The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 20, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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rtE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL MEN SELECTED MUST BE FOR TAFT,
By The State Capital Company.
FRANK H. GREER. EDITOR.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Pally by Carr I®r--Strictly In advance.
oWeek fO.lO
a Month ... 0.4-6
i«Ye«r B.OO
Dally by Mall--Strlctly In Advance.
ne Month f0.40
iree Month ... \ ,oO
x Month . 2.00
ne Yaar ..... .... 4.00
a subscription a will ha want by mall In city of Guthrla
SUNDAY EDITION:
year by mall $ 1 .00
weekly
x Months $0.25
la Year $0.5O
AH will be lia-lla-llarmony at Muskogee.
Some kinds of lobbying arc all right—as for in-
nne<\ a state printer's.
<. hieago anarchists are loud in their demand tn put
few red streaks thronph the blue laws.
Tlie new Portuguese king hj.s fourteen names. He
ight to have no trouble in establishing an alibi.
should not Hiteheoek manage Taft's eam-
Otlior candidates have managers and press
Why
aign'
iron r if <
It' Thaw cannot be satistied with the aurroundinc*
! Jl.-itteawan how do you suppose Stanford White
pleased where he is?
OPICS
WHOM THE GREAT MAJORITY DEMANDS
Reeaime Secretary William H. Taft is the choice
of a great majority of the republicans, of Oklahoma,
the state convention should endorse him for the
presidential nomination, and the delegates which
the state will select will, no doubt, be instructed
for Taft.
For the same reason the republicans of Logan
county, who have always led in the councils of the
party, should select Taft representatives to tli stal as to lying in bed—
convention, and these representatives should be in-1 past teaching all wrong
structed to stand first, last «nd all the time for Taft. sd"11''. ev" <•" ta* searoh fur <om«
There is no middle ground. The delegates must
he either for or against Taft, and the republicans of
Logan county should insist that they be representc i
by men who can be trusted to carry out their wishes
in the matter of selecting a presidential candidate.
The useful and picturesque career of' Secretary
Taft, a career which a majority of the people of th •
I nited States believe is to he widened still further
for their benefit and to his credit, makes him an
unique figure in American affairs.
As a most genial and attractive individual, as a
wise and just judge, as an administrator of large ex
cutive ability, as a diplomat of singular skill and
world-wide experience, and as an all-around states-
man. he is today one of the finest representative
citizens that the republic has produced.
There is not the slightest question as to v h r 'Sec-
retary Taft stands, and the demoe-ati • papers whi. 'i
have been jibing in regard to what they characterize
"the significant silence" of Secretary Taft in re- j
gard to the president's special message, are now as
silent as a sphinx.
Secretary Taft s Kansas City speech has forever
lenced those who would attack him on this score.
Secretary Taft stands firmly back of the policies
of the administration.
TII01GH1S (iF THE DAY
What did he say?
"It contains an answer to the
thing now, Is constantly announcing dis-
coveries which Air. Boffin would -pro-
nounce a regular startler.'1
0< taalonally it knocks the props froi
1 < <*« our moat cucoshed trtd uots, 0
puts the ban on h«blts whL-.i hav
oeen acquired after long and diligent ef
fort and travail of spdrit—habits utterly
obnoxiouN to one's natunil inclinations
but studiously followed because they
have been recommended us "good fcr
j Among these may be numbered
J practice of bouncing out of bed as soon
us one s eyes are open and plunging in
! to a bath.
"Don 1 lie in bed whan you wake up*
is *n Injunction dinned into a boy's
from the lime he is old enough to drag]
himself.
Ho is assured that it fc a laxy custom
and thai those who indulge it always
come to a bad end.
Hence he .struggles and groans and
sur!!KK1M n*4Un> anv! after ***** of
sliding Anally accustoms himself to
Jumping out of bed ami madly plunging
into his clothes as If the "nine gods
of war" were after him.
How does such a one feel when he
reads an eye-opener like this- Rest-
ing in bed comfortably 2T minutes after
you wake up and before getting up is
essential to good health"?
Or this—
Jumping out of bed and plunging in-
to a bath may end in madness"
The
The powers are going after King Leopold w ith a
lub, so there may be considerable wealth in the | pression, and the sharpness and
oago region after all.
charges that the
great body of the people as a busrle call to renew
support of the policies of the administration.
"Prom beginning to end the message shows his
desire to protect the honest business man and the
j honest laborer and the honest corporation, and to
secure them the possibility of living under the equal
administration of the law."
Secretary Taft stands for rqua'itv among the peo-
ple of the l'nited States for laws which will pro-
tect the rich and poor alike and the general good Ot
the people.
Oklahoma is for Taft because the republican of
i the new state believe in him and in the policies of
the administration.
It is no guess work—every one knows where the
"eretary stands, and—
Because of this the majority vast majority—of
the republicans of the state, as w II ;>< tJios of Lo-
_ gan county, demand that delegates 1< • sele i 1 wh i
The ommous silence maintained bv theMurrav an i i,retfor T"ft- and ,1la' il b tnownWheretlieV stah t
iaskell factions about those -I,'prams sen't out! ,t.h"t ,th*,x sta",! for T^U.^ ! th, principles
Thursday night causes one to believe it k a deadlock ! H rcpr. sents
If the weather man has 110 real objection Okla-1
oma desires that he overlook the -tate when he
gam ha to route a storm
It is quite right that the Pullmans rewarded thei
orters for being polite. 11. vtofore the passengers'
bought they had to do it
Anyhow, one of the educational institutions which
'ill be missed this \rar s "Coin's Financial
•ehool ' It had the run in IV
Over in Germany they vaee inte against the black-!
rg in cattle, lu this country they ought to vacei-
iate against the blackleg in men.
Russia will spend t■ > strengthen the de-
enses of Yladivostock. but not li cent* to strengthen
t government in the hearts <• its masses.
" r suucmwitu which upset the
whole scheme of existence.
They threaten the peace of every
... | household and spell <*id!ess trouble for
administration is responsible for the industrial de- 1,10 bonding iiouse keepo.-.
mphasis with which | . £
this unfounded attack is met have heartened the i windty u, ,hf.m le.
>ause they are old. and leave hint as
elyiess as a mariner without a com-
pass.
He is in the position of the smsll boy
u!<'' having discovered there was o
Santa CSaus, said "I'm goin* to look
into this liable business next,''
That's the real trouble with the icouo-
•ast who goes about •«mashin^ things.
He unsettles conviction, makes a mess
^f things generally ;,nd goes peacefully
on his way. leaving other people to
make the best of a bad situation.
Next to another financial panic, it in
i ffioult t,. think r f anything that would
i i-ause Igreater disturbance than, would
i follow the suddem determine ti on of ev-
ery body to stay in bed 36 minutes
longer.
It won t do st stf.
LAND OF DREAMS
are closed and
over thy
Land
Thine t
brow
Fa as the thoughtful shadows and joy-
ous gleams.
And I know, by thy moving lips, that
now
Thy spirit strays in the
Dreams.
• —Bryant.
When, overarched by gorgeous night,
1 wave my trivial self away;
When all I was to all men 3 right
Shares the erasure of the da> ;
Then do I cast my cumbering load,
Then do 1 gain a sense of Hod.
—William Watson
Believe me.
foroahow
The event
and woe.
madam, morning dreams
of things, and future wei
—-Drydsn.
The
time a
Uhttlme of the body is the day
the soul.—lambliohus.
For Cod is aj
advise.—Milton.
r>ren ma lr
breath.
\nd tears, and tortures
Of joy.
fo In sleep, and dreatns
their development
ami the touch
—Bryon.
For God spe&keth once, yea twice,
though man rcgardeth it not. In a
dream, in a vision of ni«ht. w'hen sleep
falleth upon men, in slumberlnps upon
the l>ed. then he openeth the eors o«*
men and sesleth their instructi«Ts —
Job xxxlii 14-16.
might be otu of gratitude —Kansas City
Fost.
On the assumption that the people are
onto their game, it looks now as if the
Standard oil literature might be the
best campaign matter possible for the
Roosevelt wing of the party This foxy
Id monopoly will find that the way to
secure endorsement of anything by the
people will be for Standard oil pt al.,
damn it. Ft. Smith So. American.
OKLAHOMfi.
PARAGRAPHS
1 he sheriff of Payne county mak*
h« jail birds work ou a rock pile
FORTUNATE OKLAHC/fA
The l*ooste<rs are preparing to banquet
aivd to boost tome more. Better get in-
to the good work if you are not already
In the harness.—Chickasha Express.
Kingfisher is one of the very best
towns in the new state of Oklahoma
and its citizens have money to invest
In legitimate dividend paying enterpistj.
No hot air mechanis, grafterrs or gei-
rlch-quW-k schemes need apply.—King-
fisher Star.
• —o—
The hotel bill having been killed it is
now permissable to serve the oup in a
cracked bowl ami to force a man to curl
up in bed so as to be entirely covered
up w 1; the bed sheet.- (lawton Con-
stitution Democrat.
without exactly corresponding with eith
ar.
Then he compared it with some other
bones in the collection, and the -esult of
his study was the hypothesis of a new
type, neither human nor ape, but related
to both. The curve of the spine indicated
by the bones suggestrd an animal that
walked upright, but the slxe <"ind forma-
tion of the bones made It clear that the
head they supported was ftmall and light
with very small brain capacity.
The remains resemhtHe certain bones
of a prjmltlv race of men found in Java
mure closely than any other non-human
or near-human specimens. They rcp-
rescnt altogether the oldest type of hu-
manity. if human they be, ever found
on the western continent.
OLITTeAL
'OURRI
The democratic party as the adver-
ising agency nf William Jennings Bry-
an is a mammoth success," says tihe
Brunswick, (Ga.) News (Dein.)
"Taft in urging New York republic-
ans to make Hughes a 'favorite son,' is
only crinkling salt on the bird's tail,"
lys the Richmond Journal (Dem.)"
Quantities of nice white paper and
•perfectly good ink are being u«ed every
lay out in Indiana by editors who cor-
inne to predict that the sentiment for
"airbanks will prove deeper, and great-
«r. and stronger, etc., tihan any body
upposed.
—o—
Commenting John Sharp Williams for
his attitude on the Roosevelt message,
he Louisville Courier-Journal (Dem.)
says; "Here was an occasion for the
democratic party to show Its teeth, and
it fell down and worshipped; an oppor-
tunity for it to stand fast to its ideals
and it let it slip and bit at the bait of
sleek foreman. Democrats, Republic-
ins and everybody else may ohamipion
honesty in business life, but the work
the democratic parts- to do is ro
combat the sensationally federalists
and dangerous - to nuote Mr. Williams—
movement which Theodore Roosevelt
has set in mo-tHn. and to preserve 'lioj
republic as a republic in fact as well
as in name."
ence when investigating «in*barraesed
ba.nks. says: "I never before met bo
many men who ought to be in jail."
The Rev. Reginald J. Campbell, pastor
of the City Temple, Ijonu*>n. England, is
coming to America for a two months
lecture tour. Dr. Campbell ig widely
known as an author and orator.
—o—
Milton D. Purdey, known fs the "chief
trust buater," who will soon retire from
the attorney general's office, has been a
busy man ever since he left college. It
said he will be appointed a federal
circuit judge upon his retirement.
—o—
The Rev. Raymond C. Knox has been
appointed chaplain of < iumibia univer-
sity and will enter upon his dritie* on
July 1. He is a native of South Caro-
lina and has studied at 1'rlon Theolog-
ical seminary nnd tak'% ours s In phil-
osophy and sclology at Colunrvbia univer-
sity.
+ + *♦ + + + + + + +
HUMOROUS JINGLE +
♦
♦ + ♦ + ♦ + + + + + +
'(ribber
In debt
It s fo
TO THE POINT
to economise is to get so
your creditors make you.
to be such a little criminal
lat you deserve to go to jail
There's hardly anything a man can'l
if It's against the law.
Thpro is grave question unions Speaker Cannon'-.
ri,-n«ls whether the political tactics adoptttl in his
ntcrest in Floriila and which resulted in the elee-
ion of a contest inp delegation !
tuition are wise.
' rum|
con-
W'e have failed to secure a single reo.ird where
he democrats have met and not resolved "That th
wintry has gone to Mazes under the republican rule
<nd therefore l>e it. etc., etc., etc., etc., etc.. etc.
iR-YAA Scrap!
If the vizard Kdison has really perfected n st >raire
battery which will do away with the use ,(f gasoline
in antomobilcs there will be rejoieing among onli-
nar> people who have to ns, the highwax —also
among the polecats
A New England paper sugg ts th u Douglas, the
Massachusetts ^lioe man. be made the tail to the
ft ryan kite on the ground that he is a man of mental
balance and has a good bank account. The bank
account might be useful, but what has mental bal-
ance to do with a Rr\ an
1 Mr Fon'ke's
K losevclt aer-
1 doing, and he
an ope i
who be-
eampaun.
News item
Mr. t onreid. who ha« rvsicned as
musical director of the Metropolitan Opera House
eompan.v, will be succeeded h\ two directors an.!
f"iu business managers."
lion t it read like an Oklahoma admicistratio.i
news story' Sort o' miktj you feel at home. Not
• bj:d trade mic for > .v..
There occurred recently in Wash ngt> n a memorial
aervice to a Roman Catholic priest, the late Father
,J. Stafford, in which the principal speakers w. r>
lJev. Or Van Schaik of the (ierman Reformed
thureh the president's pastor the R.\ Abram Si-
mon. rabbi of the Jewish synagogue
Tanner, a non-Catholic, and Senator Beveridg
a non Catholic, besides a Catholic priest, the assist-
ant of the ileeeastnl cWrgyiuan. Truly the era of
Christian charity and true brotherly love
when leading men of all denominations th
to do honor to a simple Roman priest.
The attempt of Senator Foraker to prove his
charge that federal patronage was being used to ef-
feet Sir Taft 8 nomination was a* pitiable as it was
futile. The only ease he was able to cite was that 01
the postmaster at Athen. Ohio, who, according to
Congressman Douglas who endorsed him. ha 1 will,
fully sought to injure the president, an 1 who had
declared that he was opposed to Mr Taft 's nomina-
tion Nevertheless, the pres >1 nt nom-nated him f0:-
postmaster of Athens and th, scnat. continued him
on January
man who has
Mr Foraker
he tig* this \
Ci
It
is in :e<Hl a
eed the rep
dopted
1 sp v'aele t
i n which hi
llanimous m
PRESIDENT S SHARP ANSWER
The president, at the sugirestiori of William Dud-
ley ^Foulke has written a letter which complete!} re-
futes the charges bandied about in anti-administra-
tion circles that he was using federal patronage ij
promote the nomination of Secretary Tati In his
opening paragraph Mr. Roosevelt says that the
charges are not only "false and ma' eious "bit that
it is the "kind of accusation which for th" next fe \
months will he rife, and th?it *'wh 'ti thi> particu-
lar slander is exploded those who have used it will
promptly invent another "
For that reason, while yielding ti
request that he write the letter Mr.
ioualy questions tht adv isability of si
is right.
Theodore Roosevelt has been president of the
I nited States for six years. His record is
book before the American people. Those
lieve in and trust him—and their name is legion
will not be misled by the campaign lies which are
being and will continue to be circulated ab ut hira
between now and next November, particulark be-
tween now and the national republican eonv ntion,
in June.
The anti-administration forces cannot attack the
president with the truth and they are forced to em-
ploy falsehood to discredit him and to defeat the
nomination of the one candidate who if nomfn ' .t,
will owe nothing to the interests. Will th American
people be misled by these taMxwda? 1'rcsulcnt
Roosevelt does not believe that they will, and no
man knows the people of this eo intrv better.
CUBA MUST BE CLEAN
Cuba must do everything necessary to make her
cities sanitary.
... This is the decision of the president. Secretary
pora j Hoot and Secretary Taft.
The issue grew out of a contract for
paving the city of Havana, which th
to repudiate because of the expense, hi
istration in Washington ha^ d cided tVi
nf the contract must be carried out
For a tunc there will doubtless be mu
and discontent in Cuba, particular
wc venture the prediction that no
grateful to the admin strat on. one-
than the people who will complain most loudly now.
The history of American occupati mi of foreign
lands has been a history of clean! ness, Americans
have cleaned Manila and made t a healthful, beau-
tiful city, and the protests of the people have turned
to praise Americans have changed the Panama ca-
nal rone and the chief cities nf Panama from pest-
holes to healthful, cleanly eiti.s, and Panama is
reaping a rich reward. Tie absolute sanitation of
Cuba will make for the wealth and proper t Sf th-
republic, and the money «o expended will be re-
turned tenfold.
id Sv^uoyah :
is rep
art
ed
s a howl-
wo.ess '4
Ranch 101
and :
Iphui
* pre van-
l graduated ir
i t lve
Vtl
wws fakir
ccr.i t-.
-O—
sherifTs an«
theasu
nal
anti-horse
Oklahoma
apt uring mar.
-o—
of horse
t drinkers ha
wful par-
r about the
wate
they
have to
since the pr
oJUbit
! Rd
tve Struck
land of the
fair God. '
-o—
nlte City Km
Ued s
it
the
foot of
Headquarters
mountain
in Giver
• is* nearly
s'.ire v
)f
becc
•mjiix *he
ama state s
prison
-o-
netrc
po:i«.
y ex-tobacco
smoi-
erj
n of
Alfalfa
are now s
mokin
•K
Alfa
-Jfa meal.
daiiu that '
rauic
* of the
is equal to t
hat ot
Havana cigars.
—o—
Otoe and P
f to sell t: .•
ir"?
In«
da
lians are not
untij all the
in their fe-
ervat
ion
re iron
d and all t
he s<
■ction
ilr.es ire
lass roads.
o
ter Bryee Fc
uter.
ae
ed t
■Ix >eors.
with Miss
Ma't
on
Wool, pged
, IN !..r, iy
r i- ^
iv aj
■= «o
a t.
nd in a
i: i. (f. two
be:u-s to a . ■
Kiar i
e
I It takes a
' i baby looks li
J lot about it*
I twouldn't
mil if «he c
rroud of ,
jet to cry
bad <o be
Id tell all the thing
1 answered
married
'Tan she take high C?" "Not with-
out knocking off some of Ihe bars.
—o—
"Is Jtmson selfish?" " Well, they say
he has never given his ego cause for a
moment's jealousy."
Mother George. I don't hear you men-
tion daddy in your prayers. Teddy
(from the bedi—Its all right, moth jr.
Ml see to that"
"Now- that we .are married every pre>,-
nt I buy you thall be something for
I the house."
Oh you dear" T saw a beautiful recep
tion gown today."
—o—
"The money a man amasses,remark
M t:.e pUiosopher, is not the measure
value to the community.'' "No.*'
Dustin Stax. 'iff the
e community's value to
There was once an old fellow named Be-
voir
Who was 111 with the gout and lung fg-
volr
And all of his nieces
Wore tickled to pieces,
Each eager for what he might devoir
Mow one was a lady named Beaulieu.
Who, of course, loved him dearly and
treauJieu,
But she needed the change,
So it's not very strange
That the giil was excited undeauleiu.
For her beewi— a young fellow called
Riuthven—
Who long for her favors bad struthven
Was poor .and unablp
To give her the table
Oh togs that here father had guthven.
rival he had—Mr, Veacd,
Old wealthy, fat, grinning and gpescl,
Whose court to the maid
Made the lover afraid.
r, anyhow, somewhat unescl.
WeH. the uncle he died down at
I*«er
And left her coin—none ran Pt leger
Now they're married, and she's
Spending money with eaue.
And he is a prosperous vt. Legwr.
" Cherry-Blossom."
THE JAPANESE OIVE GOOD EXAMPLE.
It is a proverb of Chsrry Blossom
Land that a healthy stomach ia the
ba«ia of all strength. Uoori nature n
alio rscogniasd ai of great importance.
The Japanese m a people are remark-
able for their health, endurance, pa-
tieucs and skill.
The cherry Wee is the most highly
prised of all in Japaa. It not only
gives forlb a beauufal bloeaom but the
wild cherry tree furnishes a bark which
is most highly prised ia medicine.
Wild Cherry
( JVtittu« VirtfimUma)
M
THE BULL-SNAKE.
e Emporia Gaxette:
of the agri ul:;;
in. made an int
our Ma jest v'a message
issionary "Did I unde; 4
d do me t'-.c honor to nil! This ingredient is only one of several
line tomorrow?" "A
I the cannibal ehie
ill and dine upon yo
ui lik it would be advisable
make speeches in j*our *>w*n
No" answered Rehator Sor-
is better to have some one
jr talking for you Then if
ia said which displeases you
he populsr disapproval."
"It was too bad' said
at Top?k^
Sat-:
lay
Referring
ch threat- ,
hull-snake.
widow.
cured of a
gopher.*; h<
estimable f
of almost
nle
?he e
iddeo that
are. the wemifi,
al pests which
> at night and
the dead image
■> 'valf the ni<ht: "h
if he's anything;.''
promise t<
nd malice toward
the farmers
CIORT TO THE POUT
proposed I rift
a week,
servl e
han«I
rather
pwpring
'ubans
1 m ti on mut term.*
ly ni llavaua. but
on• will I more
■ the work is den .
Washing
ludge Ha
*ne. thitt
s CRUDE PETROLEUM
ing their
■od w t *r
MISSING LINK
pumped
Front tl-e WasMnrt
of mi
The oldest fc'vn
: trtrougn
American continent
the sur - 1,
SI in the Argentina
h
lo ard article In a
u>thropo!og1csl revi.
ARGENTINA
Hi the
Rats
nn-Nitsc
yt ti e president
>• I ndon Chronicle a*>
u>r going about that
earning the aJphafcct t
urr'li g to
11'
• er apes York state
The United
fir a ti a Di§-
PE W SATO BY,
which is an
authority on medicines, ta/a of the
propertis?! of this Black Cfjerrybark :
* Uniting with a tonic power the
property of calming irritation and
dtminiiUng nervous excitability.
Adapted to the treaimsnt of diseases
in which there is debility of the stom-
ach or of the system.^ Another au-
, thority, Kins'* American Dispevsa-
rotY says, "it gives tone and strength
to the system, useful in fever, cough,
and found excellent in consumption "
This ingredient is only one of sever
very important native medicinal roots
in Dr. Pierce'a Golden Medical Discov-
ery. This is a remedy which has en-
joyed the public approval for nearly
forty years, nothing new or untried
about it, has cured thousands of people
jf those chronic, weakening diseases
which are accompanied by a cough. '
sueh as bronchine and incipient con-
sumption. More than that, by reason
M the othsr ingredients. Hl'oodroot.
Mandrake. Golden Seal, and Queen a
pathet- root- °' the medicinal virtues of
. which are acientiflcally extra<*t«d and
ay Mas combined in Dr. Pierce s (tolden Med-
ical Discovery, remarkable cures of
id st dyspepsia and stomach <ii§orders have
h ? bad been accomplished.
! Nearly forty years ago. Dr. Pierce
discovered that chemically pure glyc-
Mr'-r or rriae of proper strength is a better
first time solvent and preservative of the active
;VT, nasdiciial pnnciples residing in most of
our indigenous or native medicinal
plants than is alcohol. As its use is
• ntirelv unobjectionable, while alcohol
i* well known when used even in
'small portions, for a protracted period,
to do lasting injury to the human sys-
tem, especially in the caac of delieate
women and children, he decided to
use sheas.rally pure glycerine instead
of th# usually employed alcohel in
ihe preparation of his medicines.
Hf found that the glycerine, beetoes
beinj entirely harn-iesa, p>. asesses ;n-
Irinsic medicinal properties of great
value. Its nutritive properties. Dr.
Pierce baiisvee. iar surpass those of
cod liver' oil, entitling it lo favorable
■ o- 'ousiderallon m all cases sf lnoipisut
v>- tne\ area oonsuaptlon and otk*r wasting diseases.
«r 1 dfwi if they'd I ^ 11 an >"^1®rating, lentc alterative
r-asti. to\ and owes its virtnes to NaHire's vsge
tahls garden. Dr. Pierce is only the
woman ,an i ^ scisniitic' gar-
wxiuidn ' Mature s (lardcn. deaer who
than the 1 n —. .— knows how to
oembine ths plants given us bv Nature
lo cnre our diseases This prepara-
tion te of pleasant tagrees per-
fecliy with rebellious and sensitive
storoaohs and is extreme^ effective is
restoring tone and vigor to the entire
svstem It cures inrtammatorv tronb.t^
of the stomach as well as indigestion
and ovspepsia arising from weak
stomach One reason whr it restores
the iiealtii ot run-down, psie and ecna
ciated people is bseause t IW^ tluv ws
out the poisons from ths blood through
l,v*r and kidnsyi It then begins
e fret- reconstructive work m buildiag tip
flesh bj first making good. nch. red
blood.
Th M OoUmi MtditkJ Dtacovrrr" it
v.
^ ^MUitied
. sf la
ne.rlT . .( u.!W
• arg n. •upluvcd w wraAil,,
mib. pr.«-nu (iim.
I' ■ s , i„ ' •* ol our# u H« bMt
i ,,, , * m n> tfanuMBdii of urn o( ohronio
« •*••<• whioh cone u>«n («r
«ch T «| liro.wv.u n,uh
1 M' JO ," •.• Dr R v. -ih,
h«<i of ibis In.tituwon i Bafhk> N
| T nd «d al op-.nio
, ' I
J
should
o'clock
-Herald
.i\Orce<l
■t married j
'^e graph- i
he money
.e*«i Het«ee>v
14 nd wading
' eiLake ..f
i.« possible t'
°nly man
the foresight
Tribune One
^ on ^
n t revhit-e caa.i,
pan k.ngs
I PFRSOVS AVI) PLACES
in iMf* )*bor iorj, boro«ihlr
«lt
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 20, 1908, newspaper, February 20, 1908; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126609/m1/4/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.