The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 1, Ed. 1, Monday, January 18, 1904 Page: 7 of 8
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THE LEADER QUTHRIE OKLAHOMA MONDAY JANUARY 18 1904.
PAGE SEVEN.
mmm
Comparative
Jurisprudence
noorer class of Its student
In 1881
It had over two hundre I professor
anil -narly or quite eight thousand
students gathered from nearly every
Moslem country. In the corridors may
be found classes of la is learning to
eat? l write from the Koran In the
rea c irt the professors each Beaten
M thi iot of tine of the columns des-
gng for hi asc gather arouna
the ' T classes acd lecture on me
tftcrent branches of H'udy. grammar.
which includes the proper pronuncia-
tion of the sacred book ir ic. rhetoric.
.neology the nature or nod ana tne
nthnritv of the prophet law including
n onn the rules of practical religion
Und il' secular law The text oookh
re the Koran the traditions ana
ommentaries on these which are
cad Kt commented on by the in
Mrurtor In separate cnamuers in
structors of higher rank meet classes
if more advanced students and In a
magnificent linll the Shew of the
Wque bo is by virtue of hlB oKIps
he Uad of the MOimmrao.an cnurcn
n Eirvnf. archbishop and lord chan
cellor president of the university and
lead Professor or theology and juria-
j mi lence all In ono lectures on the
more abstruse ma'ters of the law to
Jnen from thirty to fifty years old.
iheir attainments which correspond to
ihe decrees conferred in European un-
'versl'ies Five or six y-ars of study
vlll fit a man to be a village scuool-
naster or the head of a small mosque;
t least fourteen years are required to
. ireparc one to ue a caii or judge oi
i town or governor of a small district
-while the course may be continued
111 the stuleut ranks as a mufti cor
responding to the degree of doctor of
Jaws In a Christian university and is
nnblr.l tn ilf In tho hleher court or
?o hold a professorship himself in
ome university.
R But tho whole system of ins-ruction
s jimiicu io uietse topics nuiuier
hysical science nor history nor any
anguage but Arabic is taught and ev-
i . . . . .. . . i
ii mi" Hiuuy oi iuuuiumuiiGH una muu-
l?ine once tho glory of tho Saracon
ifchools. i8 abandoned.
To this limited course of study is
ue the characteristic which makes the
reat defect of the Mohammedon law
s a ays'em of civil jurisprudence.
Historians and travolors have do-
crlbed and tho western world wond-
rs at tho Orient whoro tho modes
hd customs of social life the employ
ments and habits of the people tho
diethods of trade and business in
ihort. the whole civilization is tho
ijmo aa that which delighted our child
Ir.. .tt .t.t- imco ut lilu Ainuiail
Mghts themselves a thousand years
..Id Tt Ift Inilpixl thn linnlinnr.lnp' anal
But this is easily accounted for. All
Ivlllzatlon Is based upon law.. If the
Jw admits of progress civilization and
the law win advance together: but if
jjie law Is unalterable it will restrain
lie s 'Cial development fit tho people
jabjected to it
k isirun is uncnangeauio. Tiie whole
'Jstem of secular law Is a part of re-'jfgion-
-tho whole religious system is
iqually secular. Whatever is found in
o Koran is supposed to be the word
Gid. whatfver Mohammed decided
the voice of the prophet of God. So
Jflfi nrnOnt la Immittnlila irl.nllia
be tho highest principle of ethics or
io minutest rule of Inheritance
'hether It teach the relations of man
his Maker or regulate tho formula
f the simple contract. And till this
iw highest and lowest alike. Is sits-
'Uned by 'he sarao sanctions. He who
isobeyB is not only a criminal but a
Snner In addition to the earthly pan.
ities infilcted by the Judge he mult
jot only lose the delights of the Par-
-also promised by tho prophot to all
m believers but must enduro the
rments so ofton and so graphically
-scriuo . in the Koran aa tho portion
the ungodly
Fanaticism and spiritual pride have
tla Mimllinnrl wttl tin Irnnl Dtitrl tr
IS -. n..uiiiiiuil '"
eserve inose laws in tnoir integrity;
sid everywhere throughout the world
io "'"Men; i& noted foi his haughty
iontii i T anj indifference to all
iclal rrfurm and inodern progress.
Fvr mree or four hundred years aft-
the euablishmont of the Caliphate
lis sys'em rendered a great service
mankin It saved the east from
o anarchy Into which it was falling
the downfall of the Roman empire.
established a religion which super
vded the hnrhnrnim Irlnlntrv nt Mio
.rahs more liberal thnn i'ia imllun
t'annish excluslveness of the Jew
lUrr even tlian the dt'agea conflict
f warrm.; sects into which Oriental
Ittatll if lr tSo.l .la f.nr.HM r ...1
;' But the i-'Upposed saoredness of I'.a
Jrtgin wm. the cause of its failure
nco s eternalized It was Incapable of
trogrrs and the nations siflijeet to
lam have for the pabt four hundred
tt .i la-uvu ucuiuu in i lift evoiunon OI
liroanity In the yar 800 the Caliph
aroun-al-Raschiid and the people
ibject to his sway were greatlyeu
rlor to Charlemagne and his subjects
art in science and industrial devel-
ment But while the latter have
an advancing Islam has been stand-
K still The best results of civil
ujitiona of France and Belgium Holl-
feid and uunnany those of the cora-
toa lay. by the liberties of the United
Etatcs of England and of her colon-
while t.ie head of the Mohammed-
Iblsm the type of Its civilization and
jie naal result of its legal bystem it.
?e unsi naoie Turk.
The Chinese Law.
-It ret. r:s to coatider be most
(am .ad curioui of all systems of
cw -tjj t the Chtnestt Their gov-
Vnrai ' purt' a paternal deenot-
orl"1'- in 1 w .n the nju
antiquity. Tho emperor Is tho pa-
arc . hi a tno father of the po-
:e is sponsible to Heaven itself
r th .r conduct But his authority
rti1f is limited by the- multitude of
idltlons customs and cereiaonles
which form the essential part of the
national life by habits and modes of
thought which have directed the eon-
due an i the ideas of the people for
ages.
The whole social system re6ts upon
'li family relation- and he great part
of i hi 1 .eilglon consists In the whi
Oilp of and sacrifices to ancestors. .
vm.se Happiness in the unseen worm
fiends
Is on the falthlul performance
i duty by their descendants.
of this
. From vlils social and religious ays
tern there has developed a legal sys-
tem of marvelous complexity It let
characteristic of the oriental mind
with Its peculiarities its sinuosities
and vermlcultrions As a system it
stands by its 'It. neer llalng receiv-
ed any ail ot addition from outside
sources. It Is thoroughly Chinese
it Is slgnlfira.'it that the first at
tempt at law of which there is any
tradition is .hut udailng to marriage
whk-h Is claimed to be nearly Ave
thousand years old But leaving out
of consideration this mythical tradi-
Mon there is well authenticated evi
dence of successive codifications of
the laws down to the year 1408 of our
era where ft complex body of laws
the results of the accumulated work
of unknown ages was definitely formu-1
latea and published; and continued in
force until the establishment of ihe
Manchus In power two hundred years
Inter; nnd again revised and adapted j
to the new dynasty supplemented an I
explained by Imperial decreos It has
continued in ioroe to tne present any. board decides should be executed by
This code prescribes the rule of!writig their names on lines one be-
mllitary organization and public of- iow another so that the list is in thuj
flee taxation and public works the
law of rites and ceremonies which
governthe daily life conduct and do-
mestic relations of the people adn
cZUTTrUnLdLcvVrlf1mnr
criminal jurisprudence which in pro
hibitions and regulations la minute
distinctions In defining nlniosr every
conceivable sort of offense and pre
scribing an elaborately graded system
of punishments constitutes the great
er and the most effective part of tho
code.
There is hardly any exact system as
to civil cases dnd commercial law.
but this is made up in pnrt at leaBt.
by making almost overy violation of'monUi p9nal servitude for life or
tho civil rights of others a criminal
offense with a deflnlto punishment.
Thus if a debtor refuses to pay his
dobts tho creditor may present a pe-
tition to tho magistrate whb will is
sue a warrant on which tho debtor is
arras tod and confined until ho does
pay and if ho atill delays payment he
may from time to tlmo bo brought
before tho magistrate to be flogged
with a view of expediting his action.
Tho real estate law has provided a
system of registration. The purchaser
must prosent his doed to the local of
ficer to receive the stamp of the gov
ernment and pay the tax Imposed on
transfers ond must register tho land In
his own namo upon the tax rolls. His
failure to do so may rondor tho con-
veyance invalid nnd in any ovont will
subject him to castlgation at the hand
of the criminal judge.
Nogligenco causing ipjury to anoth-
er is sovoroly punished and if It cause
death Is In most cases a capital of-
fense. In short the criminal code at-
tempts to provldo for almost ovory
violation of civil rights by punishing
the offender and for this reason the
law of crime and punishment Is the
principal part of Chinese jurisprud-
ence. Crimes aro defined and punishments
fixed with absolute certainty. If tho
law is an exact sclonco anywhere it
certainly is in China. Thus there Is
a spocial article for overy known form
of killing; for oxamplo deliberately
planned killing killing with intont to
kill hilling without intending to kill
the person killed killing In the course
of nn affray killing by uttr ohnrce
etc etc. To each of tnoso varieties
a different penalty at aches.
It is curious to noto that insanity
is no defenso to a charge of crime so
far at least as the sentenco is con-
cerned although In ordinary cases
the sentence will bo commutted to
some minor form of punishment un-
less the lunatic has committed some
crime against his parents or grand-
parents or some of his elders in
which event the sentence may be car-
ried out. And if you will permit me
to cite precedent I will call your at
tendon to the case of Chiang Chutlen
reported in the 44th volume of Using
An Hul Lan at page 34 where Chiang
while insane killed libs father and was
in turn killed on the spot by hie mo' ti-
er Nevertheless he had a post mor-
tem trial and condemnation and his
dead body was sliced to pieces.
The right or t ven the duty under
certain circumstances to commit sui
cide is recognized by taw; and crim
inal responsibility attaches to the iier-
n who 's tne indirect cause of the
suicide
'f a creditor proceeds to dun his
debtor and the la'ter commits suicide
in consequence thr creditor will be
held crlm'nally liable for causing his
death Where the suicide results from
a slanderous attack upon the virtue of
a lady the author of the slanler in
punished capitally. (P. A. S. P. Vol.
2 p 281 A wife Is held responsible if
she runs away from her husband and
he poisons himself from grief. (H A.
H. U Vol. 38 p 87).
The system of punishments is elab-
orately gradod and definitely prescrib-
ed for every possible offense. The
highest Is the so called "lingering
death" the ponalty for treason and
parricide the latter term Including the
causing of thn death of any senior rel
ative father or grandfather mother
or grandmother and even the mother-in-law
of the criminal. These are re-
garded as gross violations of the duty
a man owes to his family dnd they
rank. In the category of crime with
treason against the emperor the fath-
er ot all the people. The criminal is
tied '. slowly cut to pieces and then
beheaded. The severity of this pun-
ishment consists In th.elr belief that In
the spirit world; a good Chinaman
must appear iu his earthly corporeal
form; and he naturally dislikes to ex-
lst In his future life in fragments or
slices. As a further punishment and
to deprive film of pos'erity to offer
the sacrifices on which ht nolrlt Is lo
escape starvation his sons an i grand-
sons are also put to death or If In-
fanta are emasculated. This punish-
mont. whil" not more severe physloal-
ly than the ancient penalties for high '
treason in trance and England adds I
to thc-m the supposedly terrible result
'of eternal ir'3er' !
The next punishment In order of s
verity is decapitation which mav i:i i
volve exposure of the head in a rue i
simple beheading or beheading tih i c i
to revision by their supreme court
Next there Is strangulation where the
person is choked ta death by tho exr
cntioner: this may be immediate or
subjec' ' revision. As behadlns 'iu
members the ho y and so affect i tlu
spirit In its hunt for Hs corpoual
similitude In the other world an
sentence of decaptiat'on even when '
subject to le vision is considered more
evere than strangulation althmigh
the latter is certain and far more pain
ful. I
The death sentence for some crimes
u n. has been noted certain nnd 1m
mediate: for those of a less decree it i
ia subject to revision. By this is '
mean that the case is reported to the
judiciary board popularly styled the!
board of punishments where the
whole case procedure and evidence
and even- circumstance is considered. !
tt tB then made of those whom the
fonu of a square. They aro not writ
ten alphabetically but so arranged.
that the names of those least rulltv
are in the corners or in the center. '
once a venr. The emneror. with ait
-lttni liiiali dlnnorl In vArmllllnn
...wi.e u. ubu uKl'vu ... . - .......vu i
ink draws a circle in the Square of
names Those whose names ore touch-
ed by the red line nre ordered for exe-
cution The others remain in the list:
but If they are not touched by the Ver-
million pencil for three years their
sentences are commuted.
Below these capital sentences there
i- n ipBniHnir scnle of leaser miniah
yen rs transportation for life or years
and the bamboo. The punishment of
the bamboo meanB a flogging and va-
rle from ten to fifty strokes with the
light rod bamboo to from sixty to
one hundred with the heavy the lat-
tor practically a club weighing two
ami one-naii pounas. i-or an minor
ouences mis nioinoti oi uunmuiuem ia
In constant use and It is also used as
an nJdl-ional nenaltv to most sentenc-
es for transportation and penal servi
.-
tude. Thus the crime of adultery is
punished by penal serx'itude for the
man and flogging for 'he woman; but
if the husband connived at the offense
the adulterer gets three years trans-
portation and a hundred blows the
woman ninety blows and the husband
also gets ninety for his complicity.
To these must bo ndded the Cangue
so often montionei by travelers a
solid wooden frame fastened around
the neckand extending so far that the
victim cannot reach his hands to his
head. On this Is inscribed the name
and abode of the criminal and the na-
ture of his offense. The prisoner is
placed In custody of a guard who may
parade him In public when and as he
think fit. The sentence may be for
a few days for a month or a year or
even for life; and la usually a concom-
itant or some bther penalty or an ad-
ditional punishment whin one trans-
ported for life or for years commits
another offense.
It is impossible In a paper like this
to give much of an idea of this sys-
tem. In its classification and minute
subdivision of offenses nnd pennltles
proportioned to onch it is moro oxact
precise Than any othon" Th.!g JSA
homicide Is punished not only a dc-iX ' re
liberate casual or accidental but with
a reference to tho relative rank and
relationship of the parties. A son who
killed his father would be slice! up
Into bits but a father who killed his
son for stealing was let off with a
hundred blows of the bamboo.
The magistrate before whom the
complaint is made tries the case usu-
ally alone though he may invite other
magistrates to sit wi.h him. His bus-
iness is to get the facts in the case
and when these are ascertained he has
no further discretion. The code pro-
vides the penaly. To get at the facH
he may ant.' in fact must In many
cases disregard the direct statements
of the witness but must conduct a
cross examination; and if be believes
a witness Is lying may slap his face
with his slipper or or'.er him thrown
down and beaten with a bamboo or
"' torture.1 until tlie evidence sv- rtav mlM tach us the inevitable result
" Sh he VS. It shooTdle.lo' " "-' "
He may also subjec. the prisoner him-JcU" "' an unchangeable code
self to the same kind of torture .Inl ....... .
cases oi prooBDie gum io compel nun
in mm.
The marriage laws of Chi-- are ex -
tromolvvmir.llntt.H tint ri Intimate-
)r nrmnanttnl with and I'nforcpfl hv the
.. .
criminal law. Thus a marriage unlaw-
ful by reason of pre-contract or be-
cause contracted within prohibited
periods or between prohibited rela-
tione may not only be dissolved but
all concerned In it.
the principals
thAmaalvoa tTin ralo' Iva nftm Annnf.
:rr: .;::.. t ";!;:":: z; :
e-1 to It and the go-betweens who ne-
aotlated It. be liable to punishment
. t ti.. .. .
vuttu tium tttv nToip yvuanj ut
death for marrying a bro'ners widow
down to a hundred strokes of the ham- The number; of square bales were
boo for being accessory to a mar- 13547 number of round bales 19-
rlage of a man with th widow of one... al commercial v.lM iM212
for whose death he must wear mourn-'' ' " m mIr? """' tr'Z"
lOK j Cotton ginned in Oklahoma to Decent-
go too. nearly every action of llfe'ber 13. 1M2 163.1W). Aeive gin-
Is governed by the code of rites and jneries December 13. 1V03. 23? Active
ceremonies but violations of this code1 glnnerleg n 13 Jm m
nro also punished as crime. Thus.
the length of time and degree of ' "
mourning for different olase of ral- U is reported that th0 land offloe
atlves forms a part of the oode ef at Oklahoma City will be discontinued
ritQs out iid eniorcemeni eiongs to
tiiB vriuuuui law
The peculiar evil of a system like
this is that It has becoma absolutely
fixed aad mechanical It stands In
J0& Only N25k
fw 5c Cigar 2
upon Which glSIm
a million tastes y&S
mm Mr hKIHPSb Et van ttt&&i A
kT- " ' M rf SLX3
m. Br flf yi
m MORE THAN A M
jL MilLWN SOLD A DAV. JW
Thi panJ is the Smokrr't Uf
Hk. Protecticrt. H
the wav of all advance In social life
while the study ot the classic upon
.ctontifio nnranit tt in nn elnimr-
.. . . n tn !.... t. l.nn i.hh.Iama.1 '
nl? BVBtlflll 11 IKW UUt H 1"1B IlUIUOUCtt
Into unchanging formnkc: ai.d cor
rupt adminlstra'ion has rendered it
merely a means of oppression. Trans-
! r5 ttjr.
planted into Japan it weighed like a
nightmare upon the people until a! once" he continued. "Last winter Structure Gleet Inflammation of tho
very recent period when tluU nation many persons who would have locatj Testicles Prostrate Gland and Blad-
buret its bonds and. modifying its an- wl here wore force(1 to to other'Ger UBUay the reBUIt am mnny
cient system by reforms largely based .. .... . . .u . . "
upon the Code Napoleon has entered Oklahoma towns because we did not other serious results are opt to follow
upon a new career of national pro- Ihave the houses for them People are 'and sometimes death but NBVI3II a
gres and prosperity. (coming here from nil sections of the cure when you use injections
The social development and mnto- country. Many who came here to live We Cure Gonorrhoea In 5 Days.
hotCrmleCthenya ff STiS I fnJ "- "- r "' N ""- AH .-"ruing and itch
awav from their ancient literature. ouy an" uU1l blt tlieT wan' to be ing Inflammation and unnatural dia
.!. constitutes their only learning
an.i ueveiop a system oi juriBprunenoe
sufficiently flexible to adant Itself to'
it. in
mvus ii .u-ta
!JlMn11. T illt flint th. Atftla nf .
J .UUIIJ i auu.u.1 umi ; u..e .'. I
nn Inflexible system of law. as oxemp
Ufled in Mohammedanism and In
China teach a lesson of vital importt
ance a lesson which we here In Amer-
ica will do well to lay to heart.
It has been the 'lory of the common
law that tt could 1th the aid of an
unrestricted legislation representing
the people themselves formulating
their wishes and meeting their neces
slties adapt itself to every succeeding
stage of the material and social prog-
ress of that people. In our own couu- tlon turnd despair into joy. The
l:L:llTtrV:LT:?t bori. to immediate relief
a dUfru.t of the national Institutions
they were founding a rtreal of popular
government on t'ie part of some and a
dislike for an s rong government on
the part of oth'i local Jealousle. and
colonial nride .nduced the founders
of the fonstl'utii a to lnser' In it re-(LHHe & Co.'s drug store.
strict ions upon legislation and even
upon some of 'ho principle ot the
common law Its. if and to make any
attemp'id amendment so nearly lm-
possibl. that the peculiar flexibility of
the iwem. its capacity for adupra -
tlon to the material development of
Doubtless the constitution of the
United States represented the best
thought and the highest sociological
knowledge ot the perioj wnen it was
framed hut l :.. last becoming a ser
lous question whether we must not re-
lax some of the fetters la which i's
founder!) have confined in restric-
tions which seem to prevent nny com- j
plots i relief against monopolies any
check upon a divorce system any ade-'
quate repression of the vast and in-
creasln volume of crime or any suf-
flcient reraely for municipal and of-
flcisl lormii'ion
nciBi cornipion
we luuei J7iuennwr mat iiu matt ui
spt of men ever was or ever will be
infallible that all Institutions and all
laws must have unrestrained power ot
I'CVrjUllUIOIll til -.?. ...icvi.u.. ...
the condition of Islam and China to-
i - - ...
uiuuu i.i.oib -i "r v.. .v....
lbreaKlI1( out all over the body. I am
.Mtertii M u inna Kimrinrn
'West (ornwell Conn.
Cotton Statistics.
The chttf statlstican for manufac-
ture. has compiled the following In-
-. ct (u tnfnrmallui hniuinn flit
""-"-. . .-"?. v"
amoun ut ootton ginned In Oklahoma
i . m . . t 1ttA . tn
from tho growth of 1803 up to and in -
cluJInu Saturday. December 13 1003
ana moy it Guthrie iri the near fu
ture. This will bo another "leather"
added to fimbria's baf. Coyle Clipper.
HOUSES IN DEMAND.
Real Estate Dealer Complain of
Scarcity of Residence Property.
The demand for rtn al houses is
more than we can accommo at-!.'
- w a .
"We need one hundred houses a
horo awhllo boforo they do UiIb If
property owners will build the real'
.. . ...
I1"" '"" va" promise mem teu
HWI.
. ..
iBtops every loss and drain of vigor.
Saved from Terrible Death. makes the nerves strong and steady
The family of Mrs. M. L. Bobbin enriches the blood Invigorates thd
of Bargerton Tenn. saw hev dying iwastod pelvic organs nnd most inl-
and were powerless to save her. Tho.portant of all restores the wilted
most skillful physicians and ery
remedy used failed while consump-
tion was slowly but surely taking
. her life In this terrible hour Dr
King's New Discovery for Consump-
an1 "" continued use completely re
storel her It's the most certain cure
In the world for all throat and lung
troubles Guaranteed Bo ties 50c and
$1 00. Trial bottles free at F. B
1 Further Procfs of Supremacy.
I Coin net I '..n seems no barrier to
Bl'DV.'KlSBIL Us march goes on by
i leaps and bounds. The past jiiar
j shows an increase of more than SO
- -r' -he preceding yea
bringing the :otaI sales of Budwolssr
(in bottles) to 100402600 bottles and
j the total sales for tho past 20 years
: 1876 to 1903 inclusive to 1410403.600
bottles.
BUDWfSISISR is the household
beverage of the American home and
its claim to the title "King of Bottled
yjeers " Is established by the fact that
aIth h runmndlUK he h hB'
" """"" luv uiRaB
prlce' iB exceed hose erf all
otner nottien heers combind An
heiiser-HiiHfhS othei brands of beer " . . .
i Psoriasis and all Chronic Skin III
are (.)()H0 hMCOn to Uudwelser
.
lhir u ' output la bulk for the
lst year was 1201762 barrels.
Anothr evidence of the supremacy'
fJr lt1lM.hUr . !. I .1... I
. . . "
ulanMi nt tn. ff t. annn. . .
" " ( " """ " " ""' o
'"rt fr8f TT" -"'M""'J-
the Stewart Cafe In Philadelphia lM1
h" Ta " Cafc "' Tucisco.
wnere tne nifni popular beers of
America entered Into eom petit Ion
aml lne vmTd wen Ut ni.dw.ur
"uu "v Ti"rO wnl IO UUUWCrlser
What's In a Name?
Everything is In the name when It
comes to WltCh Hazel flalvn V. r
rw & Co of Chl MatmitY
wme ymn bow to ft
... .
iron ww ' pwwe
t0T rne. Fo. .. hl " "T?
'or llln- FQr W1n"- oleodln. lb
ine and nrntmriin. nit
ing ana protruding Piles eczema
cuts burns rrulse and all skin dis- evening of January is. 104 will ouly
eases DeWltts Salve has no equal be honored in the hands of the brutter
Thi has given rise to numerous whose name is or Uie ticket or In tho
worthless counterfeits. Ask for De- hands of his wife mother sister or
Witt's the genuine Sold by J. N daughter. We have every indication
Wallace. taal lh capacity of the auditorium
!wlll be taxed to the limn Ticket
The Shakespeare club met Tuesday non-transferable and roust be j.reseat-
afternoon at the home of Mrs J. L ed at the door by person to whom ts-
Stevens The attendance was unua- sued except as above stan-i
ually terg. The lesson of the after
noon was a review of the Merchant
Venice which lesson will be coraplet
ed at the next meeting .which will
Iheld at he home of M. Dr Blesh.
COME TO US
Not a Dollar Need 8a
Paid Until Cured.
8r"NfeC.
i9ft9E6& I?'
1 In
r7 Vy
v
DR. RUSSELL & CO.
The Celebrated Enullsh Specialists
Offices: Astor House Outbrie Okln.
Years of practice in treating;
Chronic Nervous Blood and Special
Diseases gives u many advantages
over family physielans. Perfect con-
fidence In our ability and modern cura-
tive methods of trtntmeut prompts us
in making this g n rous offer
The physician who has not aiifficl-
confidence In hi. ability to euro
n" patients nst and receive hln pay
.afterwards is not die man to inspire
confidence in those who are In search
t honest treatment.
InHMnDDLinCA Beware of
fcCv
a'iUimunnnuiLH
UUIMUIIIIUULH Injections
charges stopped In i 4hours
NERVOUS DEBILITY Our euro
..
lor wean men removes nil the ill or-
fects of former folly and dissipation
powers of manhoo 1 Avoid temporary
stimulants. Seek lor a lasting euro.
We guarantee a permanent restora-
tion in from 30 to uo days.
VARICOCELE 1'nder our treatment.
this insidious dlsenxe rapidly disap
pears. Pain ceases almost Instantly.
The pools of stagnant blood are driven
from the dilated veins and all rforo-
ness and swelling quickly subside
Kvery Indication of Varicocele wiont
vanishes and in its stead come the
pride the power anl the pleasure of
perfect health and restorod manhood
0VDUII 10 or Contfitrious
OirHILlO Blood Po'&orr.
If you have 8ore Throat Miko.
Patches. Pimples Copper colors
spots Sores and Ulcers Ikn i'.unti
Palling Hair or any symptoms of thtfi.
disease in either primary secondary
or tertiary s nges come to us and ou
forever rid of it
All danger of transmission and oc-
currence is removed Why take mej
cury and potash for years when wo
can guarantee you a permanent cur
in i davs without the u.se of tbesu
Injurious remedies
We also cure to May curt-d My ro-
cele. Rupture Pili h Kidney WiddT
u vwl tv m.i I.. nM..nAUU T.S .
eases
I VRITE If unable to call glvlnn a
full description of your rase in your
own words Our Home Treatment ia
the most
huccomsIuI kmmn to men leal
seieniH. All ort. i-oodence Is cm.
ndentlal Hours. a to 8 p .
8unay8 9 . m p . Consult
ioIt and examination free. Address
DR RUSSELL & CO
Quthrls Okla.
Offices and treat mnt rootits ftU-
vate Parlors Astor Hcise.
Notice.
8oottih Bite Masons-
In nrilr tn nn.u..i- n.ltupninu In.
nilr with..... (.H..ii. .B.ii
u (he follow eiplantttU)n u
K ' .
- The tickets
.. . .t.
de:
ism. d 'or the entertain-
went an j the uanmi i followinK on tho
No additional tickets wot U ...suul.
ofl By order of the 8eo tlsb boi!
'.
Pratiu-nally
bo'Cha. A. Connmohnm. 22k r. r u
I Secretary!
&ti&.ik:jU&A.n B. .-
fc'.isirfsl ijm. -."
& AJb. .
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The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 1, Ed. 1, Monday, January 18, 1904, newspaper, January 18, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc75999/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.