The Guthrie Daily Star (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 148, Ed. 1 Friday, August 30, 1912 Page: 5 of 8
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FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 30, 1912.
THE GUTHRIE STAR
PAGE FIT!
MRS. JAMES A. REED OF MISSOURI
i
PROGRAM FOR
THREE DAYS
LM PICNIC
Here is Program.
The following will be the tentative
program of the three days picnic and
I^abor Day celebration to be held In
j Mineral Wells park, Saturday, Sun-
day and Monday next, under the aus-
pices of the Socialists and Labor Un- j
Ions of Guthrie.
The Women's Chamber of Com- j
merce have the exclusive rights to
serve lunch and other refreshments j
during the entire picnic.
Arrangements have been completed j
with the original Boston Bloomer !
Girl'g Baseball club to match a game J
with the Guthrie club for Sunday and |
Monday afternoons, game to be call- J
ed at 4 p. m.
Adler's Orchestra will furnish the
music for Sunday afternoon and all
day Monday.
Saturday.
2:00 p. m.—D. Cobb, Socialist speak-
er.
8:00 p. m.—Hon. William H. Murray.
Sunday.
1:30 p. m.—Band concert
2:00 p. m.—Sermon by a Guthrie I
minister.
4:00 p. m.—Ball game
6:00 p. m.—Refreshments.
7:30 p. m.—Band concert.
8:00 p m.—Rev. Wilson Woodrow,
Socialist.
Mo"day.
10:00 a. m.—Sports; varied.
12:00 m. —Refreshments.
1:39 p. m.—Band concert.
2:00 p. m.—Mon. Henry S. Johnston, j
Labor Day speaker.
4:00 p. m.—Ball game.
7:00 p. m.—Band concert.
8:00 p. m.—D Cobb, Socialist.
John Golobie, W. T. Fields,
and Judge A. H. Boles will be mas-
ters of ceremonies during the picnic.
r
VERIFIED
H5T7EV
puBui
xoTi
TMAT3 WHAT
•JMEV AUt
3AV J
/Pnnvrlfrht )
OKU. FLOUR
JUST AS GOOD
AS
I s: « M a Jt « « M M « « «
i H
it POINTED PARAGRAPHS ti
ti
st t: a si ti it ti ti tt it ti ti it a
ss a
SI POINTED PARAGRAPHS. O
a a
a a a a a a ss a a a a a a a a
The
also.
kicker is usually headBtrong
Love levels all thlngis—when it is
! on the level.
What Sherman said about war also
applies to politic®.
0«r/x«fjr/j mw.Af,
Mrs. James A. Reed Is the wife of the Junior I nited States senator (ron
Missouri, and during her flrBt season In
friends.
Washington she has made man]
Among the resolutions passed by
the state convention of the MaBter Ba-
kers' Association just closed In Guth-
Everybody is requested to bring j rie, the following will be found of
their lunch baskets on Sunday and vital interest to all patriotic Oklaho-
remaln on the grounds all day; plen- jmans:
ty of drinking water, best on earth. | Resolution adopted by the Master
The Dry Goods, Clothing Boot and i Bakers' Association of Oklahoma at
Shoe stores will all close at 12 noon, , their annual convention held at Guth-
Monday, Labor Day. rie, Oklahoma, August 21-22, 1912:
All banks and the Guthrie clearing j WHEREAS: It has been reported,
house will be closed all day Monday, | by the press and by letter that the
Master Bakers' Association of New
York City has passed a resolution
saying they will only use Minnesota
wheat flour hereafter in their baking
The women of Logan county should ! in New York City. Now, therefore,
remember the meeting of the Womens j we, the Master Bakers' Association of
Auxiliary to the Farmers' Institute j Oklahoma in annual convention as-
If a woman doesn't want to
married It Is a sign that she is.
It's not consistent to speak ill
a man if you know him well.
Some men would rather run
office than earn a decent living.
be
for
Labor Day.
WOMEN'S MEETING SATURDAY.
Advertise in The Daily Star
and get Results
at City Hall, Saturday at 2:30 p. m.
An Interesting program has been pre-
pared and the matter of exhibits at
the fa/11 fair will be discussed. All
are urged to be present.
sembled protest against the passage
of such a resolution as a reflection
upon the quality of flour made from
Oklahoma wheat. Based on many
year6 of experience, our observation?
and from our frequent laboratory
THREE MORE DAYS TO PAY PAV- tests, we unhesitatingly declare that
ING TAX; CALL AT OFFICE OF i flour made from Oklahoma wheat is
THE CITY CLERK. 48t3. {equal to any flour made from any
I wheat grown in any state in the nn-
jion.
RESOLVED: That a copy of this
resolution be furnished the various
trade journals and the president of
the Master Bakers' Association of
New York City.
C. E. Hudspeth was In from Rose
Hill yesterday looking after business
at the court house.
Charles Wagner came In from Ills-
mark and spent yesterday with his
Guthrie friends.
The poorer the sermon the longer
It is.
Better a woman with rosy cheek®
than a man with a rosy nose.
Many a girl can draw a beau who
knows nothing about archery.
Same people seem to get a lot of
pleasant out of not having any fun
in life.
It's no trouble for a slow man to
exceed the speed limit when he starts
down hill.
It oftn happens that when a man
knows his duty he tries to stave it off
by seeking advice.
If you intend to do a mean thing
! wait till tomorrow; but if you are
j going to do a noble thing do it now.
HIS CHOICE.
"This enterprise is a promising I
one."
"Is It? But what I'm looking for Is
a paying proposition."—Baltimore
American.
HARDLY FAIR.
BIGGER POULTRY PROFITS
It's no dlagraoe If yoor fowl® get I
Ion**—but it la ft ibiuue tolet tncTn |
STAY LOU8YJ Don't fool with |
home-mads •taft, or time try-
ing unknown down. GET UMCK
AJSD BOHE RESULTS by using
CONKEY'S
LICE POWDER_
25 eon U boyi ft food, 11 bornl-ilied
t*ix. It l<po«luv<' aeitth tolloe.
The cauliflower's a useful thing,
And no one seems to doubt it;
Yet of its praises we don't sing,
And no one raves about it.
Itox. 11 iiponuvr ue in |
ti oka, eto. Equally eflootlfe for I
<£22 1
up the ooopl Abaolutely harwlOM
5, to even the smallest chick. Baity .
to apply and doee the bualneee I
or your money buck. Oet a
package to<laj.
Our $1 Low Shoe
Sale Starts Today
Now for big bargains in summer Footwear for Women
and Children.
People who are prepared to snap them up will get far
more value than they even expected to get for their
money.
I
By Common Garden Sage a Sim-
ple Remedy fur Rundruff, Falling
'Faded, Gray Hair.
The old idea of using sage for
darkening the hair is again coming
into vogue. Our grandmothers had
dark, gloscsy hair at seventy-five,
while our mothers are gray before j
they are fifty.
MADE 11 RAIDS
AT THE SPIflE TIME
All Our Odds and Ends Must Go
It costs us money to stick to this policy but we cheer-
fully pay the price for the prestige of always having
lines of fresh Shoes of the best value and correct styles.
SEE OUR WINDOW
1
Root out the old pocketbook, when it can do so much
for so little.
Remember your choice of this lot of Oxfords for $1.00
one price; SHOE df m e k.
'The Home of Good Shoes "
Two raids, carefully planned and
Our grandmothers | pulled off within the same minute,
kept their hair soft and glossy with j were made by the police last night
a "Sage Tea," which also restored [ with the result that a total of about
the natural color. |forty bottl«9 of beer and some wWsky
One objection to usiag such a were seized. The joints are on Har-
prepratior was the trouble of mak- r" °n and Oklahoma avenues.
ing it. TAis objection has been ov-
ercome by the Wyeth Chemical Com- sEVE\ DAUGHTERS ENOUGH FOR
pany of New York, who has placed MAN.
on the market a suffperior prepara-
tion of Sage, combined with Sulphur j The R€V jo)m w. Cavanaugh, the
and other valuable remedies for dan- presjdent of Notre Dame college, tellB
druff, itching scalp, and thin, weak, Lf a pr|e8t Who was giving a lecture
failing hair. ■ 0n the evil of great wealth. In the
The beauty of the hair depends 1 aU(jience was a man the 'priest knew,
more on its rich, even shading than ; man wag the fatjier 0f 6even girls
anythln gelse. Don't have dry, harsh and the iecturer pointed to this man
faded hair, -when a simple, harmless | as an example.
remedy will bring back the color in "Think," said the prieBt, "of being
a few days; and don't be tormented ^e proud father of seven daughters,
with dandruff itching scalp and loose! Think who Is happier—the man with
falling hairs. "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- a mini0n dollars or the man who is
pliur Hftir Remedy will quickly cor- the father of seven daughters.
rect these troub'es, and give color, "I will ask you, Mr. Sheldon, who
strength and beauty to your hair. dQ you think is the happier?" said
Get a fifty cent bottle from your the priest pointing to the subject of
druggist today, and prove this to his argument.
your own satisfaction. All druggists The man arose and said: "Father,
sell it, under guarantee that the mon j think that a man with seven daugh-
ey will be refunded If the remedy is ters % the happier. A man with a
not exactly as represented. : million dollars worries for more. A
ispeclal Agents, Owl Drug Stor« > man wjth seven daughters never does
1 104 East Oklahoma Avenue. that."—K. C. Star.
Watch
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Hornaday, W. H. The Guthrie Daily Star (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 148, Ed. 1 Friday, August 30, 1912, newspaper, August 30, 1912; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275704/m1/5/: accessed May 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.