Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1901 Page: 3 of 8
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1
SAYS HE HAD NO ACCOMPLICES
Mardorer of McKinley Tell Judge NO
0110 VIIGS WAS in Plot — Dramatic
actin° In Court—Palters AVillitt Makiug
IrIi Statenconta to Judge
Ilintory ta the Trint
Monday Sept 16 — Czolgosz a r-
vaigned in court before judge White
charged with the murder of President
McKinley on Sept 7 Ile refused to
answer the :71t1ictment
Monday Sept 23—Czolgosz placed
on trial Pleaded guilty to charge Plea
not accepted and trial proceeds
Tuesday Sept 24—Czolgosz is found
guilty as charged
Thursday Sept N—Judge White
who presided at trial sentences pris-
oner to be put to death in the electric
chair at Auburn prison sometime dur-
ing the week beginning October 2g
—
Czolgookx nell'IMVOPI Sentence
Czolgosz was sentenced to death by
Justice Truman C White in the Su-
preme court at Buffalo Thursday
illnommommiammamommosemmill
HE WINN IIEN8 00
M
1
' 1111 IRWMIII tiLitity uvviti
Leon Czolgosz Is Sentenced to
i Die in Electric Chair
BRINGING CZOIGOSZ
afternoon The assassin took advan-
tage of the opportunity to speak but
he confined himself to taking upon his
own shoulders the blame for the great
crime of having murdered the presi-
dont of the United States Ile advanced
no reason in justification of his mon-
strous deed Not a word did he utter
of anarchy of his enmity to govern-
ment or of the motives which prompt-
ed him to the commission of his crime
Hall Cleared fly Po live
Greater crowds gathered for the sen-
tencing of the assassin than came for
any one SA-WIWI of the trial It Be-
fore 12:30 p in a crowd had gath-
ered in the corridor in front of 1 ustive
White's court room By I p tn the
corridor was jammed Capt Regan
then appeared on the stairs with a
squad of 100 uniformed officers and
cleared the ball It was a case Dr first
come first served after a line was
formed and the tickets of admission
Issued for the trial were worthless It
took less than ten minutes for the
single file to fill the court room and
then the doors were closed to he
opened only upon the arrival of
dials counsel and others connected
'with the day's proceedings
Dramatic Scene in Court
In a hush that was like the silence
of death Justice White pronminced the
prisoner's doom Physically tottering
under the ordeal but sustaining him-
self by sheer force Of nerve the in
heard the words of death pro-
nounced t'as shackled and quietly sill)-
witted to be led away
In no brazen fashion did the pris-
oner face the court Swaying from side
to side boyish looking tremoling with
nervousness but held up by nerve he
stood leaning on the chair in front of
him
ratteri in Ins Worik
Falteringly hesitatingly he spoke
after having been asked each question
several times He acted almost as if
the words were being wrung out of
him it took him so long to find utter-
ance and be spoke so rapidly wlu-n the
first word left his lips in response to
a question
Ills voice was hardly hearti ten feet
sway although every ear in the great
!ourt room was strained to catch the
slightest sound from his lips
His face paled at no time daring the
proceedings It was flushed with the
emotion it was costing him so much
strength to master As the prelimin-
ary to the pronouncing of sentence
many questions were ashed by the dis-
trict attorney Czolgosz evinced the
utmost willingness to answer all these
questions but his utteranie seemed to
smother in his throat
Lawyer Offera
It was only after an effort that each
replY was blurted out As he stood his
breast heaved his eyes blinked rap-
idly and once he almost reeled so that
MOMMEIMEMMM AM
ex-Judge Titus his counsel held up a "Remove the prisrfler"
hand to support him Considerable surprise was expressed
Ile did not need the proffered FtiA tr"t 'ire White dm not pronounce
hut sttaightene41 himself up of his on the customary appeal to the Almighty
effort It was with a feeiing of elig
1 hat the assassin heard th4- words '
"Remove the prisoner" pronounced by 4
Judge White Ile heaved a great sigh -t
as be was manacled and was led away ' i
Tell of tits Lire (i A 'o 5
'
"Stand up Czolgosz please" said ' ' ' '
Mr Penay turning to the prisoner '' '" '''& 4
Nudged by bailiffs the prisoner stood ‘' i
crowded room '-
up the center of all attention in the 14 -
-' 1
I
In answer to questions put b 07
y Mr —1
Penny Czolgosz said under oath that rd II
1
P I
he Wati born in Detroit that he was ih : i r I -
l ' l
educated in the common and church 1 fi 't ' ll 1
schools that he had been a ee t'7a I holly olly (:' 4t 1 'i' I 6 iJ ' r 7 '! ''
that he was a laborer and that be had 4 I 1 : -
' '
livd e in Clev d n B
elan and iuffalo '
144 i I -
1 -' I
The court clerk then asked the (pies- I ' ' I 11 : -
dwhich on for w all had been a waiting 7 ill 1H :? '4--
Judge Titus asked that the prisoner 11411 l )
ifil
be permitted to make a statement in 1L' ip I I I
e xc ill pat lo n of his act '1 4
Czolgosz leaned heavily on a chair
He then spoke saying he itlime cum- DISTmcr ATTORNEY PENNEY
'flitted the crime No one had any- (From a shetch made at Buttalo)
thing to do 1A-ith his crime but himself in concluding his senienve "and may
be said God have mercy on your soul"
Judge NYhite —"Before the passing of The court quit at the middle of the
sentence you may speak on two sub- enstornary formula in pronouncing the
jects First you can clahn that you are sentence
insane second that you have good
Mutat-led and I ed tufty
cause to or that judgment should m i
INTO COURT FOR SENTENCE FROM
MADE IN COURT
SKETCH
not be pronouneed against you third
that you Nvli411 a ncw trial
i vett liberty tp Spy t
"These are the grounds specified by
statute You are now at liberty to
t-peak"
Czolgosz----'I have nothing to say On
those things"
Judge Titus then consulted the pis-
oritT Judge Titns—”I think he might to he
permitted tO rtla k9 a statement in ex-
culpation of his family your honor"
Judge White—"The defendant may
speak in exeulpation of his father and
brothers and sisters If that is what
he means to (I() it is proper"
sayi Dili it t Ione
Czolgosz---"No other person hal an-
thing to do Nth Ii it No other person
knew of this but myset' my father
ntsTmcr ATTORNEY PENNEY
th'rom a sketch made at Buffalo)
in concluding his sentence "and may
God have mercy on your sottl"
The court quit at the middle of the
customary formula in pronounclug the
sent enc
Marna vied and Led tufty
he hush as the tiO1CM11 WOrdS were
pronounced was like the silence of the
tomb For several moments the silence
was pubrolten The click tf handcuffs
put a startling termination on the
strain Like a great sob the emotion
of the mut room welled up and were
lost in the shuffling of feet The final
scene of the historic trial twas con-
cluded Manacled to letectivos who bad
brought him into the court the stias-
Sin was conducted away Between the
Wan PI bailiffs policemen and specta-
tors the murderer passed Ile looked
not into a single eye Justified by him-
self or not his deed lay heavy on his
head A groan of execration followed
hint down the broad court house stairs
to the Jail tunnel below
POWERS OF HERDITY
S itymarkable Storics To14 f I ty
yterinv I a iv
Doctorsolistogreeatotheinthience of
heredity Some hold that a great deal
hinpes upon it others helieve the con-
trary Some of OW anthcntic stories
told to exemplify this tnyAeriouA hond
het N yen ancestors and descendants aro
very curious There was a loan col-
lection of ohl portraits exhibited in
London ItJy Ifl(I a young girl va3
hutting the Nisitors She was an or-
phan am wealthy hut without near
relatives and wts often heard to com-
plain of the loneliness of her pcsition
As she passed through the gallery ono
particular poi trait attracted her atten-
tion and she went hack to it nuire than
once iler companion H in it noth-
ing hut the commoitphwe painting of
middle-ago ol man in the ccamile of tho
latter part of the last century 'It is
a nice kind laoy" said the girl
lather wistfully "I imagine my father
might have looked like that hood ho
lived" As most tho pictures were
ticiittleci the visitors had purchased no
catalogue hut before going away Miss
B bought one at the elltrallee and
made a last Nt:dt to the portrait for
Which she had folt so strong an attrac-
tion To her astonishment who found
her OWII Ilante Onpthilte itS
and teamed on inquiry thPt the orig-
inal was one of her direct ancestors
Another occult coincidence or psycho-
logical phenomenon happened a IOW
years ago to a southern statesman and
financier ivhose fatally has always been
or rank in his native state This gen-
tleman was overhauling old documents
and letters which had been stored iu
REMOVING HANDCUFF'S FROM CZOLGOSZ'S WRISTS IN COURT
or mother or no one else knew nothing musty chest for 3ears and intended to
about it I never thought of the clinic publish whatever might be of historic
until two days before I committed it value-and interest To his sill-prise h?
and never tobl nobody about it" unfolded a letter yellow and time-
judge 1ewis----"Ile says ho did not staned which WaS writtt n ill 1 own
make up his mind to do it mini a few pechliar handwriting or seemed to
days before its commission have beon ivritten by him although the
date was two generati ons 1)64mp his
Judge Sentence
birth The signature or the surname
Justice Whitc- --Czolgoz taking
- v etch was the same as his own vas s)
the tiro of our Indoved president you niarhedly charaderistic thit he t nI
committed a crime that shocked and
scarcely believe Lis omi hand did not
outraged all the civilize‘l world fter pen the letters—Montreal Herald and
learning all the facts and circum-
stances in the case twelve good men
have pronounced you guilty of Initialer
Fewer Strikes in Franee
in the first degree You say that no
other person abetted you lit the corn- The statistics of the striicts in Francr
mission of this terrible act The pen- for June have just been published In
alty is fixed by statute and it becomes all the month gave birth t) 57 whih
my duty to impose sentence upon you the total for the first six months of the
The sentence of this court is that on year was 30il The same period in 1930
October 28 at the place designated and yielded 475 which shows an agreeable
In the manner prescribed by law you falling off in the discontent of the
suffer the punishment of death working classes
MOIMMIIIMft1011Mille
RELIGIOUS READING
1ELIGION AND REFORMS ALL OVER
THE WORLD
Aged Who liVe Outlived l'hoir
tionerat ion Should Ho Treated Tenderly
for They Mont 1134 Lonly —Their Yuri'
World Ls 1)esolate
iTranslate(1 front the German of Mar-
tin Luther)
In life still death Is here
There is one common doom
0 how shall we prepare
For a believer's tomb?
Peaee is of Thee alone—
Thou only ean'st atone
'Fbe sins we grieve and from Thy
wrath
Make us a path
To Heaven
0 holy Lord and God!
Eternal Christ of God!
Hear Thou our faltering breath!
Spare us from endless death!
Kyrie eleison
In death tbe Jaws of hell
Against our spirits gape
Lord God wilt Thou not Nave?
And grant us swift escape?
'Tim Thou dear Lord didst win
The conquest of Our sin
And pity for our souls obtain
Else hope were vain
Of heaven
0 holy Lord and God!
Eternal Christ of God!
Hear Thou our hitter cry!
And save us ere we die!
Kyrie eleison
Thy
In hell's (lark midst our sin
Would drive us to despair
Oh whither shall we fly?
Where is our refuge where?
Thy blood 0 Christ alone
Can for our in atone!
'Tis la the holy rood to give
The grace to live
For !leaven
0 holy Iord and Go(i!
Eternal Christ of God!
Grant from Thy faith we all
Nlay never never fall!
Kyrie eleison
—Rev I''rederic Rowland Marvin D C
TRUTH AS !I
Phrased in terms of common life
truth becomes describable righteous-
neSS and rectitude There are men
about us vhose characters are so just
and holy that they are walking revela-
tions of ctei nal things by their very
virtue interpreting the ways of God to
men It is a sail rommeatary upon
the moral obliquity of mankind in gen-
eral that such truth in action or per-
Jonal righteousnrss is so rare as to
occasion renaark When 'lye see It: in-
stead if being accepteC as the lute
which should be taken for granted as
the universal form of individual and
socia I life The need is for more
thought as to truth but ako and al-
way for more heart love for it so that
the heavenly reality will lie revealed
so clearly and constantly in human
lives that none can either deny its fact
or refuse to yield to its winsome charm
and persuasive call to a like virtue a
like praise 'truth is meant for guid-
ance Truth as bound up Avith the be-
ing of God truth as expressed in his
divine revelations truth as given by
his spirit can never safely be disre-
garded or neglected by any human
soul The wrath of God is already
revealed from heaven against all will-
ful and obstinate reketqrs of his truth
all who make and who love truth's
opposite a lie but conversely no
more blessed condition can he im-
agined than the utate of the man who
is coming more and more tinder the
domination of heavenly realities and
no nobler title can be desired or held
by any man than that of a "truth seek-
er"—New York Olmerver
LONELINESS OF AGE
The loneliness of age! llow few
think of this and treat with tender-
ness and consideration those Who have
outlived their generation and whose
early companions and friends have
been taken from them? Unable to en-
gage in 'th e activities of life they are
no longer brought into contact and
sympathy with those around them and
mutual dependence binds them to-
gether They necessarily to a great
extent live in a world of their own
Nk ith xhich those around them are
not familiar The communing of their
hearts are with the s'ones of the past
and the companions of other yeaus
who have long ago passed away Lov-
er and friends have been taken from
them and their acquaintances laid in
darkness The forms they admired and
loved are gone the eyes that looked
into theirs with the tenderest affection
are sightless and the voices that
cheered and stirred their souls have
long since been silent Their early
1A-orld of hope and Joy has become a
desolation and they sit in silence con-
templating the ruin that has been
wrought They are
"Only walling lin sliadowl
Are a little limger grown
to pass On to the reunion that awaits
them and the glad greetings of those
they love Who would not do what he
can to cheer the loneliness of the aged
to smooth their pathway and comfort
them In their declining years—
Ch 1 rch in
NEI ER 1)E1'1 I R
How apt we are to forget that
though (Imo's overcast our sky the
sun still shines that behind these
trials anti afflictions which are "but
iflocredaer o TIeen tis" evoslstillitanetgrspsitn(eit(memrst
nd lie will lark anl 311slatekrelous now In His
own good time He will deliver Never
despair Perhaps it is to make trial
of ow' faith that we are ttled or to
show us our dependence upon a higher
power for support in trials The world
offera no hoPol it cannot sathfy the
soul that has tasted of the powers of
the world to come When tempted
tried: or desolate to such a rcI I le
is indeed "the shadow of a great rock
in a weary land" S'onie oue haA said:
"The Lord never tahes anything from
us but with his design of giving IN
something bettor" We have had this
verified in our own wt Our plans
have come to naught The work of
months of patient toil has yielded
-nothing but leaves" We were heart
sick and ready to despair almost but
the "why and wivrefore" was made
plain to us in 11l own time and com-
pensation came in the best form and
our hearts were tilled with Joy which
erstwhile were tilled with the ashes
of heaviness Never deipair--lietroit
Free
-----
Daily Prayer
One always finds time to eat and
sleep and work Ile can lInd time
also to pray The prayer need not be
long as to time but it nmst be deep
and true and pervade the spirit from
dawn to twilight A lover may only
stop at the door on his way down-
town to may good morning to his
sweetheart hut her smile and greeting
will till his soul with sunshine all the
day A moment of special communion
with Christ in the morning will fill the
mind with Ills presence through the
long hours of stress and care The
soul needs its morning and evening
meal "Thou preparest a table before
me in the presence of mine enemies'
A well-fed soul is even more attractive
than a well-kept and well-nourished
body Any religions obligation or cus
tom that makes daily prayer the rule
of life is a spiritual blessing----Chrts
tian Endeavor
Treat meat or
The primal cause that has led the
Chinese to oppose foreigners coming tC
I heir land is the outrageous treatment
China has received from so-called
Christian nations Think of the In-
troduction of opium which England
I ntroduced and for which silo took
not only the port of llong-Kong but
compelled China to pay f21000 for war
expenses 'Fills opium has been a
greater curse to China than the drink-
ing habits of the United States What
fair-minded American can Justify the
action of so many of our inerchante
who made fortunes in China by sell-
ing opinin or is willing to defend the
laes vhih our government has en-
acted against the Chinese??-Rer Dr
Dana Pr(sh)terian Philadelphia Pa
CI) Hsi Ian In s tor Topics
The hook for every ilay—Monday
Oct 21 divine truth Luke 1! 1-4 Acte
18: 24-28 Tuesday Oet 22 God's mem
soiros John 5:39 20: 30 31 Ileb 1: 1
2 Wednesday Oct 23 the Spirit the
techir lohn !Is 25-27: I For 2: 14
16 Thursday Oct 21 Our constant
need John Pis 7-15 Friday Oct 25
The key to linowledge Ps 119 97-
100:1T 8: 8 9: Boni 3: 1 2 Satur-
day Oct 26 Daily food Acts 17: 1-11
snuday Oct 27 Topic— Bible-reading:
-1 will make it the rule of my life te
rend the Bible every day" 2 Tim 3
1-17
Sanligla anti Cheer
What a stOille kind of heartache wt
give others by simply not being at out
best and highert when they have tt
make allowance for us when the dull
side is uppermost in our minds and
We take their sunlight anti couragt
away by eVea our unspoken thought
our atmosphere of heaviness! ()h
stand always and eternally for sun
light and life cheer!
Tile Setting of it Hope
ThP setting of a great hope Is liks
the setting of the sun The brightness
of our If is gone Shadows of even-
ing fall around us and the world
seems but a dint reflection—itself s
broader shadow we look forward inte
the coming lonely night The sou
withdraws into itscit Then stars arist
and I he iii1it is holy—II W Long
fellow
Aitsatticrs riton
Righteousness godliness honesty—
tht--oe are principles that must hart
an inearnation in hinnan tier N
( Methodist Den VPr
IAA OS seek those things whit h art
above in our religion Seeking and it
some measure attaining them we shat
find our religion the best comfort it
sorrow the bP-4 Warni lig in danger
the best hope in death When all elst
is bitter it still shall be sweeter that
honey and the honeycomh—Rev Dr
Bacchus Episcopalian Brooklyn N Y
There is a condition by which every
Man may be accepted with God Thit
condition is twofold Firsot he must
fear God This means to recognizt
God's Ain zind to lia‘e reference tt
that in all things It means to respect
to reverence to obey anti to !ear to-
offend him in everything one does --
Her J W Quinlan Episcopalian At-
lanta Ga
What seems to be personal liberty
aucording to the opiniom4 of prodignk
and politicians is too often its idach
opposite personal slavery Something
lik 400 years ago all Europe Nu:4 at-
tracted by the movement for religious
liberty onol fathers fougit for the IP)
erty to dic that their -oons might have
religions liberty—Ilov Dr ('rafts
Washington 1) C
I can show you right here in our
Own city and all OVi the earth mon
and Nvomen who pretend to pray who'
are members of churches who oleclare
themselves to he believers in a (Ind
who is the Father of all men but who
do not for one moment believe or pre-
tend to believe in their fellow pica—
Rev 'William T Drown CongrPga-
tionalist Rochester N Y
-
TIIE SUNDAY SCHOOL'
---- --
LESSON I 2ND QUARTER OCT 6 -
OEN 37: 1236
tultleu Test: The Patriarchs MOVt ta
with Envy Sold Joseph into Egypti
but Ciod Was with Him—Ants VI I:
—Can't Devolve Gad
(' 1729
(according to margins
of our Bible Tn
s) p or eleven years after
Jacob's retura from Padan-aram
Place--liebron twenty miles south ot
Jerusalem the home of Lusa The cave
'r Niachpelah and the Oaks of Ntantre
11ng to I him place
Isaac-16S years oh! Twelve Year b"
fore his death A blind feeble old man
Jacolt—About MS years old with twelve
cons and one or more daughters
Joseph- 17 years old and Beniamin
Or 11 years Joseph lett Padan-aram when
ur 7 years obi
LIFE OF JOSEPH
First Stet): ills Ancestral Inheritance—
Joseph was born in Padan-artm B
1735 (according- to Essher) and was the
eldest son Of Jaerth and his beloved Rach-
el From his father and grandmother Ro-
l a kah he would naturally inherit a ten-
dency to worldliness and sharp bargain-
ing bordering' on (leeeit and an eager
(lesire for wealth Constancy Persist-
ence dogged tenacity is certainly the
striking featiire of Jacobs character
Second Step: Family Intitieneet4—These
like his ancestral traits were an inter-
mingling of good and evil The househobl
mite composed of lihi blind and feeble
gran(1 tathPr Saar uk father his three
wives (Rachel his mot)er being dead)
I heir ten sons much older than 1 oseph
and his younger brother Benjamin a boy
or I() or II years Joseph's tirst 'seven
years were spent in the home Of Laban
e'here the Influences were far f 14 favor
able The older boys had all thl youth-
ful training in this atmosphere Their
relatives in Ilaran were none too pious
Third it His Position in the Family
—Another series of helps and hindrances
arose frmn his father's intense love for
him There is no better intilWitee around
boy than the deep love of his parents
wisely expressed "Ills father's love"
says Rev Armstrong Black "drew out
the liner characteristics of the boy as
sunlight opens out a flower" But this
love for the ((rat-tarn of his best-loved
wife led him to partiality Ile distin-
guished this son above all the others by
coat Of many colors: probably like
those represented in the lately diseovered
tomb of Beni-liassan in Egypt long
richly mliNtidered robes lit various pat-
terns and colors which seem to bo pro-
(bleed by sewing together small pieces of
dirreront colors lierodotus describes one
sent as u present by a Iiing of EgYPt
Whirl) "had it Vt I amber Of tigunH of
animals interwoven into its fabric and
NV A !a embroidered With gold and tree
wool" tilerodotus3:12) This vas probably
giVen as a sign that he had chosen Jo-
seph to be his successor as head of the
clan
Fourth Step: Daily Labor--joseph did
10t live in idleness but worked on tho
Tarot like the others Daily tasks are of
the utmost importance in training chil-
dren They are "the sic-ed plot of the
manly virtues" In that school may be
learned nearly all the virtues when the
smallest acts are done with the highest
motives
Fifth Step: Dreams and Vision
Sept' dreamed two drearitS find related
them to the family Both of them repre-
sented himself at the head ot the chin
and toter over all They grew not so
much out of his ambition as out of his
Prespeets IS the heir being the eldest
A)11 of the beloved Rachel The coat of
many colors would confer the hope tha'
he was to be the heir Ile may have
thought how much better many things
would Ito if he could only manage affairs
Ito dreamed that he had (lie power "His
soul foresees and foreshadows its OWn
imwer in dreams: "Something said to
Josevb that he was a better man than his
brethren and that given time and
chance they would bow down to hint ono
awl all Ile (tit and knew that his day
WaS coming and he showed how strong
he was in the way he handled the future
in dream vision"—Rev Armstrong Black
Sixth Step: A Youthful Attempt at Reform-11ke
most earnest young Chris-
tians Joseph made an attempt to reform
some of the evils he suw among his older
brothers They would not of course lis-
ten to him and he reported them to his
father Joseph's brothers hated him
heartily for what he did but it doubtless
nnide them more careful
"We are not obliged to suppose that Jo-
seph was a gratuitous talebearer or that
when he carried their evil report to their
father he was actuated by a prudish cen-
sorious or in any w-ity unworthy spirit
And no One can tell vhat torture
that pure young soul may have endured
In Iho remote pastures when left alone t)
withstand day after day the outrages of
the coarse linserilp111011S
SoVelith ElitialSted With a Difficult
Nlission—Vs 12-22 The ten brothers had
wandered some seventy miles away front
home with their flocks Perhaps to kott
them sepa-ato from the Hocks belonging
IC 'Sam! Perhaps because there was
some land there 'whelping to the family
through Abraham Perhaps the pastur-
age WaS heitvr and their oWn had been
exhausted Possibly they were willing to
get heyond the ritteisin of their father
and Joseph in pursuing the conduct they
enJoYcd
Eighth Step: Sold Into Slavery--Vs
"They Ftript Jowl))) of
coat'' It WaS the sign of his super-
iority and the favoritism of their father
They would simw It to their father to de-
ceive him
The Wronged Father—Vs 29-:1i1
returned unto the pit" Iteuie
planned to rescue Joseph and semi
11rn home safely at soen EIS his brothers
Lad pot him lie probably went into an-
other Part Of the field t0 fittiold to the
sheep and to draw the rest away from
the pit Vhen he returned he found hes
brothor gone "And he rent his clothes"
The Oriental sign of grief
Beware of Little Thing4
The Monon News Warns its rcarierA
to beware of little things and a3
speaking front experience it says: "A
black seed no larger than a pinpoint
will grow an onion that may taint the
breath enough to break up a be-
trothal ruin a school and shatter thl
good intentions of a sewing circle"—
Indianapolis News
WISE OR OTHERWISE
Misery Clumps a lot of stones on the
roaa SilerPSS
It isn't the 2:10 horse that traveli
the fill idlest in a day
A woman has got to lihe a man be-
fore she will trust him
There are a lot of unsafe bridges ea
the road to prosperity
Sume outwarilly hautlsome people
are deformed on the insble
Men attribute their overstrained
mental condition to 1ri11iancy
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Peters, S. H. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1901, newspaper, October 4, 1901; Garber, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2077908/m1/3/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.