The Marlow Review. (Marlow, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1908 Page: 2 of 9
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ANTI BUCKET SHOP BILL
OKLAHOMA LEGISLATURE CAN-
NOT AGREE ON A MEASURE
NEITHEB BOOT WILLING TO BEGEDE
House Substituted Texas Law for
Senate's Georgia Law— Evans' Bill
for Jim Crow Institutes Passes the
House
The Oklahoma Benate and house
locked horns Thursday over the adop-
tion of an anti-bucket shop measure
This resulted from the house's action
In substituting what is practically the
Texas law for the Cordell-Franklln
hill patterned sfter the Georgia iaw
passed by the senate Neither body
will recede The substitute bill pro-
hibits the sale of cotton grain pro-
visions stocks or bonds of any cor-
poration on future contracts where
the goods are not actually to be de-
livered It permits "hedglik" on con-
tracts but not the use of private
wires and makes the running of
bucket shops or cotton excnanges
dealing in futures as defined by the
bill a felony punishable by a two-year
term in the penitentiary It is mam-
talned the bill will not prevent legiti-
mate future contracts for the pur-
chase of cotton intended for actual
delivery An unsuccessful fight was
made to eliminate the section prohib-
iting brokers or agents of outside ex-
changes doing business in the state
The house passed to third reading
Evans' bill requiring county institutes
to be held in each cou annually
beginning in either June July or
August and lasting for not less than
four weeks Two or more sparsely
settled counties may combine A fee
of $1 to $3 is required for enrollment
and a fee of $2 for each applicant
for a teacher's certificate and in ad-
dition the county commissioners may
allow a sum not In excess of (200 for
each institute The bill provides
that all teachers of the white and
negro races shall attend separate In-
stitutes to be taught only by mem-
bers of the Bame race attending the
Institute
In a few days Senator Stewart will
Lave reported from a committee his
bill providing for the establishment
of a state girls' industrial school
The idea is a new one in Oklahoma
and a number of states do not have
such an institution Senator Stew-
art points with pride however to
the wonderful succes's of the girls'
industrial school established by the
state of Texas at Denton He believes
that girls are neglected in the indus-
trial arts holding that they are giv-
en at the agricultural and mechanical
college only partial opportunities He
would have them In a school of their
own where all the time can be de-
voted to their education
Upon the written application of
250 householders of the county or dis-
trict in which a convict resided the
governor may grant a reprieve com-
mutation parole or pardon accord-
ing to the provisions of a bill intro-
duced in the house by Mr Japp Pro-
vision is made for a board of par-
dons consisting of three members
one of whom shall be a lawyer to he
appointed by the governor They shall
receive $5 a day for services actually
and necessarily performed and it is
made their duty to pass upon all ap-
plications for pardon or parole and
make recommendations to the gover-
nor The Anthony-Hart-Smlth bill ex-
scssment for 1908 tav -om Marcn
1 to May 1 passed the house and was
:cnt to the senate
Both branches of the legislature
agreed to the conference committee
report on house bill 206 appropriat-
ing $150000 for the maintenance of
the insane at Fort Supply and upon
senate bill 112 by Blair providing
for the organization and maintenance
of the state board of agriculture and
carrying an appropriation of $75000
and the bills as soon as enrolled will
be ready for the approval of the gov-
ernor Ardmore's street car system will ue
completed by April 1st
LIVE 6T0CK MEN ELECT
Decide to Return to Enid Again Next
Year
ENID: The fourteenth annual con-
vention of the Oklahoma Live Stock
Association and the election of offi-
cers was held last week The asso-
ciation voted to hold the 1909 meet-
ings In this city the chamber of
commerce having guaranteed to erect
a large convention hall which will
he large enough to hold all the ex-
hlblts A company is now being
formed to build a hall 700 feet by 200
feet during the summer
The election of officers for the
coming year resulted as follows: K
M Bressle president Bressie Okla
John A Sams vice-president El
Reno Okla: W E Bolton secretary
Woodward Okla J J Gullck treas-
urer Executive committee Joe C
Miller Bliss Okla T A Ellison
El Reno Okla F S Kirk Enid
J W Doods Carrier Okla
In the horse show there were
twelve classes and there were forty-
seven prize winners
The docket for the March term of
court In Comanche couuty contains
forty-five cases for violation of the
prohibitory law
MUSKOGEE: That a plot to assas-
sinate King Victor Emanuel of Italy
was planned In this city by a band of
Italians several weeks ago became
known recently The Italians left
to carry out their plans Henry O
Ronianie a member of the gang
weakened and wrote n letter to n
representative of the Italian govern
ment Q Fasslno agent of tne Ital
lan consul of Denver Is In McAlester
trytngto gather Information The
plotters lived here for several weeks
In a negro settlement and maps and
— - p Bnottprcltv-
HINTS AT FRAUD
Members of House Allege that Irreg-
ularities Exist
The house Friday chose to Ignore
a type of the governor's method rela-
tive to the reappraisement of the Ok-
lahoma school land upon the ground
that irregularities existed In the
working of the territorial adminis-
tration when a committee substi-
tute for a portion of the Durant bill
carrying out tbe executive idea was
adopted The bill Itself was ad-
vanced to third reading
The measure as reported from the
committee provides that leases ex-
piring between December 25 1907
and April 15 1908 be extended until
January 1 1908 at an Increased ren-
tal of 25 per cent This was along
the line of the governor's methods
The Bpeclal committee of five ap-
pointed to draft a new section leav-
ing It optional with the board of
school land commissioners
Discussion of the bill which af-
fects thousands of farmers was mark-
ed by earnest supporters on the ma-
jority side
The bill of Senator Franklin pre-
venting the use of a type of locomo-
tive where tbe boiler was in the mid-
dle of the cab so It Is impossible for
the engineer to see tbe fireman was
Indefinitely postponed on motion of
Speaker Murray who said that the
corporation commission had powers
to put such a law into effect
The committee substitute for the
three bills aifectlng the division of
assets and liabilities in divided coun-
ties was advanced to engrossment
This confers upon tbe supreme court
jurisdiction in these matters
The Casteel and King bill provid-
ing for copying transcribing and au-
thenticating the records in divided
counties in old- Oklahoma was passed
to third reading Tbe Franklin bill
amending the Franklin-Brooks meas-
ure for the transferring the records
to state courts In former Indian Ter-
ritory was adopted on roll call
The Evans county Institute b’
was passed on roll call and the pen
with wfilch the speaker signed it was
presented to the author a member of
the minority
The report of the committee on ex-
penses providing for a reduction tor
the house board by dropping two
committee clerks and adding one
stenographer was adopted The rec-
ommendation that' the private corre-
spondence of members be barred was
included
A G McNeer of Shawnee made
a short address after which invita-
tion was extended to Dr Lyman J
Abbott to address the legislature at
his convenience He will be at the
state university on March 5
When the house adjourned it was
until Monday afternoon Tbe ma-
jority of the members went to Okla-
homa City Saturday
For the third consecutive day the
Billups bill has been the principal
question before tbe senate
The defeat of a motion by Senator
Davis to submit articles 1 and 2 of
the prohibition measure to the people
for approval or rejection at the No-
vember election removed the last hin-
drance to the adoption of article 2
and made safe the adoption of the re-
mainder of the measure substantially
In acordance with the committee re-
porL The bill contains three arti-
cles the last providing for the en-
forcement of the prohibitory law
The Davis amendment created a
lengthy discussion during which the
constitutionality of the bill was again
attacked and tbe stahdlng of the
democratic party arraigned
Nearly every senator wanted to go
on record and in order that th
speeches might be transcribed an
mimeographed for distribution ex-
pert stenographers were brought In-
to service
An intimation had come from the
governor that nothing but that b
would suit tbe necessity of conditions
at this time Every man addressed
his support to a hill that he though
would make Oklahoma famous be-
cause of the enforcement of the pro-
hibitory law A bill was tntroduce(
December 12 nine days after the sit-
ting of the first legislature
Charges of false campaign prom
Ises were stuck In at Intervals and
senators almost grew frantic In their
replies
8uit to Test Herd Law
GUTHRIE: A prominent citizen of
AltU8 announces that suit will be be-
gun there In the near future to test
the constitutionality of the Oklaho-
ma herd law as revised by the legis-
lature It Is claimed that the law
comes under the head of local legis-
lation which Is prohibited by the
constltullon as it provides that the
new herd law provisions shall not be
effective In any part of the state
where the law was In effect at the
time of the admUsion of the state
This makes the law apply solely to
the Indian Territory side of the state
and makes It local legislation In the
minds of some good lawyers
Bank Depository Case Appealed
GUTHRIE: In the supreme court C
B Ames of Oklahoma City attorney
for the Noble State bank filed an ap-
peal from the recent decision of Dis-
trict Judge Huston of this county In
which the state banking board was
upheld In making effective the pro-
visions of the aeposi tors’ guaranty
law The appeal In made only or the
point of the constitutionality of the
law that point being the one on
which the court sustained the demur-
rer of Attorney General West
BRISTOW: Creek county farmers
are asking the state hoard of agricul-
ture to quarantine the county against
Texas cattle and are circulating peti-
tions which are being liberally sign-
ed The unallotted land of the cuun-
ty and some Indian allotments are
leased to cattle men from Texas If
the lines are thrown around they will
be prohibited from coming in which
Is the object of the petitions There
has been s war between the Texas—
or long-horn fellows — and the local
cattle men and farmers for years
tn jb r QOQ
MOTION MJIDE TO EXCLUDE
SENATORS OBJECT TO PRES-
ENCE OF SMITH ON FLOOR
GDVEBKQB’S ATTACHEE TOO ENTHUSIASTIC
Liquor Bill Is Occupying Considerable
Time — Dispensary Feature la Too
Much for 8omo of tho Law
Makora
During the discussion of the li-
quor bill Saturday Senator Davis
submitted a motion that Orville
Smith an attache of the governor’s
office be excluded from the floor of
'he senate for violation of the anti-
obbylng rules of the senate
Smith has been within the railing
several times during the discussion
)f the bill The motion caused some-
what of a sensation from the fact
that Smith la prominently mentioned
as the man whom the governor will
appoint state enforcement attorney in
case the prohibition bill passes
Senator Tom Moore who was In
the chair refused to pnt the motion
stating that Smith would probably re-
frain from violating the rules with-
out the adopttlon of Buch a motion
Unless the friends of the prohibi-
tion bill yield to the opponents of the
provision establishing dispensary
agencies In towns of 1000 population
and less the bill may yet fall to pass
the senate as an emergency measure
A vote was scheduled to be taken
on the bill Friday at 5 o'clock but
the opposition to the “crossroadB”
dispensary feature was so strong that
final action on the hill was yet pend-
ing when the senate adjourned to
take a junketing trip to Oklahoma
City A compromise was offered by
the opponents of the small town dis-
pensaries by which the question as
to whether the establishment In
towns of less than 2000 people should
be left to a vote of the people hut
the friends of the bill refused to ac-
cept 1L
NEW SCHEDULE IN EFFECT
Savings of Thousands to Farmers and
Big Dealers
GUTHRIE: The new schedule on
coal and grain contained In a recent
order of the corporation commission
went into effect Monday The recip-
rocal demurrage also became a law
at that time The Importance of the
new regime can be appreciated only
by big dealers and farmers To these
It will mean the saving of hundreds
of thousands of dollars The reduc-
tion of the coal and grain is about
30 per cent Hearings on the orders
have been heard and the railroads
have exhausted their resources In
protesting against the alleged “con-
fiscatory” rate The corporation
commission never changed Its origi-
nal ruling however
Under the reciprocal demurrage the
shipper can have cars In busy as well
as dull seasons The railroad com-
pany must supply his demand prompt-
ly for rolling stock or be BUbject to
a heavy penalty The shipper Is re-
quired to promptly fill the car after
ordering IL The loaded car must be
moved at leaBt 100 miles a day to-
ward its destlnattlon What this lh-
novatlon means to the dealers In per-
ishable goods can be easily imagined
The new epoch will be of Immeas-
urably benefit ' to the grower In-
stead of losing thousands of dollars
through Inability to secure cars he
will be assured of prompt attention
The coal consumer will get hla fuel
st reduced prices for next winter by
which time It is fair to presume that
one of the bills now pending In the
two houses holding railroads respon-
sible for coal lost In transit will have
become a law
GUTHRIE: That white news boys
are not denied the privileges of the
Jim crow section of passenger
coaches Is the ruling of Assistant
Attorney General Stillman In a let-
ter addressed to C R Jackson of
Muskogee general attorney for the
Katy railroad He says that white
newsboys may enter tbe Jim crow
section and ride with their wgres
there If necessary
G A R GIFT TO THE NATION
The Statue ef Founder Will 8tand on
Pennsylvania Avenue
WASHINGTON: The commission
appointed to select a statue to com-
memorate Benjamin F 8tephenson
founder of the Grand Army of the
Republic accepted the design of J
Massey Rhlnd of New York which
is a triangular shaft thirty feet In
helghL with groups of symbolical fig-
ures on each side The statue Is the
gift of the Grand Army of the Repub-
lic to the United States It Is to be
erected at PennsnylvanJa avenue and
Seventh street Northwest in this
city on a pedestal for which congress
appropriated $10000
Railroad Reports to State Auditor
GUTHRIE: According to the annu-
al return of the Midland Valley rail-
road hompany received by State Aud-
itor Trapp the railroad has 24781
miles of railroad In operation in Ok-
lahoma The total length of the road
Is 31570 In three states as follows:
Arkansas 3355 Oklahoma 247S1
Kansas 91
The returns of the United 8tates
and the Wells Fargo express compa-
nies have also been received by Aud-
itor frapp
CAMDEN N J: The steamship
Oklahoma the largest tank vessel
ever constructed In an American ship
yard was launched Saturday at the
yards of the New York Shipbuilding
company of this city The vessel Is
owned by the Guffey Petroleum com-
pany and when completed will ply
between Philadelphia and Port Ar-
thur Texas She was christened by
Mlm Mildred F Taber daughter or
George H Taber general manager
of the Ouffey Petroleum company
The vessel haa a hulk capacity of 2
noo entlons qnd bas s lenrth of
SENATE ADOPTS PROHIBITION
Only Two Votes Recorded Against
Enforcement Measure
Tbe prohibition hill as amended by
the conference committee waa adopt-
ed by the senate Monday afternoon
with but two opposing votes The
emergency section which contains a
provision for submitting the dispen-
sary article to the vote of the peo-
ple was defeated This leaves the
measure with Its dispensary and en-
forcement feature Intact and contain-
ing a section the one clause of which
has been questioned as to Its con-
stitutionality fcy constitutional law-
yers of the senate This clause pro-
vides that agencies may be establish-
ed In other places than towns of 2000
Inhabitants and county seats as pro-
vided by the constitution
Only three amendments prevailed
one of those presented by Little re-
ducing the salary of the superintend-
ent from $2500 to $1800 Another
presented by Stafford limiting the pro-
fit on alcohol sold for pharmaceutical
scientific and Industrial purposes The
third amendment struck out a section
providing that C O D shipments
shall be held to he made at the place
of destination
On roll call and final passage only
Senators Little and Cunningham vot-
ed no The vote on the emergency
clause was ayes 4 nays 16 It re-
quired a majority of two-thirds of all
members elected' to pass an emer-
gency section and the required num-
ber of votes was not obtained
The hill was reconTnended by the
committee of the whole for adoption
and upon the motion of Phillips was
placed Immediately npon third read-
ing and final passage Amendments
that had been defeated in the com-
mittee of the whole whose authors
had given notice that they would
again be introduced on the third read-
ing were Introduced as the reading
progressed and each was defeated ex-
cept the three mentioned
The defeated amendments that
were the cause of more discussion in
the committee than any others were
those by Little and Davis The Lit-
tle amendment sought to strike out
a portion of the section that provided
for the establishment of agencies ex-
cept as provided in the constitution
The vote on the Little amendment
stood 16 for and 20 against with 8
absent or not voting
The Davis amendment which pro-
vided for submitting articles one and
two to the people was defeated by a
vote of 27 to 9
MURRAY SCENTS GRAFT
All Money Collected from People Not
Turned ln
GUTHRIE: That there is graft Ini
connection with the appeal to the pub-
lic for money to pay the debt of the
constitutional convention was plain-
ly Intimated by Speaker Murray in
his report to the house on the claim
of the body that formulated Okla-
homa’s constitution The ' speaker
stated that to his knowledge in
one county where $84 had been col-
lected from spirited citizens not one
cent had been remitted to him He
said that there were a number of oth-
er counties in which he supposed
there was a similar failure That
those who contributed but whose do-
nation was never received by the con-
vention president may have an oppor-
tunity of placing the less for the mis-
trust fund the speaker will have the
Itemized statement he had read print-
ed The name of every person whose
contribution reached the president
will appear
Asks Quarantine Protection
GUTHRIE: Farmers of Creek coun-
ty are dissatisfied with the cattle
quarantine line as established by the
Oklahoma hoard of agriculture and
are circulating petitions to present
to the board asking that Creek coun-
ty be placed above the line Shortly
after statehood tbe Oklahoma board
extended the quarantine line across
the Indian Territory side on a line
running east from the south side of
Osage county and placing about six
new counties above the line As the
line now stands Creek and other
counties south of the line have no pro-
tection against the Texas cattlemen
as no quarantine regulations are in
force there
GOVERNOR SAYS MARCH
Muskogee Council Claims Election
Date ae April 7
MUSKOGEE: Governor Haskell
signed an election proclamation call-
ing a special election for March 29
The city has been redlstrlcted In vot-
ing precincts and wards and the elec-
tion judges and clerks were appoint-
ed by the governor under the provi-
sion of the Brook bill Under the
new districting three of the four
wards are democratic and while the
city Is normally republican the dem-
ocrats are certain to elect a majority
for the city council The proclama-
tion haa caused a big stir politically
as the mayor had called an election
to be held April 7 The mayor and
the city council insist that they have
the opinions of the best attorney In
the United States which bolds that
the April election la the legal one
Passed the Rhodes "Exam”
NORMAN: It Is announced that
Walter F Campbell of Weatherford
Ray L Lange of Kingfisher and Wil-
liam C Vogt of Kingfisher passed
the examination for a Rhodes schol-
arship held here three weeks ago
Tbe next vacancy will be filled by one
of these contestants
GOVERNOR'S SPECIAL MESSAGE
Consideration of Bill Providing for
Bond Isatiee Asked
GUTHRIE: In a special message to
the senate Governor HaBkell nrged
Immediate consideration of house bill
175 which provides for the voting of
bond Issues with which to take up
the outstanding warrant Indebted-
ness of the state He says that the
rate now being paid on thoee war-
rants Is much higher than It should
be and that the state Is paying $100
-I J
SHOOTS WIFE AND SISTEi)
ENRAGED MAN KILLS TWO WO
RTFncRirrsc Arcs '
IIS 9WI I10III Mils F01 IIS LIFE
Tragedy the Outcome of Bitter Quarrel-Posse
In Pursuit and Lynch-
ing Is Feared— Special Deputies are
8worn In
BRISTOW: With John Cerely
slayer of his own wife and his broth-
er's wife - fleeing from a posse of
creek county officers farmer neigh-
bors of the Cerely's are organizing a
mob to take possession of Cerely for-
cibly If necessAry when he Is caught
and hang him
Cerely’s brother who escaped the
assassin by begging for his life Is be-
lieved to be mentally deranged as a
result of seeing his wife and sister-in-law
brutally shoL
Tbe Cerely tragedy which happen-
ed Monday after a bitter domestlo
quarrel la the most atrocious ever
committed In Creek county
Details of the double killing con-
flict John Cerely's wife It Is said
left home after a quarrel with her
husband and took refuge with his
brother John followed her and de-
manded that she return home At the
brother's house the quarrel continued
the women siding together John
Cerely became enraged when his wife
made a Blighting remark about him
and began to curse
“I’ll kill you" he shouted at his
wife and as she began to smile he
Jerked a revolver from his pocket and
started firing
Maddened by tbe sight of blood
Cerely turned the gun toward his
brother's wife and riddled her body
with bullets The brother dropped to
his knees as Cerely began to reload
the gun and pleaded for his life
He was spared by the slayer who
Immediately saddler a horse and rode
north Telephone messages brought
deputies to the scene and the chase
that blda fair to last for days began
Cerely and bis wife have been mar-
ried but a short time Neither he nor
hts brother are well known In this
vicinity Both women were about 24
years old and comely
Additional deputies are being sworn
In at Sapulpa and Bristow to guard
tbe prisoner should he be found The
farmers who ' live near the Cerely’s
openly ' state that his capture will
mean his death
URGE8 FIGHT ON PAPER TRU8T
Herman Rldder Visits President and
Attorney General
WASHINGTON: Herman Rldder
president of the American Newspa-
per Publishers' Association and edi-
tor of the Staats Zeitung of iNew
York called upon President Roobs-
velt and Attorney General Bonaparte
in connection with the fight of his as-
sociation upon the white paper trusL
Mr Riddle laid before Attorney Gen-
eral Bonaparte at the department of
justice evidence to show that the pa-
per trust is violating the Sherman
anti-trust law
At the White House Mr Rldder
took up the question of urging con-
gress to repeal the duty on white pa-
per and wood pulp from which the
paper la made Mr Rldder Bald he
could not talk about what the presi-
dent had said
It waa Mr Rldder to whom the
president waa said to have referred
about a month ago as the “Umburger
envoy”
New Gas Company Incorporated '
GUTHRIE: Charles Owens of
Owens ft Connelly the Muskogee
pipe line promoters has filed articles
of Jncorporatlton for the Wann Nab
ural Gaa company of Owen station
The action followed the result of a
compromise with Attorney General
West which allows Owen to pipe gal
from four sections of land near Bar-
tlesville under contract executed be-
fore statehood
COAL TO BE CHEAPER
New Law Will Make a Reduction of
Fifty Per Cent '
GUTHRIE: That a 50 per cent av-
erage reduction for every ton of coal
sold In Oklahoma will result from
the order of tbe corporation commis-
sion which became effective Monday
Is tbe opinion of Commissioner A T
Watson A feature of tbe law Is that
destination weights shall be the baals
of settlement Instead of the weights
at the mines This holds the rail-
roads responsible for the loss of coal
In shipment The same ground Is cov-
ered in the bill of Senator Stafford
and other measures pending In the
house
The new schedule on 'lumber makes
'a reduction of from 50 to 60 per cenL
The new rate on grain la much lower
than the one formerly maintained
in four weeks a new rate on oil ship
tnenta reducing the maximum from 3$
(to 11 cents will become effective The
order has been Issued by the corpor-
ation commission The new schedule
will allow six cents for the fare 100
miles and two cents each additional
100 mllos The maximum In no In
stance to exceed 11 cents
Lobby to Ask for Disbursement of
$75000 Civilization Fund
" 1 11
PONCA CITY: Ten Osage Indians
will leave for Washington within the
next week to represent that tribe be-
fore the national congress A trlbla
council waa In session all last week
discussing the matter The roost Im-
portant legislation desired by tbe
Osagea Is the disbursement of the
$T5000 civilization fund Other sub-
jects tbe delegation will lobby tor
are enrollment of Osage babies re-
EXCELLENT FOR COLDS
Mix two ounces of glycerine with
half pint of good whiskey and add one-
half ounce of Concentrated OH of Pine
The bottle is to be well shaken each
time and used In doses of a teaspoon-
ful to a tablespoonful every four
hours The true Concentrated Oil of
Pine comes put up for medicinal uses
only tn half ounce vials sealed In tin
screw-top cases and Is a product of the
laboratories of the Globe Pharmaceuti-
cal Co Dayton O The Ingredients
all can be gotten at any drug store
Causa for Alarm
A young man had been courting a
girl for nine years "Jennie" be eald
one evening ‘1 read the other day that
In 60000 years Niagara falls would
dry up”
Jennie clutched his arm excitedly
“Why what’s the matter 7” he
asked
“Why you promised to take me
there on our bridal trip Don’t you
think you had better be a little care-
ful that it does not dry np before we
get there T"
! 'r Hog Cholera
The greatest drawback to the hog
industry which breeders In this coun-
try have to contend with Is what la
known as “hog cholera” and “awlne
plague”
Hog cholera Is a highly contagious
disease and unless checked Is liable
to carry off a great number of hogs in
a very short time
Mr A P Williams of Burnetts
Creek Ind tells of an experience
which he had with- some hogs that
had the cholera “Five years ago
saye Mr Williams "I was In the em-
ploy of Mr J D Richardson Lafay-
ette Ind as his barn foreman Some
fine hogs that I was feeding took the
cholera I gave them Sloan’s Lini-
ment and did not lose a hog Some
were so bad they would not drink
sweet milk and I was compelled to
drench them I have tried It at eve rjr
opportunity since and always find It
O K”
Write for Dr Sloan’s free book on
the treatment of Horses Cattle Hogs
and Poultry Address: Dr Earl S
Sloan 15 Albany Street Boston
Mass
The “Patrollum” Wagon
The telephone in police headquar-
ters rang
“la this the police station?” In-
quired a woman's voice
“It is” eald C E MoVey the desk
sergeant
“Well I wish you ail'd send the pa-
trollum wagon over to Fourth and
Oak streets right away Ole Blll'a
got drunk again and he’s just raising
Cain And say” the voice added “If
you all don't send that wagon mighty
quick you all might as well send a
hearse 'cause I’m goln to hit that
fool nigger In a minute”
The wagon made a “hurry” run but
returned empty a few minutes later
The driver reported that he could
find no trouble — Kansas City Star
Mrs Goodsole— My toy It makes
me sick at heart to see you smoking
Kid — Dat's funny It seems to ketch
me right in the stummlck
OLD SURGEON
Found Coffee Caused Hande t
Tremble
The Burgeon's duties require clear
judgment and a steady hand Aallp
or an unnecessary Incision may do Ir-
reparable damage to the patient
When he found that coffee drinking
caused his hands to tremble an Ills
surgeon conscientiously gave It up and
this is hla story
“For years I waa a coffee drinker
until my nervpus system wee nearly
broken down my hande trembled so I
could hardly write and Insomnia tor-
tured me at nighL
“Besides how could 1 safely per-
form operation! with unsteady hands
using knives and instruments of pre-
cision? When 1 saw plainly the bad
effects of coffee I decided to stop it
and three year ago I prepared some
Postum of which 1 had received a
sample
“The first cupful surprised me It
was mild soothing delicious At this
time I gave some Postum to a friend
who was In a similar condition to
mine from the use of coffee
“A few days after I met him and
he was full of praise for Postum de-
claring he would never return to cof-
fee but stick to Poetum We then or-
dered a full supply and within a short
time my nervousness and consequent
trembling as well as Insomnia disap-
peared blood circulation became nor-
mal no dizziness nor heat flashes
“My friend became a Postum en-
thusiast his whole family using it ex-
clusively “It would be the fault of the one
who brewed tbe Postum If It did not
taste good when served
“The best food may be spoiled if
not properly made Postum should be
boiled according to directions on the
pkg Then It Is all right anyone can
rely on It It ought to become the
national drink” "There's a Reason
Name given by Postum Co Battlo
n ev c 1 r F I H T ft U'V'V r — -a i
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Anthony, W. B. The Marlow Review. (Marlow, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1908, newspaper, March 6, 1908; Marlow, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1859667/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.