The Oklahoma Guide. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 12, 1915 Page: 1 of 4
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lahoma Guide
VOL. XXIV
No. 9
GUTHRJE, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, AUGUST }2 1915.
GUTHRIE DIST. GON.
,W. M. SOCIETY &:s. S.
,AT MERIDIAN THIS WEEK
STATE FEDERATION THE B Y P I)
MEETS AT BOLEY
era;
• he \V- II. ty. Society, lhe Is. All ejes should now be turn
;S in d ti e E| hworth League is ej toward Boley the place of our
in Evasion at Meridian this week annual meeting Aug. 26 & 27
^i-ih j.) •'mi sj i vv.ll tu there L t every Club send its full
•Saturday and Sundav ; ipeta of earnest enthusiastic
Elder Gatewopd says Satif- 4elegatts, whose only ainbiLityi
SviV.be a day of days a,t Meridian, is to nuke ours the best Stale
busy, doing something ,to make a
! 'better showing-
i But we mean to help you broth
Held its ?pnual Mecitinfj at e,. president so long as you go
o the Club Women ofOkJaho-l Meridian last week in Coil-, straight. You should encourage
nection with tlje S- S Con every Sunday School Superinteu |
| dent to Subscribe for .the j
There were onjy six local Un-
ions that .represented in the 'list
Convention this year.
I/O "umpres \vill fcaye to put
T30
A JBig crowd will be ther.e.
Nervou* Woman Finds
Relief From Suffering.
Women who suffer from extreme
Nervousness, often injure much
.suffering before finding any relief.
*1 rs. Joseph Snyder, of Tiffin, O.,
jhad such an experience, regarding
^vhich she says:
"Six mguthfl x
was bedfast with
nervous prostra-
tion. I had jink*
■inif spoils, a cold,
clammy feeling,-—
could not stand
the slightest
noise. At times
would almost
, fly .to pieces.;
stomach very
' weak. My hus-
band insisted on
my taking Dr.
^files' Nervine, and I began to Improve
pefore I had finished the first bottlf
;Untll I was entirely cured."
MRS. JOSEPH SNYDER,
262 Hudson St., Tiffin, Ohio.
Many remedies arc recommended
/or diseases of the nervous system
Jhat fail to produce results because
^liey do not reach the seat of the
^rouble. Dr. Miles' Nervine has
proven its value in such cases so
jmany times that it is unnecessary
fo make claims for it. You caij
prove its merits for yeurself by"
getting a bottle of your druggist,
who will return the price if yoy
receive no benefit. a
*1ILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
Federation in the United States.
The t'ommit'ee has prepar d a
strong program: mucljinspiraiio i
I should be carried to the home
| clubs- The Local Committee
■ is fully prepared to take care of
all wl.o coitus.
Let the Slogan foe—"On
Boley"
lOkla Guide. As it will be valu-
able aid lo you in making an
i nouncemejrts of your plats
Roost lhe Guide and broaden
Job
iiipre ;life into htis w.prjc if Ive c> ulat.o .
Lo have a^.v thing to represent Advertising
nj aj;
pays.
to
I am glad to see o^r District j
takes iIs place along with ,othei j
Districts in doing l'-ducati Jna| |
Work.
K A. Clark. !
or to preside over at ali
other annual meeting-
To deal with young n^inrl? i'l
this enlighten age require sawe-
tiiing more than talk.
The Baptist Young People's
Union means efficiency and tot$-
ce he who presides as president
of the District mast be jn ad=-
Mrs. J. C. Horton. President N,ince o^ '11S followers; nr else 'ihe mint makes it and under
here is going to he retrogration the terms o theCONTINKNTAI.
ind failure alonga'] lines jMORTGAGE COMPANY
"MONEY"
f think a preacher who cannot!..
Tha Quinine That Does Not Affect Tba tisad e ,, , , ,
Because of its tonic awl laxative effect. I.AXA- 1 ^UCCfSSIlllly pQSLOJ' (I cfrl^rch C.JII1
TIVK 1IROMO QUININKis better than ordina- y
Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor
riiiKinK in head. Remember the full name and
look for the signatuie of K. W. GROV1-;. 25c.
A Lost Art.
Another art hng been lost! 'fhert
was a time when the elegant woman
fook a legitimate pride In her manner
of ascending a stair, in this $ay of
eievators, ff there still exl3t womep
who have the manner, there are few
stairs worthy to serve as a stag© <?x
which they may *xblbjt JL
Eagle Not Always bravo.
Eagles are generally believed to b«
fftry courageous. That they are not
always as bravo au Is supposed ifc
prored by the foliowlpg anecdote: A
naturalist tells of £ conibat between
ten missel-thrushes and a whlte-tai'ed
eaglo, tn which the latter was thor-
oughly vanquished, and was discov-
ered squatting down In a shed, whera
ho had been driven In hope of rofug* , You will llftye to furnjs}) US with
tironi the angry birds. I
a system for operating the work
H/IANY RESERVISTS OVER HERE
starring Nations Could Call Approxl-
i mately Million and a Half Men
Fro/n United States.
not in my openiop preside «s an
ex* culive ovgjr a district-
1 hat may h.e p.uttjng it strong
and yet jf .'s Jtruje.
^ ,e hope President "utppress
is going to proye himself compe-
tent for the p'ace he now holds
or elfg wmpel^pt enought to
give it up before vye 1q >se ojuf as
a District body.
Bro. Hnmpress you wilj have
to give more Jtijrie to work.
you
can secutfc it at 6 per cent for
any loyal Purpose on approved
real estate. Terms easy, tell us
your wants and we will co-opeia!e
with y«u■
PETTY & COMPANY
1419LYTTON BLDG. CHICAGO
OF EVERY DISCR1PTION
Give us your cards, bills, envel
opes, letterheadsphamplels and
minutes.
What He Took,
''Oolng down the rlvef to speaij
Sunday with tho folks." panted the
excited week-end jauntc.r, as he swung
aboard a movlog car. "No, 1 don't
need acy luggage; all I take tor the 8
week end excursions Is Juit a Dlght-
brush and a looth gowo."
World'* Debt to Wrfte-i.
ft was a French new* writer that
wrote: "SuS«r yourselves to bs
hanjad If n«ed be, but publtjih your
opinions;" but In this country writers
In eurly times faced Imprisonment
and th pillory acaln and agajn jn or-
der to make their views public, and
whatever those may liavo been. It
must fee conceded that they deserve
oredlt for cournge, at least, |n hav-
ing laid the foundation of that free
dom which the press of this country
enjoys.—London Globe.
Nations of the triple entsnte and
•pelglum could call upon 792,068 re-
servists in the United States for mili-
tary *duty, and Germany and Austro-
^iungary could call out 650,962. There
fre approximately one and a half mll-
on unnaturalized foreigners more
fhan twenty-one years of age, natives
pt the warring European countries, in hi* First Day In School.
fhe pnjt.ed States, according to latest ' tt yas a country school. A small,
J'epprts ffom the census bureau. I bright-faced boy had Just been en-
Most of these are liable for military rolled, and this was hia first day. T'ns
this year.
No business can successfully
run without a system to run by,
$14.00 is ^ very very smi
mount of money to raise i
ijnpu^l District meeting.
Mr President you wftnt to do
better thai) that this year.
a-
an
/iwigoratlnK to the Pale and Sickly
The Old Standard general stvt nKtlietiiiiR toulc,
GROVK 3 TASTELMSS chill TONIC, drives otit
Malaria, enriches! he blood.and build* up the sys-
^euj. A true tonic. I'or adults nud childret}. 5'>c
HORSF. OF THE GOBI DESERT
Animal Discovered by PrjevaUky
Never Has Been Famed pjid May
Be a Distinct Gpeciss.
ft Is more difficult to doruestlcato
the wild horse thnn It U to bring oth
«r ppecieB of wild animala under sub
Jection.
Some years ago Prjevalsky, a Rua
slan explorer, discovered a distinct
wild horse In the Gobi desert, In thts
south of Mongolia. A herd of 80 colta
were captured and landed In Europe
Mont of tUcm were Bent to Russia, but
a few were shipped to the estate of
the duke of Hed/ord, In England.
They were ragged of coat and of
awkward gait. Ah efforts to tame
them have failed. They will not Bub
mlt to man's rule und are therefore
Not one dirflG \yas givpn to Pd- unserviceable. They become badly
• , frightened when a man approaches
jucation cin(J to Ivjispjon, under nearer than two or three rods of them
' M , . I T he RusBlans claim that by methods
, ^ 1 admmjgtl atipn. M$y be of comparative anatomy and In other
fluty, and many of them have already teacher pointed out a deck for him, I .VOU do not know about the Or- <hoy have p.uvod u,!,„?ob!
gone forward to Join the armies of And pave blru a lesson to study. I?-* flesert horpp is a distinct syecles of
their respective fatherlands. About ; took his seat, propped his kneeo u D t (11 Home j Efrfiua horse. Most naturalists
against the desk, with his feet swins ' ),nvc u,ui' na'/ heliavcd that the true
ing down underneath, and soon be- .... , , . I wild horses with aji ynbroken line of
:ame absorbed in his lesson. He be- , triat 13 located at Oklahoma City wild ancestry were extinct.
came so absorbed, in fact, that be for 1 „,:,u u , :ij , r 11 10 tbe K«">eral opinion that the
got he was in school, and prcatntly ho several Olplian children al" I 4on.estlc horse of today was malrly
derived from throe wild species,
which Tiavo been n.imed tho steppe,
forest and plateau varieties. The gobi
horse is a rrprcientRtive of the steppe
variety. Tbiy hocfe In its wild st^te
lives in tho level districts and goes
at night to the pasture lands and
drinking places. At break of day It
return* fo the desert, where it rests
antil sunset.—Ner/ Vork Herald.
pne-tenth of the tntlre population of
the United States came from the na-
tions now at war, if the women and
children are included, making the to-
fal. 9,985,479.
Those liable for war duty are divid-
ed as follows:
Great Britain and Ireland, 197,626V
fanada, 150,718; Russia and Finland,
418,428; France, 1^,005, and Belgium,
8,691. On the other side, Germany
}jad 127,103 and Austria-Hungary, 623,-
*59.
In addition to these the other Eu-
p>p*an nat|on3 might call from ths
United Statea men who have not beei}
paturalized here as follows:
Italy, 468,442; Switzerland, 10,338;
Norway, 34,478; Sweden, 52,041; Den-
mark, 14,107; Holland, 11,706; Portu-
gal, 18,444; Roumania, 12.669; Bul-
garia. Servia nnd~ Montenegro com-
bined, 14,552; Greece, 68,208; Turkey,
£7,494, a..d Spain, 8,213.
puckered up his lips and
Rest softly and then quite shrilly,
teacher laid dowu his pen In amuse-
ment, and cried sharply: "Who Is that
whistling?" The small boy looh«d up
quickly, *nd then said, InnocenUy:
"That was me. Didn't you know '
oould whistle?"
whUtitd. ready on oqr hand to care for,
rtlly. Th« 1
Bro W- A. McKenney (white)
has assurned the responsibility of
of establising an orphanage for
our orphan children
^ hat are you goin to do for it?
If you cannot cross the oceon,
In the heathan land explore,
Qavc-the Sign.
It was during tho Spanish-American
*r A wealthy merchant, who had
left his butlnoss to offer tjis services | +" ncctuirtii litnu explore,
in his eountry, was paclnj up and '. ;
lorn on jicket duty an? dark night. • Vou can find the heathen nearer
Suddenly he detected sqund o( w u , , ,
Vroachl^g footsteps and quickly brirtr iOU C311 Il^lp then! at J'OUT door. ' C°"ars are :
1... 1,1. ! he U w
Ei( president Wallace of the wouldn't he?
In Pri>r.of ...
—I want a cap, please, for my
tiiLband.
Shopkeeper--Yes, madam. What
ilzc- does he wear?
Wifie— Well, i rea ly forget. Ilia
though 1 expect
be d waTit about biz/ IS or lit) lor
Kind Words.
Kind words are the music of th«
^orld. They have a power which
ipeems to be beyond natural causes,
Rs If they were Bome angel's song
"jvhlch had loBt Its way and come t<J
parth. It seems as if they could al- I
most Boften the hard and angry hearts
nib
emlle played around tk« cornara of
tba clerk'a mouth and k« aaawered
1b a low whlapar:
-CB«h!M
Then Ut merchaat, brlnclng his
Of men. No one was ever corrected pieoe to a rigkt akoulder. let Ulm dm.
Iiallnd I# ♦ V.« , . * *
|>T a snrnasm; crushed perhapB !f the
saroasin wag clever enough, b t
jielpad never.—F. V/. Faber.
l)ig his gun Into position, commaHdail
In a sonorous volns:
•qive the counterslgal" i S- 3. Convention must be praised ' Plea*' "■ of ,he Children.
The person chall«*ged proved te be j There should bp some time during
an enlisted dry goods clerk formerly for tile sho\villg he made in the I day, even in ti e busiest household
employed by the merchant before the Bn ll0ur at least, set apart in which
war broke out. A their eyja m«* a Disti'iot sUllday School work last the older members of the family
, aliould devoic; themselves wholly to
year With some few exception j the chii'ren. Liuie object lessons or
i, _ j • i , stories containing practical knowledge
lie made a good president. ; told In an interesting way will bt
Rev nartW.-will hnvp In koor, e'jre !o ho,d t:"'ir attention. The
. barunct will nave to keepi (tory of th< grild„., ronKatlon of th.
tud resumed his pacing.
fruits, flowers and vegetables «:il de-
fight them and will be eagerly looked
forward to and always remembered.
Pedestrian*.
A teacher In a primary school wae
endeavoring to make clear to her
class tho meaning of the words
"ervestrlanlsm" and "pedestrianlsm"
ffhcii silo put this query to one small
boy: "What Is a pedestrian?" 'lie
Is one of those fellows," said the boy,
"who makes an awful kick wheu aa
automobile runs him dowu."
Why toon jr is Chssp.
^ want you ti? (eli me what this
paper means vheh it says In Its mar-
ket report that money Is cheap," said
Mrs. McFci to her husband, who, like
all kuebands Is supposed to be en
cyolopedic. McFoe laid down the
sporting sh«et. "It's simply putting in
a briefer form the statements that
money talks," ho replied, '"and that
talk ii cheap."—Judge's Ldhrary.
Sweet Charity.
"Has It ever occurreJ to you that
the more money a man has the more
difficult It Is for lilm to be charitable?
When ono Is poor and has only a few
sente it Is an easy matter to divide
the money with sotnp poor devil who
Lu none."
AfvCIENT ISRAEL USED Ifii.
Writings of ElJUIe T4mes Inscribed ur.
Potsherds Have Been Tount'
In 6arnarla.
"That the ancient Israelites had a
cheap and easy method of eendltiK writ-
ten messages which was in fairly com-
mon use Is now an established fact,*
said Oeorge A. Relsncr, (.snistatit pro-
fessor of Egyptology at Harvar-1, who
for the last fourteen yoarH has boeo
conducting cxoavatlons In Egypt afld
Palestine. Professor Heisne** Just re-
turned on the Campania.
"We were excavating In Samaria,
once capital of the northern klug-dom
of Israol, in 1908, when we came Upon
tho palace of the Israelite Idurs Lart
summer we found on the floor of one of
the chambers of the palace a number
Df potsherds and on tl.ese shards -vere
written messages; they related to
tithes or taxes paid to the king, and
wero written In an Ink made of pure
carbon or lampblack. These, perhaps,
are the earliest spjclmcns of Israelite
tork cnntamporaneoiu' with tho lilblo.
Thoy wofe written In tho reign of
fciug Ahab."—New York Ev -j!na Pn-i
High HaMen of tho Twine.
The village of High Halden, n^.-
Arhford, England, undoubtedly hoidf
the record for the number of t-vln*
born there. Ten children, all of whom
•rs twins, attend 1U* village school
regular!/. Kvery morning two oldar
twins can be seen carrying two young,
er twins to school, all baiug member*
of one f#iiiiiy.
COMFORT *! ECONOMY
MOttK AND ppTTER RUBUER, STi;ONO.
frtON-KUSTINQ, UNBREAKABLE PARTS,
pnds and button. iiole5 that won t
break 01} pull, out, (tnabi.k us to
POSITIVELY GUARANTEE THAT
BULL DOG SUSPENDERS
OUTWEAR THREE ORDINARY KINDS
imaoe light and heavy
y/eioht (extra long. 'k
desired), in a variety of
NEAT. pleasing styles
50
CENTS
' HEWES & POTTER
LARGEST SUSPENDER, BEIT AND 6ARTER MAKERS 111 The WORLD.
DEPT. LINCOLN ST, BOSTON, MASS,
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Ridley, Elmira S. The Oklahoma Guide. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 12, 1915, newspaper, August 12, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc155360/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.