The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 1, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA STATE C APITAL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1908.
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL
By The State Capital Company.
FRANK H. GREER, EDITOR. *
SUBSCRIPTION HATES:
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SUNDAY EDITION:
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SPECIAL ADVERTISING AGENTS:
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following advertising agents:
Kastern Agent:—The N.Af. Sheffield Special Agency,
tribune Building, New York nty.
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Those having advertising to place with tho Dally and
"Weekly State Capital In theabove territory, please cor-
respond with the agents as stated above.
j Pleasant nights—for mosquitoes.
Hnt the chcerfulest of all is the ice man.
Wnteh Taf'ty silk become all the rage again.
Sunshine these days is making its presence felt
even by the pessmists.
"It looks just like its father." King Alfonso,
•ven, can't escape that.
The shortage in diamonds has now extended to the
local baseball situation.
Now will the Prohibitionists say that the cocktaill
story defeated .Fairbanks?
The mercury in the thermometer tube needn't
get so "uppish" about it.
Do not swear at tho poet. Think how hard he
must have toiled in this weather!
AVill the Sunshine Congress kindly bring its tel-
epatliis powers to bear on the thermometerf
\\ ill Mr. Bryan have the decency to announce
that he is not the originator of the buttermilk idea?
In spite of this July temperature, the young col-
lege graduate is hi rining to mutter "cold, cold
World!"
COMMON PEOPLE LOOK TO TAFT FOR
AID-NOT TIIE GREAT LAW BREAKER |
So long as President .Roosevelt was righting an
uphill battle, he had the sympathy and support!
of papers like the New York Evening Tost, the
Springfield Republican and other eminent expon-
ents of the holier than thou school of political phil-
osophy.
Now that he has driven his principles home to the
conscience and tho intelligence of the Nation, their
praise is turned to scorn and innuendo.
Meanwhile, there has been no change in the
character or the moral standards which the lYesi-
dent lias sought to uphold or in the unworthy pur-
poses of the powerful interests which have fought
him so desperately. There is as much reason us
ever why powerful corporations should be taught
that they must obey the law and respect the au-
thority of the Government. There is as much reas-
on as ever why the reactionary forces that are still
conspiring to circumvent the President should be
frustrated of their designs.
Hut the mugwumps have lost interest.
Now the trend of their thought is exemplified by
the sneer, the gibe, the subtle suspicion.
To the President are attributed sinister motives,
to Taft are ascribed corrupt deals with Wall Street.
The overwhelming choice of the people is inter-
preted to mean the tyrannous imposition of an un-
desired nominee upon a reluctant rank and file.
There is no good in the platform, nothing hut
blemishes, treated with microscopic enlargement of
their infinitesmal dimensions.
We hear nothing of the popular endorsement of
the President's battle for equality and justice be-
fore the law; we hear nothing but yelps and whines
as the cause of progress and reform marches vic-
toriously by.
When this change of front does not represent dis-
appointed ambition or anger at shattered dreams
of power, it is indicative of the carping, nacging.
venomous spirit that likes to call itself independ-
ent criticism.
It is destructive, never constructive.
It is never for anything in whole-souled, enthusi-
astic American sort of way, but takes keenest d '
light in being against something for the spiteful
things it can say and the notoriety it may get from
barking at something or somebody of true worth
and real greatness.
It is not the spirit of the American people; an 1
it is doubtful whether the Hepubli can party has
ever gained as much from such sources as it has loit.
Not from the finicky, pusillanimous, crotchety
soul of the Superior Person, but from the great
wholesome red-blooded heart of the ..American peo-
ple must come and will come the generous confi-
dence and the votes that will put Secretary Taft in
the presidential chair.
i WILL BE WHOLLY TAFT ADMINISTRATION
BECAUSE WILLIAM TAFT IS BIG
THE STATE PRESS
POINTED STATEMLNTS ON MANY SUBJECTS.
FROM THE PURCELL CALL
It is high time to begin the work of
reform in Oklahoma which will surely
lead to the elimination of the 'freak leg-
islator* "and an Incompetent, erratic and
unscrupulous administration that has an-
tagonized and routed capital and brought
aiHJUi commercial and industrial stagna-
tion. Democratic organs, subsidized reds
and yellows and pap-«ucking office-
holders can rave and rant, deny and de-
nounce this true slate of affairs result-
ing from maladministration, maladroit-
ness, chicanery, little graft and big graft.
hlgh-hand«d rascality, sheer Ignorance
and idiotic incompetency, but they do It
falsely and every mother's son of them
knows It. The present strained—yes, de-
plorable conditions which confronts tlic
people and business interests of this state
and will grow worse before growing bet-
ter, are attributable without equlvicatlon
or evasion directly and specifically to the
overt acts of a "freak legislature-' and an
unscrupulously hypocritical and uncon-
scionable administration. Deny it, if they
will .but the intelligent home loving, pat-
riotic people whose pride of state has
ruthlessly crushed, their Immediate
hopes destroyed and their dream of glow-
ing prosperity shattered-ask them and
they will place the blame where It justly
and truly belongs. They were deluded and
deceived for a time; contldenced and ca-
joled; hoodwinked and robbed, and all
tho lies of the liars and folks of the falk.
crs and the promises of the henchmen will
never again bo able to place the demo-
cra< v i # ibsolute power in the state of
Oklahonra.
The fisct if. patent. Oklahoma was en-
Joying a reign of unprecedent develop-
ment and prosperity up to the very time
th«> Ilaskellizpd democracy (one of the
many d^ tinctive brands) begun to grind
out obnoxious. malMous, senseless laws
and assume the "grave responsibilities
of state." Unreasonable legislation
against oorportions caused all corporate
Interests to cease improvement and aban-
n all ideas of extension, expansion or
promotion. Capital set aside for Invest-
ment was withdrawn with the result of
demoralizing industrial enterprise, pro-
jects became empty dream", visions of
wealth vanished like shadows, commer-
cial Interests Roughed and the condition"
were reversed almost in a single night.
Darkness followed sunshine and Tittle
better than chaos reigna where preperlty,
bordering on affluence held tree and un-
limited sway. Curse the legislation
that grinds down, demortUlzes and ter-
rorises legitimate Investment. Curse the
kavery, Ignorance and malice that
prompts the "freak statesmen" to enact
exclusion laws, cripple Industry and set-
tle tax and assessment slavery like a
cure on the state and its people.
No wonder men have aroused from
the sleep of Indifference and realize that a
change must be had. No wonder that
men who have been life long democrats
stand out In open declaration and express
a determination to stamp their vote of
condemnation on every thing that sav-
ors of democracy or eminates from the
state organization, such as It now It.
The democrats forming the component
parts of the rotten democratic machino
of this state may cry panic and hiss
approblums upon the republicans, but
they cannot refer to a single republican
state that has been pauperized by dam-
phool legislation to the extent of ter-
rorizing financial Interests and putting
to flight by unjust, prohibitive and in-
line laws every enterprise of an Inde-
pendent character and not subject to
easy graft. No republican stato In this
glorious republic of republican states
was ever; no, never! held up to ridicule
and its administrative body pictured as
buffoons, heralded as nsses, exploited as
freaks and mnde the laughing stock of
this proud and mighty nation.
What Is true of the democracy In Ok-
lohama Is True of it everywhere. Its pre-
dominating element consisting of the riff-
raff. bob-tailed, ignorance and scum of
the larger cities whom the party dema-
gogues please to designate the masses"
rtro Incapable of understanding the sci-
ence of politics and possess no more
knowledge of matters politic or the fun-
damental principles of government than
a Fill Islander or an un-rdouted Tgorote
of the Philippines. Should the democ-
racy succeed to power next March Okla-
homa's disgrace would only be exceeded
and made more complete by the dlsg-ice
*">f the nation. But there Is absolutely
no danger. The republican party is strong
ly entrenched and better fortified than
ever in the history of the party to con-
duct a glorious winning fight.
TfiOUSHTS CP TiiE DAT
NO—
closing :o
Where the sea and sky
gather,
■ . .<)Mng together as a book that is
read. Joaquin Miller
IT'S face is growing sharp and thin.
Alack! our friend is gone,
Close up his eyes; tie up his chin;
Step from the corpse, and let him In
That standeth there alone.
And walteth at the door—
—Alfred Tennyson.
To thou unkonwn, Almighty Cause of all
my hope and fear!
In whose dread presence, ear an hour.
Perhaps I must appear.
—Robert Burns.
The life of the fish slid inst merrily through the
pool water should have an especial appeal to the
poet these days.
The dif icovcry from an analysis of a dos's hea 1
that it didn t have hydrophobia after all, doesn't
help the doit much.
The people who affect to be aggrieved becaus<
President Roosevelt has ardently approved and sup-
ported the candidacy of William Howard Taft sneer j
ingly say that if the latter is elected Mr. Roosevel; i
will be the power behind the throne, that Mr. Taft ujx^her
will be "his man,' a mere figurehead, and that tli • 1 she unities, jmt as «he aid of yo«
. , ,. , ... ... , As dear nH ever to- me,—nay It may be,
presidential policies ot the next tour years Will b J [ Even dearer still, sim-e 1 have no thins
() God! that horrid, horrid dream
Besets me now awake!
—Thomas Hood.
ast; while my tears fall
were stil
more.
J Wherefore,
j ed tT-.f worl<!
j death passed
who know Mr. Taft smile over the id«i iiave sinned.
as by one man sin enter-
and death by sin; and sn
upon all men. for that all
Romans v. 12.
A prosidentnl nomination, has some drawbacks.
Taft must i!• i• t :i!• :',000 li ters in answer to eoncjrat
ulntions from political litrhts.
Rockefeller is said to be busy writing his 1 it•
story. Don't forget to mention Ida Tarbcll and
Judge Landis, Mr Rockefeller.
Just think of next summer when you will have ti
pay your election bet by wearing your overcoat
downtown the Fourth of July.
"Call again." as three or four hundred Spanish
prisoners said in chorus when they saw the stork
flying away from the royal palace,
"A Rescue in a Freezing Sea" is the title of a
feature story in a Western newspaper. Nothin;
like "giving people what they want" in the news-
paper field.
Pearv still needs some more money for that new
dash of his to the pole. Why doesn't he give some
illustrated lectures on the Arctic region with elastic
temperature effects?
A Washington astrologer declares Taft will be
elected not only once, but twice. Why not declare
the Denver convention off and save a lot of apop
lexy-producim; excitement.
Canadian whiskey has been seized by I'nited
States authorities at Detroit. Who can blame them
for becoming desperate these hot days and trying
to get a "cooler" at any pricct
All of which charming and inspiring visits may
explain why, for one thing. Mr. Bryan thought Den-
ver would be a nice place for the convention. Also
the Nebraska railroad that runs through Lincoln.
those of Roosevelt, as much as if h
oftiee, and not those of Taft.
All such talk is untrue and ridiculous.
l'oopl
I that he is any man's man.
| That he is in harmony with the principles ami pol- j
icies for which President Roosevelt stands is, of
| course, a fact, but this is because he is himself eu
lightened and progressive and not because he is
simply following a leader.
Mr. Taft is a man of strong and positive convic-
tions and can be depended 011 to make up his mind in
j his own way when occasion requires.
Some one has said that Mr. Roosevelt is the plat-
form. and this in a sense is true, the ideas he has a
vocated being those which are given prominence in
the party's formal declaration of principles, and his
general position as a promoter of the people's rights
being accepted as the spirit of the revivified party.
But when Mr. Taft accepts this platform ho
merely agrees to carry forward the principles ac-
cording to his own ability and judgment, and thet j happy.
he will do.
When Mr. Roosevelt succeeded President McKin-
ley he announced bis intention of continuing bis pr-
deccssor's plans and purposes so far as he under-
stood them, and this he did.
But the time came when McKinlcv's views could
not govern.
threatening to
danger" is to the
pOll i*!s J wpJ5t china and Japan should agree to
own initiative and judgment, and the presidential ,lop the European* and the America™
policies then became his own.
The same will inevitably be the care with Taft.
He is in touch with Roosevelt now and his effort
will he to promote the principles and the measures
that have made the latter's administration distinc-
tive and popular, but other questions and other in-
terests, will present themselves and upon these le
will have to pass for himself, for them he will have
to be responsible. And it is quite certain that he
will be equal to the responsibility and will need to
rely on no man but himself.
j RIGHT TO THE POIST
A man ha; an awfu lbad temper
deny that he has.
Some men are i> giddy they can't even
be trusted with their own wives.
There's hardly anything more risky
than proposing to a girl except marrying
The reason women like to go to be-
long to a club Is so he can say he was
there when it was the theater.
The reason wom^n like *o go to wed-
dings l* so they can pretend to the bridal
rplo they believe they ar« going to be
of Lemon, Orange, Vanilla, etc., impart their deli-
cate fresh fruit flavor.
democrat running for local office with a
fair chance for success has a rocky road
to travel." The democratic party is a
discouraged organisation. What was the
u*e of protesting against the qu«ese
of the Old Man of the Sea? So the par-
ty submitted—a subnilsHlon born of tho
hope that after this one more try per-
haps the fellow will let go. Bryan has al-
ready become rich as the result of Ills
activity in politics. Maybe with the mon-
ey ho will be able to accumulate as the
r«-sult of his new opportunity to adver-
tise himself he'll rtlre by 1912.
So it Is to be Bryan on tho same old
platform—a new plank here and there to
displace the old ones that have become
rotten and are discarded, but the same
In framework and underlying timber, lie
is to make the sam<? old appeal to dis-
content and nascent class hatred. He Is
to campaign as beforu against a return
of prosperity. He will pray during the
campaign for the largest possiblo number
of men to be thrown out of employ-
ment In order that he may arouse in
them a destructive spirit. Every cut in
wages will delight him. Every open mill
will be an affront to him, and he will
denounce ail employers who are strug-
gling to keep their men at work as en-
emies of the republic. He Is stil enamor-
ed of the theory that the man out of
work wants conditions to be made worse
Instead of better—that he is so big a
fool that because his ankles are In the
mire he wants to plunge into ooze up to
his neck. This is Bryanlsm in its new
phase, and It Is the same old phase. Bry-
an didn't think seriously of becoming
again a candidate until he heard that
banks were beginning to close. The com-
parative mlldnes* of the depression has
been a keen disappointment to him. and
It will not be his fault If the army of the
Jobless . Is not Increased between now
and November. The good crops now rip-
ening on the western prairies he looks
at sourly—Is almost ready to charge
that even the climate is In league with
the gold bugs. And already we can hea*-
and read in Imlglnatlon, ad nauseam, the
1AQ8 version of the one unchangeable
Bryan doctrine. Denver will be but
megaphone through which to shout a mes
sage already too familiar. It will not be
a convention—merely a speaking tub.—
New York Globe.
'BER
POPICS
Puzzle: T* ind the man. who, a week ago, was
complaining about the weather being so uncomfort-
able cool for this time of year. Hints Search
where you hear the loudest remark* concerning the
present warm wave.
Tt
be an awful bore to try to name babies in
a monarchy. Vlmost as much of a bore as in
America, where, since 'flfi we've been compelled to
name most of them "William," except for the
"Theodores."
m PLACES
New issues and new situations presented them- **
. , ti i, , . the east a the 'yellow da
nves ana Roosevelt was obliged to act upon u - L, .
DEATH HASTENED BY HEAT
People of all ages feci the strain of extremes of
heat and cold, but the extent of tho depressing ef-
fect on the system is best shown by the unuiunl
number of deaths of men and women of advanced
years that invariably occur during or immediately
following such periods. Younger people and th isa
in vogorous health resist the strain that the othe"-
are not equal to. Mr. Cleveland's death was ad-
mittedly hastened by the excessive heat of the pas!
few days.
from cornering the whole of the Indus-
trial and commeu'ial markets In the far
east.—The Talyo, Toklo.
The Vienna Academy of Sciences has
spent nearly Jii.OOO in working 10 tons of
uranium ore for radium. The yield was
three grains of pure radium, the largest
amount ever secured at once, the value
being $320,000.
On the railway In Wales the brake-man
has to announce such stations as Fles.
tlnlcg. Bettw«-|*-coed. Llftndegat and
Pemaenmawr. in this country, tour-
ists OOOMtOMlly fall to understand what
the man says.
The Chinese government Intends tr
construct a large military arsenal .out-
side the wall* of Paottngfu. This extram-
ural establishment will (comprise gur\
foundries and Beasemer smelting works.
The diamond, so long the hardest known
puhstanc#. now has two rivals, tihe sill -
ride and the horlde of lltanlum—pro-
ducts r>f Henri M Issan's elentrlc furn-
ace—being claimed to he as hard.
Tn the Slavonic section of the New
York nubile library there nre fc.527 volnmss
p*iH a ve**y large proportion of the Rtis-
slan rwedrrs select hooks on social ind
tjovurnmcntal subjects.
THE DENVER MEGAPHONE
THE SAME OLD BRYAN
Speaking of the Denver convention
the New York Globe says: No mystery
or uncertainty attaches to the proceed-
ings of the Denver convention. It will
nominate Bryan on the first ballot, if
not by acclamation. It will adopt thb
platform that he has prepared. It will
name the running mate that he desig-
nates. Not a step will be taken nor a
committee be appointed of which he dis-
approves. Tin* Chicago convention Js
said to have been personally conducted.
But compared to what the Denver con-
vention Is to be It was Independent and
untrammelled.
The journey of the delegates to the
city of high altitude Implies an alto-
gether useless expenditure for railway
tickets, li will be Bryan solus who will
be in session—Bryan will be at on-e
principal and attorney-in-fact—Bryan
will meet, Bryan will deliberate. Bryan
will adjourn. Whenever Lincoln takes
snuff Instant will be the sneezing to the
west. The program to be followed Is
alrt*udy de>siccated. Everything has
been arranged. -ven to the intonation of
the orator's voice and the punctuation
of the party platform. Is thero anyone
bold enough to question the mandate of
the Boss? < fT with his head! Presi-
dent Roosevelt, as he sees how his con-
trol was qualified and limited, must feel
green with envy as he beholds how
trankly and openly domineering Bryan
Is ubie to be. Under th. -xlstlng clrcum
etancos for any democrat to approach
a republican h subservience be-
speaks a congenial lark of humor. If
the elephant walk aroun : us his mahout
Jabbed his ear. the donkey will dance,
bray, roll ovty and flap hjs ears at the
slightest eye movement of his relentless
master.
In Bryan was nominated because
ho was the favorfte paid lecturer of cer-
tain silver inlne owners who wanted to
sell 50 cents' worth of silver to the gov-
enment for a dollar—because It was
known that these silver mino owners
would more cheerfully provide a cam-
paign fund for him than for any other 1
cand'da'e. In 190O he was homlnated
against the will of the convention that
namp.l him bernus<> tip threntenM to take
ft Popullwt nomination and lead a new
holt. Thl year he In to be nominated
hep*use of another campaign of success-
ful terrorism. "Me or nobody," he said.
"If you d 'n't name me, I'll see to It thit
nny candidate you name Is assailed hy
my wlde-naKtrlnfr tongvie as a creature
of Watt street. I'll see to It that any
J DAILY VERSE £
LOVE'S TAPESTRY
By Archibald Sullivan
Said she, 'Go fetch the palest stars
That blossom in the summer skies,
The amber tissue of the sun,
A flight of opal butterflies.
'A skein of silver from the moon,
And trembling green from off the trees;
The rainbow that but yesterday
Was wonderful against the breese.
"The whitest rose that ever blew.
The dewy emerald of the lawn;
And all the apple-buds that laid
Their pearly lips against the dawn.
"And fetch the nights I watched for him
And find the veil of tears I cried;
And bring the little sob that broke
My heart upon the night he died.
'Then In the twdllght I shall sit,
And never hear the years that flea.
But weave a beauteous tapestry
Of dreams about my love and me."
HUM0R0U3 JINGLUS *
+ * + + V <*, ♦ * * * *
The Phoenix was, as you might say,
The burning question of his day;
The more he burned, the more he grew
Splndlferous In feathers new,
And from his ashen rising bland.
Did business at the sjiine old stand, *
But though good people went about
And talked, they could not put him out.
A wond*rous bird—Indeed, they say
He Is not quite extinct today.
—Oliver Herford, in the July Century
George iGoodwln of Washington, Pa.,
slept 40 hours uninterruptedly.
Electric cars were held up 1n Danville,
111., by a swarm of bees, whloh settled
on the trolley wire and could not be dis-
lodged until the trouble wagon was sum_
moned. when the bees wor^ taken down
by their owner.
When Mrs. II. O. P.ri'llcv told Judge
Kunkel in Harrisburg. Pa., that she and
her husband quarteled about a nume for
their bmby and that the hinban 1 It
home the Judge ordered him to pay his
wife $1.C0 a week.
Mrs Abraham Isreal of Evansville,
Ind., weight 32o pounds, fell off a seeond-
story balustrade, striking a telepnono
wire. l ouncing thence against a cistern
causing a fracture of three ribs. Th«
crossarm of the telephone pole was crack
ed and business on the line suspended.
Owing to n dspute about contributions
to Bt. Casimer's church .In Worcester.
Maw. .Bishop Beaver has ordered cash
registers to be put at the church doors
next Sunday, so that church-goers ran
pay as they enter and see their monrv
registered.
WITH THE "PARAGRAPHERS
The saddening effect of the financial
legislation Is pitifully Illustrated hy
the Atlanta Georgian when It asks:
"Will the passage ol the Vreeland bill
make money any vrcer?"—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
There is one good thing about the
place some pipe smokers are going to
when they die. They will not have to
run around trying to get a light.—Gal-
veston News.
Wall street has land which is quoted
at $30.000,coo an acre—enough to land all
th®, credulous lambs high and dry.—At-
lanta Constitution.
Captain Peary may be disappointed
about starting for the North pole this
summer because of the difficulty of get-
ting money. Seems too bad to keep the
captain here sweating, when he do** so
prefer chilblains.—Washington Times.
That Wall atreet land quoted at >30,-
offl.ooo an acre Is not especially good for
tillage, but It's a great place for separat-
ing the farmer from his money.—Louis-
ville Courier-Journal.
Elderly Bore—"Your face awakes a mem
nry. "When I look at you my thoughts are
taken far, far away!" She—"How I long
ta follow them!"
'I heard him behind the door pleading
for Just one. They must be engaged.
Naw, they're married. It was ^ dollar he
was pleading for."
Old Gotrox—"What! You marry my
daughter I won't hear of It.' Young
Slimpurse—"I'll take good care that you
don't hear of it till it's all over."
Did the new foreman at the works give
the men any Impetus at the work. Pete?"
"NO ?ah. Not a bit, sail. Said we'd have
to wuk fo' de same old wages, sail."
"Gee whli! here's the rain coming down
again and somebody's stolen my um-
brella." 'Somebody's stolen what?" 'Well,
the umbrella I've been carrying for the
past two weeks."
Sb* (sentimentally)—"Do you remember
William, the lsst time we went rowing
like this? "You bet! I was twenty years
stronger, you were sixty pounds lighter,
and the day was tifteen degrees cooler."
POINTED THOUGHTS
Perhaps the physician who got Intoxi-
cated on water drank It with whisky
chusers.—New York American.
"Peary anxiously awaits funds." H-
will have sympathy. There nre other*
who need money with which to make a
dash.—Philadelphia Ledger.
'teff Pnvis will not be a delegate-at-
lcirge to the Denver convention. How-
ever he will remain at large.—St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
The most dastardly political canard
yet started Is tho rumor that Mr. Brvan
does not like baseball.- Atlanta Georgian.
When a rash man goes out to give his
hepd n pwim It doesn't make much dif-
ference whether he tackles a merrv-go-
round or a merry widow.—Dallas News.
Woman's feet are growing larger he-
cause she puts her foot down so often
of late.—Birmingham Age-Herald.
John Hays Hnmmnnd to have nr '
I**®' ore nus.llfTnHon for the nations!
t'eket. He ta n aroM men from start to
finish.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
P0ST0FFICE DRUG STORE
F. B. LILLIE, PROPRIETOR.
Fresh Pure Drugs
Ice Cream and Cold Drinks,
Photographic Supplies,
Kodaks and Cameras,
All Kinds of Druggists Sundries
West Oklahoma Avenue, Opposite Postoffice
GUTHRIE 0KSA,
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 1, 1908, newspaper, July 1, 1908; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126737/m1/4/?q=%22United+States+-+Oklahoma+-+Logan+County+-+Guthrie%22: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.