Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1916 Page: 5 of 8
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I
I
OKLAHOMA STATE REGISTER
r\ -4 pace five
lne Sale - of - Sales at the Monarch Continues
REAL BARGAINS The Great Drawing Power
WHITE PLTMOCTn BOOS.'
RUCKER'S
QUALITY WHITE ROCKS
Eight Pens of Finest Premium Win-
ners at Oklahoma Fair State and
County Shows.
Write for Prices and Folder
KARL RUCKEK,
B" Guthrie, Ok la.
7%
B. C. BATES,
Breeder of
SINGLE COSTS BUFF ORPINGTONS
Eggs in Season. $1.50 per Setting.
Mail Orders a .Specialty.
Your patronage solicited.
Phone 376. 19n w Man>ur
GUTHRIE, OKU.
FOR PLANT BARGAINS
.. See ..
THE BARBER CO.
GROWERS OK VEGETABLE A\D
FI.OWEB PLANTS.
Guthrie, Oklahoma.
2015 W. Warner. phone 536.
Ageratuni, Antirrhinum, Pansies in
bloom, pcntstemon and salpiglosis at
35c -per dozen.
Tarnation pinks, coleus, geraniums,
heliotrope, lupinus, mysotis, salvias,
vineas, all 50c per dozen.
Petunias (double) 75c per dozen.
Salvia, blue $1.00 per dozen.
( annas $1.00 for 15 named varieties.
Five varieties of peppers 15c per doz.
Ten varieties tomatoes 40c per 100.
Six varieties Sweet Potatoes 20c and
25f per 100.
Cauliflower, egg plant, dill sage and
tansy. Write for price list
k lit ]
Are you one of the many who
have taken advantage—if not, do
so at once.
Note Our Special Prices
* -p
$1.75
IU YS A WOOD EVERY DAY SKIRT
$7.50 Skirts now for...
$6.50 Skirts now for W.9o
$5.00 Skirts now for $8.95
$4.00 Skirts now for $2.95
OTHER SKIRTS AT ATTRACTIVE
PRICES.
$2.00 Wash Skirts going now at $1.(13
$2.50 Wash Skirts going now at. $1.95
SHOE BARGAINS KOI! WOMEN
$2.00 Slippers now for $1.(19
$2.50 Slippers now for
$3.50 Pumps now for
$1.50 Old Ladles Comfort Shoes $1.25
$3.50 to $5 button velvet shoes.. $2.50
$2.50 cloth top pat. leather shoes $1.95
$5 patent colt, hand sewed shoes $3.95
$2.00 White Canvas Oxfords 9Se
MANY NOT MENTIONED HERE."*
COME AND SEE THEM.
The MONARCH
The Stoie of BETTER VALUES In Guthrie
LOCAL NEWS
j
County Olerk A. A. Leer will run
again for the office of County Clerk.
His announcement will appear in the
State Register later.
Several hundred Scottist Rite Ma-
sons from Guthrie and adjacent towns
attended the Maundy Thursday feast
at the Masonic Temple Thursday
evening partaking first of the un-
leavened bread and the paschal lamb
followed by the usual mystic manquet.
This is one of the great ceremonials
of the year whose observance is ob-
ligatory on all Scottish Rite Masons
wherever they may be, those sojourn-
ing in strange places being obligated
to hunt up brethren and break bread
with them.
Two of Guthrie's former citizens, ex-
governor Frank Frantz and Charles
Carpenter were in a Katy wreck last
Saturday, near Muskogee and were
considerably injured. A sleeper was
derailed and hurled down an em-
bankment, with a dozen or more pas-
sen genrs on.
AGENTS WANTED—Earn *15 daily
calling on automobile owners. Par-
ticulars free. Agents Supply Co., 1827
Market St., St I/)Uis, Mo.
Chancellor Ilislop of the Methodist
University, won first prize in the
Nashville Christian Advocate, offered
for articles on religious subjects. His
theme was "Justification by Faith."
The Advocate is the official organ of
Southern Methodists.
Shakespeare's three hundredth an-
niversary is to be celebrated worthily
of the bard in Guthrie this week. Tues-
day, Cecilian club program of music
from Shakespeare at First M. E.
. <• cp* >
"'/A
V /V /jp J
> J-\J".*
*oc A* S
Jtoem
Church. Wednesday. Julius Caesar at
Highland Theater. Thursday, lecture
o nShakespeare by Dr. Edward Hislop
at First M. E. Church. Friday, "Mid-
summer Night's Dream," by students
of dramatic art of Central State Nor
mal at the Guthrie Theater. These
series of affairs is for every one in
Guthrie, arranged by the Shakespeare
club to commemorate the three hun-
dredth anniversary of his death. The
Tuesday and Thursday nights prog-
rams were free, and on Wednesday
and Friday there will be a small ad-
mission fee nsseceary to cover ex-
penses. To all these the public is
cordially invited to be present, ir.
fact, are urged to attend to aid the
Shakespeare club in having a fitting
celebration for the greatest of poets.
A Good Singer.
Now is the time to buy a sewing
machine for the wife to get her spring
sewing done. You ca nbuy it from us
with a small payment down, balance I
divided in three yearly installments,
due each fall without interest. Make
that machine pay for itself. Come in
and see us.
Jack Teamey has moved back to
Guthrie from his Noble county ranch
and will go into the oil game. He be-
lieves it is here, and as he has large
real estate holding he intends to help
put Guthrie on the boom.
Singer Sew ng Machine Co.
Five cents saved on each dollar s
worth of merchandise you buy by us-
ing the State Register Coupon Trad-
ing Book.
All the churches, held elaborate Eas-
ter day services Sunday. The day was
beautiful and the flowers and decora-
tions were emblematic of the spirit of
the day.
It is estimated that fully 100 people
went to Edmond Sunday to hear the
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.
Guthrie people want good stuff and if
they cannot get it at home will go
away for it. Oklahoma City's showing
at the concert was a very small num-
ber.
SWEARING EN, photoographer, op-
posite postoffice. tf.
A record crowd taxed the capacity
of the auditorium at the Masonic tem-
ple Sunday afternoon to witness; the
impressive Easter ceremonies
of Ciuu.iie Chapter No. 1, Knights of
the Rose Croix. The last supper, the
arrtst and trial of Jesus, the cruci-
fixion, resurrection and ascension of
the Savior were all presented most im-
pressively in pantomine, the chap-
lain., interpreting the significance and
caning of each scene as presented.
The State Register Coupon Trading
Book contains twenty-five cents cou-
pons, good for one dollar and will be
redeemed by twenty-one merchants in
Guthrie.
Cal Orner, who is visiting Mr. Weeks
south of town, was one of the men who
enjoy* d himself greatly Saturday at
the VPers celebration. Cal. was a first
day teller and assistant secretary to
©•cue? r*-a
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life ;, jf&i *
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C'D'a'a>Q-3>a
a
a-u.is.a.a.j.c.Q
tie-o-a-o
o-o-a-a.a-a.
Robert Martin, the first secretary of
th,' Territory and afterwards for
years in the school land office. He
sure met many old timers who were
glad to see him. There was but one
missing—Ned Cheadle.
TYPEWRITER wanted to rent, Under-
wood preferred, address care State
Register. 105 N. First St.
O. L. Brooks, the tailor, whose for-
mer place, on Oklahoma and Vine,
was torn down over his head, hat
moved to the store room formerly oc-
cupied by the U. S. I<and office in the
Fielding building, east of the lone
hotel. The city commissioners made
the Rock Island tear down the old
building and park will take its place.
The Capital City Business College
had a handsome display of its work
in the Adler building, on Oklahoma
Avenue, on '89er day. and was crowd-
ed with visitors all day. This concern
|is the greatest school in Oklahoma
anfl pupils desiring a business educa-
tion come to it from all over the state.!
It is transforming, especially farm
boys nnd girls into skilled business
men and women.
IK VOI R I ARM IS FOR SALE
Call at my office over the Logan
County Bank and list it with me. I
have some buyers for farms of most
any description, especially 80 acre
farms. Will make you a farm loan at
6Vt per cent, interest.
2t W. E. McKEAN.
On the basis that nothing should go
to waste, Joe Winton found a large
canvas banner advertising Sun Gold
Flour for the Guthrie Mill in the rear
of the Adler building, in clearing the
room for the '89ers headquarters and
stretched it across the rear of the
room, where thousands Baw it on
r.aturda>.
the boys go to Stillwater and judging
from the defeat they handed that town
two weeks ago should have little
trouble coming home victorious.
Section men working on the Guth-
rie, Enid & Kiowa north of town saw
a strange sight last week that has
kept them wondering. Two very
pretty girls, apparently high school or
university stufle-nts, carrying a suit
case and traveling in evident haste
passed where the men were working
and headed north up the track in the
direction of Crescent. Were they run |
aways or Just school girls who had
spent their allowance and were forced
to walk home, or were they merely
making a cross country hike on a bet?
The section men would like to know.
. 0n Friday May 5th, Guthrie High
debates Oklahoma City High School
on the question, "Resolved : That the
, I nited States 'Should Permanently
I Retain the Philipine 'Island. Each
school has an affirmative and a nega-
| tive team. The negative teams travel
and a debate takes place in each town
at the same time. The Guthrie boys
who will go to Oklahoma City are
Gordon Bierer, Omar Lyon and Glenn
McCleery. The team that remains
here is composed of Lloyd Swearingen,
Charles Ailing and Glenn Branaman.
Guthrie debated Oklahoma City last
year, 3ne team winning and one losing.
This year both teams hope to win
over the rival city.
Rev. Pittenger, the originator of the
idea, gave a second State's dinner in
by Fenton.
George Harris brought in the larg-
est list of elght-niners and got the
the Methodist Church las, Friday, as-j $2.56 razor at Hir^i"
ch?^h°\r,T;byt,HheLad,r8 0fthe| ^ Varl°UB '
-ast jear the idea took so grab race and boot races by Rucker-
well that he has madi it one of the Burton Co u - " " «iye« a British subject charg-
annual alfairs of the thurrh. n ^ <*' * ?V" « — the ac, Z
«iui u ueavy
hand is indicated by the publication
ot a proclamation in the official Gaz-
ette Wednesday night suspending in
Ireland section one of the defense of
the realm amendment act of 1915
which gives to a British subject charg-
annual affairs of the church it is a Ben Weinbe'rger, Gardner * SoeM and'
|grTheght't0ffether entertalnment- ! Guthrie Harware were all gobbled up
LhJJiin ,he C!UlrCh W"ere b>' boys Resenting every portion of
I the dinner, .erved by the ladies of the the county but they got their prizes
Society was gaily bedecked with and gjt away with them so quickly it
I arranged'for the'dHr whl'e ("le tables ' was Impossible to get a complete
. i different states were record of their names
ere Ca %°:rr\!rTitc now-1 u is n<,pdu,s81° ***
■ owa, Nebraska. Missouri and was pleased with the prizes and the i ""
Kansas were especially attractive. Ok- contestants who failed to win were all 0< "rCKent War ,he opcra-
lahoma, the table occupied by the good natured over their defeat bv the 1 uH SPCt'°" one may be suspended
young people was quite appropriately luckier ones. .either generally or in a specified
decorated with a miniature oil derrick. I area.
Good eats and good fellowship '89ERS' COMMITTEE KKKMItu
abounded. Chancellor Edward Hislon Th« * . .
- - " — I The exeoutive committee having in
right to be tried by a civil court.
I he proclamation recites that the
present state of affairs in Ireland is
such as to constitute a special mili-
tary emergency, as specified in sub-
section seven or the act, which enacts
that in the event of an invasion or
other special military emergency aris-
ing out ol the present war the opera-
of O. M. U. was toast nnster tj,„ I exeoutive committee having it
talks were limited to five minutes md C^''ge 'he S9er celeb" ion last Sat-
Oklahoma led the program with a vio """ 'M°",iay after"oon ln the
lin solo by Joe M Oolph, Oklahoma's |an<1
youngest violinist and with an original °UmS aKa'nst as"
tribute to her native state in blank i , , lncu,re,J r°r the big day
verse by Miss Alma Houghton Other Ti (>a3"n*-ali expenses a small
states represented bv spearkere were 1 7 han<i<''1 over to the treas-
' 'Uler future use. The committee
Guthrie people certainly go out to see
good pictures. This fact was made
j evident at the showing of "Julius
Caesar" at the Highland Wednesday
| evening, and of "Silas Marner" last
W'eek.
■ Sheriff Sherwood took Edward E.
Cassaday. a farmer near Marshall, to
the Asylum at Norman. He was de-
clared insane by the commissioners
after a thorough examination. '
The results of the latest typewriting
contest of the High School Commer-
cial Department were announced last
Thursday, and pennants were award
ed to the following: Charles Schrick
ram, Ralph Poschel, Pearl Paris, Eva
Wells, Henry He'rber and Agnes Hix-
on. Card case# were awarded to Mel-
vin Acott and Pearl Loos. Ralph
Plschel wrote perfect copy for the 15
minutes of the contest.
The Guthrie High School haeetball
team lost two games to Enid High ln
that city last Friday and Saturday.
Coehrell pitted a good game on Fri-
day the score being 14 to 16. On Sat-
urday Kenworthy and Jones both had
a try at the pitching but were given
poor support and the game was lost
by 8 to 19. lEndi plays two games
here May 19th and 20th and the Guth-
rie boys hope to make a better show-
ing on home grounds. On May 12th
A large excursion of Oklahoma City
-Masons, accompanied by their famous
Temple band, came up to the Scottish
Rite reunion Thursday. The band
played delightful music at the
Temple and also while marching
through the streets.
The delinquent personal tax Is now
in Sheriff Sherwood's hands and will
become operative the first of May.
A stray bullet from a target rifle
hit Marion Welton in the eye and
came near shattering the eyeball. Such
toys ought to be prohibited and boys
| punished.
j Emil L Hirsehi, the hardware man,
i lias made up his mind to run for
county commissioner from the Guthrie
district on the Republican ticket. He
| has been a resident of Guthrie since
I the first dav and thinks the people
ought to know him He has held bill
one office so far, that of city council-
man, some years ago. He Just wants
the people to know he Is going to run
now, but later he intends to make a
campaign that will walfe up the na-
tives.
Iowa, Loren D. stark; Ilinois, Dr. T.
8. Pittenger; Ohio, Dr. T. J. H. Tag-
gart; Indiana Judge W. B. Herod'
Missourt, H. H. Dodd; Kansas, Fred
W. Green; New York, E. G. Green;
Pennsylvania, J. E. Nissley.
Mayor Nissley's talk was in Penn-
sylvania Dutch, unintelligible to many
of those present but interesting, nev-
ertheless. John Golobie made the clos-
ing talk in which he called himself a
representative of "No Man's Land.'
was well satisfied with the successful
termination of their efforts.
TRI E GAMULERS
NEVER SI ICIDE.S.
Melville Davlason Dost in the Satur-
day Evening Post.
Great police officials assure us that
the professional gambler or person
move dby true gambling instinct never
under any circumstances takes his
own life. It Is the defaulting clerk
Premier Asquith in the house of
commons and I -orr! I^nsdowne in the
house of lords made reassuring state-
ments Wednesday afternoon respect-
ing the situation in Ireland.
Outside of Dublin said the premier,
the country was tranquil.
I-ord Uinsdown declared that there
was now a complete cordon of troops
around the center of Dublin. He add-
ed the information that a "half-heart-
ed attack was made by the rebels on
Dublin castle Monday. The casualties
at Dublin, according to his statement
were nineteen killed and twenty-seven
wounded.
I, . . •• •••*-• it is iiiu ueiHuuing clerk
can claim no state for his own as who kills himself, the ruined shop-
he WHH horn in A ... . '
he was born ln Austria in the pro-
I vince of Crozatzia.
"America" and "Auld Lang Syne"
keeper, the desperate woman of the
world, the involved financier, the ite
faultr and the like who have turned
of6the'sBM1"* mV"6™ at the ol08,!ifor the moment to the gambling table
Of everv snrlmr '° ^ "" *Vent Val" 1,01)6 recollPln« their
B' | losses or mending their ruined for-
OLDEST wnt rnv I tU"eS' The trUe «ambler is a I'^son
, ,IUK. of eternal hope. If he 'oses today he
|,,h H - . I believes that he will win tomorrow.
Joseph Rurrlglit and Man, Other. "None but reasonable and reasoning
Were (.hen Prizes Offered by men. players from ambition, from
Merchants. , envy or rrom necessity, every give
TSe 89er day was too lively to get way to despair and commit suicide.
" the particulars and these are a The profesetonal gambler Hves to old
partial list of the lively contest for age" says Monsieur Claude in hi*
the many prizes offered by the mer-J memories.
chants for the races and other special
features of the '89er celebration Sat-
urday.
Joecirt BuTright, aged 83, won the
hat given by the F. O. Lutz Co., for
the oldest eight-niner to report.
Mrs. A. G. Parks, of Iowa township,
Lincoln county, acme thirty-two miles
KKVOI ITIOV IN DUBLIN.
lx>ndon, April 26.—British regulars
from Belfast and England are now in
Dublin and have recaptured from the
revolutionary faction several impor-
tant centerp which the members of
the Sinn Fein party and their adher-
ents had occupied
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
OA STO R I A
A dispatch from Tralee, county of
Kerry says that a sensation has been
caused there by the arrest of Austin
Stack, a prominent member of the
Tralee Irish volunteers. An account-
ant in the general postoffice at Dublin
also has been taken iat ««stody. Both
are charged with conspiracy in aiding
the importation ot arms from an
enemy.
Another man of unknown nationality
has been arrested. His identity has
not been disclosed, but he has been
conveyed to Dublin under a strong
escort.
The men connected with the filibus-
tering expedition now in the hands
of the government include Sir Roger
'ascmcnt and two Irish confederates
and twenty-two Germans comprising
the crew. The chief importance of the
capture lies in the revelations made of
an extensive plot having ramifications
in Germany, Ireland and America.
Irish-Americans are said to have been
largely Instrumental in financing the
revolutionary movement.
The capture of the expedition by tho
navy secret service Is considered a re-
markably clever piece of work. An
automobile with Irish confederates
awaited Sir Roger Casement ashore.
- —— These include St
in a waeon and got the $3.50 shoes of- Stephens Green and Liberty Hall
fered bv C. F Eisennrhmlrtt I v wnnuwui asnore.
Carver McGinn!- . ^ „ , L \ °' precau,lon martial | The machine and its occupants were
r . ^ if farmer, law has been proclaimed in the city seized by secret service men
from Iowa township, with a wife and and county of Dublin and the ofriclal j
eleven children, won the $2.50 In cash announcement is made that drastic ' a n,.mK .
sx*. £„rer Pha~ forrp9 -vr, rn ,o
A. D^OinTrth! Garfield county 'U I ™ "
mer who came thirty m,ie« in an auto-1 That the government intends
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1916, newspaper, April 27, 1916; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169540/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.