The Oklahoma Guide. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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.
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PwS'H
NOTES ON RACIAL PBO-
GERSS,
Report Ry The National Ne-
gro Business League.
Cures Old Sores, Other tannines Won't Curi
The wot i cases, no matt' r of how Ion*
an* ^ureil !>u tl r * .«l« rful. ol<l r^Jiabl Ui
I'orter' Aiitnepii.. Mealing Oil. It : ■ 1.. tj
p i.i) iutl lltals i t}i« wine tunc. 25c. tiOc. il.'X.
" THE NEGRO PilESS
| Amcrioan Girl Tells of Soci.ig the
City Destroyed.
9mm'
000
I'he National Association of
Colored Nurses recently held
their annual meeting Ilaleigh.
North Carolina. The sessions
were attended by delegates from
many States and cities-
Chic; Commanders of German
and Austrian Forces.
Kaiser Fir.-,t In Theory, But Genera!
von Moltke and Admiral von Ttr-
pitz Hule—Archdukc Frederick
Heads Austr.a'a Armies.
The Negro
Georgia I
ation a Model
Odd Fellows Of
iave in successful opei
Demonstration
Farm near Macon, < eor-da.
The faim consist of 2 Jil acrt
110 of which are under cultiva-
tion
The Colored Federated Chari
tics of Memphis, Tennessee have
just published their annaul re
port. During tho past year they
reaened and helped ovei
five thousoiul persons.
II. C. Shepard is president
and V. w. Broughton, secrctar\
Joseph I Attwell has been at
pointed general manager of tn<
Sr.uth Caro'ina divi ioiflof the
North Carolina Mutual insurance
company of Durham North Car
olina. Mr- Attwell will have his
headquarters at Columbia. South
Carolinna.
Dr. II* Green of Knoxvilh
Tennessee, has done ve y coin
mendable work this summer in
connection with bettering th<
health of the children In his
country Recently a large group
of these children were his gHeM
for ear rides to nearby cities
Mrs. J.C, Horton of Guthrie,
Oklahoma, was recently re
elected President of the Oklaho
ma State Federation of Negro
Woman's Ciubs. ^'rs
widely known for her
work in establishing
Emperor William lilir.seir Is exorclj
lng supremo command our the Uer-
man si my In tlie present war. lu
times of peace tlie rulers of liavarlu,
of Saxony sad f sonio of the larger
states of the German confederation
retain the more or less theoretical
coutrol of their rispdctlvo armies.
Hnt the moment that the empire Is
Involved In war (he su|.eme and iwii.
command of tho military forces 01 all
tho German states is vested by the
terms of the constitution iu the kaiser.
An bo poi-^estLB l)o Wjir experience
of his own ho Is availing himself ol
tin advice of some of the older of tin
German soverelgus who havo smell
powder on tho b.ittleiieid lu.-teud 01
In shstn tights, among them be i 111
King Louis of H(ivarltt, wlip still limp*
from the efTect of a Prussian bulie.
received in tho war of ISfifi, and KinL
Wllllam of Wvrtenibcrg, and Dnln
Bernard of Saxe Meiningen, belli ol
v,bom wear on their bread the Iron
Crocs, bestowed upon them for feats
of conspicuous gallantry under fire as
youirp cavalry oilieers tu thu I'j'.-l.co
German war of 1870.
Gen. Julius ven Moltke. the German
chief of tho gem ml ft iff, Is a nephew
of the great Kit Id Marshal von Moltke
ami is as taciturn a - wes his famous
uncle, lie i.i renowned for Ihe rarity
of his liiullco, while such a thing m-
laughter Is entirely forci-ji to bli
character.
He always has an appear! nee ot
profound gloom, and < ven of down
right misery. Impressed upon his I a i
countenance. To such an extent f:
this tho case that the kaiser ah-:;,
upi uks of him as 'Mirauii^" JulHu'
(the gloomy Julius). There ts. it must
be admitted, some reason lor this
gloom. Kor EaipMor W'illluin Is i
ditlltult man to MtUfy in militan
matters, pnd the general la a cc istant
subject of Imperial crlliclsin Not-
withstanding this he lias managed ti
retain hold of ills office (or cl-.se upon
seven years.
The crown princa Is serving with
th ■ German army of Invasion us u
Col >nel, and his younger brothers, Ok
c.ir and Joachim, alio are at the front
, When the history of Germany's
mighty naval development come; ti.
bo written one nnr.io will stand out i:i
boldest relief Von Tirpltx. To this
giant, fork bearded sailor statesman, a
piugniflccnt specimen of Teuton phy-.
Siiquo of (ho old school, must fall ti e
lion's share of crc dit tor thu persistent
aggressiveness with \\Uieh the father-
land has rushed to front rank as a
ecu power. Ho Is the real creator of
the kaiser's tleet.
"Tlrplt* the Internal," they call lllm
In rteriln. For nearly fifteen years he
has been constantly at the helm.
He believes religiously in the In-
vincible superiority of German gun -
that they will d; cidc the I. i;c to Ger-
many's Imperishable glory 0:1 the day
when the kaiser' T:v. ;'ur is to be ; ".ot
fought and won. lie denies Germany's i >f t
culpability for the i ■ nous compel!
tlon in naval armaments.
I'r. Washington- in a notable
address before th National Ne
(V*o Business League, paid a dej
serving tribute to the Negro |
press. Anion;; other things he
said: I wi-h now and agjn,
as in^other yea . to th ink th
colored press throug uit the cone
try forils mote than liberal arc!
constant support of the lra;:ue
We of Ihc Negro race and i f
the vvhito race know little of the
self sacrificing and patriotic
>vork that is conslantly being
lone by the Negro
pre s.
Independent.
—rjc
1 A C.«lE?^ti!-C'S!j «=
WEBSTER'S
NEW
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
THE MERRIAM WEBSTER
Tho Only New unabridged dic-
tionary iu many years.
Contains tho jiith and essence
of an authoritative library.
Covera every t'old of knowl-
edge. An Encyclopedia in a
single book.
The Only Dictionary with tho
?h \v Divided 1'ugc.
400,000 Words. 2700 Pages.
COCO Illustrations. Cost nearly
half a million dollars.
Lot us tell you about this most
remarkable single volume.
Write for samplo
pa,-c.i, lull par-
ticulars, etc.
Uarne this
paper and
we will
pe."id .'red
a set of
Fccket
Maps
G.&C.MerriamCa. t
Spri ilgfleld, Mass
Child's Elrthrijht.
A child la any station of life should
have the unspeakable heritage of be-
lli;.; able to lcolc back in after lifo on
a iiome of happiness and Joy,
Healthful Mattresses.
All children should have bcpurate
btds. if possibly and r.uutresfes era
far more liealtliy than reather Hedfc
All counterpanes should be removed at
night, for they are heavier than
bl. .ikcts. and not good ou the bed
during sleep.
llorton is
successful
library
the author of the dr -.dual ..lit is alone
guilty. IIo disclaims persuasively the 1
notion that the German ih- t is buiU
fur aggression, and be Is Irrevocably i
opposed to llmitin 1.^ development
by agreements of ?.y kind.
Prince Henry of I'm? a. as Inspec-
tor general of tho navy, is the rank-
Jng officer of the It:: u;V great ar-
mada. Ho Is a Bailorman first and a
prince afterward, ar.d is Idolized by
the German people
It Is to Archduke Frederick that
Emperor 1'raneis Josoph has conl jed
tlie chief command of his armies in
tho present war. Very short nod
• toeky, he Is the eldest brother of tli
Queen mother ot Upnlu, and la on
terms of the utmost intimacy with tho
kaiser, and as such a frequent visitor
to Potsdam, where one of his daugh.
(era is married to a I'ru laa officer,
financial and ! Prince Emmanuel Kalm. Enormously
rich, he Inherited the va: t fortune as
well as the duchy o.f Te .'hon from hia
uncle. Archduke Albert, vieti r of the
battlo of Custozza, who for so many
e„„ 1|„J .L 1 .. I years was generalissimo of the Aua-
handled through the e\ocutive, Jrian army.
Archduke Frederick i.i one of the
few members of the Imperial family
whom ilie murdered hell presumptive,
Thu Scientific Butler.
Science in It? more :.'.vful fe.Tns ts
e d to r.cnoolboy howlers. Ono
\y Canon Alage; e itorie3—-
^uotrtii In Mr. II V. I.ucas' delightful
llo avers i anthology oC letters, entitled "Tl\e Sec
a
for tho colored people of her city
'I he Supreme Lodge of the
Pythias which recently met
Columbus Ohio, reported som.
very substantia),
numerical advancement. Over
half million dollars have been
Po^t"-proves It
At a c":i 'ry l:o '.:.o party a maid was
trcbi lug fc .V'-'- t's lii.ir,
" ; licp-3. I'urktu-," rai-I f!?A 'r.dy, "yon j
ire comfortable yov.r pjn.ee?"
Oh, yos. ma'am." the malil replied, |
svlth great warmth. The socScty
-or.*n sta'.ts is so sa: or! «• Tlie Vutl t
ta.ls; the conversation.
"lie is n refined man," she c©nt!n ;
•led, with rislus t nthu-lasm. "tndeeii j
i iltp scientific. He has been leliin^ ,
all about o/olution, ana v.e quite unci. r
;t:md it now.
"lie :;ays." tili maid concluded, earn ,
autly, u.?.t ve are all dc cendod from
r, In."- -Youth's Corny anion.
Ceciaret German Soldiers Ct"rted the
Fighting by Mistreating Belgian
Wcmenr-Vain Search ^or
Her Relatives.
1 ondon—Marguerite I sttebroiclc, a
sUtecn year cld American cirl from
MiilorPvUle, Hi., arrived iu London
after an adventurous trip from Lou-
vain, the burning of which she wit-
nessed.
The fill v/ao viiitin^ Flemish rpla
tives n«ar Louvaln when tho village
wliero her Velativilived was burned,
'i hey went into L; .v..'u. She .'.aid that
the U - t eIrii of tr ub'.e was when two
Gernmu roldiers maltreated and killed
several girla Tliese soldiers \.^ro
pro.i : Uy shjt by their own of.icers,
but the feeling of the populace against
the invaders had grown very intense.
The (i rman soldiers, according to
Miss r itobroick, made no secret of
their determination to make t*ie Itel-
gians suffer for tlie indignities which
they claimed the German residents
bad suffered at the hands of the Del
gians at the outbreak of the war.
The girl described the destruction
of Louvaln and the terrible firing in
the streets that continued for two
day:; n- a sight that had burned into
, her memory. Her father and a fifteen-
year-eld brother, who were also in
I Louvaln, disappeared and she believed
that they had been made prisoners by
the Germans.
Seeking to locate them, Miss I-slte-
i broick made her way into Germany on
a German prison train. She was un-
able to find h r relatives and appealed
to the American consuls in various
cities. The investigations of the con-
suls satisfied them that the father and
brother were held at come German
concentration camp.
The pirl then made a trip to Cologne
wl- re she met her aged mother and
brought her to London. Mother and
daughter are now bein? aided by the
j American relief committee.
In a dispatch from Copenhagen a
i correspondent of the Central News
| ays that General ManteufM, the Oer-
! man military commander at Louvaln.
nolgium. I ns made an oHlcial report.
In which he asserts that investigation
ha - shown that it was flel;?ian soldleri
who had drawn on civilian attire over
tho uniforms win fired on German sol-
| diers from housetops of tho city.
War Cuts Ccsmetip Supply.
The latest commodity which tho war
has made ee.- rco and expensive is
powder—the toilet kind. The talcum
itself can be secured in adequate quan-
tities in North Carolina, but the per-
fumes and secret aids to the beautifl
cation of tho complexion, which the
manicurist andjjarber tc-11 you about,
are to a large extent the products cf
foreign labor. In many eases the
composition of toilet compounds is a
secret ift SQtne European family. With
all tho men at war, no considerable
sypply can be manufactured and still
less can be exported to America.
Fafclo of tho Mice.
The Town Mouse and iho Countrj
Mouse engaged in a friendly rlvalrj
to see which could best entertain the
at liar
The Tpwn Mo"se l^d off lie Intro
ducod the Country Mouse to a grer.t
many people of tho right i;o*t, who
graciously lapped up all the chain
pagne he cared to buy—iu short, ex
ho listed i he resources of urban Los
pita'ity.
"Pretty good!" t?ie Country Mous«
admitted "Lint say. you come out ti
my Mlace in your car and run as fasi
as you like. I'm Justice of th<*
Peace."
Thereupon the Town Mouss had k
acknowledge that the rustic lifo belc
the greater possibilities.—l uck.
A Speedy Stitcher Av.l Free
With One or Three Vi*#iV Pnbscr ption to
The Wichita Weekly E .^e
Send GJ cents for one ywtr, $1 0 ) for three© ye r«
either to - 0!Ja Guide or direct to the Faxle OfT.t.a
and you will receive the Wichata Eagle and th«
pcidy Switcher Awl at once
est Metropolitan
Weekly Newspaper
Southwest. Has Frank Carpenter's artieles,
Waahinton D. C.
Eyclt, Kansas i xperment Station
and Ada «orrol War ton for the ladied, Mut and Jeff
by Hud Fishor, Associated Press, Base B.I! and
Tli 1
In ti,.
I'rof. A. M Ton-
Father Millison
NIpvI c t.
Ibe
c c o 3 t
tit cL er A.wl
dollar- Has fiv needles
Sells even where for a
adjustable bobbin and thread inside. All l-.side of
handle made of the best hard wood M 'pU Guarenteed
by the Weekly l':agle
- Fill Out The Blank and Send to Day
Enclose please find 50 cents for one year, or one
dollar for three years for which please send to ma
the Wichita Weeky Eagle one j eai
biee ypars and per your 1' vee Of
fer, the Stitcher Awl.
Name ^'ty
State street -
I> F U . No Box
Put (X) here: New Renewal —
Superior Judgment.
"So you suspect that men are. quick-
er of judgment in practical matters
j <ban women." "Yes," replied Miss
Cayenne. "Men have heeded tho warm
lngs of the newspapers and quit buy-
ing gold bricks, but women continue
to marry for money."
T.'je Lcve.
Love in action is sacrifice; it must
give itself; wherever, then, true, jure
love lies, true puro sacrifice is ron
• inually made - Jessie Comhs.
Kercscrj
r. asr.es rhould
- t.e before they
ise ( xalic aci-,1 or
•nit to remove the
fcr
• rubbed with kero
:ire poKshe:!. Then
iommon vinegar nn"
t t:-Ins end dullm s.i
His First Day In School.
ft was a country school. A smell,
"irlrrht-faeed boy had Ju?t been en-
rolled, and I his was his tlrsi day Ths
her potat.cd out a desk for hfin.
.«! gave him s 1. r.*on to study. He
'C')!*: l.-ts rent, proppefl lils /inees up
••.gainst the i' •!•:, with his f« ot swing*
i:^ down UM.rrncath, and coon be-
• e ab. uht d In his lesson, lie bo-
•nip eo i.Vsorbcd, In fact, that he for-
t he wes in school, and presently he
!:erej up his Hps and whistled,
...t softly end then quito shrilly. Tho
•eachrr 1 nid down bis pen In amaze-
ment, and cfled sharply: "Who Is 'hat
whistling?" Tho small boy looked up
•i'llckly, tnd then said, innocently.
' That was mo. Didn't you know I
ouid whistle?"
The D^ily Leader
Leading State Paper of
Oklahoma
Official State Paper; Official
Paper of the Constitutional Con
vention. Contains all the news}
National, State and Local — At
the information for the Lawyer,
Merchant, Doctor. Farmer-
$4.00 Per vear
By Mail
The Daily Leader is the ofiicta\
State of Oklahoma. It is a motn
bcr of the Associated Press am!
contains the news of the world,
't he Leader is the o.nly Simor,
pure Democratic paper of the
State. It is most vigorous paper
in the State, editorialy. It discusi
sed editwrally each day the great
Very C utlout.
A so'.? player vl o lad been bricl'i i '"R f:
bcnlcn by UU opponent exivV.neil ic
t tm that he fcn'l Ki'ii sufforliiR all «!:iy
.'rom nouritia. "It's a ev'rlcis tblrr;.
-i ' lied bis opponent, "but I'vo never
. .ten a rr.an lu ptrfcrt health iu m:
No Exaggeration.
"Fpeeit?" letorieil the demonnirn'or,
hen .Thilca asked if tho ear was po
'Speed? Why, l^t nio tell
;cu Foniething. If you started ov.t lu
,i rale o' wind blnwln' sixty mlk'B an
hov.r. and Rein with It. thiR e.ir'K bo
r; ?t it'll blow it in your rase."—Har-
per's Weekly.
Gave the Sign.
( was the Spanish-American
*.-.r. A wealthy merchant, who had
loft h!s biislner.s to offer bis services
i, bin country, was pacing up an.!
down <'•! picket duty one darlr night.
Suddenly he detected founds of ap- i' .. . , a
-ehi'.ffe footsteps and quickly bring QUCI^tlOI.1 ill wlliell the people Ol
■,ug his cull Into position, commanded
in a sonorous vole.a:
•(live the countersign!"
The person challenged proved to be
111 enliited dry pood:i r(lerk formerly
emplcyed by the merchant before 'he
war bro!:e out. A3 tiielr eyes uit' a
jni!'" played around tho corners of
tlie cleiVs mouth and he acswered
in a low whisper:
"Catb!"
Then the merchant, bringing hlj
pi-co to a right shoulder, let bim par?
■md resumed bis pacing.
, Oklahoma are interested-
The I.er.der gives the Official
order of (he Corporation Cornmis
sioii and I.h« State Courts decis
; ions in full.
('.Veekly) Leader-
Address Leader
Oklahoma
$!.('() a year-
Printing t',0.
>*ie Okla.
officers since the last meeting
and the the enrollment of
mem-
bers now stand 2T>0,000 0f the
Pythians and 87,000 of the
Courts of Calanthe.
The K n«a§ Way.
Mere Ih the way a Kansas paper
duns Its subscribers: "If vou have fre-
quent tainting spells, accompanied by
chills, cramps, corns, bunions, chil-
blains, epilepsy and Jaundice, it Is a
«lRn you are not well, but liable to
die any minute. Pay your subscrip-
tion In advance and thus make your-
%©1{ solid for a good obituary nolle*."
-pnunar t'ui:>I) ojim fj.iatio 1
— ,-sTpos onio* Xnq puc j.muoq a'hi uo
lanoui ssai poods p,|, ubui 1 |u ""II
paoii-Bpis ..iMSOf), sdiu-icl pjddB.us
pas Bgoq psjoio.jou1 '.11!(]J 'i'Ml cum
in?^ w uau|] u uo pii'i -1->S
luiBBBd uumo.tt v yo J''l pill) psddois
4 no.n ail) fiiq* . |HA-'.-li->:j.> ti| ion
joj eqt no pools ubui pio uv
•wu 13l taO ®IH
Pitfalls to Avoid.
Argument, as usually managed
ihe worst sort of convei itlon; -i; it
ib generally in books, the nor^l sort
jf reading—Swift.
•ttoiioo '0 'C
— Btfi) ain rati] uiojj eoh«1 P"b
iSp-i; nci'i l.'O-u ai|) japnaj sm ea,\iS
ou.« 1 . hi .no s^op jaiit.w l'-'nx
isuw sjoo 04A\ J® |JM *41
Natufat.
Can you If vou be tha gentler s s
walk down the street behind an ele-
gantly gowned woman and restrain
Ihe Impulse to Imltat • her polBe cf
bond, bar carriage and the fascinating
ways she possesses? Have you e.nr
bern In a crowded rouui where ono
woman was the center of nltrartlna
Mul seen someone trjiug to luiltata
'irr? \ woman Is most charmina
w en she Is natural. A woman who la
natural, even !n her erratic moods,
Jocb not give oflcose One fannot 1ml
tato the ways, manners and style of
mother without appiaiing rldlciilon*.
i'he nlcMt WO inn wc meet are thuM
ivl.o do not pese or seek to ltnitita
bom, one else.
For a Sprain.
Or.e dran. oil of wormwood and s
pill of alcohol Keep the Injured par
wet iviih ii until the pain abates au<
tl.e iufi.-.D-.mation Is gone.
How C.irlyl Kept Warm.
EIr Francis ('nltcn ir.et Carlyl
iwlcc. On the IIlot occasion, be say
narlyle surprised hlni by his " ■ o>
pi icily courteous, even pollshei:
iu;.utier; but l.£ becanie more lli.v
ordinary ee'.f latci 611. Or the seooni
occasion he seeuieii lo me tho great
est bore that a country bouse cnulf
tolerate." llut Oarlylo nmused lilm 1 ?
grnvtly hopping up nnd down In or
dr;- to l eop warm Gallon was tlK-
only man wh0 ever got Herbert Spoil
cer lo the Derby. Spencer said thai
! c crowd of men on t'-ie fcrass looked
,l!,o dies 011 a plate and Ihnt the
Oeiby wa« Just 111.c hat he exp«rted
.t to l e
with poisonous pomades — hot irons —
hoi combs and other harmful hair '"lions.
Use ZOTINA
FOR THE HAIR
Original and Only Scientific Remedy
Guaranteed to Straic|hten the Hair
Make it soft and pliable, easy to tomb, glossy and beautiful
Used by the Eixtir". Profession
Price. 50c. and $1.00 oy mail i- - — 1 n
i# AGENTS WANTliL) I
Manufactured onlu <>1/ (ne , -J
ZOTINA REMEDY COMPANY Tampa, Ha. Dept. -H J
HOT HWXTIWJ
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Ridley, Elmira S. The Oklahoma Guide. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1915, newspaper, October 7, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc155367/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.