Guthrie Daily News. (Guthrie, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 1435, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 18, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
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(1UTHK1K NKWJS: 0UTHK1K. OKLAHOMA ThKKlTOKY, MAKCH iv I*'.M.
#rt.*+uv«- ''"•"■hiw cotorth ar.aii ... line Ail
Vi/iu Vi)4iu/i liint ih uecenMirv to victory khio k*«t>
iu <le middle of de road." and vote for
Martin for mayor.
FOUNDED Al'KIli 22ND.
•llliSCKll'TION ItATKH.
daily:
•lit: month ( 'ity)
One month by mail
Three months.
Sixth months* ....
One year
wekkx.y:
Mix months.
tme year
* Mi
tin
EVIL NAUTICAL OMLNS.
1 'lb
;l in)
(i (10
1 IN)
ItAIIiKOAI) TIMK TABLE.
ATCHISON*. TOPF.KA .V SANTA EE.
south bound.
No. 4(M> Chicago ExprwM. a:J.'>A. M
No. uw Minnioiiri ltiver Kxprenn. : :-jii 1. 31.
No. 4fc.' I .oral l-'reifrht
No. i«ii Local Freight • • M.
No r.n looh not run north of (Jiithric.
south bound.
No. 40.'{ Trias ExprcsH 11:10 P.M.
No. io? Oklahoma l-.xpress |\ M.
No. 423 Local Frcitfht. 1:0SI'. M.
KOCIKTY NOTICES.
OUTHHIE I.OIXIK NO. i J. O
* meet* every Monday
evening in the
Viet or Tin i Ming on Harrison avenue. Visiting
hrothern invited to attend.
John Hooan, N. (J.
('llah. Met/., Sim 'v.
I'lilhK* I liut Sullora Dreml >lrri it Ml*. <i •
Hfrprnla, s|i;u k« itml t'limitum*.
About Vineyard sound there are num-
erous legends of a famous Indian iriant.
It is said that the rocks at Seaconnet
:ire the remains of liis wife, whom he
threw into the sea there. Me turned
his children into fishes, and, emptying
>ut his pipe one day. formed Nantucket
ut of its ashes. This latter story of
Nantucket's source must account like-
wise for the well-known story of that
old Nantucket captain who was accus-
tomed to make his reckonings by tast-
ing the earth brought up on sounding.
One day the lead was dipped in some
earth brought on board ship from the
island, and the captain, after tasting,
leaped from his berth in great excite-
ment, exclaiming: "Nantucket's sunk,
and here we are tight over old Marm
llackett's garden.'' Naturally lie would
O. F. recognize the taste of tobacco ashes.
DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEES
tf.nuiToniAi < KvritAi, committee
( . W. Uonld, • 'It'll,
Joseph Wishy,
J. I>. Dent,
J. I>. F. .leiiniiiK*.
J. Wrights man,
John It. ('lark.
John It. ('lark. He
<'. A. Qilbraitn,
I J. Jolmnon,
J oin Philips,
Wright ChriHtain
11on Whorton,
S. l\ Brooks, J. S. Morrison
K. J. Kay. J. W. Turner.
11. V. Cummins. K. K. Dixon,
L. (1. Pitman, John Moore,
J. A. Sampsrl.
COUNTY CKNTKA1. COMMITTEE.
J. A. Sampsel, ('h'n
I rank Kllis,
It. 1.. Hancock.
Wm. brown.
•lawns Hobinson,
K. 11. Nugent,
s. T. Hntner,
A. I.. Hunt.
H. W. Ilathbone,
T. It. MoMurry.
M. Torrance,
(ieortfe Tod«i,
Kd Alsop.
H. W. Illckum,
■I. M. Johnson.
I!. ('. Dodd,
Joseph (looeli,
Phil Leinmon,
A. Jj. Cockruni,
(leorge 11. Clayton
NVm. Kicker.*,
Wm. Draper,
11. F. Kyle,
" M. Gill,
John Simmons.
COUNTY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
J. A. Sampsel, ('h'n, It. S. Kcavos, Seen
John Simmons, S. T. Hutne .
Phil Lennnmi, I . ( Dodd
Wm. Gill.*
some
\ pro*
A (it'THKtE clerk was Riiowi i,
hose to a yonng lady yesterday
needing that rather cmbanassed
"How much are they
Only seventy.five cents.'
"They come pretty high, don't they'r"
"Yob. b b but you are pretty tall
Miss."
Mermaids work dire mischief, whether
in the shape of the famous Lorelei of
the I!hine, or as frequently seen by
sailors, and are sometimes regarded ab
the sign of coining disaster. Naturally,
many terrible accidents have followed
the discovery *>( one of these beautiful
creatures, and as people are always
waiting to put cause and effect to-
gether the result has been this belief.
Tales about the sea serpent are grow-
ing too common, but together with
everything else of a kindred nature the
appearance of this monster is asso-
ciated with impending disaster in tlif
mind of a sailor.
A sailor always regards the presence
of a shark about u ship a most fatal
omen to the sick on board. The high-
est exultation ever witnessed on a man-
of-war was occasioned by harpooning
:i shark that was hanging about while
a favorite was sick: but the appearance
of a shark is often fatal to the life of
a bather in the ocean as well as a sail-
or upon it, and is quite as much to be
dreaded.
(•hosts of Jill sorts and kinds prefer
traveling by water to almost any other
mode, and our own Cotton Mather tells
lis of a specter that visited a colonial
ship, carrying off in a ghostly canoe
seven of the crew at a time, lie also
says: "Many persons who have died at
sea have been seen, within a day of
their death, by friends at home." As
late as the seventeenth century they
tell a story of a ship about to sail for
Kngland that had as passengers a
strange man and a girl of great beauty.
So mysterious were their actions that
she inked, they were supposed to be demons, and
replied, many feared to sail in the ship. The
vessel sailed on Friday and never
reached her destination, but appeared
as narrated after a storm that lasted
three days.
Near and inure near the ship came on
With all her broad sal's spread:
The night grew thick, hut a phantom lij'ht
Around tier path was sited.
Ami ilie waters shuddered us on they came,
For against the wind she sped
Longfellow also tells a similar story
in his "Phantom Ship," while all lovers
of good music will remember the story
HoniRr Martin will certainly b«
mayor of Guthrio. The railroad com-
pany. ol' which he is president, now has
two corps of surveyors at work running
linos between Guthrie and Ooft'ervilU
Will the (hithrieites turn down tuck m
man as that- The democratic eandi-
ilateii not in it union lie can beooiu* "f.1lhe."1!''nl ,""U'l"\"!n "
president of a like railroad and put at
least three corps of stirvoyora in the
field Oklahoma Times Journal.
IN HANDS OF THE SHERIFF.
Adversity comes when people leiut e\
peet it. Emperors have been born
only to yield. Rothschilds, as a finan-
cier, was equal to Napoleon us a com-
mander. Miekens was considers*!,
in his time master of literature. \Nul
ter Holmes wrote poetry which ha>
been translated into many languages.
Thacherv read his verses and com phi
cently smiled. Uneasiness only comes
to those who court it. In time it is
possible that usury money len
ders, may bo throttled. Demos-
thenes was considered as an orater
Ciecro, eighteen hundred years ago.
made a better declamation than toda\
records, and Kgeptian Obelisks were
erected. Some of them yet staid tin
derail kinds of weather. Hieroglyphic.-
were cut in them, and the symbolic
words yet point and direct wayfaring
people. Like little drops and grains
of sand, these words grow in truth
fulness. Thousands of years ago Christ
came on this earth, so biblical histon
teaches-only to be crucified. The
money lenders here now, like the shy-
lock in the play of the Merchant of
N eniee. demand their pound of flesh,
but justice still stands and says if you
spill one drop of blood, you'll be held
accountable.
"KEEP IN DE MIDDLE OF DE
ROAD."
The people of Guthrie arc followm::
"the straight and narrow path" which
leads to glory. All they have to do i
to keep "in de middle of de road."
The feotpads of politics lurk in the
byways. The party harlots solicit men
from the alleys and the shadows. Safety
from temptation and from harm lies' m
de middle of de road."
Turn neither to the right nor to the
left, (to straight ahead. Gather re
cruits whenever the recruits want to
join the procession. Hut don't stop for
them. Don't stop for anything. Keep
going, and keep going in de middle of
de road.
The good to be reached is salvation
The prize which lianas at the end of the
road is Guthrie's prosperity. The one
way—the sure way to reach tlie goal
and secure the prize is to keep "in de
middle of de road.''
The battle cry is Guthrie." The
banner which has been flung to the
breeze bears the motto, "The elimina
tion of polities from municipal govern
ment " The cause is a holy ons. The
I here is a superstition that a ship no
longer seaworthy, just before breaking
up between the strains of wind and
wave, has been known to give forth
wailing sounds like moaning. The
sailors can not account for this, but he
knows too well its import, and loses
heart at the melancholy sound. This
is also noticed by Cooper in his "lied
Hover, " where one of the characters is
made to say; "A ship which is about
to sink makes her lamentations just
like any other human l eing." Boston
Transcript.
ONE OF THE BLESSINGS OF AGE.
Il in I lit* I'rell) I.net* I up W lileli Ih Permit*
iimI to liray Hairs.
An optimistic young woman declares
that the compensations of old age are
far more than its trials. And chief on
her list of reasons why one should wel-
come gray hairs and hail wrinkles with
joy is the lace cap.
The lace cap of this season bears out
this claim made for it. It is the dainti-
est bit of headgear sh >wn in any milli-
nery shop. It is airier than the airiest
theater toque ever made, and more
delicate than the finest and whitest of
babies' hoods. It is a little "fluff"' of
lace, with a bunch of pink ribbons
somewhere near the front and a little
laee butterfly rising from them, or a
bewildering concoction of lace and
lavender silk, with perhaps a violet or
two looking as though some youthful
member of the family had dropped a
llower on •'grandma's" head All the
delicate shades that bring out the
beauty of soft gray hair are used in
i-ombination with the lace, and any
clever needlewoman can make one in
mi hour X. V. World.
GEMS OF
THOUGHT.
nnstunc\ <
Tin:secret of sufatas
urpose. Disraeli.
\\iivi is eivlilz&tlonV 1 answer. Hit
..t . f good flymen.—Emerson.
W I. ought iJOtiO judge of men as ..
i ii iv or sffltoJ, TIT first sight l.i
w persons hayj£i'o\irage toupp"
>od as they fefmv ft re. .!. « a i
i hath made man upright, but
have sought out many inventions,
.de mstes.
A sirmiKf IMmit.
In the island of Reunion is a plant
known us the wild orange, which pro-
duces a fruit, green ut first, afterward
bluish, and verging into purple as it
ripens. This has been tes'.ed and
found to make a beverage in every
wa\ equal to coffee ami at a much
lower price. The product is called
* niussaenda." and can be used
alone or mixed with pure cotfee. It is
announced that about twenty-four
thousand acre, of this plant are now
being cultivated. It is most likely,
however, that chicory, more than cof-
fee. will suffer from the Introduction
oi "mussaenda."
POISONING AS A FINE ART.
Itallaua of Oldau Oars look I if* in Maay
skillful Way*.
The art of poisoning in tin*** day* is
not cultivated with /est or skill. Even
in modern romantic and melodramatic
literature the poisoner works in what
the. Itoston Journal enlls a crude fash-
ion; his one idea is to jfet the poison
into the. stomach of the victim. De-
tection is almost inevitable and pun-
ishment follow*. Italians of the fif-
teenth. sixteenth and the first half of
the seventeenth century showed most
surprising skill. Italian reuiorers of
enemies were welcome at many a for-
eign court, for they were subtle. *ur*
and, at the same time, well bred.
There was the attempt to kill Louis
XI. by rubbing an ointment on the cor
l er of the altar steps on which he
went to kneel. Gloves and bouquets
removed mighty m*?ii and delicate
women. Valets pricked their masters
as they served them in their toilet.
Nails steeped in aconite put an end to
petty quarrels. Henry of Castile wore
boots one day and never took them off
again. A king of Grenada should
have refused the adornment of a
variegated royal jacket. There was
a jealous woman who smile 1 as
she saw her rival eat the half
of a delicious bird that had
touched the poisoned side of the knife
used by a kissable hand. A t«ivh
borne before a cardinal lighted him to
dusty death. Perfumed ducats slew a
creditor before he could sign the re-
ceipt. There was poison iu the pom-
mel of the saddle that bore a powerful
queen. It is said that Henry the em-
peror and Pope C.'einent XIV. were
poisoned in a draught of tL* holy
eucharist. There were still mofe sub-
tle devices, too horrible to tell; but
searchers into the dark yet splendid
history of the renaissance and students
of the Elizabeth drama may Hud
therein many a shudder.
Vet there is subtle poiboniiig even in
these degenerate days. The careless
plumber or the greedy landlord is. in
his way. a lessener of the race. There
are wall papers as efficacious as the
deathly books told of in the "Arabian
Nights'' or by Dumas the elder. There
are public rooms where foul air induces
diseases. IJut these methods are slow
and bungling not in keeping with our
boasted civilization. The smooth, the
subtle Italian was more merciful—that
is. when lie merely accommodated a
master and did not work for his own
pleasure.
ALWAYS COOL IN A CRISIS.
C'«HMUS Agnlit Ston«'« Caliu K«qM«al for
Ailvlee Wli«u His Team Kan Away.
There is one of the employes of the
census bureau in Washington who is
regarded by the W ashington Post as
the most matter-of-fact man iu the
government service. One would scarce-
ly call him a hero in the usual sense of
the term, but he evidently has in him
some of the stuff such as heroes are
made of. and there are occasions when
he would probably rise to the point of
the sublime, though, truth to say, he
has not done so up to date. His phlegm
Is of the teutonic variety, such as
would probubly lead him to continue
the careful indexing of his Held notes
In the midst of a shipwreck or a boiler
explosion, and if there should ever be
an earthquake or a collapse of the
building in which he was working he
would as likely as not remain in his
chair while the floor w as going through
and ask some of his fellow workers to
hand him a ruler or shove over the
paper weights to keep hi* notes to-
gether. I'p to date the worst story
that has been told of him was laid
in western Kansas during the
last year's field work. With an-
other agent of the department he
was driving around the country col-
lecting data. On one afternoon they
got a pair of spirited horses and drove
out on one of the long, level cross sec-
tion roads. After awhil« Mr. Stone
asked for the lines. He did not know
much about driving, but Prof. \IcOil-
len. who was driving, handed over the
ribbons. The horses, feeling a strange
hand, started off briskly and cont inued
to increase t lit- cadency in a sort of
geometrical progression. Faster they
went and faster, till at length Mr.
Stone, who was holding the lines prim-
ly in front of him, not unlike a society
girl the first time she tries to handle a
T-cart. turned his head slowly in tfce
direction of his companion and said:
"Professor, do not these horse* seem
to be going rather rapidly?"
"Ves." replied the professor, with
equal calmness, seeing that there was
but little dauger on the long, straight
road. "Ves. Mr. Stone, it strikes me
that they are running away with you."
"Ah!" was the unmoved respouse.
"In such a ease, professor, what would
you advise a man to do?"
Itfi'llu t'uUlii' KIuIkm*.
These popular establishments are
described by Oeorge s 1,avard iu the
Nineteenth Century. A public kitchen
for the working classes was inaug-
urated in istiti by a Oerman woman,
llan Morgenstein. She has estab
lished many of these kitchens, each
one having a public dining room, com-
fortabh warmed ami furnished, and i
supplied with the daily papers. Kach i
kitchen, supplying perhaps from three
hundred to four hundred people with I
daily meals, is managed by a local ,
committee, the whole scheme being
under the control of a central council, j
All the paid cooks arc. on the premises :
by six iu the morning, and the tege
tables und meat have been brought in j
before them. Waste of any kind is I
strictly forbidden. A subscription of'
three,, thousand two hundred ami
tifty dollars was suiticient to start this
scheme; the reserve fund set aside for
providing new kitchens increases
every year, while the council pays fair
\n a^res and is able to pension off its old
servants, l or a sum varying from
three to*ix cents the Herlin workman
can obtain a satisfactory meal at any
of these restaurants. A dinner for
four cents allows a basin of thick, sub-
stantia] t lernian soup, a plate of veg-
etable;- and a plate of pudding and
a ioU of bread in addition costs a lit
tie brer one-quarter uf a ge ui
A BEAR'S PFVFNOF
An Olil Orluljr l.lrt In Wall for Ilia Po -
alble TranaffreMor.
Mr. The« dore Roosevelt, writing of
(Tiaclv bears in his book, "The Wilder-
ness Hunter." relates a story told him
by Or. Merrill, of the I'nited States
army. "A remarkable incident," Mr.
Heoeevelt ealla it. Or. Merrill, in
company with an old hunter, was fol-
lowing an elk trail ill a deep, narrovf
canyon.
On turning a corner of the canyon,
the two men were charged on by an
old she grizzly, so close that it was
only by good luck that one of their
hurried shots disabled her and sent her
tumbling over a bank, where she was
easily finished.
They found that she had been lying
directly across the game trail on a
smooth, well-beaten patch of bare
earth, which looked as if it had heeu
dug up. refilled, and trampled down.
Kxatniiiiug this patch curiously, they
saw a bit of hide only partially cov-
ered at one end, and on digging they
found the body of a well-grown grizzly
cub. Its skull had heeu crushed and
the brains licked out. and there were
signs of other injuries.
The hunter* pondered long over this
strange discovery, and hazarded many
guesses as to its meaning. At last they
decided that probably the cub had
been killed and its brains eaten, either
by some old grizzly or by a cougar;
tlrnt the mother had returned and
driven away the murderer, and that
she had then buried the body and lain
above it. waiting to wreak her ven-
geance on the first passer -by.
FARM PRODUCTS ABROAD.
Hoksks are very cheap in Australia.
The horse markets are glutted with
animals offered, for which there is no
demand. Similar reports come from
(beat Britain. Indeed the depression
In the prices of horses seems to be
world wide.
A kink stud of hackney horses has
been established at lluda-Pestli, Hun-
gary, by a wealthy gentleman named
Wahrmann. Among the foundation
animals are thirteen marcs from the
renowned Itrookfleld stud of Mr. Bur*
dett ('onIts.
Tiu agricnltu ral department of India
has adopted what is there spoken of
as "a new idea." and which consists
in publishing for general distribution
monographs, similar to the fanners'
bulletins of the I'nited States depart-
ment of agriculture.
1' a an Kits in all the parts of Kurope
which suffered from drought last year
find it difficult to provide forage to
keep their live stock through the win-
ter. In I'ranee and Germany, twigs of
trees and vines are made to contribute
to the subsistence of cattle and sheep.
I'.mtki) States Commercial Aokxt
Smith reports that the Rhine vintage
of was a full one-half crop. This
is a gratifying amount, as a three-
fourths vintage is a rarity and a full
vintage remarkably scarce. It is ex
pected on all sides that the Rhine wins
of 1993 will be flue iji quality.
At Death's Door MONET TO LOAN
Farms and City
Piopertv for Sale.
Blood Poisoned After Ty*
phoid Fever
A Marvelous Cure by Hood'i After
All Else Failed.
L.pHeba
"Buxkixs used to think the theater
was demoralizing," remarked the man-
ager. "Has he changed his views?"
l4Yea. 1 converted him." "How?"
*8ent him a pass."— Washington Star.
Bert--"I don't sec any use in this
geography lesson." Mat tie — "Why,
you goosey, it's the greatest use. It
tells you where to go when you can't
get there, and describes the country
ind all that. If we had no geography,
Jve'd get lost all over the world."—
Harper's Young People.
captain Sweeney, U. 8. A., Han Diego
Cab, says: "Shiloh'* Catarrah Remedy
Is the first medicine I have ever faund
that would do me good." Price 50c. Sold
by F. B. Lillle ft Co. (4
"I was affected with sore eyes, caused
from impure blood, and was nearly blind
for seven years. About ihc first of Jan-
uary last I commenced using Brown's
Sarsapnrilhi and Dandelion with Iodide
of Potassium. After using five bottles,
my eyes were restored to their normal
coudition. I know Brown's Sarsaparilla
did tin* work. Dr. C. S. Wainwright pre-
scribed it for me, T. M. Fosteu, Wake-
ton, Texas." For sale bv F. B. Lillie & Co.
There is nothing iu this world that
gives such perfect satisfaction for nil
blood disorders as Beggs' Blood Purifier
and Blood Maker. It dries up blotches
and pimples on the face, heals old sores
ami eruptions, makes u yellow skin (dear
and transparent, and keeps the bowels
and liver in perfect condition. Sold and
warranted by all druggists.
Cure fur Headmhe.
Asa remedy for all forms of headache
Electric Bitters has proved to be the
very best. It effects a permanent cure,
and the most dreadful habitual sick
headaches yield toils influence. We urge
all who are afflicted to procure a bottle
and give this remedy a fair trial. In
cases of habitual constipation Electric
Hitters cures by giving the needed tone
to the bowels, and few eases long resist
the use of this medicine. Try it once.
Large bottles only ."W cents, at sseatonian
Drug Co., and F. B. Lillie (t Co. (2)
Hurllm'* Arlmi Salve.
The best salve in the world foi cuts
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
eorns. and all akin eruptions, and posi-
tively cures piles, or no pay roquired. It
is guarantied to give perfect satisfaction,
v>r inouev refunded. Price 25 cents per
ooi. For sale bv Scntoniun Drug Co.
aud F. B. Lillie & Co.
f|pa<la< hf and Imligrstion
cau be cured If you don't believe it try
Beggs Little (iiant Pills. Sold and war-
ranted by all druggists.
Hale IMp W mted
ti.no to $15.00 per day at home celling
Lightning Plater and plating jewelry,
watches, tableware, etc, Every house
has goods needing plating. So experi-
ence; no capital; no^talkina. Some
agents are melius; a day. Perma-
iWJBrtt Uil.- Address W K Del no k
mr rf jfTOBfo, obft. j
"C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"Dear Sirs: Twenty-five years ago 1 had a
bilious fever, and later it turned into typhoid
fever, and for Ave weeks I lay like one dead, bul
at last 1 pulled through and got up around. I
soon discovered on my left leg Just above the
kaee a small brown spot about as big as a three
cent piece, which puffed up but did not hurt me
or feel sore. I did not pay any attention to it
until two years after, when It commenced to
spread and have the appearance of a ring worm.
It itched and burned and I commenced doctor-
ing. but to no avail. I
Cot Only Momentary Relief,
And sometime!) not even that. I could not sleep
Lights, and on account of the Itching 1 scratched
the spot until the blood would run. In hot
nealher my elbows and all my joints were Just
the same, and what 1 have suffered 1 cannot de-
scribe with a pen. Last February I tried an
herb for the blood and It broke out in the worst
form of a rash all over my body. I began my
scratching, and scales would fall off. The sores
continued to discliarge and I longed to die.
Finally my husband bought a bottle of Hood's
Harsaparilla and 1 had not taken more than
half ot it before 1 began to change for the better.
1 have had four bottles.
Now I Am All Well
but two little spots on my leg. I can now sleep
and eat well and work all the time. I am M
Hdod'ss,p>Cures
years old, and the mother of eleven children,
and think I can do as much as any one my age.
My son has also taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for
dyspepsia.land has been greatly benefited by it.
1 feel very grateful for the benefit 1 received
from Hood's Sarsaparilla." Mas. I'iif.hk L,
Hai.l, Ualva, Kansas
Hood'a Pilla act easily, yet promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c.
MATRIMONIAL TROUBLES.
A Con necticut man got a divorce be
ause "the defendant would not gcV^i
n the morning, nor call this plaintiff'
nor do unything she was told."
A Nkw York wife was granted a di-
vorce because her husband threw tlu
babv at her when she hit him with the
•oal bucket for spitting on the stove.
A Missouri divorce was once granted
; ecause "the defendant goes gadding
about leaving this plaintiff supperlcss.
>r if he gets any lie has to cook it him
,elf."
In Minnesota a decree was given to
the wife because "the defendant nevei
cuts his toenails, and, being rest lev
in his sleep, scratches this plaintiff se
verely."
A Michigan wife was released be
•auxe the husband did not provide the
necessaries of life, saying "he would
not work his toenails off for any
woman."
In Pennsylvania a henpecked hus-
band was relieved from the yoke of
matrimony because "the defendant
itruck this plaintiff a violent blow
w it h her bustle."
Houses & Store Rooms
For Rent.
G. U. L1JNJ)S.
ATTORNEY8.
X W. MILLER^
Attorney at Law.
Office in Times Building, 11(5 North Sec-
ond Street,
guthrie, oklahoma;
O. R. FEGAJN,
LAWYER.
Rooms 5 anil ti,Guthrie National Bank bnili'
inn.
J. Ii. KEATON. .INO. 1). COTTKIIAI..
KKATON t ClllTfM,
Attorneys at Law.
Rooms l,:! nndBeujinniii Bid#., < >Wn-
homa uv.,opi). u. S. I,und Office.
JOSECl! WIHUY. c. U. HnttKOH.
WISHY 4 HORNOR,
ATTOHNKYS.
OCTHlllE, OKI A.
Rooms 2.1-25 over Capitol National Ha nit
PHYSICIANS. SURGEONS, ETC
Dr. PEOPLES,
DENTIST !
Oklahoma At. ami Hr«t St. lteahleiii'r, See-
(nut St. an ti Noble At.
Dr. G. F. Gotteral.
Office over Bee Hive. Residence No.
f 03Vilnsav. Calls answered (lay oi ni^ht
WISELY SAID.
It takes a g*ood salesman togvt what
he asK .
Tiik cat often gets caught twice ir
the same trap.
See the World's Fair For 15 C'eutn.
L'pon receipt of your address an.I 15
cents in postase stamps, \vc will mail
you prepaid our Souvenir Portfolio of
the World's Columbian Exposition. The
regular price is 50 cents, hut fts we want
you to have one we make the price
nominal. You will llnd it a work of art
and a thing to he prized. II contains full
page views of the great buildings, with
descriptions of same, aud is executed in
highest siyle of art. If not satisfied with
it, after you get it, we will refund the
stamps and let you keep I lie hook.
Address II. 10. Iiitki.i:> & Co ,
t Chicago, III.
Karl's Clover Root, the inn Blood
I'urilier, gives freshness anil clearness to
the complexion and cures consumption.
£>e., 50c. and *1.00. Sold hy F. B. I.illie
&Oo. _ (5)
Shiloh'* ('lift', the Great. Cough and
Croup Cure, is for sale hy us. Pocket
size contains twenty-five doses, only 26c.
Children love it. B. Lillie & Co. (3) '
FOR FIFTY YEARS
MRS. WINSLOW'S
SOOTHING SYRUP
—has been used—
by millions of mothers for their chil-
dren while teething. It soothes the
child, softens the gums, allays all pain,
cures colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhaoa.
25cts PER BOTTLE.
The Oneal Grocery
General Supplies,
(Jroccricx. Confectioni'vi/,
Feed tint! Fruit,.
Opposite I •.<>., IUI i;,i K|.
W.T. CANNON,
I SECOND ST., SOUTH OF P. O.
! w.nvifM.i keh ,y-./ k 11 ■/■: /. /•; u
Heparins a specialty Work promptly
done.
Money loaned on valuables, (Business
{Confidential.) Constantly on hand and
for sale—musical instruments, organs,
{sewing machines, revolvers, watches
J chains, rings, and every class of jewelry.
! WPAWNF.D GOODS AT BARGAINS
I
The Rugged Child
is largely an
"outdoor"
product.
!•' r e s h air
and exercise
usually pro-
duce sound
appetite and
sound sleep.
Sickly chil-
dren obtain
great benefit from
Scott's Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Ilypo-
phosphites, a fat-food rapid
of assimilation and almost
as palatable as milk.
DR. GUNN'S
ONION
r SYRUP
IF0H COUGHS,
COLDS
AND CflOUP.
grandmother's advice.
£o retain* a family ol nine children, my only reui-
I 'uy tor ('oughtf, Colds and Croup wuu onion uyrup. It
■ jum asefTc'Otivto-day as it was forty ye ars ago.
; Mow my i r tud.-hildren take Dr. On mi's Onion Syrup
vliloli is already prepared and inorp plesiant lo tli •
* te. Sold everywhere. Large hot ilea 00 oontK.
I'ako no substitute for It. There's nothing as good.
J S< l<l by \\ allure & Midler, ilrii^irtts.
DR GUNN'S
IMPROVED
UVER
PILLS
A MILD PHYSIC
ONE PILL FOR A DOSE.
°f ,h,? b0WelB ®ach d*y 1" necesnury for
S.Jlii |' ..11?6 pili""upp1y toe system lacks to
make it regular. They cure Headache, brighten the
Eyes and clear the Complexion better than cos-
oth«r"ninlJXaC'T'milaiy: neither *r p« nor mokeu as
- m Pl> T<2 convince you oi their merits we
will mall samples free, or a full box for 20cents Sold
•v#rywhere, ilosanko Mtd. Co., Philadelphia, p*.
Sold by Wallace k Muller, (lniegUU
RLQQI
CUBE5 C ONSTI PAT I ON
P. INDIGESTION,DIZZINESS
"UPTIONS ON THE SKIN
Beautifies s>cr>mp
WILL NOT
'I j'nn agreeable Laxative for the riowela;
KQ M0f1>^«L0iLMi£SK
35lciurP.B LtLlilE&eO
I
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Guthrie Daily News. (Guthrie, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 1435, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 18, 1894, newspaper, March 18, 1894; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc282069/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.