The Guthrie Daily Leader (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1915 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TITE OUTITRIlJ DAILY LEADTiflO FRTDAT OCTOBER 1 lOto.
; PAGE FOUR
T II I I) A 1 1. Y L E A l K II
eV LESLIE Q. NIBLACK
point'
jl'uulluliod from The lutl'.y Leader budd-
ing. Went Harrison avenue mid entered
t the (Juttirie poitofflce u second claws
mitlur.
MEKIBIR OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES
'Pi'f mouth hy carrier .....I .i.i
IVr'yew by currier. In advance.... 5.00
Per y&r l.y null In edvjinro 4.UU
't .' '
. . OKLAHOMA (WEEKLY) LEADER
Six months f .SO
On year 1.00
New To k ottier: N. M. Sherfled
fipeclal Atfency.
' Chicago office: N. M. Sheffield Axency
The Iycadtir reserves the right to reject
any advertising mutter Hint It may deem
improper' and not according to contrnct.
The Xeader la not responsible for nd-
Wt'aementa ordered or discontinued by
telephone.
. OXs for satiety meeting cords t
thanks obituary notices r'Hohitlond. so-
ciety and church eooluls lecture Botices.
sails for church meetings (except Sunday
er-non) are considered as advertising (
.and will l.f charged for. .
'. Hiuunevs office: No VV. Harrison.
Composing end Trese. room No. 107 V. .
("JTarrlaon. Editorial rouins So. 10" W.
. Harrison. To rrurh all departments
phone extension 75.
U7
OfAainDnAdin
is "Crumbh-proof"
there arc
six more in
Ihe -point um.
o o
The t'lilef Of Fools
The public cusser lu a mutt
That one might call lie luxe.
Ills nasty month la seldom abut
He la a peat gadzooks!
lie keys his voice up to a pitch
Where he afar is heard.
He makes hit lingual mixture rich
With many a useleas word.
The public cusser does not know
How shy ho is on bruin
He scarce has sense enough to go
In from a heavy rain.
(The public cusser will not heed
Theae llnes.'or boll with rage.
The public cuaser does not read
The editorial page!)
Health Talks
BY WILLIAM BRADY M.D.
Cartoons Of The Day
"PEACE WHEN THERE IS XO TEACE!
The Nails
'. Former Senator Lorlmor Is reported
'sitting up in tils political coffin in
s-i Illinois.'
Von Papea admits that
- Yankees are Idiotic Nor
Teutons Von Papons.
'
M Some 125000 ar.Dlauded
not
are
all
all
10000
nifinlainan at man.. ........ I.. xta...
wtStlll preparedness Is not a matter of .
"''"rooting."
' .
Let's keep this peace with the rest
fc of the world vihlle nearly alt the reg-
ular soldiers of the United Rtules nro
"In Haiti and Texas.
'. A village .philosopher rises to re-
mark (hat if you wlch to know all
about a family employ tho hired eirl
who formerly worked for it.
.AuttemP ..amended noto complains
not tlftfHvfe arc Belling mucinous but
that we'yRUIng too nnu h. Who is
to 'determl'the normal sale of muni-
tions tq yjlfgortnts? ' I
f l.li;..L.iLj.i.;ill ...i
"The death 'of 'irHes ifeir Hardlo the
British labor yiiy(Vjtremove8 a man
Whose sinceritytiiwwaMiiever doubted
end whose carer"ai)lit remendous
odds was remarkahhtfhuui'
" '-'--i- mmmmiimXt.
7 J'he governor ; of "N'ep'al -iBliouitl '"'
r-jiure!y hnvcDeimltted '"Doc" Cook to";
make -the ascent of Mount Bverest to
to the topmost pbmaube and also have .
eq to It that h! turned; the trlek. 3
Bafe view of this marvelous war
spectacle. The thought of wounds and
death Beems to have occurred to few
indeed.
The sume thing happened the other
day In New York City when a square
of the Seventh avenue surface dropped
30 feet swallowing up a trolley car
with 78 passengers a brewery truck
and everybody and everything else .
between sidewalks wllhln the space of
the disaster. Unheedful as to pos-
sible further collapses or explosions
i eopie ruxhed Ignorantly to this scene
by thousands. All these Imperiling
their lives. The dust that arose was
so thick that some who hurried from
abutting buildings fell unseeing Into
the great pILr Tho anly power that
stopped the mad dnsh of sightseers
consisted of the policemen who with
their clubs were obliged to literally
hammer them away from the vicinity
so that the rescuing officers and fire-
men could do their work.
It is always and everywhere the
same story. Is there a riot a great
conflagration a mighty flood a sen-
sational murder an explosion a vol-
canic (eruj)tion ef nature everybody
mum In person either see the thing
Itself or the scene of Its enactment
legurdljias of daAger to life and' limb. ''
1 1tli'.eiiUinnbl bl- aB. inherent quail- i
ty of human nature ooitrolluble only '
on perilous occasions liy sleru exercise
of authority by officers of the luw and
not alwnya by. this. .
I'iniilKln KlloHofy '
TIT ain't no man ahmart or good
enough f be trusted f pick yer
friiids f'r yex ixclpt yersllf! An
tiometimes even yez fizzle at it!
Inducement
Wanted People to look at our
bargains in wall-paper. We have
1000 bolts on hand that ought to
be hung Immediately.
(We went and looked at the
paper. He's right.) r
m . . . Atmi
lie Mas Kngiisn
SINCE prehistoric days the nails
have been without an Indispens-
able function. About all we uso
them for to-day is (1) opening pen-
knives ;(2) pinching out blackheads;
(3) pdHliing needles through trouser
bands; (4) scratching wherever it
; may Itch and on great provocation
(5) defending one self against an In-
furiated sister.
Fingernails' art) a nuisance and a
menace to health on the ono hand;
but on the other band they furnish
some people an occupation manicur-
ing. On both hands they are a boon
to nervous Individuals who work off
lots of superfluous energy chewing
them. We have it on the authority
of a distinguished correspondent that
nail-biting con be cured by painstak-
ing attention to manicuring; the
idea being that a smoothly trimmed
and polished nail offers no subcon-
scious temptation to the teeth.
An acute illness leaves a trans-
verse marking or furrow upon the
nail due to a feebler output of
matrix when the system Is weak.
Persons whose metabolism is pav-
ing the way for Joint disease notice
that the nails are very brittle.
Paronchla or inflammation and
suppuration at the edge of base of
the nail may be an acute'rnfeetlon
i - i; .
one ounce of aluminum acetate In
ten ounces saturated ' solution of
boric acid tho whole wet dressing
covered by a loose rubber fingor-coL
Severe cases require Incision and
drainage. v '
White specking or marking on the
nail Is due to air bubbles la the nail.
It does not Indicate or foretell any
illness.
Ingrowing nail Is caused by de-
generate footgear. Pointed shoes
narrow shoes and shoes with diverg-
ing inside sole lines make ingrowing
nail. Mild cases are helped by nar-
row strips of adhesive plaster so ap-
plied as to draw the sore skin edge
away from the nail. If there Is gran-
ulation tissue In the furrow ("proud
flesh") It must be cut away burned
away with lunar caustic or shriv-
elled with alum or other astringent.
Appliances other than correct shoes
are useless for Ingrowing nail. Bad
cases require surgical relief at the
hands of a doctor.
That poison which the anclonts
made of fingernails was undoubtedly
the cultured microbes the then
worthies carried as do their modern
descendants in the furrow beneath
the nails. -t
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
. 7V i J -y T J t r "Tf!Tr r Magnesia Or Soda?
T - . . .. .'7:. Tl'lSJ.Ji r.4f in isil' sr n i unf.
i ra si f a in as v )' t (V mil
acid $oila or magnesia?
Hff-Bdeed I cawn't sayf apr.rr -Kinfworm of the nail If .il ec
bow far away they are. casionai condition ana an exceeding-
' ly obstinate one to treat unless by
Read It Again autogenous vaccines which seem to
Eugene Clough of Ellsworth ue very enective for ringworm of
fn ..m rr.. a9
iinh i... Lf.ri fnm-A ralscd- thickened split and aoatorted.
.. .... . ..... s
hind legs. One of the bind lees 14 i
grown where a foreleg should be.
Rockland Me. Courier-6"a2ef(e. ;
Ordinary "run around" is'usnally a
streptococcus infection. "A'' good
treatment is a light wrapping of
gauze soaked In a solution containing
Answer Milk of magnesia 13 pref-
erable as a rule. ' "
l5l Carbon In Cylinders '
In. J one gets charcoal' in the note
tcill it do any harmt
Answer Not more than ordinary
dust.
Less Than Huniaa
Tom the country six-year-old
presenting himself one day in even
more than his usual state of dust
and disorder was asked by his
mother if he would not like to be a
little city boy and always be nice
and clean In white sutts and shoes
and stockings. Tom answered
scornfully: "They're not children;
they're pets."
Dr. Brady will answer all questions pertaining to Health. If your ques-
tion is of general interest it will be answered through these columns; if not
it will he answered personally if stamped addressed envelope is enclosed.
Dr. Brady will not prescribe for individual cases or make diagnoses. Ad-
dress all letters to Dr. M'illfam Brady care of this newspaper.
1 ' L
1
if:
1 nA y
N I
V-.
I
v
i!
n
Ml
V
1
'J her ain't Koln' to bo no core
Orr in Nashville Tennetseon
The Puzzling Point
Enthusiastic Aviator (after long
explanation Of principle and work-
ings of his. biplane Now you un-
derstand it don't you?
!. Young Lady All but one thing.
Aviator And that is ?
Young I.ady What makes ; 't
stay up? ......
VestPocket Essay
S
People's Legal Friend
' .Ml 1... Ml j i in n i. 1 1 ... . . ii. .im unit lini)
I ; ..(1
:. Vigilance committees
' "' The Doctor's Bill
: '). Some time ago I went '4
physician and followed out a
of treatment .prescribed by: him.
Vo'if e a Q.' Ar then; llrOjijws In
t courts many ef tne stii felaws
constitutional? .
CHRONIC CONSTIPATION.
"About two years ago when I be-
Had been niiffr-rinsvfor sum 'time. ol.?!Lcd 'eLe -ftft?c A".:':
' w'tti BlnKl.1.1. ti.-11. ami nl.mnln ' ' " t HCK ill
-Mtl!.irtlon:---fMrTondltlon"rrrrprovi -f.use me- wigeuuca'm not Uthing;
w uiuniiiiif.
Within The Law paralyzed in ith'Bims ahd had a
' Rural Constable "Now then woddcii fcg.
come out o' that. Bathing's not al- ji.'Usft WW'S dirvered In Call-
THrJ flgllance committee was an ' lasm. At length they were'dlscon
Institution! 'which .flourished la .tinued fof twot reasons. In. the first
Callfornfti at a time) when Jus- place the society came to the re-
tlce was hof only blind but was luctwic conclusion that hanging -al
Nothing was said at that time about 1 " A.I 'ThfeTe are elgW-libWr'biws In
his charges. He has lust presented a ''number 6f! 'states. Scfmetlmesf thei
l
3 Those Zeppeliu raids on the Kngllsh
'''Ka'it'Cttast 'hiust have done more dam-.
'ik'd fhhn'rPlwirteil nr uIua n irirl m.nv
d'.uid lu.sin ciainiiv:its ror compensa-
tion are trying to gouge the British
government .
ed raiiiilly through the use of these
tablets. Mince taking four or' five
1 otties of them my health has been
Vine.
ill!.'
; . Cmidejicetislon
MndpQtv -la Mtl Pnpftplhe Alintitv
writes Mis John- JJewtonUryj- j .ay0unrmii.''nd the War Of-
'N. Y. Obtainable everywhorai: ' l t T i...Z .
uuu let nam rj nuvii yyi wiaiDU Ltia
letter of a youth with no military
experience whatever who In apply-
ing for a commission slated that he
would be quite willing to start as a
lieutenant. 1 .
- "
KKKksuss is' as' a' miisii
:& OVl'U THE STATIC. '
i '' Charles CousItib a Cleveland Ohio
' newspaper man. tiled Monday. He was
the author of "Confessions of a Wife"
' ""which have been printed in many
papers throughout the country during
" the past year or so. His wife started
the feature but grew tired of the Job
after writing a few confessions. As a
ii Joko Cousins continued the work re-
marking that "he could make foolish
women eat tho stuff." According to a
-Cleveland dispatch the "Confessions"
will ' be continued by Cousins' co-
Inborer Ceorgo Slmms of the Colum-
bus Ohio. DiBpatch.
The people throughout the state sym-
pathlic deeply with the people of the
ciiy of Ardmoro in the disaster be-
fallen that city with such frightful
destruction of life and property. Ard-
inore is one of the oldest cities of the
stale Kormer residents and relatives
pf residents and intimate friends of
' residents by the thousands are scatter-
ed throughout the country. The news
uf the disaster aroused in nearly every
community a personal anxiety and a
feeling of personal loss. Our hearts
go out to Ardmore's .people as they
follow ihe remains of loved one to th
imf r'lng place or mluisi t ...
wounded.
DANGEROUS CURIOSITY.
" . ' Vm tfvorpowering Is the curiosity of
riiank'nd that every sort and degree of
'- . danger will be unhesitatingly risked
' ' for its gratification. This was shown
last "week in London during the ter-
..... jible night raid of the Zeppelins drop-
; t.ins bombs with which to destroy life
. and property. Hid the populace flee
j.. . fully understanding the imminence of
- 'great personal danger when It was
' . known that" monster airships were
.- .no.it above the city when bombs were
'-' -ji;slaig and anti-aircraft guns were
mrtitig; when numerous searchlights
' t.- ro sending their powerful shafts up
'tr.to the sky to reveal the locality of
" 'the ylsflor? Did the people run for
safety? Some may have done so but
... the news reports state that there was
! general flocking to windows and
t racts to secure u good even 'J un
it Is said that Kay county will have
the largest corn crop in its history this
year.
Some of our merchants who I know
would be opposed to mall order houses
do their advertising out of town.
Alva Review.
A man who wants something mean
said and is ufrald to say it always
runs to 'he newspaper uud wants it
to say it for him.
Ruth Wauhilla Tweedle Is the name
of the girl that took the best baby
prize at the free fair at Claremore.
Sho had ninety-eight competitors In
the contest.
Every one deeply regrets the ter-
rible loss sustained by Ardmore but
a good many will hope that Sidney
Suggs' famous musical Instrument was
tinmaged beyond repair.
. Harry Becler republican member
of the stale election board has ac-
cepted a position with the Pierce Oil
corporation. - The big concern doubt-
less felt that they could not get along
well without him. McAlester News-
Capital. Jim Goodheart of (he Denver Sun-
shine Mission is in Oklahoma City
and in contradiction of the police
records and the news columns of the
papers says that the town la the
cleanest place of its size in the Cnited
States.
The ladies of the Cheyenne Indian
tribe have planned to put in their long
winter evenings making moccasins.
They expect to make considerable pin
money In that way and at the same
time relieve the monotony of life in
the tepee.
Cole
Coin Is a kind of cabbage.
Also It is a kind of governor of
a state.
The first one's last name Is Slaw
and tho second one Blease.
The latter Is not much like a
cabbage except when the cabbage
has a lot of red-pepper mixed with
U.
tied out to the coast. Some of these
were cstlmaDldTsentiemen and others
were hyenas who had degenerated a
good deal.
There was a great deal of free-hand
murdering- In. ..California in those
days and large numbers of alleged
humans took a pride in boring a hole
through a total stranger in a work-
manlike manner. . In the course of
time San Francisco acquired quite a
number of citizens who felt dull and
listless all day if they did not shoot
a man before breakfast.
There was some government of
course but not enough to interfere
with anyone's pleasure about as
much as there is in Terre Haute
Ind. during an election. The quick-
tempered citizens with the convulsive
trigger-fingers went on shooting peo-
ple for breathing the air in their
vicinity until something had to be
done about It.
Tnev vwwT (e No
MORE HAI TRIS
05 Fba tone
TIME
Mtmi M Km)
PJK.I TIU
Since Turn AGin
i aiu i MO MOM
VWOR.K fCH IMC
COMMITTI
MOVE Wt
AOJOMtM'ft
I I
bill 'Which) it seems to me i is ex
orbitant pan I be compelled tq payt
A. The physician Js entitled 'to
make a' reasonable 1 charge" for . b)s
i services." Just what 'constitutes a
. reasonable i charge ; must iifcpeid ou
a
these
some-
laws ' artf constitutional and
times ttrerare not:" :
TliC;nte-0 4:Peed u
i ' Uurre.tl or cannot be readvwvuldit
the circumstances. Many things are! 'lnfuSssfblP ft fts&rf t dtitstde evi
'to be considered such as the physi
cians skill and' experience! -ana his
reputation and standing.' Other ele-
ments to be taken .into account ire -the
question' ad to tho difficulty .of
successiully liandling the cade' the
time &nd labor involved and the cus-
tomary fees received .by men ordi-
narily proSclent it! .the' same pro-.
fc38ion. ' ;. ' v -V ' i '"'" ' i.
djnee to prove the real date. A. Yea
iSiiirrent Foetry
The High rowRIag495 v
The price o(iUs ihir-e.;' .
That Is too much? Why niaq. allv
You don't' 'anorec'iate' iilatf art '1
().. Please infonn me hathcr i ' RhoWh'Mn tW a'dvtiMfsfhg fin:
Theatre Tu
tillA
Cole Slaw Is a very peaceful citizen.
mil me uiease muu is. m.o .f eraI despra(i0 wouid reInain healthy
euuuu oinciai in caiiuvtij w- -
;ieves in mob law and anuroby'.
At this point a large number of
citizens organized a scientilic society.
The object of the society was to dis-
cover whether a gunman and gen-
So Say We All '
Old Zeppelin and all his works
I'd find myself forgiving i: .-i
If he'd soar up to where It lurks
Ahd from tho sky !
SO lilgh so high
Br;ng down the cost of living.
after being hung from a telegraph
pole by the neck. ' ' t;;wi
A-large number of experiments
were carried out with great enthus-"
Tftere were no desperadoes left to
hang
desperado by the neck was invariably
fatal. In the second place there
were no desperadoes left to hang.
Vigilance societies are a little out
of fashion now but a modification
of the old organization might be very
useful In every American city which
is cluttered up with inspectors who
don't Inspect. If Chicago had had a
vigilance society poking around Into
conditions for the last few years and
pointing out things with long bony
forefingers the Eastland would prob-
ably have carried 500 people out in-
to the lake last July in perfect safety.
Gentler Sex
''The lady who thinks the atroci-
ties of war are just too terrible for
anything went away for the sum-
mer and left the cat with a Jar of
ondensed milk and no can-opener.
Theimng Lfady
Across The Way
Views (Df The Press
'' ''"" 'I ''' 'AS 10 in.-.
The Czar And The Grand Due
How An Engineer Keeps Well.
Railroad engineers are more ex-
iposed to catPhintT f-oltl lhau other
workers. E. 0. Dunaphant of kMonette
0lo has run a Frisco eug:ne iS5 years
and all the medicine he has taken is
Foley's Honey and Tar. iHe writes:
"I always keep it in my house and
recommend it to all who have a bad
cough or ctld." Sold everywhere.
We asked the young lady across
the way if she though lynch law was
ever justifiable and she said us long
as it was the law she supposed it
ought oto be allowed to take its
course.
SOMETHING hieratic symbolic
Byzantine clings to the Czar of
All the Russias. To multitudes
of his people he is a kind of sacred
icon if not a divinity. As in years
that outrun memory the chief of the
clan the head of the horde the King
led his wild followers to battle so
Nicholas II. puts himself at the
front of the armies of the nation. A
stimulation of patriotism a half-
religious fervor creeping through all
that mighty mass of men and races
may be stirred thereby. A fine bit of
decoration a good stroke ofbuslness.
But as the Czar takes his place in
the pageant the Russian hero of the
war the victor of Galicla the captor
of Przemsyl the consummate cap-
tain who has eluded again and again
the Austro German efforts to envelop
him whose masterly skill in a re-
treat forced on him by no fault of
his own has won the admiration of
military experts the Grand Puke
Nicholas is packed off to the Cauca-
sus. The best Russian General In
the opinion of many enlightened
Judges the best General of the war is
disgraced demoted and his place is
taken by the Imperial cockade. The
Implications are sinister. Behind all
the explicable want u munitions is
there the old welter of incompetence
and Kraft so sickening In the war
with Japan? That for Russia was
a little war after all. The Inert Im-
mensity was not greatly moved. In
intrigue inefficiency and corruption
it was a giant war. In this Incom-
parably more vital hour of Russian
destiny has the habit the good old
"Oriental" tradition of bilking the
Government and pursuing the swag
survived?
Virtue clucked happily when cer-
tain Grand Dukes of the old style
were detected in grand-ducal plun-
dering. Now a Grand Duke Is pun-
ished for being great In victory and
greater in defeat A dark or dubious
outlook on Russia and for Russia.
On the other hand the imperial Commander-in-chief
may be presumed to
know what is good for his Imperial
bacon. "As I cannot die at the head
of my army I lay my sword at the
feet of your Majesty." This patter of
the ruined Napoleon the Little must
occur to Nicholas IT. If be takes
the form and exterior of military
command he takes the responsibility
he must be confident of triumph. He
cannot afford a Sedan. For In spite
of lingering "Old World" symbolism
and superstition there Is a Russia
which might ad! a civil to the mili-
tary debacle of its Little Father.
Xe Turk Times. .
sfofe has the riglit jo impose
cent or tax upi a theatre.-
A. Yes.
A Corporation's By-Law Rights
Q. Docs a corporation have ihc
right to enact aw' adept any by-luts
it pleases?
A. No. 'It 'may make such '.y-
laws as are not inconsistent with ;ts
charter or the purposes and -objects
of their corporation and such as do
not cip'lict with the law or wit; rny
legal duty.
" Both After The Job
Q. M'here there is en election con-
test two men claiming the same of-
fice would ii be possible to enjoin '..ic
payment ." salary to one who is nf-
iemptin; to cenwe the Cuttes of ihc
ofiter
A. Some counts have held that an
Injunction In a case of this sort -wouM
!!s. The decisions are not t.r..'-
form hove- sr. Soir.otiiies the
statutes sv.julu'e matters of ihirsort.
Property Liable For Debts
Q. Is all of a decedent's ;:pps-ty
liable for his debts?
A. Yes as a general rule.
Contract In Writing Or Printed
Q. Kay a contract be partly in
wriiinj u d partly printed? ' l. iw.
Nine-tenths of it is of this' cHia
Just one conglomerated mass
auto cars and patent soap
I.ni phopographs and otherdope.
Of course there's readin' to It too.
And when you come to glance it
through
You'll find an article or so . ' V
Upon the nicest way to grow
Alfalfa in the arid west
Or how to save your coin the best.
Of course a lot of that Is bluff.
And "you don't have to read the
.- - : stuff. ' "''K' 'i H. .
And it's a dollar to a cent ' '"''
Ycu wouldn't know Just what It ;
.meant !
But you're rewarded if you wait; I
The ads aie always simply great.
Roy K. Mo ult on.
I
Without going Into the moral
ethics of the matter the fact remains
that the only way the average man
can get anything out of politics Is by
Belling hi3 vote.
The Life Lin
By Laura Kirkman
The Girl Who "Wishes Sie
Were a Man"
If you notice she seldom says
this to women; she says It before
men. She says it to attract. It Is
one of the vivid flags she waves to
arrest their attention. And men
know this. They know that if she
earnestly wished to be a man she
would know that talking about lt:
wouldn't do any good. Anyway we "
don't shout our real disappoint-
ments from the housetops. "Just
thirk of not having to fus over'
one's hair!" she sighs lightly
thereby directing the masculine eye
to her mass of tresses. "And oh
how Joyful it would be not to have
a let of shirts to got in the way!"
Here the masculine eye is expected
to appreciate her smart gown.
"And yet' she goes on foolishly
"I'd LaU to have to shave!" And
she seeins to ti'nk sho's voicing an
orifiinal i-iea. She doesn't suspect
thst iitT :st?ner has probably heard
the sarie thing bcf-.it from girls
of Vr lype. Srs fe conmon or
garden vtfix'y.
The man who neglects to look In
the glass In the morning can achieve
tho same general depressing effect by j
gazing ir.teni.ly at his photograph i
No matter how many free blades
you get with a safety razor It Isn't
enough.
Tho first thing a man looks for Is
a place to sit down. The first thins;
a woman looks for Is a mirror. .
A woman can change her name at
any time but a man is compelled to
wait until the legislature convenes.
.A man should not be Judged entire- I
ly by his ability to assimilate pun- j
ishment. Ills altitude in the face of '
victory is the better test. '
-The man who refuses to do it In j
politics ' will often "grandstand" ai
little for " the delectation of. the !
women.
. One of the recent poems Is called
The Wife of the lied Haired Man.
If you are making a crazy quilt this I
undoubtedly belongs In it- !
In Missouri recently a cat ate
canned salmon and died. You now 1
know what to do with the canned 1
salmon.
To avoid argument it may be con-
ceded that football is more brutal
than prize fighting. But neither Is as
brutal as women are to other woman.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Niblack, Leslie G. The Guthrie Daily Leader (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1915, newspaper, October 1, 1915; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc618212/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.