The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 240, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 5, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA^ STATE CAPITAL, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 5, 1909.
H
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL
By The State Capital Company.
► HANK H. CHLEH. EDITOH.
ttUBSCKIPTlON KATES-
Daily by Carrier—btriotly in Advanoa.
One Week
One Month -
One Year - — .. . , ———
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0.45
600
One Month
Three Month
6ix Month ...
One Year
Daily by Mail—Btrlotly In Advance
$0.40
1.00
2.00
4.00
No aubecriptlona will be eent by mall In city of Guthrie-
SUNDAY EDITIONi ^
One year by mall - —— *1,00
WEEKLY-
Six Mor)the _ n $0.25
On« Year , , , $0.50
SECOND OKLAHOMA LEGISLATURE -
WILL BE SANE AND BUSINESSLIKE.
DAILY VERSE
OttiliUi. V lilt iiom U AUiiWl'ti
I The Daily and Weekly Capital are represented by
Ffollowing advertising agents:
I Bnatcrn Agent;—'Tho N. M. Hheffletd SpecialfAgency,
t Tribune Building, New York City.
' Central Agency;— The N. M Sheffield Special?Agency.
U S. E*cr a« Building. Chicago. Illinois.
. In Kansas City;—Mert J. Larronir, lot R A t/>ng Build-
Inff. Kunsaa City. Mo..
I* For the State of Texas: —Oodbold Spwltl: Agency. Dal.
tat. Texas.
| Those having advertlalng to .plane -nth the Daily and
Weekly state Capital In the above territory. please cor
respond with the ngenta n* atated above.
f A prophecy of the world 's end means the end of
ithe prophet.
( astro now knows he is deposed—they are niakiug
him pay his bills in Venezuela.
Isn't Christian eharitv enough of "a rarity under
■th" sun'' without cornering it into a trust?
Ahe Ruef insisted all alongsthat all he wanted was
■justice. Now that he has it he isn't tatisfied.
The question is not, Does the constitution follow
the flag? Does the constitution even stay at homo
•with the flag?
Having classified .To„eph Pulitzer and Poultney
B'gelow. the president is not at all alarmed by their
Jirrsenee on the isthmus.
MUSIC OF HUNGARY.
(By Anna Reeves Aldrich.)
My hotly answers you, my blood
I.caps at your maddening, piercing call,
The fierce notes startle, and the veil
Of this dull present seems to fall.
My soul responds to that Ion* cry;
It wants its country—Hungary!
Not mine by birth. Yet have I not
Some strain of that old Magyar race?
Else why the secret stir of sense
At slgiit of swarthy Tzigane face
That warns me: "Lo! thy kinsmen
nigh."
All's dear that tastes of Hungary.
Once more, o let me hear once more
The passion and barbaric rage!
Lot me forget my exile here
In this mild land, In this mild age;
Once more that unrestrained, wild
cry
That takes me to my Hungary!.
Thev listen with approving smile,
Rut I. O God. I want my home!
I want the Tzigane tongue, the dance,
The nights In tents, the days to roam.
O music, O fierce life and free.
Or d made my foul for Hungary!
THIS DAY IN HISTORY
JANUARY 5.
1G75—'Turenne defeated the Imperialists
at battle of Turkheim.
17^2—Urn press Klizaheth Petrovna of Rus-
* i, died. Born Dec. 18, 1706.
1781—Arfold ln\\ded Virginia with 1,500
British troops.
1799—England ami Turkey concluded a
treaty of defensive alliance.
183G—Riotous demonstrations In English
manufacturing districts against the
introduction of labor saving machin-
ery.
183$—President Van Buren warned
Americans not to aid in the Can-
adian revolt.
1!**®—I'nlted States Military Asylum at
Augusta. Me., destroyed by fire.
1896—Cecil Rhodes resigned the premier-
ship of Cape Colony.
THIS IS MY BIRTHDAY
Taft s aversion to the theatre is easy enough un-
derstood when one considers the width and uncom-
fortable character of the average opera seat.
Because C'apt. Mains recites poetry and constantly
whistles airs from light opera he is thought to be in-
sane. In private life we call those fellows pbiin
Sociologists are to meet in Atlantic City to discuss
divorces. But one never hears of those intending
divorces stopping to discuss it. Action is their watch-
word.
The trouble with John D. Rockefeller's proposal
of a philanthropic trust is that it would be just as
regardless of the individual as any other kind of a
trust is.
AT NOON TODAY,
At noon today the Second General Assembly of
th„ State ot Oklahoma will convene for a sixty day
session, during which they will be called upon to
repeal laws which have demonstrated that they re-
tard the state's progress and they will also be asked
to enact laws which must obtain for
years.
at least two
A serious duty confronts both representatives and
senators and the sixty days will be made up of
jworry, disappointment and extremely hard and dif-
ficult work.
The good must be separated from the bad.
The judgment shown by the lawmakers during
this session will represent the facts which must lie
presented to the people two years hence, when the
voters are considering the selection of their third set
of agents.
With all this The State Capital is happy—pleased
to call attention to the fact that the personelle of
Oklahoma s second legislature appears, individually
and collectively, such as will and does cause the peo-
'|>le, they represent, entire satisfaction.
There are few, if any, who can be called profes-
sional politicians, and these p. p.. are largely in the
minority, consequently real men of affairs will be
in control and it is not to be expected they will
allow themselves to be swayed, and controlled, by
'that element which is a detriment to the state.
Old members, those who have Berved before, are
Welcomed to Guthrie, her people, as a people extend
« welcome.
Political differences and quarrels have nothing to
do with the acts of a people as hosts. It is a lion-
partisan welcome.
To the men who are serving their first terms as
law makers, there is extended a welcome equally as
sincere and to them also it may be said that every
courtesey due an official and citizen of the state will
be shown.
There are many men in the city who are here as
attaehees of either the house or senate. A number of
them have acted in the same capacity in the past,
some of them during the first legislative session. It
s wise that such selections were made. 'rheir exper-
ience will prove of value to the state and the mem-
3ers of the legislature. Those of the employees who
lavo been here before are greeted '<;■ t'ic pe, pie of
Guthrie with a welcome which is sincere while those
vho are here for the first time have only to make
.heir wants known and they will recei- attention.
The people of Guthrie greet kindly all as individ-
lals. as members of the legislature an I us represen-
atives of subdivisions of the sta'.e.
welcome is thus three fold, " ^
'•klahoma's second legislative session convened to-
day and, from all indications, it will be a general as-
sembly of business dealings conducted b;r men who
are employed by the people, of a great state, to look
after their interests. •
The members of the second legislature realize that
they are here as the representatives of the people of
their district and county and *hc. ully realize that
it is the people who have honored them njd that it is
the voter who is paying their salary.
Knowing all this, and being men who have been
successful in their ov.n business, cautious and allow-
ing others to do the experimenting, they will tak« no
chances with affairs of state which they would not
take with their own property or capital.
*• *«*«
Scheming politicians will, no doubt, as in the past
endeavor to create sentiment for many bills which
should have no place among the laws of a state and
there will no doubt be much in the way of political
bills introduced.
Tho wis legislator will steer clear of each of them
because he is aware of the facts in his heart, that j
the people have had all the politics they want.
Three years is enough time to devote to politicians.
Each legislator knows that he was sent to the gen-
eral assembly, by the people, to act in a sane, sound
manner, and that if he had not promised that he
would do so he would not have been elected.
*••*« *
Because of the general belief and great confidence
n the present sessions of the legislature the people of
the state today are much more contented than they
were six months ago, when the first legislative ses-
sions closed.
The acts of each law-maker, personally, are what
he must go home with.
It is not the things he did for Tom, Dick and
Harry that will count.
The general public, the people who elected the leg-
slator, is simple interested in what has been done for
the general public and, it is always safe to wager, the
fellow who talks the loudest casts the fewest votes
when it comes time to approve the acts of a law-
maker by re-election. ,
*#«**•*
Lobbies do not care a what, happens to the
the legislator, after he has cast his vote the way they
wish.
Lobbies do not care a continental what happens to
sometimes pay much, but what ever their motives,
there is one thing sure;
The track of the lobbist is lined with political
wrecks, blasted reputations and grieved homes;
While the libbist? The lobbist has his ranks filled
each year because there are men who find the sport
of getting a law passed the most exciting in the
world, because when it is over they know where
every other fellow stands.
**#* *•
Today the people of Oklahoma have their eyes 011
the acts of their agents, the law-makers and u i'ess
the agent fulfills his duty and lives up to his' promise
he can rest assured of one thing—
He will not have a chance of acting as agent again.
*••••••
The drift of public sentiment some time ago in Ok-
lahoma turned from the wild idea scheme of state
government and the politician who is not fully con-
versant with that fact is not alive and his advice,
when offered is not worth the slightest thought.
The people of Oklahoma believe; they hope; and
will insist that this session of the legislature be a
ane, sound and business assembly and because of
that belief Oklahoma ask the people of the United
States to watch, with them, the return to soundness
of a State which had to go through the "Arkansas
leff Davis period," "the reckless Texas fever time"
and "the sockless Kansas and Nebraska age" before
they woke up to the fact that all such insane, experi-
mental legislation has but one effect—decrease in the
value of ALL property in the state.
Last week a number of men and women of Nyaek, [''
N. Y., dressed themselves in white robes and went up i t
011 a hill in expectation that the world wa.< to come | ",n„Rrfll"v," h"rt touched
to an end. One of the women was so glad of the out-
come and so willing to resume the routine of this life
that she got out a big washing on Monday and hung
it on the line without so much as a word of grum-
bling, but on the contrary, with smiles and laughter.
She was glad she was alive and in the same world.
rybody is whose mind is in a normal, healthy
state.
HUMOROUS JiNGlE
OPICS
HENRY E. CRAMPTON.
Henry Kdward Crampton, professor of
zoology in Columbia university, was bom
in New York City, January 5, 1876, .and
was educated in the public schools of
that city and In the College of the City
of New York and Columbia University.
After his graduation In 1893 he was of-
fered and accepted the position of as-
sistant In biology at tho Massachusetts
University. Two years later he became
Instructor in biology at the Massachu-
setts Institute of Technology, and re-
mained with that Institution one year,
resigning In 1H9S to return to Columbia
as a lecturer. Since 1904 he has been
profesHor of zoology at Columbia and
al.*o an instructor In Barnard college.
I>r. Crampton is an associate member of
the staff of the Carnegie Institution for
the Station for Experimental Evolution
at Cold Spring Harbor. His investiga-
tions have been chiefly in the fields of
.jperlmental embryology and oxperimer*
tal evolution .his contributions appearing
In loading technical journals of the Unit-
ed States. Egland and Germany.
PROSPERITY AND BAD TIMES.
Prosperity and hard times are after all
but relative terms. What has been the
habit Is hard to surrender. The pace
once set has to be sustained. The rat<*
of income usuually regulates the stand-
ara of living and only a few are philo-
sophical enough to adjust themselves to
a sliding scale. No man likes to go back
to less than he had once received or earn-
ed. The general bettermnet of the whole
country and the people is written In fi-
nancial history as well as other history,
and every decadev has marked its won-
derful increment. Values and earnings
ana advantage have come with every
r.e<v generation till in the last ten years
the marvelous totals have made this the
richest of all nations in money values,
In average Intelligence and in the activo
participation in government.
Retrograde movements are protestlngly
endured and the scapegoat Is never spar-
ed. Not once has this country struck a .
level or slight pull up hill and frankly
admitted that it had been expected and
anticipated with eqiilnlmity. All the
warnings given out have failed to get
the consideration and attention which
would have steadied business and found
ilnandal centers ready to meet the
strains. From units to tens and from
tens to score and from scores to hun-
dreds. to thouands to ten thousands, and
hundred thousands and millions has the
totil amounted as this country has
grown and expanded until now the Unit-
ed States is a billion-dollar country and
rapidly climbing to a greater figure.
The trouble is the impatience of the
multitude that wants to break Into the
big figures and are tolerant of real and
imagined blockades. Where the million-
aire in this country was a curiosity even
In the memory of the middle-aged of to-
day, his name is now legion, and the
company which cant capitalize in that
seven-figured conversation can't talk at
all with real business noise.
lYosperity, as this people have known
it, has run a gait that makes us unrea-
sonable and never in any humor to en-
dure even a cessation temporariy. Hard
times come to few who have had a
chance and tried to be sensible, and hits
the people who are wage-earners and
mu3t depend upon the business acumen
and foresight, of the managers of the
business. Tho great combinations em-
ploy great numbers at great cost, and
when a sinHlen or anticipated stop comes
the end of the pay rolls cuts a multi-
tude. These are the sufferers from hard
times, and yet many of these could, If
thev would, prepare against the suspen-
sions of Income and tide over the lapses,
and muny of them do.
Looking backward over the last hun-
IJred years and comparing the decadef
afford a wonderful exhibition of prog-
ress and proves the comparative feature
that is seldom considered In the fierce
attacks upon the alleged causes of pan-
ics and slumps and the result cf over-
oroduction.
You hear It coming with a whoop,
You shudder at its demon shriek.
To shun Its force you shrink and stoop
Before Its fury It can wreak.
The tree tops sway, their branches
creak.
It's quite disturbing to the mind,
Palsies the limbs and pales the cheek,
It soon blows over, you will find.
If you have looped the winding loop
And ihen at last your home you seek.
And feel your spirits rather droop
Recause your treasure is not blind,
Don't try to make excuses weak.
Herause eyour treasure is not blind,
But let her with all freedom speak,
It soon blows over, you will find.
And If you're In a greedy group—
A crowd of ringsters or a clique,
Those who the public treasure scoop
And rule the roost with nrazen cheek,
Ana somewhere there has been a leak
That starts the old muckraking grind,
You needn't show your yellow streak,
It soon blows over, you will find.
L'ENVOI.
Of course, you may for cover sneak,
Or jump the town if you're inclined,
But laating storms are quite unique.
It soon blows over, you will find.
WIT AND MUM0R
Mrs. Bugglns—Before we were married
you used to say I was the sunshine of
your life.
Mr. Kuggina—Well, I admit that you
still do your best to make things hot
for me.—'Philadelphia Record.
"Willie, do you believe In Santa
Claus*
'You bet' I ain't no chump tryin' to
play smaj'ty."-X3v!cago Kecond-Herald.
Stella--Po you do your Chrtetmas shop-
ping early?
Rella—Of course, but I never buy till
the last minute.—New York Sun.
Justin—Why are you looking so dis-
consolately and Intently at Miss Old-
cash?
Hardup—I'm just trying to decide be-
•ween ner and the plumbing business.—
Chicago News.
BEE)
Strange News Stories
A 200-page book dedicated to the mem-
IV Of a dea.i cat has been published by HOLLAND AND VENEZUELA.
Mrs. Laura W Greene or uci-wyn, 111., Holland's action in revoking her treaty
a prominent club woman and vlce-preaJ- of with Venezuela is an act of retal
t of the American Cat Fanciers' As- iatlon that may have serious results for
President Castro's country. Cairo's own
performance In closing the V 'iio/.uelan
Philip l>avlson of New York stood up ports to shl? s coming from the Dutch
his folding bed ti arrange the cov- | Islands of Curacao wtis such a heavy
tepped on the trigger of the | commercial blow to the Dutch colonial
port of Wlllemstad that Holland's coun-
ter blow Is t he natur.il result of a retal-
iation policy. But Its ultimate signifi-
cance is in the fact that the annulment
of the treaty of 1R94 opens Wlllemstad to
the e xport trade in war materials and
thus makes it possible for Venezuelan
revolutionists to use the Dutch port as
a base of military supplier. This alone
would stimulate revolutionary move-
ments in Venezuo but the Dutch gov-
ernment goes mut li farther. In announ-
cinn that if will not lnterfe-o with fili-
bustering expeditions. It evidently seeks
to provoke a revolutionary outbreak
against President Castro In his own
country. Such an announcement is so
far hostile to Venezuela as to be a
breach of Interna^ nal law and could
be legitimateH- rrgarded by the Venezu-
elan president as a casus belli. But
Holland for sometime has been ready,
apparently, with Ihe South American
pountry.— Springfield Republican.
Little Johnny—Papa, is it tHUe that a
camel can go two weeks without water?
Papa—I believe It is, Johnny.
Little Johnny—Then how long could
he go if he had water?
Little Margie was rather mischievous
at school, "nut ono day she was unusually
quiet and the teacher said: " Margie you
have been a very good girl, today.
"Yes, ma'am," replied Margie, "I
couldn't help being good; I got a stiff
neck."
Small Nellie read aloud from her Sun-
day school lesson as follows: "And the
king of Nineveh covered himself with
sat koloth and sat in ashes."
This wan a puzzler and finally she said:
"Mamma, what kind of ashes is satin
Ihe State Capital Company
Corporation Record, made
to Comply with the Con-
stitution and Laws ot Okla-
homa, Do not be Fooled
record fcner" roTm corporation
aald to be food for any State.
The requirements In Oklahoma ar«
dlfferent from thoge Qf any other sut#
Th« l.,n 0klahoma are distinctive,
ine Combination Co-poration Record"
t0 CnrnP'y 'Tlth the laws of all
the States, will not do In Oklahoma at
• If you use such a record, you will
Your corporation into interminable
legal entanglements.
BE SURE YOU'RE RIGH1
<Wn® CMly Suue Capiur. complete
Corporation Record.
R contains:
1. Complete Initructlona aa to how to
keep the reccrtL
2. How to organize a corporation un-
der the constitution and laws of Okla-
homa.
I '1 s*eleton 'h record of the orig-
inal subscriber, to the Capital.
tltm C"ry the artlo'*> or Incorpora-
stockholders.11 °' ^ °<
airecto™'"""1 r,COrl °f Flrst "--"'ti* of
minutely to th
Oklahoma.
e constitution and laws of
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
>ed, which shut up like a Jackknlfe,
lamming him atralnst the headboard and
otherwise injuring him so that a phy-
Iclan was called In to dress his
Dr. Jesfe C. Green of West Chester,
Fa., aged ft! years, continues practirng
his profession of dentistry, and almost
dally rides his blcyle about the streets
of town. Tie never smoked or chewed
tobacco, nor lias he taken a drink of
Intoxicating lluqor.
At Cincinnati Mrs FJsther Bailey
pskr'l that two-dollar bill, a remnant of
which she saved, be redeemed because
a pet cat brushed the bill from Its place
mantel and it was wafted into
and burned. W. N. Tuttl
had 1
ened
s rap
ghted
r the bl".
•Israr with it in a dark-
mistake. Tuttle had a
Character tells, even in the panic and confusion af-
ter an earthquake. When convicts at Messina were
released from the prison by the falling of the walls
they proceeded to rob the dead and the living and to
perpetrate all sorts of outrages. The liberty to com-
mit crime unchecked evidently overcame thf terror
that the scene of destruction must naturally have in-
spired in them.
CUTS AND SLASHES
The time is evidently past when the farmer con-
siders his unsalable grain good enough for seed. An
auction sale of prize seed is being arranged for, and
it. is thought that some ears of corn and some bush-
els of wheat will command many dollars each. What
a blessed thing it would be if the breed of humanity
could l>e as easilv controlled.
Haron Rosen, Russian Ambassador,
will sail on Wednesday from Cherbourg,
France, for the I'nlted States, to resume
his duties at Washington. He has been
absent some months.
Mabel Taliaferro, star of "Polly of the
Cirrus," who ha* been 111 for some tmle,
rejoined the rompany at Hartford, Conn.,
yesterday. The members celebrated her
retitrn.
—o
Admission that Miss Frltzl Scheff, the
comic opera ntar. and John Fox. Jr..
were wedded in New York secretly last
Sunday is made by John <\ Hunt. Not
ev« .t Charles D. Dillingham, Miss
S hell's manager kn^v of the union al-
though Mr. Fox said some time ago
ho would make the singer hi. wife after
Christmas The officiating clergyman
was Rev. Dr. Wallace of the Mount
Klrco Methodist church. The couple
have taken up their home at 471 Park
avenue, New York.
Prlnci
and Princess I.uxarnvich Hre-
h were among the mnny pass-
bo arrived th« White star
Two Massachusetts young women have invaded the 1 L'mi'Ymi,,,1 '.'.V .'^urmer'VrviRn'dy-
field of pugilism, and it's just like them to butt in " " "
with a challenge to the male holder of some champ-
ionship, relying on his chivalry not t
the puffed pompadour.
1 .onilo
strike below
time Is spent In
wife Wis \tiss Calhoun cf
hey are going to the Par-
ish friends and rilfttl /es of
AMERICAN PROFESSORS ABROAD
Undoubted success lias attended the
operation of the system by which Amer-
ican and German universities have hern
exchanging representative professors and
lecturers. Tt Is reported that splendid
impressions were made last week by the
new Anierlcan-Perlin exchange profes-
sors, William Morris Davis of Harvard,
and Felix Adler of Columbia, who deliv-
ered their Inaugural addresses at the
University of Berlin. The German em-
peror's second son. Prince Eltel, was
present ai the representative of his fa-
ther, and the American professors were
Introduced as a former student both at
Berlin nnd Heidelberg universities
The reception of Professor Adler,
whose Jewish origin and whose educa-
tion for the Jewish ministry are officially
catalogued in the Berlin university, has
more than an educational significance.
As an American professor at a Prussian
university he receives honors and dis-
tinctions for which, it is said, German
Jewish scholars must aspire In vain. In
his present position he rightfully rep-
resents the greeting of American scho-
larship to that of Germany and the
pledge as between all America and all
Germany "of mutual good will, of mu-
tual respect and of mutual sorvice."—
Boston Globe.
PERSONS AND PLACES!
It is no Joke, after all. A dispatch
says that four persons who ate frank-
furter sausages contracted hydrophobia.
—New York Tribune.
The government attorneys who are
looking after the Powder Trust have
lengthened their fuse.—Cleveland Dealer.
Castro Is always doing something to
displease the people. Now he says he
Isn't even sick.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Think of a president \
such knock-out blows it
—Atlanta Constitution
ho could deliver
the last round!
Ii worries n woman when she expects
bad news and it doesn't show up.—Chi-
cago News.
Christ in
pretend
rorst thing about a home-m
is present is that you have
to like It.—Indianapolis News
he woman
vho
epted a bulldog In
nent of alimony must think she is In
or protection from other men.—
idelphla Inquirer.
TO THE
POINT
heirloom most poeplu
b"Ufc is the mortgage
«v anything
t will
(„„ "'r" of on«r«! or special m >t-
o n or stockholders
stock. °rlg,nal certificates cf
cstM. B=8,"er of stock certlfl-
fransfer record ol stock
wltn« °* W"h P,ac*' "*T>atur. snd
.h",.w;™frVkU,ovrnd-u b'
In. ",orkho"I"rs- lertser. show.
19 1. transaction ahout the stock.
Re-f" ue stockholders' led*er
counts °' *'neral corP°ratIon ac-
!«' tear. ,mrP°r«"on accounts.
Wits ,m ° "" ,h"
With thl, record you cannot *o wron*
Directions snd forms «ro so plain that
no error, need he made.
Leather bocks End corners nnd cloth
BOOK gives yon AT T TTtfl1
RECORDS YOIT NERD FOR A CORPOR
HOMA. "" LAWS °P OKLK'
PRICE *
Kept in Stock Ready for
Immediate Shipment
Here is what you need to start
a Corporation in Oklahoma
State Capital Corporallon'Re'cort'' !*'
lOO Stock Certificates bcuutlfully
printed on bond paper, a lltha-
graphed form ip brown or green
background and border, num-
bered and perforated and bound
In a book
1 box Rod Heal Wafers ....
1 Ink Pad
1 No. 1 Line Dater Stamp ..,
$5.00
. .400
. .2au
. .85o
Total
113.60
It has bfPn d
Is ungrammatic
•d" .
An
Atchlsi
Jlorced
i piece
We ha
Christmas
iakc a good deal |
—o—
Ided that ".'"well people"
atieal. U should be 's well-
lien."
— 0—
heart
ften that it must
Hamburger steak.
is been
eaemble
strang
e remarked*that when we h< ar
it heralded as "good company,''
iisappolnted.
Usually, when a rnotlu
for a profligate son, a
worked hard answers h
Nothing makes a woman more angry
ti in i" rtaltae that hir husband doesn't
caro If she forgives him or not.
I w is ver> fortunate," said a woman
th" other afternoon i madeA twelve
calls toH.ty, and only found one woman
Our Special Bargain Price for
All the Above
$11.00
Send us jour draft for 111.00 and wo 'IU
ai;ud you tliu uomi*let« corporation o , .lit
outlined above-all you need to keep yinir
records In the most minute and approved
form, and exactly as provided by the laws
who has | of Oklahoma.
Wanted: The scientist vho enn improve the breoc
ami increase the ize of ants until thev lire as lurtr,
aa chickens; for an industrious white ant will lm
80.000 eu£s n dnys
Surely that was a "highland fling"' that Andy took
at the tariff.
C ASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Haw Always Bough1
Bearu the
blguaturv of
American mn was Pl.„-ed In rhnr e of
lie recent lord mayor's show In london
turned what had come t.. |>(. regarded
as a sort of circus procession Into an
interesting pagenut Shakespeare wjm
accompanied by a picturesque entourage
of characters from his plays, Chaucer
was followed by a band of personages
of bin creating, and Spenser and Mar-
lowe were attended In like manner A
striking feature was William Caxton on
a float with a group of printers working
sn ancient printing press TheFe histori-
cal pageants will be continued progres-
sive]^ in future shows.
A man appeal
nornlng with e;
e a mllllonair
nan heard the
ntended for hli
<ff "Don't do
a alariu; "give
•d on tin- street the other
g QD his face. "He must
i." some one said. The
emark, and knew It was
) II" started to rub it
that." said a bystander
It to me."
Be sure to send us the following ao fh-
Stock certlrtcates oun be correctly prmtodl
Incorporated under the ,aw( of; Le«i
tie of corporation: Principal Place of
Amount of capital stock 1;
Title of officers
title
business:
Amount of each share $
who WBI *lgn certificate
V'ou do not v\;fllk enough.
>f ten or twelve Y
After r wnlk
ks you are complete
iy tired out. If you were faithful to the
rules of health, you could walk six or
eight miles at a stretch and not f*el
tired Thr man who rides g*ts to the
end of the journey fir«t, and alio to th0
end of hla life first.
Guthrie.
oki*.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 240, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 5, 1909, newspaper, January 5, 1909; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126924/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.