgj9ts or sent promptly by mail on receipt of price.
WHITES' BROTHER
constitutional question;
Thai statehood Is the .11
question to relieve o„r people of the urn
harassment of Interior department rule.
Thai there l .pparent good r" 0"
doubt the proclamation of statehool
r separate roach an,, waiting room
DENIES THREATS; -^^oi'e.Cdc > recommend that the
Is Perfectly Willing:, He Declares, I road^ ^(.^steanld0 Xmng rooms for
•sr£zr. SSs
All WUh but equal « «•«■-
All With the negr0 race.
ELOPES WITH CHEF
uOT FATHER FORGIVES
Omaha. Neb., Mar. 1. Ml" ln«* Kver-
ctl, daughter of J. t>. Everett, head • f
the Lincoln sanatariuin of Llnco'n and
prominent socially, eloped from the. • d*
to Omaha on Saturday and was nvtrrl."11
to Slgmond NN stern Of Pan KrniJ*"1
i i <■ hi ■ ■ r louncil Bluff*. The
I courtship of iMIss Everett and 8tivn was
I short and romantic.
| On the day following the Hat; P rnm-ise.i
•earthquake Btorn left for tic E:ist. ar-
riving at Lincoln , where the only ;.or,i-
I tlon he could secure was as chef of Un-
icoi n sanitarium. On Dec. 31 Everett sent
his daughter to confer with the new . lie
regarding the New Year's dinner an.l
the couple fell in love. Two weeks «go
i Hvarett was advised, through mutual
Roosevelt's
Successor
friends of the couple, at their reques'.
that thev Intended getting married. Tlii
su enraged Ev« rett that he ordered rite.a
1 from the sanitarium and warnoi nim ,
tha If he did not leave tho city he wou.d !
shoot him. I
Stern came to Omaha and wrote ..M.fs .
Everett of his whereabouts. She replied (
she would come to him as ■ m -s i-ohsI-
hie. Sa.nr-lay the opportunu/ presentel ,
Itself and Ml a Stern boarded nan for
Omaha. Immediacy alf?r iicr arilvul
she aceompanla«l SU rn to Council Bluffs
I became his brMc.
ind Mrs. Stem went 1*0rt CrooK j
they are no'-v the
and _
ett apprised of his difwrh'^'s marriage
to litem and tm.ned'iUoly n-kuraphed hei
rill always he welcome hon«e provid-
ed she comes alone.
PENSIONS ALLOWED
HEARST? HUGHES? ROOT?
TAFT? FOLLETTE? BRYAN?
Nrw York holds the balance of powtr in the picking of our
next Presiiient Whom will Father Knickerbocker back with
his winning electoral votes ?
Read " New York and the Presidential Situation." in
The
New
BRmrwAY
MAGAZINE
For
March
Here U an utterance of such political moment and authority that no
American citiien ahould fall to read it. It l« written fairly, by a mjn
who knows his subject to the bone, and put. neat ytar's political problem
■n clearly, logically and forcibly that no one can fail to see its every sidr
Other forceful articles in the March Broadway, too. * Bridge Whimt
—A Social Riot," Is nothing le« thsn a sensation, telling the wav
this social scourge is blighting happiness and homes. "ParkhurW-The
l aiah of Broadway," tell, completely, for the first time, tbe story of New
York's famoos pulpit-policeman.
Fight SpvkHaf Short fltorlm Magnificmt nlastration.
Clever, BrMsy Departments Tha Lalwt N#wi of The Play
HERE'S ammguMim NrthtHOMKthatfom'll rtod ALL THROIGH
SCT YOUB BKOADWAT TODAY. 18c., An News-Staiida
Special to the State Capital.
Washington. I> C.. Mar 1. Delegate
e has been notified of the allow
5f the following cklms for in-
crease of pension:
linos J. Mlngus, I^ookabn, flT.M.
James Morehead Anadarko. ?8.00.
Lawrence M. Provost. Aha. W-00.
Hugh A Owen. T.enora. $12.00
Albert 1"). King. Tecumseh *10.0«>
Ferdinand ftpcngler. Newkirk. fl.'.OO.
John II. Ro <evelt,^lountain View W- CO
William Faulkner. Guthrie. 13000
Aaron I.. Oelvin Ponce. ll.'.t'O.
John \\. Kern*. Chandler. $l-'.«0.
Cha«. Keesecker. Hennessey. $1. 00.
Indian Territory
t,., jft Coop. Pryor Creek. $12.00.
Tlios. R. Roughton. Row. $17,00.
Berry I- W alden. Oktaha, $10.(>«.
Daniel U Miller. Oarvln. 110.no.
Snmuel S French, Hughe*. J1..00.
Obedtah B Nations. Grant. $10.00.
Original pension, as follows;
IVter M. Richer, Fairvalley. Is.« '
Seth Pai nienter, Oklahoma. J10.W).
Leon Perieo. Ft. 8111. $40.00.
i Veil Long. Vinita, $i .00.
Amos Rowlej, Woodvllle. $i:.a0.
Reece Price, guardian of minors, of
J:-nies M Pi i f. 11 v been allowed $< ")
,,er month urlBinal pfnsluii fr m Jan-
,n. • lfi i and $'-'"0 per month for
i each minor child.
V rgliiia widow of .lames AI iMcCor-
•. u Of I. /V-; -a. Oklahoma, has been
, allowed original pension at fc.nO re*"
I month from August 'J3.
I K.iward Button of Canadian. Oklahoma,
lias Keen allowed supplemental pen-ion
,t jij.'HI per month from January 1. 1900.
(,« M.ir^h : 1903, by reason of allowance
■ of same rate under a<*t of March n. |fk,r
PAPER SAYB PALMA
BOUGHT OONQRESS TO
BRING SPANISH WAR
O Madrid, Mar. l.-A sensation has O
lO been caused here by the publlca- O
A tiort of a story credited to the Dlr- O
rlo de La Marina of Havana which O
i purports to show by documentary G
y evidence that the United States O
) congress was bought in 1897 by O
> Toman Estrada Palma to Insure O
> war being declared against Spain. O
) According to the Havana newspa- O
> per bonds to the value of $37.€00.- O
;► 000 redeemable when Cuba should O
> uecome independent were Issued in O
> Washington to senators a contract O
> exists which contains phraseology O
> like that of the Joint resolution of O
y April )m voted by congress. O
>000000000000000
TRAIN BURNED; ONE DEAD
■ Thirty on a B. and 0. Passenger
Are'lnjured
For the Law to do
Hany Thaw
Seattle. Wash.. March l.-' FoeJing con-
fident that the law in its unerring course
will mete out justice. I have had no
thought trf such a thing. I never «ald
that 1 would avenge my brother Setan- ^ _
ford White's death, for reaping revenge .-..tiotn were adopted
would not bring 1,1m hack." The "f,""" ,." orl of the
Itlchard Manefteld n'lilta. a brother "f from the surP ,chool land"
Stunford WTilte. replied to the story sent coniml«ee on state a d , ,
out from tlw East to tne effect that he . gec. The penmanent common ^
Intends to avenge the death of the dig- :(n(| other educational fnm •
...ted In flr.t mortaase. upon good and
SCHOOL FUND SECURITIES
May' be Invested in First Mort-
gages, U. S., County, Dist. Bonds
RELIEVES CHRONIC CASES
Anyone Can Fix it at Ho'. e—
Harmless and Inexpensive—
' Relieves all Forms of Kidney
| and Bladder Troubles and
Rheumatism
| The great majority of men anil women
: at the age of 50 years begin to feel the
first nigns of advancing age in soma
j form of kidney trouble and bladder weak-
j ness. Few are entirely free from that
i torturous disease, rheumatism, which :*
'not a di-ease in itself, but a symptom of *
! deranged function of the kidneys which
have tK.conie clogged and sluggish, fail-
llug in tin duty of sifting and straining
1 the poisonous waste matter, uric add.
elc.. from the blood, permitting it to re-
main and decompose, settling about the
Joints and muscles, causing Intense pain
and suffering.
The bladder, however, causes the <V:d
folks the most annoyance, especially at
right and early morning
A noted authority in a recent article ^
stated that he has wonderful success
with the old-time 'vegetable treatment.
He states: "Of sixteen cases of bladdnr
troubles and rheumatism which have
be*n treated with this treatment only
one very complicated case failed to fully
. ield to its remarkable Influence. It Is
the most harmless treatment I have ever
found to clean the system of rheumatic
poisons; remove irritation of the blad-
der and relieve urinary difficulties of the
old prople. It is a true vitalizing ton'c to
the entire kidney and urinary structure,
reinvigorutiug the entiie system."
What he terms " old vegetable trea'-
ment ' consists of the following slmpla
prescription., tV Ingredients In which ^an
be obtained from any good pharmacy U
small cost: Compound Kargon one
ounce; Fluid Extract Dandelion one ha t
ounce. Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla.
three ounces. Shake well in a bottle and
take In teaspoonful do?es after each meal
and upon going to bed. also drink plenty
or water. This prescription, though sim-•
pie !s always effective In the diseases
and afflictions of the kidney and blad-
der.
tlngulsh- d architect In the event that , vMted ln nr9i -
District Attorney Jerome fails to secure j d fa,.m lands within the atat
a conviction of the accused on a charge P nQ cn>(. shaU m0re than fifty per
of murder. ian f the rPasonable valuation of
"There Is no truth in the report" he <*tu improvements be loan-
eontinuod. "but In their search for new ti p ^>d«
sejisatlon. In connection with thL, caie ed on any tr««
they deliberately make up this i ue of; oklahoma ta« non^u. of ok,a_
lies. It Is done every day. : County bonds or
The dispatch fro mthe E «t ha It that
Richard WTilte'e arrival from Ivuropo ' ac,.l)0, ai,tr|ct bond, of the •' no
I an early avengaaient • ! oklahoma.
.. death ln tbe evjnt ili.it tr t bond.. Preference b.lng
llorry Thaw escaped ihc electric chair. In iec,ir|tlaa In the order namftl.
A, a matter nf fact Mr. White ha. not given " "" .hall provide tbe man-
been In Europe of late. j ' .. .ccurltle. .foresaid.
In denial. Richard M. White sa.d that „er of selecting the sec
ne had been bock ln Seatlle foi a month1 — -mcor to make such
ne had been bark In Seatlle for a monui nBn^e the oflhvr ,..aulatio-is,
and thai previous to that time he .iad ^ me„t prescribe the rules. K
spent a brief period In Chicago. In Mon- trlot|on, and condition, upon whi. I
(sua and in Spokane, en route to hi. , a(orc a«l .hall be loaned o.
Seattle home. He had hern In New York d 0u things necessan lor
sr.^h\s^;l:nl^n^r?he,h;^^!r."<e,;* -, -
ss *i.r «h.
savs emphatically that hr never made
such a threat or even hinted at such a
thing White expressed himself as rather
confident of Thaw s conviction.
SULLY WILL RECOVER R
New York. March 1.—The serious ill-
nens of Daniel J. Sully the broker whfl
w.is HI with pneumonia Tins passed
crisis and his physician said today thai
the indications pointed to n recovery.
TO INSPECT THE RIVERS
Washington. Mar. 1.—The house
committee on rivers and harbors de-
cided to accept an invitation from tho
Louisiana delegation In congress to
Investigate the rlvera of Louisiana and
on March 25 the committee will as-
semble at New Orleans. Several mem-
bers of the committee will go to Pan-
ama with the congressional party
leaving New York on March 6. but
they will retrun from Tolon to New
Orleans In time to Join representa-
tives who will go to Louisiana by
rail.
Connellsville. Pa. Mar. 1. — Baltlmote
and Ohio train No. 41> went bound, run-
ning eighteen minutes late and forty
miles an hour, was wrecked tonight near
Indian Creek seven miles east of her.?.
The entire train consisting of a combin-
ation smokln gand baggage car. two day
coaches and the private car of Robert
J. Finney, superintendent of the Pitts-
burg division of the Baltimore and Ohio
railroad, left the rail" and after run-
jiiiiig for two hundred feet along the tics
I was thrown Into a ditch at the foot of
the mountains, where the wreckage w.ia
completely burned.
Wylle Irwin, engineer of Pittsburg wis
killed, the firemen fatally Injured and
«ind the baggage master, express
nies-
...... conductor and six passengers,
jerlously Injured About thirty passen-
gers were more or less cut gild bruised,
in was 'aught under the wrecked
ind burned to death before the
1-ussengera, who were powerless to liber-
ate him.
ecnger,
Ir
engine
NOT BARREN AFTER ALL
.tltute to the supplemental report on
„at« and .chool land., but the demo-
X'tiT-'- CntH other.,e provlded by
Ihc legislature the. prwenl '°r,tory
leasing of school lands in the . ^ ^
Oklahoma shall const"ut _ . m.
i of commissioners who shall 1 ^
The C.eek Field Oivos Another mated the school land ^ (i)n>lUu.
Di" WCU K Sdt,^ .h.. mav be passed bV
Special ,0 the Stole Caplt.l the >««'*^".ir".r" .hail have
Tulsa. I. T.. Mar. l.-ln an old >Vl«*y the legist'« |„m(nli „le.
and Galey lease In the B.rd Creek pool control ot th PP ^ >(()rc.
in tho Cherokee nation, twelve miles . ta and , ontrol and dire.-
north easl of Tul.a In what was bell.v.d sold, .nd l s■ t or tbe funds in
lo be barren territory, a live hundred | tlon of the lrcMUrer arlslns
barrel nil well was today drilled. It is the ha"d" disposition of any o(
th. larsoat well that has been discovered l,r"ra^'" , „f ,h. pormsn-
l„ the Creek held, which seem, destined j said land.
to prove the most valuable In the alenn ent ..hnoI lu ln bon<1(
Fool district. I Ainitmi st&tes bonds of the state of
Oil men arc (neatly excited o>er the tin■ * bo„ds of tbe coin
And and there mav be a S'eat inviease I. i .tate of Oklahoma or in Hrfct
that section. ! m„rt«.ge. on farm land, within th.
state not exceeding In amount „■ e-th id
I of the nctual value of ny subdivision
FORFEITED 10 CITY
one ■ SSIXII m
That is LAXATIVB BROMO ftuinine. Sinil-
l.rly named rem.dl.. d.«c'"^,,, ??i
fir<t and oriKinal Cold INiblet is a will IB
PAOKAOB wfth black and red l M M.
; bears iho signsturo of B. ^ • GROVE.
RANGER KILLS PRISONER
A Mining: Company Manager
Resisted Arrest
Benson. Ariz. March 1.-J. A, Tracey.
manager of the lielvltia Mining com-
pany at Vail, was sliot and killed todav
\ Ijentenant Harn Wheeler, it r,m-
,grr. Ii la said that Tracey wju« threat-
I enlng to shoot W . tJllveton anil hla
j wife. Wheeler arrested him and Tracey
shot and wounded the lieutenant twice,
i Wheeler waa taken to a Tombstone hoa-
| pHul.
rn.r* cr«r. ! •• •««
■ i/D OINTMENT is gn*r*ntred to curs saf
n«b,:«, Bb.d,
, Piles Id I to A days or money refnaaas.
WITH THE 8PIRITS SUNDAY
NIGHT AT BROOKS THEATRE.
To the curious treat Is In toro
(for them at the Brooks Theatre Sun-
I days night Mar. 3, when Mr. Sawyer,
i the eminent medium, «ho has been
startling the world, will glvo one of
his seances that has made him fam-
ous throughout the English speaking
I world. Not In darkness, but In open
light Mr. Sawyer will give the mani-
festations which for many years at-
nacted the attention of the scientists
and simpletons alike The London
Spiritualist says the forms which are
nightly seen and recognized by the
audience would seem to the proof
conclusive that they are genuine spir-
itual manifestations. Such eminent
scientists as Prof. Crooks. Hargeam
Cox, Tymlall. lluxley and others havo
proclaimed these Idealisms to be as-
tounding fact. Mr. Sawyer s open aeu-
stice was presented by him before the
leading scientists in England. Austria,
I Germany and France. Mr. Sawyer
was submitted to the most crucial
| tejt conditions, a table rises, and
flouts in the. air. flowers are brought
to the audience by Invisible hands.
I slate writing, questions written and
retained by the interrogations will re-
jciev full and Intelligent answers.
oi uir , i i
■ Ion which the .am. may he ,
J value to he determined by sppralsem nt
„'| in the manner lo be prescribed by the
Water Company Valued at w3- jmature and in l",s " 111
000,000 Is Confiscated by City j«
and County of San Francisc ^ i.. state and rerti-
HWII (EMS
Cracked and Bleeding In Many
Places—Became so Bad that Nail
Came Off Finger—Tried Many
Remedies and Consulted Thre*
Doctors, but Got No Relief—Now
Cured and Is Very
PROUD OF HAVING TRIED
CUTICURA REMEDIES
"I had eczema on ray hands for
' about eleven years. The hand* cracked
open in many places and bled. One
fit my fingers was so bad that the nail
came" off. I had often heard of cures
1 by tho Cutioura Remedies, but had
no confidence in them as I had tried ho
many remedies, and they all hail failed
to c ure me. I hail seen three doctors,
but got no relief. Finally my hus-
, band said that we would try the Cuti-
San Francisco, March t At a stormv
..leetlng tonight the board of * i;,ervlsois
declared forfeited to the city and coun-
of San Francisco the franchises and
irks of the Spring Valley Water com-
pany, upon which the company Itself
places a total estimated value of $&:$.000
000.
The action of forfeiture w;is t.titen by
the board of supervisors under the pro-
visions of u state Jaw which the company
is accused of having violated by charg-
ing 190'.' schedule rates In 1M6
Tlaktf
Ororm
all the property of the state and cert
V the same to the proper county o..t-
■ers who sli til extend the fame on th-* j
a* books to be collected a? other taxes
,o a„ to at all "times keep the prlncioil ]
f said fund inviolate.
Section . The legislature shall pass
iunable laws for the safe keeping, tra- -
fer and disbursement Of the si ite school
fund, and shall require nil office, s
charged wlt'i the same or the safe heel-
ing theteof 'o give ample bonds -for r 11
moneys or fund* received by them, and
if any of said officers shall eonvert to
hi, own use In any manner or form or
shall loan without Interest or shall de-
posit in bis own name, or other* i#e tin* >
in the name of the mate of Oklahoma.
,thnll deposit hi a.u banks or wltU
any person or persons, or excHangc oi
other funds or pmpertv. any portion <
. school fund aforesaid or purpose-
ly allow any portion «.f the same to re-
main in his own hands uninvested. **-
•pt in the manner prescribed by law.
,ery such act shall constitute an em-
bezzlement Of SO much of the aforesaid
•boo! fund as shall be thus taken or
loaned or deposited or exchange,! or
withheld, and "hall be a felony and an
failure to t iv ov*r, proline or account
for. the frtid anhool ti.nd or in an*
part of the name entrusted to any su« b
(Coiltlnu -'>1 on 1'age Three, i
cura Remedies, so we got a oake of
Cuticura Soap, a bog of Cutioura Oint-
ment, and two bottles of Cutioura Resol-
vent Pills. Of course I keen Cuticura
Soap all the time for my hands, bul
the ono oake of Soap and half a box
of Cuticura Ointment cured th«m. I
OI l lllicuni Olllliunui- VUIWI ...,ii.
is surely a blessing for me to have i
bands well, and I am very nroud w.
having tried Cuticura Remedies, and
naving irieu uumura noiutinra, aim
recommend them to all suffering with
eczema. Mrs. F.liza A. Wiley, It. I'. D.
2, Liecomb, Iowa, Oct. IP, 1906."
i
Ii
ITCHING PIMPLES
Resulted from Polsonlnf. Cured
by Two Sets of Cuticura
Remedlei.
" Mv husband got a blood disease from
wrnrihg woolen underwear. He was
all full of pimples, and he had an awful
itching. H* took a good many so-
rt I led blood remedies, and nothing did
him good. Then we saw in a news-
paper about Cuticura Remedies, and
they cured him after using in all I wo
seis of Cuticura Soap. Cuticura Oint-
ment, and Cuticura Resolvent, and n<iw
1 wouldn't do without Cuticura Soap.
Mrs. Harner, 1010 Henners St., Heading,
Fa., Jan. 25, 11KJ0."
Complete Kitornsl am! internal Trratmpst 'oi
Kv«ry liumor of bir.niu. Cbuar u. ami Artulta ron-
i ikii of (jut-fura Sua ii {2&r ) to (Vanie the Hkln.
iitirur Olnitnent iMlr to Heal the Sltln, and
i uUnira '.ti^olvenl (Aor > <or in ibi- form nf Choriv-
uti' i Mi-Mi PiHa ."m* per vial of (Ml. lo Purify Uia
i rtiniMl -.ill thniu|lioiit ih world I'oHer l>ru| •
I ajern i orp , Sola Pro pa Hoflon Man*
| a/" Mu..id 1 ret. Ui>uk uu tiatn and bcsla.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 2, 1907, newspaper, March 2, 1907; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126413/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.