The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 89, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 10, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE POUR
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL. TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 10, 1903,
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL
By The State Company.
FRANK H. GREER, EDITOR.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Daily by Carrier—Strictly in Advanca.
One Week
One Mfltth
One Year
5.00
Daily by Mail—Strictly in Advance.
One Month
Three Months
Six Months
One Year
No subscriptions will bo sent by mail in city of Guthrie.
$ .40
..... 1.00
2.00
4.00 J
SUNDAY EDITION.
One Year by Mail
Bix Months
One Year
....$1.00
.50
SPECIAL ADVERTISING AGENTS
The Dully nnd Weekly CaplUl are represented by the
following: advertising agents: . •
Eastern Agent—The N. M. Sheffield Special Agency,
Tribune Building, Now Ycrk City.
Central Agency—The N *M. Sheffield Special Agencj.
United States Express Building. Chicago. 111.
In Kansas City—Mart .1 Pnrrons. 302 R- A. I.ong
Building. Kansaa^Clty, Mo.
For the State of Texas —dodbolrt Special Agency, Dal-
las. Texas.
Those haling ifflvertlslng to place with the Daily ar,S
Week I \ Ptato Capital in the above territory, please cot
rep pond with the agents as stated above.
tors of the state at au election to be provided for by
the Legislature.
Before any convention was called congress pro-
vided that it should have power to make the "ordi-
nance irrevocable," accepting the conditions of that
Enabling Act. The people by electing delegates to
that convention without objections, thereby assented
td their exercise of Niteli power, and the ordinance m>
passed by binding upon the people when the state
came into the I'nion thereunder, and is irrevocable,
except by the mutual consent of the parties to-wit:
the nation and the state.
Ordinances so passed may be approved in advance
.'is in this case, or subsequently by vote upon them,
j In this case the ordinance was appealed to the con-
stitution us part thereof, and certified by the speak-
er and the secretary of the convention, and is n part
of the fundamental law, and is binding upon all of
the departments of the state.
8 t'yff 7-4.
Stewart vs. Crossby, 15 Tex., 546.
^laloney vs. Roberts, :J2 Tex., 136.
jjuke vs. L'uhaba Nav. t'o., 10 Ala S'J; 44 Am. In c.,
472. • «
The constitutional convention by the very authori-
ties calling the convention was given th-j power of
the pe"|jje w liri elected the delegates to the emiven
tion, to pass this ordinance, and by electing them the
people also gave them the power to do what the au-
thorities calling the convention expressly provided
that they might do by ordinance irrevocable. Having
such authority it was not necessary aftct passing
that ordinance to submit ordinance to a vote of th
people.
Where a legislature provides for a constitutional
convention and an election of delegates thereto by
the people, but docs not provide that the constitution
The spider sleeps within his hammock woof,
The lizzard on the sun-batlicd dial sprawls;
Above my head I hear the drowsy coon *
Of dores beneath the jutting of the roof;
While from l" zenith with the suntide falls.
Tin subtle smiinn/i'iii'' of si miller noon.
Hubert Cameron llijj s.
LAW ON THE STATE CAPITAL QUESTION.
Section 2 of the Knabtin!" Act provides that
V^i'lie Capital of the State shall temporarily be at
the city of Guthrie, in the present Territory of Okla-
homa. and shall not be changed therefrom previous
to Anno Domini, 1913, but said capital shall after
Centennial of independence will be cele-
bra if (j in Ecuador by the opening of a
national exposition In Quito.
Special meeting of Cincinnati. Hamil-
ton \ I>a.vton railway stockholders v ilj
be held in Cincinnati.
National Sheriffs' Association will be.
gin threp days' session In Seattle.
National Association of Chorus Olrls
will open annual <onventlon in Chicago,
to continue four days.
Army of the Philippines will or>#r
national reunion in Pltshurg.
World's Convention of Temple of
Honor and Temperance will open In St.
John, N. P.
Klnp F?dward and Emperor Francis
Joseph nf Austria contemplate a meeting
at Ischl.
WEDNESDAY
Washington state 1< nj.-'ature will re-
convrne as a court fit impeachment to
tiv . ||. Schivelv. slate ■ ranee mm.
mIs.*-ioner, elvirRed with extortion, per-
«J"tv and g!-"■« in gleet "f duty.
Democratic state convention of Mary-
land will be held In Baltimore.
THURSDAY.
Ale>A . Qnrevltch of Htwsla will bf
'fr n? age and the njir -ersnry
will he widely celebrated In the Czar's
dominions
FRIDAY.
N itii.n;ii tra.-k field outdoor cham-
pionships "f the Amateur Atlileii ■ Union
begin at Seattle.
SATURDAY.
Joint army and militia maneuvers. In-
frame*by that convention shall be submitted to the
people for ratification, the constitution when so made!"*1", eunnismm win begin.
become effective and need not be «#l>niitt;jd for rat-L,nn"| ' rZvZ'tlln' In'"T'orM.'.'n,'l." m111
ification. In the early history of the United States! Prknw AKunejation win np<?n
■ueh was the general rale, and reference to the peo-j.""""' M "'ln" '".J". j"1"'
P1® waa the exc<Ption- Later ti nils for the con- | ri|Xe iMn ci acute
vention have commonly provided for reference of the'I oLflaHta
constitution to the people. But the principle remains
VERSE FOR TODAY
•PICS
COMING WEEK DAY BY DAY.
TUESDAY.
Charmed Into silence lay,
The forest, dimly lit;
No wind that summer day
Moved the least bit of it.
No chorlc branches stirred
Its calm profound and deep,
Nor voice of any bird,
Hut tdlence dreamed like sleep.
m
I.ike dew upon tho grass
Tt fell upon my soul;
Loosed it to soar and pass
Beyond the star's control.
Vague memories it woke.
Shapes far too frail for touch;
And then the silence broke;
r> t I should learn too much
—Frederick Manning In the Atlantic,
THE CRIBBER
>.l e savs she would rather waltz than
eat." "Well, she'll find plenty of r
who would rather sign a dance program
than a dinner check."
t -°~
MV. Ulower—"Your automobile hit me.
but r got its number, all aright!" ITalr
occupant—"So nice! It will make a cap-
ital decoration for your den."
She. to future son-in-law—"I may toll
you that, though my djuiahf r i- well
educated, she cannot cook." lie—-"That
doesn't matter much, so long as she
doesn't try."
"De man who I* lookln' feff trouble,"
said i;pcle I'.ben, "generally finds it. Put
he mo?' always doesn' manage to meet
up wif de particular kind he felt com-
petent to manage."
—o—
Kthel (In the crowd of enthusiastic on-
lookers of the new Blue Blood Guards)^—
"Is that man next to you jotting down
noies, a reporter?" Mercedes—"No. Ho'h
n toy maker, and he's jottine down new
Ideits for making wooden soldiers!"
—o—
"Do you always express your opinions
to your constituents without reserve?"
"No,"' answered senator Sorghum. "I
feel compelled to make allowance for
certain irejudlces. A man who expects
people to bellev# all he says must be
careful not to say all he believes."
I'harh
Louisville Tim
—o—
I 4' " l'!i Mi'- ('ran- (lie new minister
• t" China, is In the elevator business, it
11!) lees nut necessarily follow time he wl!l
■'ttfinpt iinv uplift work among tin- ,'rfn.
fitclans.— Indianapolis Star.
that reference of a constitution, framed by a con- to'ci'.inT. i's\i./modern^nstaTce'^t'o"
vention elected by the people for that mirnose feed wh" l!r' fa.
. , 1 ' I II' I.."US. I .o i. i -Villi- Tliii.'u
not l)i' rderred to the people for ratification if the
call does not so require.
Sproult vs. Fredericks, G Enel. Law, 807-898
.Miss., 898,
Quinlin vs Houston l{.\.. .'14 S, W . 7:18.
Hamper vs. Hawkins. 1 Va 4'as., I'll.
Taylor vs. Cointnonwralih, 101 Vn 44 s K
754. '
Jamison Constitutional Convention.
So it is plain that any attempt of the Oklahoma -r ~°~
1 a , . , rMntlr gnvernment notified
i state sharks to repudiat e t he conijjtirt between v 1 1 11 rr ■ 1. tit -r. t• ■ , ,,,
the federal government and the, state w ill fail Vn n ,,l!i!!.i*"T 10 • "highly .•-
..,„:ii .... 4 ■ 1 * , , . ( 'i'table The Chinese were probably
1 01111 Will sanction Slieh an action anc* the people will '"-innlnc to fear that they were .not :>
not tolerate it. iso^an American minister. -New Orleans
I Times-Democrat.
1 lie promptness with whicli the senate
confirmed the nomination of M - Charles
R. Crane to be minister to China shows
that the honorable senators have no fear
at all that he will twist the pigtails.—
Boston Globe.
BUT WE ARE BXPANDIING.
. ^'r- Arthur llawkcs of Toronto in addressing a
said year be located by the electors of said state at Chicago advertisers association lias indulged in a1 .. j
lection to be provided for by the Legislature.' hit of prophecy.
He is reported
POINTED PARAGRAPHS J
Section 22 of the Enabling Act provides:
"Acceptance of this act. That the constitutional
convention provides for herein shall by ordinance
irrevocable accept the terms and conditions of tins
act." •
S.-.-tion l! of the Schedule 111 the Constituting pro
vides 1 hat
I.et it.
Hill savs
said.
meat Is going high-
■ cut out the climb-
, ,, . 'U act, and there is no vegetable trust —
in the ( hieag'o Inter-Ocean to have j Atlanta constitution.
—o—
It must be said for Or. Eliot's .ist of
books that it does not plav into anv
publisher's hands In th«- matter of cur-
rent copyrights.—washington star.
"The stars and stripes will never float over
the Parliament buildings at Ottawa, except in
the spirit of courtesy which the Canadians have
never failed tn observe."
Of course we have 110 means of knowing what
"All laws in force in the Territory of Oklahoma ll',|sls "r information the speaker lias that he should
at tin' time of the admission of the state into the l',, j be so certain of his portion.
ion. which are not repugnant to this constitution. stars and stripes arc floating over many
1.\ !tllousand square miles ol territory ovec which it
and which are not locally inapplicable, shall be
tended to and remain in force 111 the State of Okla-
homa until they are altered, or repealed by law
On April 22d. .\. I>. l!Ki7. the constitutional con-
vention accepted the terms of the Enabling Act by
lin ordinance in these words
"Be it ordained by the constitutional convention
for the propose.I Slate of Oklahoma, that said coil-
ht it lit iona 1 convention, do by this ordinance invvnci
ble. accept the terms and conditions of an aefcof the
congress of the I'nitcd States, entitled, "An Act to
Enable the People of Oklahoma and the Indian Ter-
ritory ti. form a constitution and.,state government,
and lie admitted into the I'nion mi an equal footing
•with the original states; and to enable the people of
Kew Mexico and Arizona to form a constitution and
State government, and he admitted into the I'nioa on
an equal footing with the original states."
It was aiipr"^' ' .lutie 1 i lIi. Anno Domini. 1!")i;
would once have been deemed impossible that their
sovereignty should extend.
We hold trat the man tloes not live who can sav
with any justification that the flag of this Republic
may not float over any special part of this world of
ours. «
Canadian annexation is not very near, but that
Canadian annexation will never, take place is by
no means as cerfhin as Mr. Arthur llawkcs of To-
ronto seems to believe.
'I hereby ortifyt
NO REASON WHY HE SHOULD NOT.
Some of the leading Republicans of New York
arc quoted as expressing fear that when Mr.
Roosevelt returns, he will refuse to run for mayor
of that great city. The chances are that there are
a good many other leading Republicans in New
York who are equally afraid lie. will run wh«u he
the foregoing ordinance, returns. John Quinej Adams went back into tin
accepting ti.- *1 t ins and conditions of he Knahting
Acts as the same has heretofore been passed and en-
grossed, was engrossed with tin . ugros.ed cop} of
tin- constitution on parchment, was read as en-
grossed anil rolf call had thereon, and the same duly
adopted by a majority of the votes of all the del
gates elected to and constituting this convention at
11:41 o'clock 11 in,, this L'lind tlaji of April. Anno
Domini, 1!K)7." The above was eertificatcd to anil
(signed by tic president of the eouvent inji mil at-
tested by the secretary
This "ordnance irrevocable-' required by the
United States as a'Condition to the framing of the
constitution, and passed by the constitutional con-
vention is like many other constitutional ordinances
which the courts have declared to lie a "compact,
which is obligatory, permanent in its obligations, and
cannot be altered without the consent both of the
people of the state and of the I'nitcd States, given
through then representative*
Spooiier vs. .McCti'iiuell. i. McLain, 117
Hogg vs. Zanesville Co., .j Ohio, 41ll.
Beyond question the Enabling Act was in foree'in
the Territory of Oklahoma before ami at the time of
the admission of Oklahoma into' the Union. It was
not repugnant to the constitution, and was not locally
inapplicable. Therefore, Section 2 of the Schedule,
fcttrrT; that provision of the Enabling Act requiring
that the capital of the state shall n-- af Guthrie until
1913. and si.all after said year be located by the elcc-
I'nited State* House of Representatives after he
had been President and really achieved a greater
fame in the subordinate'position. The Washington
Times thinks Mr. Roosevelt will follow tlU' Adams
example..and either enter polities again as a mem
ber of the house. If Mr. Cannon should continue tt
hold his grip 011 the situation, and Mr. Roosevelt
were on insurgent, there would be lively times on
Capital Hill. «
Kven rn.ittor-nf.fact Diaz appears to
have a grain of humnr. He asks tho
Me.vli an ronsrcsK fnr permission to visit
the l'niteii Statfs to meet Mr. Taft.—
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
—o—
King Kdwaril has set the style by tip-
pearlnn In a rroek coat anil liplit hat.
Now If he'll discard the eoat he will be-
come a randiilate with every promise of
winning the title of the most popular
man In town, — Washington Times.
The deposed shah mljfht anpeal to the
Persian supreme court to annul the elec-
tion of his sucressnr on the ground that
the election methods nnd practiees nf the
Persian eonstltutionnlitlsts were wholly
unnonstftutlona!.—New Cirloa^s Times.
Democrat.
During a severe cieetrical storm which
v-at over 1 lie southern part of Norfolk
(Cnnn.) last evening a bolt of lightning
entered the house pS Nelson Morris, re-
moved a chimney from a burning lamp
ii set it on tiie floor unbroken. The
bolt extinguished the light.
—o—
lam" Kirk, soon to he released fn
Frankfort penitentiary, is serving
his second term for having stolen the
same eow twice. Tie announees that as
■OOn as lie gets out lie wilt make another
try for the cow if It is still living, as he
holds it responsible fnr his iwo year
sentence. He never did anything wrong
, • iil icil the eow.
■ o—
While spending their honeymoon in <*
houseboat near Port Angeles. iHr. and
Mr* John frreenleaf of Seattle, Wash.,
were cdrried out to sea by a whale.
While playing in a cove nearby the
whale came up under the house boat, be-
came entangled in the loose anchor
.'bains, and, being unable to free him-
«ft the heavy float careening until
tho oa'>l' s snapped .
In order to receive a -v-i 1-gBL- v.
which she was promised upon becoming
r, bride. Miss Luclnda Bush of Chicago,
topped a man on a street in Appleton.
Vis., 14 years ago and asked him to
marry her". Within one hour nvere
packed tho wooing, the marriage, the re-
rovery of the $3500 and a separation.
Th* marriage was annulled yesterday
upon the application of Miss Bush.
A $100,000 BUSINESS COLLEGE
G. C\ 13. c. are magical letters in ti
beautiful city of Quinty. 111. They star
for one of the city's leading institution
Tin* (J«'in City Business College, a srhool
of national reputation, which built an-
owns and occupies for Its own purpose*
the $100,000 building shown here. Fo
3!t years the Gem City Business Colics
has been under one management.
Our readers have often noticed th
kindly, bearded face in the small adver-
tis "iient fji i in* - oo! In <• ir paper
That is the face of I>. L. Musselman. its
veteran president, who for more than
third of a century has seen so ma
thousand well equipped young men a
go out from his institution into
business world. Gem City Bus!
STRANGE NEWS STORIES
PERSONS AND PLACES
Some day the Thaw incident, with all its slinnio,
will be a matter lost to memory, but the Thaw fam-
ily, an army of attorneys, anxious for the Thaw for-
tune and a well trained corps of newspaper writers
refuse to let the poor consumer have a rest, at least,
just at thisf time.
As a sort of tonic to help bear with all reason-
able grace the hijrh altitude to.which the mercury
now aspires, not that Santa Claim arrived in New
York a day or two since with a shipload of Christ-
mas tovs.
m
Ess. x Market court in New York id
i ,i had wIV ai cording to the July
grand jury, which demands its physical
regeneration. The chambers are said to
unfit for a Judge; the court nppers
filed where anyone may steal tnem;
cells are unspeakable*, and the room
devoted to the use of worn. ,i "would not
be tolerated In T key." And this in
a < ourt of justice ... America
If the prohibitionists* program is suc-
cessful Alabama will go "dry" sometime
next week. The general bill, which is
expect 'i to reach the senate by Thurs-
day, becomes effective upon its passage.
It is a very strict bill, and under its pro-
visions an officer may close up a place
whore Intoxicants are supposed to bo
sold, the burden of proving innocence V>e-
intr upon the accused Ex-Chief Justice
S. IV Week ley. who drew up the bill, be-
lieves that the clubs will have to get
along without drinks.
Governor Fort of Now Jersey enter-
tain< d 200 pron in< i < leffeymen at lunch-
eon at Sea (h'it on Thursday. v< r;il
bishops and Rev. E. B. IT Macpher-
«nn. rector of St George's church, T.on-
don were among his guests. Ife made
on address, in which lie said that there
had been a qulckenlnc in civic spirt and
cm. r-ti nterest iu public affairs in the
last few yeariu "All must concede," !'r
mi i "that this condition is largely due
to the persistent and earnest zeal for
cfvfc righteousness of former President
Roosevelt * He told the minister® that
there was still plenty of opportunity for
earnest work alone reform lines.
10c CIGARS
'?° No band on thom. We'd rather give
you a Better srnoko than a better-Looking
smoke.
Strictly hancl-made of the choicest
blended Havana leaf.
. Sold
Wherever Good Cigars
Are Sold
Kothenberg & Schloss
Kansas City, Mo.
s£. cig3
HUMOROUS JINGLE
HOTTEST PLACES IN NEW YORK.
A factory room where the temperature
is L1L' degrees above zero.
That Is really hot. Ves, it's the hot-
test. place in New York where men go
and Jive afterward to tell the tale. But
few are hardy enough to bear it.
This hottest place In town Is in Des-
brosses street in a vulcanizing factory,
here telephone wires are insulated by
being coated with a preparation of rub-
In the room where the process
takes place the temperature rises to ^12
legrees—100 degrees hotter than the
hottest it. may be outside in tflft sun.
Men ';in endure no in/oi •.
Acautally there are some who can
stand this, however. They are only the
strongest anil hardest of the workmen
and they can be In the room but a few
brief minutes at a time. Several times
daily it is their duty to enter the room
to see that all goes well.
To keep from losing their nkin and to
protect themselves from the terrible
heat these men wear their heavy woolen
shirts buttoned high about their necks,
anil woolen masks and gloves. Four or
five minutes at the most In the vulcan-
izing room Is all they can stand without
collapsing, and some can't even stand
•that long.
Outside these men, nobody is ever al-
lowed to endure such a frightful heat.
In fact it Is hard to convey the Idea of
Pis degrees. You can the same de.
preo of temperature by thrusting your
finger into boiling water. Water boils
at '.'12 degees Farenhelt.
No native born American can stand
?ueh hear? and foreigners—Italians and
Sicilians—make the best hands at such
work and make up the staff of urn-
ploys in tho. vulcanizing rooms. Even
these hardy sons of southern climes often
•ollapse from the terrific torripercAire.
There are plenty of other hot places
fn New Yok but none to compare with
th s. In son>e of the big hotels it gets
I4-, degrees in the great kitchens,
rooks and helpers have to work in that
temperature for hours unprotected. The
sxeat difference between 145 and 212
degrees above zero, just the same. Rom**
■•s can endure a temperature of ISO
degrees without protection, but after the
•cuv has passed the 170 mark or ISO
mark It means death fnr anyone to re-
main in t for anv length of tlmp.
The kitchens In V.any of the hotels
1 restaurants are In the basements
Poorly ventilated as they are, the tem-
perature remains practically stationary
all da\ New Yprk World
The kindly scientists again
Assuage a human grief.
This time It is the lazy men
To whom they glv* relief.
No longer now the eye of scorn
Is leveled In contempt
At Idler*, for their lot's forlorn
And they're from toll exempt.
Sweet pity looks on them with tears;
It grieves her very soul
Because for years and years and years
Reproach has been their dole.
All those who are inclined to shirk
And sit around at ease
And never give a thought to work
Are clutched by fell disease!
Poor fellows! They are very ill;
A germ has bitten them,
And we must give them comfort till
Their tldrf of woe they stem.
So cheer the sufferers while they lie
All cuddled .up and snug,
Because they have been bitten by
The dreadful lazy bug.
TO THE POINT
A woman is a herb to stand so many
of them in her family.
•—o
Girls have a splendid time nt a* mat-
inee unless the show Is any good.
——o—
\ valuable thing about , building *.
house is you learn better than' to do It
again.
—o—
A sure way to break a drought H 1iave
an engagement to sit In a hammock with
a girl under the trees.
If a man had nine bath tubs in thi
house he'd manage somehow to kee|
all the family waiting till he came out
of thom.
THE STATE PRESS
-j
It Is announced that fourteen method"
of supplying moisture to land will oe
demonstrated at the National Irrigation
Congress. We'd lik^ to see the old-
fashioned rain method demonstrated
once more.—Chickasha Express.
•—o—
Yep, the republicans are In a fine po-
sition to elect the next state administra
tlon. The hitili rote of taxes for the
next year is RtilJ staring the people Jn th«
face nnd is confirming the charge of the
republicans that the taxes for last year
was only for the year 190«, and was in-
tended for only seven months instead
of iiinetecn as tjms declared by the
democrats We enn't help it; you fellow«
did it yourselves —Tuttle Times
OKLAHOMA NOTES
An English ship lmilifinpt firm has received nn
order for a monoplane of the Bleriot type to be de-
livered by August fi. This time a Frenehman made
his mark in England.
One thing is sure—either the city should purchase
its street cleaning equipment or compel contractors
to do some cleaning,
ness Colleges Unlay unquestionably one
of the leading business colleges of Amer-
ica a working, reputable, practical school
dealing with truly modern business forms
and practices.
There are from 1200 to 1400 industrious,
ambitious students enrolled annually at
Gem City College and 20 experienced
teachers. The graduates take high rank
everywhere, quickly finding their way
Into the most responsible and best pay-
ing positions. The management of the
school have many calls for well quail-
fled men and ,#women, frequently more
applications than they can fill.
Qulncy 1* an ideai place to equip for
business ilfe. It is moral, healthful;
board ia cheap and tuition reasonable.
Th« Fdi Term will open September 7,
1000. The beautiful \nnn l Cat.
nle.tr p|v|ng> r*H pon|en)awi will be mnllod
free to afevone writing for II.
T ic about a stand off as*'to which is J
the taller. Cushing's sky scrapers or Its ,
sunflowers. . '
Red Fox was fined $100 and sent to iail ;
for f.o days to think it over for seiling
liquor a* I>avis Mr. Fox i« not nearly
so sly ns his name would indicate
—o—
T.esc than half the ^tillable land acre-
age of Kiowa county is under cultiva-
tion. yet the county ranks well up to-
ward the head of the list In taxable
wealth. Tf all its varied natural Re-
sources -wre developed where wouldn't
It stand"
T awton hns lust celebrated It* eighth
birthday anniversarr with Indian dances,
n street paireant. race" nnd the eoneump-
J|on of four wagon loads of melon* nnd
S'0 gallons of soft drinks Tn fact It
wa«« the blrgest two dnva the town has
had since it was n "tended city
T'nbmVen etrre penttere-1 about where
n l arn h*id stood, n ehlrlrsh with 1'"
peel* trn^anx".! '>v t p'.V nnd an old
v-i--r- tlthiiy "-M-rii jn two.'
M wl'h the bo|tot ir««fi'M rv-'; 1
W feeaVti rf . c'nm- th t dlrped to the
earth irar ChNkj-hu a week ago.
FREE For "Summer Complaint"
The common ailment of these hot days is "Summer Complaint,"
or diarrhea. It is very annoying and weakening and upsets the
stomach. The cause of the trouble usually lies in food and water,
which in the summer time are often laden with germs, but with
many it is due to eating too much fruit or to eating over-ripe fruit.
Whatever the cause it is not g<x)d to take an astringent remedy that binds
up the bowels and stops the flow too
Euddenly, hut take a reliable, natural
laxative like DR. CALDWELL'S
SYRUP PEPSIN.
Its antiseptic properties remove the
germs which have beencansing theirrita-
tion. Children like it especially because
of its gentle action and pleasant taste.
Salts and purgative waters, tablets or
pills, act so violently as to weaken you
still more, and do but temporary good.
DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN
is the best remedy you can obtain for
constipation, indigestion, summer com-
plaint or summer colic, biliousness, sick
headache, ctc. All druggists sell it and it
costs only 60 ccnts or $1.00 a large bottle.
It is for all members of the farailr and
should be your household remedy for
these purporos.
may Brnbrr of tholr r>allf 1/ (Mdtl« bmm
• ad ftddrrM to the darter. Tin MHflr will tfcr
*•■( to t*ur home IW« dufye. la tfcla mmy
jou ran Ond out whattt will Sm wHbaatnM
Al.<n, trthofMO prrMDU 41flc*KtM thai dM-
Ur* ud otkw mwm aatklc U e cr-
er ta Or. Oddnell u,lala
tag haw Ike pmoa tafera
uuA he wtll give >«■ fata
l**t BKOK1U *nvio£
fauaeJ mm kalf • («atar| mf
e ip(irl«ac« to tliaaik,
lUrr aad hmrw*1 IImiim.
ullkaii «kart*. wmmmrm
a kare cklUrca AmU
rMl tor 'DI MMKt 0ITO-
Ot^riOlH TO M«TI
£BX,r
(•r*i i .
ran, etc., la kat
• w/ laiTlM
'IV adlwai to
DR. W. B. CALDWELL
511 Caldwell Bliifc, a.nttMll. IIHMta
SAFES
$5.00
Fire proof safes sold
o n $5.00 monthly
payments at factory
prices. Send for cat-
alog.
Millison Oirice Supply Co.
wicmiit kansas
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 89, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 10, 1909, newspaper, August 10, 1909; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127396/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.