The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 20, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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THJ3 UK.LAHOMA Di A i {5 UAPITAL.
ME OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL
Er By The state Capital Company.
FRANK H. GREER. EDITOR.
<m
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily by Carriar—Strictly in Adw«nc<.
Dne Week
Dne Month "£**~
}ne Year -• *■
Daily by Mail—Strictly n Advance
One Mopth
Three Month —
Six Month —
One Year
No sub' :ription will be sent by mail in city of Guthrie
SUNDAY EDITION: *
One year by mail t * $1.00
WEEKLY.
Six Months ...« , - }®f®
One Year * •, *°.5C
$0.10
0.45
5 00
$0.40
1.00
2.001
4.00
SPECIAL ADVERTISING AGENTS
T:. • Daily vlid Week!* •1 ital art' represent. .! %y the
f r.£: :iiiverti■ *'
Eastern Agont.* Tlv N M Sheffield Special
Tribune Bulling, Ne« York ''It; 0 o
Cent-a AJnrv Th N M Shuffle-:.I ...
V. S Express Building. Chicago. IllInol
In Kansas City?; Mart J° Barron*. 302
it.g Kat - •" . tj *M
For Stat. <1: Tell' Uodbold Special Agepcy. Dal
ias. Texas. #
n.--*e having ad' *.*.ng to"-place with the Da ly
Weekly Siatt Capital in th* above territory, pleast
respond u ■ g nis - stated ^pove
Agency
A
Long Build-
and
eor-
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET
* resident
WIL°LIAM HOWARD TAFT, .of Ohio.
Viie-Prtiident
JAMES SCHOOLCRAFT SHERMAN of New York.
Is it not natural then, for the people to believe
that, if under oath the head of the School Land De-
partment substantiates one of the charges of the
State Capital, should he answer any of the other
questions it will be found that suspicion of ex-
travagauee and charges of GRAFT will be ata%
shown founded on more than rumor? •
Tli. mlinii.istration, hi - l.v- n satisfied to simply
shout. Ti stale ( .ip:i. 1 is . L: r. ' lit the people
nr.' lmt satisfied with th>- cry what tfcey want are
11 few fai'1% and figures and unless tlies. nr.' produc-
d. the |will be I'nre. cl to admit that.
<«\gaiti the administration is wrong and the State
Capital is right. #
There are eleven questions in the list." which the
state Capital has asked the School Land department
I manatfiT. and jf it will be a difficult task to answer
Stem all at once, why not lake one each day from
now until November 3.
The parents of the school children are anxious for
information.
Let the administration lir>t give the names of
••vert 1 irtplo\his r>'si<lene.' aitd salatV Th.-t
should l.e -asy .-ly two 1 tired odd names to.be
put on a list as follows:
Residence Salary.
John Doe. Bunkopolos. $5,200.
Total the list and there will*have been*answered
four of the questions- 4hat leavi* seven, and all of
them can eaily be answered before October 31
tfcat is if th tidmin «t rat ion does not fear t.. answer.
If there is silence "it demonstrates fear.
TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1008.
jam - 1I~ i ~
this day in mist0ry
OCTOBER 5J
1«532 Sir ChrUtopher Wren the architect
ernor of Alassachusetts.
-©3—Sir Chritopher Wren, the architect
«, of St. Paul" Catsedral In London,
born. Died Feb. S>, 1723.
::-s ' * ty of Copenhagen, Denmark, near-
ly detroyed by fire.
'830—Spain ratified treaty ceding Flori-
da to the United State.
x ; Frederick Dent (Irant and Ma
Marie Honors marring in Chicago.
UM—Honor* MiWir, canadian states-
n in. die<f in Montreal.
1S99—(Jen. Jimines fleeted president of
th« Domini, an Republic.
190." - President Roosevelt visited his motli
er a old home at Roswell, Ga.
SILENCE DENOTES FEAR^FEAR TO
TELL THE PEOPLE WHAT IS DONE
Wh\ is it that the Governor, or the head of the
School Land Department- the men who are hand-
ling the property of the school children of the state
| _don't furnish the people of Oklahoma a detailed
I report of the department's expense!
Why is it that the following questions, which were
I asked by the Daily State Capital have not been 1111-
swereifhy the Governor?•
HOW MANY MEN' ARE EMPI<f)YEI) IN THE
DEPARTMENTT , * *
WHAT ARE THEIR NAMES AND POST OF-
FICE ADDRESSES t • ♦
WHAT IS THE SALARY OF EACIIt
WHAT IS THE COMBINED SALARY OF THE
EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT?
* WHAT HAS BEEN THE OTHER EXPENSE OF
* THE DEPARTMENT? ' .
WHY HAS NOT ALL THE SCHOOL FI ND
000.000 BEEN LOANED TO FARMERS AT 'FIVE
PER (JENT?
wiiy has The money been loaned to
the state at fol'r per cbnt: „\ni> why
were these state BONDS not SOI,]) o\
the eastern markett .
WHY HAS ftlE WILL OF THE PEOPLE BEEN
PUSHED ASIDE? •
WHY RIDDER IS ENERGETIC.
Report is that Herman Ridder, treasurer of the
Democratic national committee, as successor to tin
late unlamented Haskell, is prrofing quite & success
and that he is getting "the coin" which the Demo-
crats so much need. Mr. Ridder's appe'arance as a
Bryan manager is otherwise cue iff the humors ot.
the campaign. *
"We deem a Republican victory less dangerous
for the country than th#election of Bryan, ' laid Mr.
Ridder's- New Yotk StaatssZeitung on • October s,
11104. And on September -"i. 1000, the same paper,
in an editorial by Mr. Ridder. said:
"The east is too level-headed and"conservative
to give a majority lo a man Bryan who on econo.
mie questions is ignorant, and who, prompted by hto
confused potions, would gr&tp the first opportunity
to eiuist, a teiritie eatastroplu
Before tl^e Denver convention Mr. Kidder made i
special trip to Lincoln to tell Mi*. Bryan he could not
be elected, and to be- him to withdraw and east Ins
influence for Gray. # *
Today Ridder, who is wealthy, is sending his pap-
er fjee during the campaign to anybody Wfeo asks
for it. and devoting his.n^iii" t eflVrts raKing a
Bryan campaign fund. ,
Why this change Mr. Ridder can haMly -be-
lieve Bryan is essentially different by reason' of
anything that has happened in the-last three months;
three months ago he oonaidered Bryan the same
Bryan that h> lied been in JStlii ami IJUm'i.
The explanation wema to be that Ridder is one
of a Targe number of Democrats who believe the
•beat way to b« rid |>I' Bryan, and at the same time
make effective use of him in the* ridding, is to give
such a loyal party support that Jiis followers mav
never again claim he Aid not have n "SqtMTO deal''
| within his party, bis leadership means only defeat.
xpeet to win; they are playing for the
this is my birthday
OPICS
THE BRYAN TRUST-
Mr. William Jennings Bryan lia-i
a goud deal to say. Hrst and last, ab&ut
the trusts. He used to poso as the cham-
pion* "trust buster, " and he complains
thai the gnan who took his belt away
stole hUi Ideas, «uid ti. t* the champion-
ship still belongs to hitn.
But there is a feature of the trtut bus-
| iness with which Mr. lit;, m0 h.is to do.
thai interests particularly ha Demo-
crat# of the country, and one that has
not been given the publicity it deserv-
ed. It may seem like news, at the flr*t
Bryan himself
tfust existing
111 tlie country, dhi it himself, issued the
stock, took the receipts, rapitalized the
business at no one knows how many mil-
lions, set his industry into operation,
and has 'raptured all tfie returns that
hf?\ 2 been sighted frutn the begij^iing <>f
Augustus O. Bacon
A icwstn *Bac on, United States sen-
•tor from Georgia, was born in Brviff. . ,
county. 0|or*Ui, October 20. 1S39.* and f1""" ."!'" ' ,
«-a ..du,..,|Ka in ti., l-nicrsity Of Oeur- i t"rnu"1 Uv glKan"'
kI.i. lie served in the Confederate army
' r .ugh the ' iviP war and at the end , f
WflU I !.e i ••-tii,ied th.' study of law.
A:t.-r his admi>sion to the bar ho bi-gan
the practice of law In Ufacon He early
took an active interest in Democratic
politics. His first election to office was
111 ' u '* n «4 a insen member
• f II.- fje« rgia legislature. He served
that body fourteen years and for sev- ral
years was speaker of the Hous<*. Ho wis
'' ' ••••''! a. < .indidate 'j- the ^ .
cratlo nomination for governor <if a;- ••
gin and he was one of the representa-
tives of his state at several of the na-
tional party conventions. He was elect-
ed t.> tlte I nited States senate in 1<!©4
and was re-elected in 1900 and 1907.
Kodol
For Dyspepsia and Indigestion
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyapepaia, Qaa on
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,
etc., a little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly
political points
Since the beginning of the Presidential
vai^paign the Chi. ago Tribune
Hep.) has opened its columns to Willit,
J Abbot, the press agenf of the National
Democratc committee, to express the
views, hopes, and arguments 0f his party.
TWg departure, of a strong Republican I
paper from the policy of Riving its read- j friends have made has been a good
the enterprise, now twelve \ears ugo
This trust is known on Wall street as
"the Democratic Part*. Limited. Its
stockholders are scattered from Ma'ne
to California, and there are great quan-
tities of them in the south. Whenever the
treasury runs low the corporation asses-
ses the stockholders I^arge assessintnis
have recently been made .and Portland
stockholders have been called upon • to
pony up on Ihelt stock within a few
days, and if current reports are true
many of them forked over their good
money to keep the enterprise going.
Judging hY results tfe stock which our
friends hold in so large 'amounts must
be watered. It has run so thin that *l^e
dividends have never *becn seen by one
of the capitalists interested, save and ex-
cept alone the manager, who has reaped
no end of advantage, financial and oth-
erwise from the investment which his
credulous friends have rriade on his ac-
count. When Mr. Bryan took charge of
this property he was a poor man. He is
now reckoned among the wealthy men
of the world. The investment which hi*
hjs only one
eated quite
i"; u
of the pending issue
a large excitement
an readers.
Says the Philadelphia Record fDem.):
!■" • e \\ iiiiani Pitt defended Muihelf
against Walpole's accusation of "the
atrocious ( rime of being a young man."
t has seldom been necessary for any man
P • e to defend himaelf from the
charge of pmooolty. But, after William
> «'M .bryan lias been n public 'ife
twenty years, it is immensely amus-
the Republicans objecting to
for him* personally, both in a financial
way, and is an 'advertising medium for
himself. Hut what has anyone else got
out of all the exploiting he has done
for himself through them" Not a cop-
per. either in direct returns, or In ad-
vantage gained. One would think that
the stockholders would he asking what
there is in all this for them. It Is human
Kodol supplies the same digestive
Juices that are found In a heidthy
stomach. Being a liquid, it stArta
digestion at once.
Kodol not only digest* your food,
but helps you enjoy every mouthful
you eat.
You need a sufficient amount of
good, wholeeome food to maintain
. strength and health.
But, this food must be digested
thoroughly, otherwise the pains or
indigestion and dyspepsia ar the
result.
When your stomach cannot do its
work properly, take something to
help your stomach. Kodol is the
Only thine that will give the stom-
ach complete rest.
Why? Because Kodol does the
same work as a strong stomael), and
does it in a natural way.
DO. UUIJ u IltrtfJWU jruui RWJIUW u
Don't become a chronic dyspeptic.
Keep your stomach healthy and
strong by taking a little Kodol.
You don't bare to take Kodol alt
the time. You only take it when
you need It.
Kodol is perfectly harmleaa.
Our Guarantee
entire
knew
I Offer tip
ds lay
Poo'l hesitate, all
that our guarantee Is good. This fit
piles to the law bf)ttle only at d to b
in a family The large bottle contains &)£
times as much a* the fifty cent bottle.
Kodol if prepared at the laborator-
ies of £. C. De WLtt 4 Co., Chicago.
For Sale by C. R. Henfro
In Switzerland we <
falling down a crava*.
i"ue mighty near
"When we '-tr? enjoying the fruits i.f
| victory." said the catnoi'lg.i solicitor,
"you will be sorry you denied us n cam-
paign contribution." "V sip." enawefel
Mr Dustin ^t.i-: H*or -i.cn in my circum-
stances the fruits of victory too fre-
quently prove to be lemons."
She - 1 expect to marry young. ' He
'\ou mean you expected to marry young
don't you?" ♦
Many a man who boasts that he is the
architect of his own fortune must have
stovd in with the buiidinj in-'^'C. r-
. "I fancy our family doctor is the least
ambitious man In town.'' "What is h-.*-
pointed paragraphs
•' uiiiuiiiuub iiinn in town.
nnlure. after ■ stoc k Johblng Voneprn allopath!.' or home >pathl<-?
Ing to he
Ills inexrerie
the presiden
holding pub!
■ Office much of the time
mu arc tne Hepubllcans-so attache,] i0
Ihe public crib that thoy ran taudna no
other (.uallHcatlon for the highest offi. e
In the country than years of occupation
of smaUer offices ?'•
wit!:
ub. He
nst diver
WHY HAS HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF
DOLLARS BEEN LOANED TO "PETS" AT FROM j They do not
T\N«> 11 > TOREE I ER ( l.N'I. # . future, and for t^at only. They are determined afrl
A\ in ARK I'ARMRRS, WIIO OFFER rill. | whatever saerifi'*" t > tli r self-respect, to be r- ^uln
BEST SECt'RITY IN TIT1' WORLD, an Oklahom i this y> ir tlmt th.-v m..y .1.maud n 1 .-iring.4
Fann RKI-I >>K|i LOAN'S AND "I'F.rs iny,,.,. and t"'int t<> tli i- .-ord in pfoi.f tha*
GIVEN MONET Af A M^JCH liOWER BATE OPI Deraoctacy must abandon Bryan if it would evir
INTERESTf _ „.in
WI1AT PART OF TIIE SCHOOL CHILDREN'S ;
MONEY IS LOANED ON CITY. IMPROVEMENT j
BONDSf •
Any fair rninde
has bled Its victims as long as they
see their way clear to. "antl-up" for men
begin to make Inoulrles as to what it
all nmounts to to them.
When a promoter comes aroftnd with
a seductive prospectus men are not *o
Jisquaiification for j blame if they think there.. (■ advantut
True, he has not been |iri if for them and that the tnveetme&l
likely to pan out. If they put their mon-
ey into the scheme. It may be that their
judgment Is faulty, or that the promo-
tor's proverbially smooth ways havo
overcome their natural caution, but it !s
quite nardonahle that one Investment
should be m-ile in a Promising p sperf.
If that prosnect proves to have been
,1 promfror .'>nlv, as 'a1' been the case in
this corporation of which we speak and
nothing comes of It. the Investor usual-
ly fights shy of the same proposition for
a second time. Tn Mr. Bryan's ease. h ">w-
eveH the vlctlfti took itock a second time
and a second time there was neither ?!n-
ancial return, nor comfort in the way of
a successful report, nor anything in th<
nature of remuneration. such as cf-
flrlal fMWltlons under the promoter. A
second time the whole prnposltlon went
throueh. end their good money was lost.
Again the same promoter comes be-
fore the same Investors and a"ks them
aealn for 'heir m rev to put Into exact-
ly the same proposition. Bryan ha* n
monopol- m the greatest cold bvtelf
scheme that ever was* invented bv
Tt takes n confidence man to w- rk tho
schemes sucessfully. and leave the nur-
chesera as pn.id natueed can hp. wh'i°
the profits are nut In the bank to the
credit of the Commoner . •
Talk about the
GOV. HASKELL SUIT.
i ru i: die Globe Democrat:
flkrr. Haskell o{ Oklahoma is as busy
as a hornet # nest which has
■n stuck
Preparing to bring
and sundry person *
'1 Ui* N r. Hf
that
mostly *paihe!lc."
Wife—"Did you get the seats fo*
play I'm so anxious to «ce?" Huahani-
"\es. I was very fortunate. I got two or-
chestra chairs for three \ears from to-
night."
"Did you have any :id'"entires white
you were abroad. Mrs. Concur*." *"Ov.
yes. in Italy we were In a hV.--breadth>
of being heid tip by the bandolines, and
Many a profit is without «honor in II13
stock market.—Life. *
~^o—
The thing that inspirte a man to want
a public office'"Is how he hates to work
for his living.—New York Press.
—o—
•The air does not seem to.know that It
fs tonquered, and the law of gravitation
is unaware that it lias oeen repealed.*
Puck.
A nian hat a hotter idea .if jl.e meas-
ure of « crnity afler ie ;i.i>* i n two
women engaged In saying good-by —
Atchison Globe.
If a ^irl has a figure ifte a case-knife
her idea Is that she Is gracefully slim—
Xew York Press.
' Ki t be admitie,; thai M -
'tiers s.uue pe.-ulfar advantages to
w1 an damage his own reputa-
' N'Hl tli.it nobody else has a call
P him. If the governor of Okla-
nsists on a monopoly and a pat- .
fJU in the way of kicking hirns !f. Standard Oil business, if that be h<*
find Missouri as hospitable a state worst of the business corporations
part of the recofd jaeainst which the enh^rts r>f JfeftWili are
THE REAL QUESTION 0? THE CAMPAIGN
•It i> no. injustice- to Mr Bryan's nttr.ie* ive f>.• r-
man or Ionian knows that it; Sonal qualities, as to Ins effectiveness as an orator his
•hould bo poariHe to answer the above queations in skill «s a party .leader, nor^s it any disparagement
questions the purit.v ..(' Irs inotiv.'s v■> thii' tli.- lii.-m who
espoused free silver in 1^96, renewed its
in lf)00 and later declared his beli
owernship of railroads can not 1
safe leader to whom mav be eo
of her inferior
>le right to defame
not to be infringed
ire doubt wheth
aurts that
Is own
i arming. Is a 'simple little plaything.
side r
pros*
less than an hour, but since none of th
have been answered; and the men who control th<
property nf the«sehoo! children of Oklahoma Aake
tli position that—th. pnbl^ h. DAMNED: it is
only natural that the people look for a reason which
w I x|- :i ii.wh> thi■ r. i- ~ &
' And the natural deduction is to the effect that
tlli r.- miim !, m'Mi.-thill- nniu
If there waa not, is there the slightest reaion for!
saving that the Administration would not haw. M.'
ready, jumped on the State Capital and after pn
senting its figures called the State Capital a LIAIf
tits not this been the policy followed by the
Iliisk.'lf!/-i| ring <lm intr the past two yearst f
Don't vou think flint if it was possibly for tli
Administration tn make a creditable showing that
.I, wmild have lieen* made lon^ atjo.
,\ i\ind .I- an v :•
simply sai.l -ThcDailv Stnti1
powers
trines a
country
lit.; ail
rh n
Hiii
the J'rysidei
oniited frort
ejs .. man
fundamental
nt in* any diffici
man is William
lies, of New To
merely
his pros
pnncipl
man
s advocacy
government
mtleil as a |
the greatj
those doc- !
platform. The
sound convie- 1
n Whose
i iovernor Churl
cotifid
beeafi
cute suits in Mis<
nat the president* against
Inst anybody said to have
luring the recent contro-
i Mr. Roosevelt came so
shorter a ng uglier word
flf® HaekeU and some
ns It is now less than
til the election. We regard
that the governor of Ok-
" suits and If such suits
anywhere. Missouri would
t" furnishing the word
Unl
nrporatlon In which a
Haskell ' '"dividual Is the whole thing, while
come out
capital and the profits
his deluded following
This 0orp6ratl hae twice bens bank-
rupt. and the ! asinjt slgr -t of another
failure give promise of a third enroll-
ment on the docket of the bankruptcy
court. Ami the eola prompter of thill
fist Actually thinks him Self hostile to
(•monopoli'-s'
KALU
the best
styles
REIJOLVLD
7Tiatthere:s no use;
LdoKjNG Around £very
direction when there"
isa placeiriYouRCiTV
Iv/here THey Sell the
< eest selected th/ng5
I KE£P V0UR EYE:S
OPEM.TR I ENDS.
BUSTER BROWN.
Si-
LOO*INS ASOUflD*-
lias th
that whi
is a Liar
tceptiiijt
C apital
Omaha, Nebraska, Oet. 2n,
resenting the,estate of Charl
one time was treasurer df wl
"Bryan Personal Fund" in I
ed for another continuance*.!
b?J •
tot;:
Attorney
Haskell. \
as known
. vesterda
f ti
rj
Don t
ut up til
nir
nen who are charged with murd
of not guilty, and then make >• i
though the Admin
Ot guilty, but has faili^l 01
i of evidence to substantiat
the
i
pn
fei
D Don't it I
entered a4p
not produce
plea!
The only answer made to any one of the ques-
tions whs in . Matementyf the I.ami 'r„m,n
<r in which he said that the state had
about a million ami 'a* half
!i"ii Dollar Kiii, i . - f, ,
borrowed s million mo
the state had been loan*.! „ million f
fund, hundreds of tliim
, m 10,1 to "pets" at from tw
to three per cent.
The commissioner made
facts and thus, under
Hearst
suit hi
liundri
"It
TI
rat on h.,.1 . n,;" "I"'1 l-
$100^(
litt
'Iter
The remainder of the
ands of dollars) was lo;
state hail borro\#i
liars, of the Five Mil-
per cent, that counties had
and that the farmers of
ind a half.
prosf
Mr. Taft speaks
^ 11 at 'hr ^..|;'|
' to the
ding the
the Soul)
d that fi,
v pert
its p
••w'York
inherit .1
'-liearti
injf
*Vi"d to bar t.
answer
thin*
in the heat of
political
I hate to be swindled. 1 have to admit;
w uld Ve a j
'ke, an,]
I'm a stickler for fairness; I love ilb-
rid «
ould roar, but
hat care
erallty.
Unties of this
Imperial
Youi
grufters and jobbers I don't like a
it world? They know
bit
-ars£
V. and its roar
is onlv
I h
ave always been very severe on ras-
uml In their ears. Oov,
cality.
the president
In some
Stri<
t probity's what I demand every
M RS irt ih . c
in make
time
nd the president would
An
1 how 1 am treated I think Is ;he
Missouri lihel
aw. an J
test of It.
>Klcai report f
rom the
A Jo
b* on yours truly I think is a crime.
1 tide
that It was r
laugh-
1 want a square deal—If 1 can't get the
best of It.
CSS ,1
o we feel assu
ed that.
if and the tun
lull die.
Im
mown to the %orld aiajN
de is counted
and the
kick
>wn
he delible Ink
n whl" i
If
I'm injured at all by a morn!
Rldtdl - its
Will he
obliquity. , •
r# to fade. It
s sice.|-
Wht
never I'm stung I am stung to the
p ( as
* 'f Haskell
hat Mr
quick
cond#n
nod him
^n
d I let out a rear at that form of
Inqulty
•• National He
Tnte
Krltv's rare- very e]doin It's found
people like me. who are ever <n
Ut- •
mt ' >x n
quest of It.
a. ^ wrung wt.i
eh could
Oh.
give me a trader of principles sound
e
•be elected.
Haskell
f
ant •« square deal-when I can't t
«
to one of the
t
hlghAt
Its
Th
The"
nwf'H tie that s<-.me huslnes
men do.
with facility.
• r,. slow—very slow In believing ;n
efr
Oklahoma mr
of oir
'
The
Th
ouirh vo, think you possess dlpb-
' have Vi. sort o# • insclence. no, tro>i-
"V ' " d.«?" v eait fc f'-r the bas«
Ha*
Vo
r-r •• V 4 ■ •- • . nslnf'T 1 •
COPY* c*THsi,Brn«e BVStesbkowkCO.CIIIC.CQ.
why WAJTE YOUR TIME IN LOOKING
AROUND WHEN EVERY ONE WILL TELL YOU
THAT WE .STAND AT THE TOP IN THE
CLOTHING TRADE. WE DO NOT, HOWEVER,
TEAR COMPARISON. we ESPECIALLY INVITE
y ou to compare our ready-made suits
WITH THOSE THE TAILORS MAKE ANP
CHARGE YOU MUCH' MORE TOR. OUR CLOTH-
ING IS MANUFACTURED. BUTCHERS Do NoT
MAKE OUR CLOTHIMG,- BUT TAILORS. BUTCH-
ERS Do NoT TAILOR SUITS, BUT TAILORS
SOMETIMES'BUTCHER SUITS. YOU CAN TRY
ON ONE OF OUR SUITS AND YoU NEED NoT
TAKE IT UNLESS IT SUITS YoU AND FITS
YOU. YOU WON'T HAVE To MAKE YOUR
FRIEND THE TAlloR. FEEL-BADLY BECAUSE
YOU DO NOT LIKE THE SUIT WE TRY ON
YOU. IS NOT YOUR BEST FRIEND, YOUR-
SELF* WE CAN SAVE THOSE WHO WEAR
.TAILOR-MADE" CLOTHES 25 To 40 PER
'LENT OFF. EVERY SUIT IN OUR STORE IS
MARKED AT A SPECIAL CUT PRICE ALL
THIS WEEK.
COMING OUT SALE CLOSES SAT .NIGHT
rm.
que
m is
sworn statement to tlu
oath, proved one of th>
charges which has been made bv the S
The
f the Hearst lil
ic services of th
State Capital.
The dead and injured are
football field.
I
pay any i
NIGHT
arried from th
CP2
she know her to spr*)* to
nly to tsjlr about."-fimast
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 20, 1908, newspaper, October 20, 1908; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126848/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.