The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 3, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL. TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3 1908.
CONCERTED PLAN
NO* 8EVEM.ED
| A NEW BOOK B* A FAMOUS ACTHOR
Mr .~ Mary J. Lincoln, author of the
[famous "Boston Cook Book," has just
I written another book of recipes, the
j "Pure Food Cook Book." It is interest-
. ing to note that in a number of recipe*
(Mrs. Lincoln has recommended the use
of a vegetable oil eooking fat, called _
; COTTOtENE. Lard ^ing made from gtandard Qil Originated It Early
' hoe fat is often impure and always, inai-
eestible It is claimed for COTTOLENE, in March *905.
however, that it can be used in every
way that lard is, that .t makes l.gh rich HEARST DISCLOSURE
delicious pastry which can be digested
with ease by the most delicate stomach, in Another Series of Letters,
and that itis.also moreff«on°^aUbin '' Exposure'' . Hearst . Involves
lard, one-third less being requirea. r
republican
Stamp in the circle under the Eagle
and you will have votetf for prosperity.
Vote Her Straight—Vote her straight
and thero will be no question about the
ballot being counted^ If you attempt
to spilt your vote you might lose It so
to be sure—stamp in the circle under the
Eagle, which appears in cne secnd col
unw on your ballot.
For Presidential Electors
(vote for seven.)
WILLIAM BUSBY.
J. C. ROBBERTS.
EMORY FOSTER. „
ABEL J. SANDS.
K. O. CLARK
BRUCE KENAN.
W1LIAM McKOY.
For Justice of Supreme Court
Second District
(vote for* one in this dictriet.)
For Justice of Supreme Court
Fourth District
\vote for one in this dictrict.)
. JOSEPH T. DICKERSON.
For Corporation Commissioner
W1LLUM TI REYNOLDS.
For Congressman 1st District
BIHD S. MeOUIRE.
For State Senator
U \RPKR S. CUNNINGHAM.
For Representative
. (vote fur oijly one)
O • B. ACTON—1st District
JOHN S SHEARER—2nd Dial
A C. HAMLIN—3rd District
that
vhlch bring
career
most real happiness of the person
whose character is in question.
•Coming now to answer your inquiry,
l should say that a Christian character
in he buil<lnf*of a successful fafoer
its most Important pari. The •longer
0110 lives, the more convinced he must
b< <ome •'.hat every other Incident and
(•'•'•nicut of a <areer loses•Importance in
comparison, and that when a man's life
work 'iidonethiffls wh.itst* andsout.and J
wok Is done this Is what stands u;,
nnd whether the career is one of profes-
sion. business or politics,
thing if true.
1#
Cures Woman's Weaknesses.
Wo rotor to that boon to wekk, nervous.
Buttering women known as Dr. I'liycc',
Favorite Prescription.
Dr. John Fyfe ono of the Editorial Mad
of The Eclectic Mkwcai. Review say,
•of Unicorn root Dioioa) which
ono uHlie chief intffedienU of the "tir
vorlto proscription p:
"A remedy wblcli lnvmUbly acts u auter-
Ino Invikforator " * * makes (or normal ao-
tlvllv "f 11"' entire reproductive system,
llo continues "In Helonla* we hare amecllea-
niont which moro fully answers the abor,
purposes Ihan nun other druo uHfi uhich / am
nmuaintfit In the treatment of diseases Do-
llar to women It Is seldom that a case t
M'l n which does not present some Indication
f.n tliN retnwllal asenl." Dr 1
tiavs: "The following are among Jhe leadtrjir
Indications for Uolonlas (Unicorn root). I am
or aching In the back, with leucorrho-a:
atonic (weak) condltlullV of the reproductive
oreans of >«omen. mentX depression and lr-
Tltablllty. Asoiiatcd wlt chronic diseases or
the reproductive (/gans of women-.constant
sensation Jf hpat in the region of the Kijl-
nt ys; men/irrhsgls (flooding), due to a weak"
cned coiv/itlon of/the reproductive system!
ametoor/TTu>^sKEJre*8®<1 wr ***ent monthly
« •|o<!/./dWfclmfwrru or accompanying an
mbnoiMl condition of tho digestive organs
and A/iemic (thin blood) habit; dragging
sensolons in the extreme lower part of llie
*' I ( I'l'o're or i f tho above symptoms
Members of Kansas Delegation
York, Nov. 2.—\V. R. Hearst
brought the campaign of the Ind^iiend-
enc<4 party to a close in Carnegie hall to-
night by reading letters which revealed
an attempt of tho Standard Oil company
to shape public opinion. The letters and
Mr. Hearst's comment thereon yvere heart!
by a Ia.rfie audience which cheered the
telling points brought out by Ihe speaker.
Thomas L. Hisgen and John Temple
.Graves, the league's candidate for prcs'-
dent and vice-president, and Clarence J.
Shearn, the nominee for governor,' also
delivered addresses.
"The senator mentioned in this letter is
our old frlned Joe Bailey of Texas, With-
out doubt, as Mr. Sibley sefys. Mr. Bailey
vould come with anyone. He has been
seen'there. It, Is impossible to open uy
any crook or cranny of the Standard Oil
without finding Mr. Bailey in some dark
corner blinking with beady eyes at the
unwelcom ellght.
"Tho Important part of this letter, how-
ever ,1s not tho part that reveals Sena-
tor Bailey's democratic friend of the
Standard Oil. It Is*, the part wjilch reveals
the jjjant o control the great news organ-
izations* of the country' Tiie Associate!
Press' and kindred avenues, 'to Influence
njjbllc opinion.' In that way Mr. Sibley
thinks the public can be deceived and pub
He men like Roosevlet, who value public
opinion, can be criticized and controlled.
"Tt Is undoubtedly possible for the in-
dustrial corporations and the transporta-
tion;) cunpanles with the Standard OH
at the bead to bring about union of
forces for concerted action.' That union
of forces would enable them to control
many of the great avenues of publicity
• Think -if the joy pf the Standard Oil
in a 'silf supporting' organization which
would daily deceive all the cltlsens of the
, I'nited States. No more subsidies to
newspapers and magazines and lecturers.
\o more subscriptions for l.OOfl years and
| season tickets for 20.000 performances.
Merely a self supporting or even, n •profit-
able organization which under Mr. Arch-
bold'8 direction could he brought to fab-
ricate and falsify as glibly as he dpes.
Perhaps the people's public servants coul.l
he controlled then without the need of
so many secret certificates of deposits
and certain so many exposures of Fora
ker and Haskell* would be suppressed as
yellow journalism an dnews not fit to
print.
'In complete ignorance of what w;
earring the peof>le could < be led blindly
the polls to vote for the pedpetratlon
of a government of the .Standard Oil, and
for the Stan'dard Oil.
When I am attacked by certain pub-
lications for making these Standard Oil
letters public T cannot heTYi but think
that the Standard Oil company has been
partly successful in establishing that ef-
ficient literary bureau which eosts money
but Is the cheapest in the end.
"Mr. Grasty, to whom Mr. Archbold
wrote a letter that T lately read wrote a
letter to Mr. Archbold on December 4,
1903. The letter refers to the subsidized
Manufacturers' Record and says:
"Dear Mr. Archbold: In the article,
'Teachers vs. Doers,' in the Manufactur-
ers' Record this week, there is a world
of good common sense. Although Mr.
Morgan Is recognized as the head of
tain properties and thereby meeting me
ifccds Of the country yet some consider-
ation is given to the powers that have
expanded our commerce. Now while ex-
pedient under existing conditions to da
nil that we can to turn the tide of anti-
Morgan sentiment nevertheless I want to
say to you that T think it would he a
pood tiling if Mr. Morgan could be quietly
and peacefully supplanted as the most
conspicuous representative of financial
power
••Unless you have devoted more time
than so busy a man is likely to he able,
tasshare for such t purpose, to that great
man's loss of the public's confidence, you
can scarcely realize how much harm has
n dow bj his undbtbg §r ^ what peo-
ple consider the exposure of his methods.
But whatever we may call t. the effect
of the discredit which J w befwn him
hn« been H mhkc the public i.cheve or at
Vast to take serious sensational stories
concocted for demagogic effect prior to
these disclosures, were considered un-
founded' and unworthy of credence. A
number of my friends—men or sanity and
feelers of the public pulse -have earnestly
,v„ t '.tlfctl •: • i ust the course we ha v..
taken In Mr. Mh defense savins with
gtatula* unanimity, 'lie does not deearve
It nr.d will not jiprri'elate it.'
••I am idling you all this bseauso I
honestly believe that interests of audi
immeasurable maKnltu,le as Mr Morgan
Is supposed to dominate ought to he un-
der the ocntroi of wiser men-men with
sense enough to see and avoid such pal-
oable pitfalls as surround the shipbuilding
d,"-A substitution of onnVal of power—
,i ehan«e of generals- seems to me he
nnlv way to eseape the consequence or
an<\' head off public distrust.of our great
organizations and to stop the supply «
fresh anouunitlon to the trust b 'J*- ■
■••Now among the lettw I put
dore Roosevelt and W. n. Hearst in the
same category and Hcnrst today has an
organiaatlon of Immense e"^eni V mad"
UP of first-class, high-priced brains
backed not hv a tiaifcl but by a ho«s-
head and is liable to bl the democartlo
nominee for the presidency. That «°"se-
velt will be the republican nominee Is n
nclitslon. Now In times of d)-
he slogan 'nothing f"r :l
■ s al«ngWH>s. If ' change «
,v 'opinion it is prob-
tand for the malnten-
, m in bs and f"> ;
gr,a.„., .he -Kr-arest numt
foregone
presslon, the
change' goes
even possible— li
nhlo—people wh
ance of American In
t d to t^
V Q rue
l/flultig lngredi
qTTu^ufwirnni la Unlcorn root, or Helonlas.
and the medical properties of which it
most faithfully rcprosenU.
Of Golden Seal root, another prominent
Ingredient of "Favorite Prescription,"
prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D.. of Ben-
nett Medical College, Chicago, says:
"It Is an Important remedy in disorders of
tho womb. In ail catarrhal conditions * *
and general cnfeeblement. It is useful."
Prof. .John M. Sctiader, M. 1)., late of
Cincinnati, says of Golden Seal root:
"In relation to its general effects on the
system, thrrf. i* ru> infdiciiw. fti we ab<mt wfiira
thtrr I* turn general unanimity of opinion. It
Ik unfcMnvWfy regarded as the tonic useful in
all debilitated static." w ^
Prof. K. lturtuolow, M. I)., of Jefferson
Modlciii College, says of Golden Seal:
" Valuable in uterine hemorrhase. rnenor-
rttagla (flooding) and congestive dysmenor-
rhtea (i)aliiful menstruation)."
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription faith-
fully represents till the above named In-
gredients and cures tho dUettoo* lor which
ught to be brranglng t
nihility of such a dl^
election to the presidency.
•• 'Yours truly.
"'THOMAS P- GRA8TY.
In his speech nT H™r"t 'e^rrP'1^
to a recent statement * Y John I
bold that he was sure until Mr
read the letter regarding
judges, neither Judc*
Henderson had anj
(Aretibold^ wrote CS
their behalf
Judge Morrison also dei
Hearst, that he knew A
ano but that he had not seen him
years nnd it was Jnexpllealii
Standard Oil man should tuke
in his welfare,
"In the light of the letter I am about
l„ ron?!." said Mr. H'-urst "the explana-
tion seems simple enough. Mr. Areh-
l,„ld apparently 'look so deep an Inter-
,.sf In t'K' matter nf the appointment of
Mr. Morrison to n Judgeship because Mr.
Morrison certainly Vnew of Mr. Arch-
bold s activity In his liebalf because Mr.
Archbold wrote to Mr. Morris,
him about it. You will see plainly from
the first paragraph of tilts letter which
ute watt in reply to
letter which Mr. Morrison wrote. Here |
is Mr. Arehbold's letter:
" "26 Broadway, New York, August 3,
1S"9'Hon. Thomas A. Morrison, Smith-
port, Pa.
" My dear sir—I am duly In receipt
of your favor of August 1 and it hao
tlven me great pleasure to writte Sena-
tors Quay and Penrose, expressing my*
earnest desire ^hat it may prove possi-
ble and consistent for them to support
you for the supreme Judgeship.
•• 'Yours very truly,
•"JOHN,P. ARCHBOLD.'
Mr. Hearst then read letters from
Archbold to Senators Quay and Penrose
making the recommendation and sa\
IriK he would be greatly pleased bx the;
support.
"I have shown heretofore." Mr. Hearst
went on, "the peculiar views taken m
newspapers and magazines and lectures,
and other irfrtitittlons and individuals
that influence public sentiment."
Mr. Hearst theri read the following Tet-
ter:
" '26 Broadway, Oct. 10. 1902.
«« 'Mr. H. H. Edmonds, Baltimore, Md.
" Dear sir.—Replying to your favor of
the 9th. it gives me pleasure to enclose
you herewith certificate o /deposit h
your favor of $3,000, covering a year's
subscription to the Manufacturers' Re-
cerd.
" 'Truly yours,
•"JOHN D. ARCHBOLD.'
1 have looked up the subscription
price of the manufacturers' record," Mr.
Hearst continued, "and I find that it is
$4 a year. Consequently Mr. Archbold
as a year's subscription, so that there Is
no possibility of it being anything else
than a subsidy.
•'The object • of these subscriptions is
to Induce these publications to Influence
public sentiment in favor of the Stan-
dard Oil, as the following letter will
show:
" '26 Broadway, December 1R. 1901.
" 'Mr. Thomas P, Grasty, care of Buck
nd Pratt, room 1203.
" 'No. 27 Williams Htreet. City.
" 'Dear Mr. Grasty.—I have your favor
of yesterday and beg to return herewith
the telegram of Mr. Kdmunds to you. We
are willing to continue the subscription
to the Southern Farm Maga-
zone for another year, payments to he
made the same as they have been made
this year.. We do not •doubt but that the
influence of your publications troughout
the south is the most helpful character
"Wit good wishes, I am,
* # t " 'Yours very truly,
^'he Standard Oil Co. not onlyl en-
deavors to "influence public sentiment
through magazines and newspapers but
it subsidises tea 'hers nnd lecturers to
educate the public In the interest of
the Standard OH. The following lette.
is a point in example:
" *26 Broadway.
" 'Prof. George Gunion, 41 Union
Square City.
" 'My dear Professor.—Responding* to
your favor It gives me pleasure to en-
close you herewith certificate #of deposit
to your favor of $5,000 as an additional
contribution to that agreed upon and to
aid you in your'/nost excellent work;
ers' Record or he was subscribing for
760 years. The $3,000 Is definitely stated,
was either subsidizing the Manufactur-
most earnestly hope that the way will
open up for an enlarged scope, as you
anticipate. ♦
" 'Yours very truly,
" 'JOHN . D ARCHBOLD.'
In the following letter i* the mention
of a certificate of deposit sent to ti
itor of a dally newspaper:
" '26 Broadway.
" '26 Broadway, Jan. 1, 1899.
"'Hon. W. A. Magee," Pittsburg Times,
Pittsburg.
" 'Dear Sir.—As per understanding,
herewith enclosed find certificate of de-
posit to your order for $1,250, the re-
ceipt of which kindly acknowledge.
♦ 'Truly yours,
" 'JOHfc D. ARCHBOLD.'
"I will now read you a letter whic-ft
indie ateda still* wider and* more com-
parative plan and one of even greater
danger to the free press. The letter is
the Standard Oil Co.'a congressional spy,
Joseph C. Sibley. It ts written on the
letter * paper of qpngress and is headed
'Joseph C Sibley, hcairman committee
on manufacture, house of representa-
tives. United States, Washington, Mar- h I
7, 1905.
'"My dear Mr. A.—The Illness vf a
member of my family has prevented iny
coming to New York. Senator n was to
have gone ov< i w%h me. T think he will
go anyway as be has business there. I
had a conversation with* an important
•official' yesterday and he told me there
was but one thing to do and" that was to
start a fire back ' 'Like myself iu>. \y
much alarmed and as a member of the
reigning family his hands and tongue are
tied, no tuinks the work should be don I
in the education of public sentiment be-
tweeg now and the meeting of congrefi
in (V'tober. It has. Ithink, been decided
to convene congress in extra session
at that time although the speaket; vlll
try to have it go over until November if
can't do beter. I will know In a day
two how he stands.
'Long (Senator) and Curtis (rep&jsen-
tatlve) are tho strong men In Kansas
ation. r have explained matters ?o
them nnd T think their Influence will
-ount some when the.- ff0 home. Camp-
lell Is a clever bny. has no strong points
ret developed. He seeks notoriety, but
s harmless in himself. Tb's agitation, in
tho language of the started f'-om
the top and will run its course. ,It Is
not a deep-seated, profound conviction
f wrong. Tbe one thing is to get doing
until temperate action can be secured
I think the pendulum will swing to tins
side after awhile but. I do* not want tho
devil to pay before It goes back.
" 'An efficient literary bureau is need-
ed, not for a dnv or n crlslp bu^ ft per-
manent tjinfl healthv eontr 1 of the Asso-
ciated Itoss and kindred avenues. * it will
■ -st monev b t will lie made self-support
the end and can be made self-support-
ing. The next four vears is more than
any previous epoch to determine the fu-
ture f the eountry. No man vabx - p ih
lie opinion or fears It so much.as Roose-
velt. No man seeks popularltv so mue'<
as he. Mild reproof or criticism of bis
I t- ilh " would nearly naralyze hiiu Todiv
he h\rn onl> th© chorus o* rabble, anj|
he thinks It Is public sentiment. T d
know whether the Industrial eorpomtlons
and th^ fransportaion companies h
enough at stake to justify a union
•s for concerted acttlon. it soemi
necessary
millions
of the
Inventor of a Succ
Cotton
NO.
THE MACI-IINB.
In that valuable book, "Cotton,'' by Prof. Charles Wm.
Burkett, of the North Carolina College of Agriculture ana
Mechanic Arts, in collaboration with Clarence Hamilton
Poe, this statement is made:
"But, aom«one reminds ur, in this day of labor-savins
machinery cotton is still the one crv>p most fully depend
ent on hand labor. It is satd that withiu fifty years the
time of human labor required to produce a bushel of corn
has decreased from four hours to thirty-four minutes,
and for a bushel of wheat from three hours and ten min-
utes to ten minutes, wliib* It is doubtful if tho Lime of
human labor required to produce a pound of cotton has
been diminished even one-third What then when the
world has begun to demand 2fi.00o,00fl bales of the
South, even though we have so improved our seed and so
built up our lands as to find no difllculty hero, shall we
not nevertheless be hopelessly balked by lack of labor for-
picking the orop? • • • Clearly, therefore, the man
ing of a mechanical picker is a hard task, and yet so
fertile Is the human imagination and so enormous arf>
the rewards awaiting the, man who succeeds in making
an effective picker the wealth of Croesus may be bis
that we expect it'to come, and to come no; many
years hence. * ♦ • There are millions in it for the man
who succeeds at it; it is* likely to be if it can be
done."
This written by-Mr. Rurkott throe years afro. In
this same book, farther alouir, on pn^ro 107, under the
head, "The Cotton Picker," are statements which, had 1
talent, I could not have written more to the r>oint in ref-
erence to my own invention. This is what Prof. Burkett
Bays, sfieukijig' of the necessity o! a cotton picker:
"As has already been Indicated, the draft on cotton
profits is greatest for picking. We gather cotton to-day
just as it was done In India a thousand years aito Hand
picking, hand harvesting, 18 not only tl e rule, bat it is the
only method of gathering the lint.
"Other crops have labor-saving devices In use in this
final phase of their production. With wheat, com, oats,
potatoes—all our leading crop*—while the cost, of pro-
duction' has been lessened In our tim>\ the cost of liarvesl
ing? has been reduced many times. Wtth cotton it'is dif-
ferent. Slave labor passed; paid labor took its place. And
labor cost is steadily Increasing It eoets more to-day than
a quarter of a oentnry ago, more than it did a decade ago.
"The great hope of the Sonth, then, line in tho (firection
of labor-saving devices for lessening the cost of cotton
prodnction. Some will come, of course, lor better prepara
tton of the crop and for its better culture, thereby tnereas-
ing the yield; bat'the greatest improvement will be found
when tbe cotton crop may he picked with so-nwhat the
same independence of hand labor as obtains in the har-
vesting of other staple crops.
"Yon think this can never come?
"We wera fifty years producing the wheat harvester,
and from its nature—gathering eraln. cutting It and bind-
ing it—are not as many features Included and complica-
tions involved as in 'the harvesting of cotton?
"The cotton picker will come In Its experimental stage
now it is not to be dismissed with a mere wave of the
hand. It picks now. That much is certain. The time will
come when it will pick profitably
"The successful cotton picker has only to do the work
efficiently and cheaply. It must be built to pick the cot-
ton without injury to plant or unopened bolls.
"The fact the cotton opens slowly necessitates, as has
been sc*n. three, four, or even five pickings, and this com-
plicates cotton harvesting; but if rows are placed at
proper distances, fields planned for horse or steam drawn
OFFICE ANO FACTORY,
4436-38 Olive Street,
St. Louis, Mo.
Postal and Weitern Union Wires and Operators in My Factor/.
tools, the cotton picker may he operated twuo or three
times without serious injury to'plants or bolls."
T want tt) arknowloduTP m> LndebUnlnes- to t "ot T ur-
kett for inspiration. 1 have avoided complicated ma-
chinery nd produced a simple, easily managed und ef-
fective machine.
I have invented a machine vrhicli will do fur the cot-
ton growers of the world all thai Prof. Burkett says it
should. My Vacuum Cotton Pickinsr Machine fills every
specification. It is the result.of a thorough i>n<jerstajid-
inj; of the needs of the cotton j;rbw< r.
My machine is beautifully made in every pfirt. is con-
structed i)f the best material to last,, is manufactured
with a full appreciation of the uties to whii-li it may !>o
put I r the cbtton grower when not in use as a cotton
picker, is sold* at a price anthon such terms as will make
the marketing of these machines a cheap and simple fac-
tor, and mean's that the millions mentioned by Prof. Bur-
kett as the reward to eonfe to the inventor ol a successful
cotton picker will be distributed among: the stockholders
of the Vacuum Cotton Picking; Machine Company.
The proposition I make to tho public is no "stock-job-
bing" scheme. *1 am not a schemer or promoter, i am a
manufacturer, president of the General Compressed Air
and Vacuum Machinery Co., of (St. I.oui*, have a_largo
factory arid my house-cleaning machinery is in use in 500
cities in the I'nited States, besides many plants in opera-
ti on in Europe nnd South Amonca. IliGre is a solid, sub-
stantial business back of every statement I make.
I told you yesterday that 1 wanted to build a new plant.
I am going to build this plant, and while it is not abso-
lutely necessary in order to do s'o that you join with me,
yet I am fully convinced that it will make the company
stronger and better il several thousand people are par-
ticipants with me in the profits df the Vacuum Cotton
lacking Machine Company, which are as certain as is tho
fact that the sun shines in the South.
The Vacuum Cotton Picking Machine Company is not'
now and never will be the property of any trust.
I have organized the Vacuum Cotton Picking Machine
Company under the laws of the State of Missouri, with
a capital of $3,000,000. Of this sum $2,000,000 is com-
mon stock and $1,000,000 is cumulative preferred in
shares of $100 each, bearing seven per cent annual divi-'
dend guaranteed. I expect to sell enough of the preferfed
stock at par to build the plant which I have mentioned.
I will give with every two shares of preferred stock one
share of common, so that the holder- of preferred stock
may participate in the management of the .company as a
voting stockholder and secure such additional dividends
as the common stock will earn.
Do you want to come in?
Do you want to participate jn 1lic profits Tvliicli must
come from the manufacture of this machinet
Remittance of one-tall' the amount uiilst be made with
the reservation.
lie^iiJ the papers to morrow.
JOHN S. THURWIAN, President,
Vacuum Cotton Picking Machine Co.
Over the State
A lew million pounds of Oklahoma cot-
ton is mixed with mud.
They like to
son In Blaine
read about Satai
•ounty.
Pontotoc county Is still without night
riders, excepting those that return from
their best girls.
Shirty O'Hornet conducts a dog farm
near Ponca tlty. His dog flesh Is high-
priced venison. .
A Garfield county political prophet pre-
dicts tb:it tall Ellis will lonk small after
the election.
llenrst
Pennsylvania
orrlaon nor Judg >
knowledge that he
.vernor Stone in
mI, said Mr.
Archbold years
j that the
:in Interest
'Sincerely
mrs.
'Sini.ET
The young folks like to have a fe
dollars they can call their own.
makes them think the farm is al!
right Not that fite dollar Is all there
Is of life on the farm, but rones are
the thread In the cable binding th
boys nnd girls to the country. The
boys nnd girls are the best stock on
tho farm atid must be kept there
A sarcastic pencil :>u«=V
istrlcts calls the little c<
ective son-in-law "little r
of the rural
rporal's pros-
stlcklng up its
tiie f inter iiiy
Night rideriam Is
and cros'sbones In
ture.
rn Altus citizens
c.itirt for exhibiting
colored like whisky.
Sidney fingRS and .lack T.ove wen
re^l biggest hlir fellows in the little
pcral's whirlwind menagerie.
The proposed Girls' Pr^sbyterlfn O
at Duflant is# still "hanging*lire."
goodly number <>f r n."homa dc
>ose to strike for higher fees.
veral county attorneys are mi
honest efforts to arrest ind prosem
violators of the Sabbath laws.
More than loo Wichita , Indians
dancing with "the <'>n • lies at
Storj\ ' ,
Thousands of country, lnd* are m i
terestst In baatball than In pollti
ed ucatlon.
And the prohibitionists a e In
of the water wagons and water wa
and big new
articl
any
puollsl
recen t
and Verdigris
\-lndiar. TerritM
cainst ^Selling the s« liool lauds
t there's large quantl
k and ti
all hal
NVEDNKSPAY
•klahoma tha
k, N
THIUSDAN
Indian
Wolf wl
\TI iLI
Will T.indsj
; ra d
killecl himself last'Sunda
vthietl
t riilck
lit Ion. T
ihrarv
terrible
nt Is covered wltl
foundry
anotfiei
1 lelul
lire't lonf
i 11-
SOMETHING FOR THE BOY'
o A. JKi "i? "3 TL T -A.
Tn« Kind You Have Always BoiH,
ugh i
. Threi
Iryln
fals?
Muskogee -• lrl<
i.. ... .v
Miami I
lift l rmineral rb 1 '/An
ers flocking there from
„ .. Kind You Have Always
Petri! i he -J7 ^ .————
SlgaMim /yl/
THE ABANDONED GOIDE-POST.
The above subject is unb of vital m
ortance to the traveling public thesi
siys. With the mlvnt of the nut m
lie and improvements on> other
f.-r Individual ♦use it brings the sul
as one of mu 1 -rt t m ••
our country highways <
sheer negligence of someoi
•ly are guide posts found.
kijow where to lay the bla
this negligence, for it can bo
easily on the other rfellow or tho omw
department. In these flavs when busi-
ness men. tourists or uleasure seekers
(nvade the country and take extensive
the tlrri (|uestlon of Impert-
good r..ad, and the second how
n,.| to their destination """
Jou
y„ •• ii.. I «■ '<
testimony.
rbal b<
nl«bt obtain from, '
niters
Kato
The average rural democrat
xv iiy Cb#rlsy West Roy Hu *Tn
pemard. Bill ("Tosh end several other not
r,l d"Otoct at Ic ,«M>ell-blndlers. failed t;
stump It for the "dear peepul" during t.hl
vltrlol'c campaign.
The p
TO-NIGHT
fllcted
metropolis, Shawnee, Is
a butter nnd egg famine
Just found out In Oilsonlte that a
of tho hns not Jurisdiction
•rlmlnnl libel suits.
The Kingfisher Midget's sanctum is
kdornod with a seven-pound potuto.
information
hat remains
are inclined
Relieve that he would be ages making
j.Ajrnev after extricating himself
n a selection of the wrong highway.
impelled to obtain his
harumscarum manner
he chances ty meet
from the farmers, many
has to cliase for miles
out'of "the""way <'"ty of er.« tin.;
K,,l,l,. p.mtH devolve upon nine on.- Then
whom? The road commission, tho coun-
ty court or the Individual? The prop-
er and best method and eventually tho
cheapest would be for each county court
to make a sufficient appropriation to
have enough guide-pusm oust at some
Therefore, he i
information In
from whom
or perchanc
„ BLSt :> PtlSOH
No case o£ contagious blood poison is •-
of the.virus has been removed from tlie '•1
the blood will sooner or later, cause a ti*' a 1,1
its hideous and destructive symptoms of ulct:
coloredaplotches, failinghait| s^r^s ma uu•
surely cun ; c« I 1 • • •
blood and ,sU ami yr. . / <!n\
abiolutely and perfectly purifie® Uie blood,
rich and lie;ilt1ay as it l ' •" '
poison entered the circulation. •'• 'PJ*1
and gradually the symptoms disapj
cleared ol all spots, sort s and other blem
the mouth and throat heal and when S.
the last
it in
health
tiie h.
b. ias m i
poison no trace ot tne aisea^c ca. vS. S. iS. cu • v
because it is the greatest of all blood purifiers, u -U-.
than forty years. Hook on this disease ^ itli su^-.. t uu
ftud any niedical advice sent fiee to I'll whowmu
y swiFT SPECIFIC CO., AiLANTA, uA.
■ -OS down into tlitt
of the inffctiou. It
ia vital iluitl as fresh,
of contagious blood
effect on Ute blood,
mprovut, the skin
out*.
;il tiie system of the
tagious blood poison
•oven for more
fin home treatment.
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 3, 1908, newspaper, November 3, 1908; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126862/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.