The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 24, Ed. 1, Thursday, September 7, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR.
THE LEADEH GUTHRIE OKLA. THUKSPAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1905.
Tele LEADER
BY LESLIE O. NWLACX.
MEMBER OF TUB ASSOCIATED PIIBSS
rabllshed every afternoon from The
Leader budding. 1M TTett Harrison
avenue and entered Hi W" Guthrie
Pcctofllte as Second Class Matter.
Subscription Rate Daily.
rer week by carrier 10
Fer month by carrier
Ttt year uy Carrier In advance IS CO
ter year by mail. In advance 00
Weekly.
Eli months
One jcar &0
The Leader Is a member of thftAajw-
lated Press and rceoJVes the day tele-
rraph report of yixt great news organic
Uoti for exclusive afternoon publication In
Gut brie and SO miles radius.
New Yrf Otflfte. 1C Nassau St.
Chlcaoo Office C. A. WMIInms Mar-
quette Dido.
Mo. & K. Business 75 Editorial 69.
Ark. Valley Business 75$ Editorial 69.
KOT1CB TO SUBSCmBEHS
In the event of dellvory being Imperfect
r papers being rolled twisted or mtltll
atcd subscribers are urged to make lm
mediate complaint to tho business office
In person by 'phone or tiy mall.
THURSDAY SEPTEMnUH 7. 1906.
An Iowa man says only the rich hare
brains This Ib poor news.
Tlw Cossaolts are celebrating peace
by Killing a tew more Jews.
Japan possibly u not yet Christian-
ised sufficiently to say: "Blessed are
the peacemakers."
The Keep c"rsic3!oa should have
a care lost It be lassoed by the ml
tape it 1b trying to untangle.
We have often woudered why the
lime devoted to making raspberry pie
isn't given to some good cause.
Still. ir John D. Rookeieller had a
proper sense of modesty he would have
bought a wig that also coveted up hie
face.
la thpre any significance In the Rus-
sians selecting the Town jf Maikop as
a place to honor the nam of Roose-
velt? The undertakers will meet next year
In Oklahoma City which suggested
itsolf ar U'e natural place for hucu a
meeting.
It Is unfortunate that Mayor Duko
fa'.led to carry out his threat relative
to booting Oarrlo Natloi' manager
Into space.
The Guthrie .Milling company Is noth-
ing If. not enterprising. That train load
of Guthrie nindolflour will prove a good
advertising Wd for Guthrie.
An Eastern magazine has becono
greatly agitated oer tho quostion as
to whether Oscar Wildo Is living or
dead. What's the dlfftTence?
A distinguished Gorman professor
reports tha touoanut meat In Its raw
stato is tho .ratural food of man. An-
other proof of the Darwinian theory.
Sonator Fairbanks' presidential
brVini haa disappeared Possibly
Toddy look It with bin on that sub-
marine trip and didn't br.ng It back
A Texas negro was sentenced to
thousand years In the penitentiary
Still if ono haB to stay In Texas It
doesn't matter a grout dial where he
spends h'g time.
Afta treading Sonator Bevertdge's
article In the Saturday Evening Post
the majority of men will congratulate
ihomsolvos on having had the oourago
to resist the toniptntlou to go Into ilio
ministry.
Sonator Docker It Is said. Is after
Governor Ferguson "with scorn and
vumon ' Perhaps that's the reason
tho governor is referring to a certain
senator whoso bill wag etoed after
tho assembly adjourned.
An Idea of the great and ponderous
good to be done bj prohibition as
lautjbt and exemplified by I'ai r.e Na-
tion aod her notoriety seeking cohorts
is shown In the puettle it-n 'IuUoiik
pas d condemning lli maor of thl
c ty Prohlb lion lias not "much sbw
with such a gang edvocatlng it
The army officer who h miking a
tud of hypnotism imh.I1.ik h trial
for murder In the hope or using it on
the judge and Jury Is only applying
an "Id dene Hypnoiism after all in
a wiif if mi and as an art it has been
appliei by i tie fa r sex whenever they
havt had to tace twelte good men and
true There should be no disci linlna
Hon between the exe
StifciuH Ytltto. the Rusian diplo-
matic and statesman made and broke
a r mt at on since he came to Amer-
ica. Tie maneuvered himself into a
good posit on and obtained a splendid
bargiin for his couuUy. Then he
bragged lik a Keuiucky horse trader
how ht- had done up the opposition
Hut t ir dou'itful if he has done tham
up at all. It le juet noetilbJe Japan has
taken the broader view and ie the reel
victor. Anyhow Vine's boaatlng is
ill timed and in bad taete.
30
yers
THE PANIC OF THE INSURED-
Tho decree to which emotion rune
svny with peopl wrti m eoW bul-
nee Affair i hown in the preclpl
tut surrender of Hft insurance )oli-
e et for their aaeh values.
The Hfo insurance scandal has been
bad enough to alarm .everybody but
the policy holders. None of the revels
ttens yet mtde. startling as ther have
been from some standpoints hare In
the least affected the values of policies.
If the promised reforms are to mean
anything tangible they must mean bet-
ter conditions and returns Tor volley
hoKlors thafa bavo prevailed it the
past. A change from loose to strict
ritarfagfeiuont must make policies of
more valuo titan before.
The Equitable disclosures are bound
to hnve a baneful effect upon all life
Insurance compalf'epr Extreme pro
pef.ty may bflve lamptfri many com-
paulae to extravagance which will now
be rigidly checked.
There is n indication apywherq
that any large life Insurance company
Is n danger or Insolvency. T-hey w.ll
all cont.r.ne to do business and do It
under hotter ntethotla than those In
force previous to the scandal.
The life Insurance policy is safer
no nutter in what company than It
wae s x months ago.
Those who surrender their policies
will regret their emotionalism later
The cash value of a policy Is only
what a foreclosed value of Bny othr
property would be There Is a con-
siderable loes to i he man who aur
renders it. Bes'dt". increased ane
prevents his getting a new policy un
der as favorable terms.
The panic of policy holders Is with
out sane reason. But In It there U a
lesson for the Insurance compan'es
The reason inon fefl such distrust and
disgust Is their inability & And out
the condition of the company In which
they havo policies Wo easily suspect
what wp can not understand. If the
published reports of tho companies
wero intolllglble to tho public there
would bo ten suspicion.
A man holds life insurance as some
thing sacred It Is In most eases the
chief protection of dear ones against
want after he has gone
The average man will not tolerate
any chicanery In the management r;
this eacred trust.
He can entertain no doubts in thte
direction with equanimity.
If he Is over justlflott in allowing his
emotions to get tho better of his tea-
son this Ib the jiardonablo occasion.
But the fact romnlrs that he makes
a grave mistake in yielding to his
doubt and distrust.
And tho companies make a grnvo
mlstCKO in permitting doubt and dis-
trust to be possible. Their solvonoy at
leaBt should be made clearly to appear
above suspicion.
THE MAN TO BLAME.
AHhb Brandt. In tho New York Tri-
bune charges man with roaponfltbHlty
for "family desertion." So at nil
ovontB sh has found It In two-thirds
of SSC cases personally examined.
With the peroual Investigation of
Mle Brandt the reports of charity
workers agree In 12 per cent of the
casos looked Into by charity workors
Die wlfo was to blnmo chiefly; iu 13
per cent of the cases husband and wlfo
wero alxmt equally to bfame; In 12 per
cent again the immediate responsibili-
ty for the breaking up of home lay
outside the control of both husband
and wlfo. In threw canee only wtre
tho men really Incapable of supporting
families two by serious lllnesa and
one by blindness. These are the only
clear examples according to Miss
Brandt "among 674 cases or the hun-
dreds and hundreds of inon who are
popularly supposed to be driven to tho
desperate nioasuio of relieving their
wives and children of the disadvantage
of their presence in order that the
public shall see to It that they do not
stiff or "
A sad and s'gnlficaut feature In the
statistics suppliod on family ilosettion
Is the looseness disclostd In the mar
rlage relation. In 110 oases fifty-
three men left wles for other women
Seenten women only were charged
witli a like offense and against these
seenteen the proofs were not con
vinrlng
Dew-ttloi) Is in many cases attrlli
utable to Intemperance. Thtee hun
dred and twentv five of tho Investigat-
ed men arrt forty three of the lavestl
gated woiiirn are set down as "hard
dr nkers " Family life it Is impossi-
ble ti maintain when either parent de-
Kcendi to hablt unbt-fltting animal.
Miss Brandt raises a point or practi-
cal value when he charges that many
or the desertiog husbands go to fotm
the floating population of cities
If the truth could be known." she
states "it would b round that many
or tho apparently unattached men who
fill (he free lodgings and make up the
'bread linos' are rucilly deeming hug
band who create a double problem by
lagving their families dependent at
home and oatfng themselves on char
ity in game other place"
This ie a phase of the question de
serving aerioua aid minute Investiga-
tion There doe net seem to be vigor
enough at all displayed In following up
;sasea or desertion-. We do not allow
annrohlsu to land In America but suf-
fer anarchists of the most repulsive
character home breakers to go un-
CUerry Pectoral. A
regular medicine. A strong med-
icine. A doctor's medicine. A
medicine that cures hard colds
severe coughs croup the grip
chronic bronchitis.
J.O. irCt..
MMUMMuraA
whlpt of Justice at home They bes-
ly desnrt wlfft and children They in-
jure society They affront hu nanlty
nut Rsk the neighlior? and they will
mee&ly answer "Gohe to the. west"
"Said to be In Texas" "Last heard
from In California."
Tho statements of the state banks of
Guthrie show tip In splendid' shape. It
can bo truthfully geld that Guthrie has
recorered from the financial depres
sl-.n of a year ago.
THE $20000 BILL.
Governor Ferguson's Statements About
keglslatlon Challenged.
(Coinmunlaattttf.)
A statement made by Governor Tom
Ferguson in an nddrees at Sparks in
Lincoln county during the past week
Is attracting tho attention at present
of tho people of the two territories
probably more so at this time because
of tho near appronch of statehood.
To illustrate a point in his address
the governor said- "After the Okla-
homa legislature closed last .spring
a politician of prominence In the ten
ntory asl'e rat for my reason for
vetoing a certain bill which had passed
both houses of tho legislature. I an-
swered: 'Hecnuso tt wae conceived
in Iniquity and brought forth in sin.'
Tho ma then told me that It cost
$20000 to pass that bill through the
legislature" Dally Paper.
The governor does not say whflt bill
lie means but we remember that he
tetoed but one bill and that was the
quarantine bill. This same bill was
passed by tho legislature In 1903 and
vetoed by the governor. The demands
of the people were such that the laet
legislature again passed the bill.
Ninety-nine per cent of the people of
Oklahoma and the Osage nation de-
manded Yhls hill. It was passed and
again the govornor vetoed the hill.
This very bill the governor had recom-
mended in his mossngo to the legiala
ture. However Hitchcock the great
power at the White House when it
comes to making governors wired the
governor to veto the bill; that le con
fllctel with the Interests of certain
cattlemen who hid leases In the
Osage aat'on. The legislature could
not see fit to stand by a little private
graft of Hitchcock an-! promptly paas
ed the bill over the governor veto
Now when the governor knows that
the quarantine bill Is a Just bill; that
the people dT Oklahoma unanimously
demanded It; when he romombors that
ho hlmsolf recommonded It; when ho
renllioa that the people know that ho
vetoed tho bill sacrificing tho intor-
estB of the people over whom he rules
in order to save his political neck and
hold his Job as ho realizes these
things It seems that the governor has
missed another mighty good chance to
keep st.ll and not refer ta tho bill
that he vetoed.
Or It may be that tho governor re-
fers lo Homo or the bills that ho did
not veto os stated In the article but
failed to sign and atlowed to die after
tho legislature adjourned. Those who
know the bills wh'ch passed tho legis-
lature and which the governor allowed
to dlo will havo a hard time finding a
bill that was worth twenty thousand
dollars or oven one-half that sum to
any Interests organized. In the terri-
tory or ono which !t could be expected
that any such sum as twenty thousand
dollars could have been raised to
lobby through tho legislature. The
statement looks ridiculous. Further-
more If as the goernor says the bill
"was conceived In Iniquity and boroi
In sin" and ho knows enough about it
to veto tho bill why dooa ho not lot
tho publlo know something about It
who the grafters aro and how thoy
operato. If theso things are true why
doos he not havo his attorney gonoral
or tho county attornoy Institute an in-
vestigation and bring the guilty before
tho oourt? In other woids do more
and talk less.
QUIQC'S QLM20LE.
"I'roni tin- Uullf Num.)
Cull t-mtlle It-RlmiM- The nnl Oovotn-
t -if 'IVx.i thuuld lie a utaienmun .ind
l.t- ill Uickbone to do t ink' Putiy
r'il" wrfenthiu? i.u'WirlcU tKiuuet.
.hrowipg "aiowrtaVes upoli iht- mirl-
KoIiIh )! i!a cut adieu the 'i.r'.
but u gxi jjllinmt-rlnj with tho vx-ixion
clmt hi lugs it forth unit owit fur notli
lt In tryilnt irfilri uli busi-
ness aoterniHriit. with no 'i ill upon H.
such a neputiMn. fre pusm and n on
Is wh.tt the plain people ynt.
If imv one of th- a;entl n n ii'tmed foi
SitHHr U tlmiiMl Text -vHI i ot him
.ik Its itUf ni'iullif it in in who -ui
tllnit llowirn." Ilr-wks lo-iky lime of tlio
oratoi thin m one uf th.in .! sonii
timeai appeal a .i Hum who euulit mmi-
in oi.iloiv Bi.t I.e. o fur ht hIiowi
no tin I'li.itlon to lk It Coictitiit ne not
know one rhetorictl Doner from another.
Any nutu who has leeu for ear eiiKiKil
In calcuUtlnt; mllu(e unit freight n
dirri-i-eullah) oun not jrraup a Dguie of
leen Bell ner eaei the omtoiic
1U made noe ipeeolies when h was hi
the senate. ljt they wece plain 4id
elote to the vubjev-l dll the time Inuie-
Ine. it you un Mr WIU talking- atiout
daffodlla Hiitl nwxklns; liluli A foi Mr
Campttell. he never had tnoiiKh wntlniein
or ornlory In blm to repuMt "twinkle
twinkle Mltle r" with the JWHVer feel
big It la Mining nothing- tl-r-.ator to
any of thest (ilemMi to say that in
oratom itu-j have uot and will not make
areat iwnies. In fuct orators are not
in much demund In such humdrum times
us wis are having If wr.r luvild n.
Its ffTtaaltd ftuut oi mil ttlioitit .t
tmpcrlltxl tn i the (t itoi would h. !i
demand llui be i not un.i n. v.
when evry one to umi. t in muj.i-
lus pi.tetlt-.il uid et-ouoinl( quentioiik
NothliiK tuld he iiwie ildlv.ulgu- tl in i
nuin nkniiii . i. oi mn bttoie tin nb
IU h mn f r n.ll In inn J be i l(rn .) to
(bt unil Me iut iubllt nilmi la on
ta.s uiul txp.'iMts nl ftt rnrnt ni -.( tt-
lr... out. htHid a . lebrnl. I . nl.'i n
ul.l . .. I . itt. I i l...u ... K. V . . I
tM lUv oiaioiitdi yu tbt. 11 in jjil
his full was very flat Quire; wns ft h. i
ef'protefj. of Senator Piatt unfl "
nw(iprrii tutii t tlked mub ubout hl
t?liir th rotnl e n an tit tact "hey
prophecled 'hnt he wool 1 be taken I llo
the senate' by Piatt Tile tartf qtKftMn
was op ana QulRg- concluded to prepare
A speeeh on the nujhtet ard dtottneulsh
himaeir In Its deHverv. He 'eek the rtor
wheri the time came that he thought bet
far him te make a good Imprerskm arc'.
pmeeeJel Ft- the first ten or Mf'een
inhvttet his terirk" were In the naturo
"f Intro luetnp htrnroH Then "ie re- In it
the plic wlete he Inttndcd tn astound
those who wer present In idluCIng t" i
some one of his rirt-T;lalne Sfites
Prevs belle-es--he nald. "botted .int".
spurred he unrann; Into the arena nnd
Just nt that moment Caruth of Kent.tcky
In a tons; drawll us voice for which he
wns notorious arose and whined out
"Mr Spe-ilier K-el wts In the chair.
and-he wae nlsc equipped with a drawl-
Ins; ilsl I very and he could make It most
e&nsperftllnK whn ht desired. He did
not like Qulrr no he drawled tiotw tlinn
ever lit hi Interrouatory 'Tor wliat rlo"
the afntteman from Kentucky or1eT'
"I desire to ask the gentleman from New
Voik a question. ' wst the response of
Caruth. Then Heed m htfl mot inltat-
lofr way proi-eeded to drawl out the foi
Jotting '"The trentleman from )entu'-k
wlshea to ask the aentlftnan from Mew
York a qtieetlcn " Thl" had token a
legist a minute and Quiff? stootl with his
hand In the ilr just as he had It when
Interrupted. Taking a good Innir br.fh
Heed continued "The gentleman from
Kentucky will phase ask his tUstion '
Cnruth fingered his papers as If he were
tn deep thought ns to how to frame his
ItiUrrogaiory. and im.illv put an extra
drawl on his words ns he said- "I would
ilkf to know wh-rc In -1) nlston the gen.
tlcman from New York ever read any
thing ilmut anybody 1 cars not who h
was springing Into an arena to right lion'
and tlgcis witl. hoots and sj urs on.'
Qulgg nat down and was never the mm.-
man again. They leat him the next
time he ran and we have beard of bin-
no more forever foi Culberson In dls-
cuRttng oratory In cmrress w"th P'ate
Pretm years ago nld: "The occasions
are rare and tie men few who can-hold
the luiuse bv ornlory. Tne .nan whj
makes the imprenslon In hls Iwdy la the
man who argues like h' wna argulr-g a
demurrer. 'For I 0H ww It Is the cnl1-eat-lJoodetr
nn 1 clammiest srt of uoll-
tlclaaa In all the world. Oratory and
sentiment roll -iff them lut like- water
off a duck's hnik. I wonlil just aa soon
try to -ork on the fecflngs of a Jur
compoaed of good lawvers as lo try t.i
get this houe to go my w-.y bv expres-
sions of sentlnmt und rli-torlcol tlour-
leheo " The people are getting very
much like the house of rfiresmta!e3
Thy wunt sense talk"tl 'o ihem ami do
not cure for tn)thclog-lal lore and pot try.
Why surfer with lieitlaoJ.e pot.stijwiUon
stomach kidney and liver trouble when
I lobster's rtocky Mountain Tea will cure
you No moruy wanted unless i-ou nm
cured. 3f. ecnt "fe or Tffbtet. A!t
vour drufrgifrt.
SHAWNEE'S FIRST B..LE.
Shawnee Okla. Sept 7. llmwnee's
II ret bale of cotton wes broutfbt In totla)
by S. W. HnrKls from tpmr AfrClouil. Two
bourfi later F. 1 I.lf.le of west of To-c-umseb
brouRbt hi Hiiotbor. A premlOm
of JM whs divided bv the men. Both
bAlea wero bid hi at 10 c-nts.
Trribl pbtgues. thoic lteblnS. peser
ItiB dlaaen of tho skin 1-ut an end to
iilsexy. Doan's Olntmsrt cjrea. At anr
Jrui; store.
SEARCH FOR MISSING FARMER.
Waukomlk Okla.. Sept. T. Mrs. WII--lluni
Coiieland todj- reflHested oft'eers
to make n search for l.er huslsind. who
mysteitously dlsaiuiearml throe weeks
ago with $.'.U00 In his possession the
proceeds of eii'-.g !ils farm. . Copland
was married only t-e'itly. 'Us wife fenm
foul plav.
INFORMATION FOR COWMEN.
Explanation of New Oklahoma Quaran-
tine Line Given Out b Sec-
retary Tom Morris.
Among the cattlemen In Southern Ok-
lahoma tberu la vme misunderstanding
rgardliiK the new sub-iruurauttna Unt
recently established by the Ckluhonw
Live Htoek Haultary commlsalon along
the ltoik Island railroad in Caddo coun-
ty In regard to this Una Secretary Tom
.Morris of the buurd today said tltat this
new Hue wits established by the Terrt-
tor only and In no way affects the fed-
eral line along th South Canadian liv
er Oattleinou (bs not move their stnek
above the federal line.
new question to solvo has reached
the Oklahoma. Live Hiotk Auiltuiy ram-
mlmloii which Secretary Hitchcock held
hits no authority whutt-vei In the Osage
nation teguidiug the movement of cat-
tle to and from thut nut Ion This order
vvitM made hy Seiretury IlltehcOck. fol-
lowing Hi- passage by the lust territo-
rial leglitlai re of a bill Mtabllshlug a
quarantine Hue -vro-.ind the Osage nation
Its held stall a line would Interfere with
leasing the Indians' lands to eatllt men
and regarded the bill as lnoeratlve
The new question whUJi arise Is In
tegard to the board's authority to In-
veMllgate taiM-s of glanders among horse
and mules In the Oaagv i tllon. It the
board haa no power over 111 cattlt In
tluu nation lut it hid over dteaaeI
horse aud mule'' This uueatlon uilae
fiom the fatt that Ilr While a veterlu-
nrutn. ekilms to lutve auch authority from
I-Yank FVnnt of the Osage Indian na-
tion. Secretar) Moi-rle lookup the mat-
ter with Mi. Krauts and bvtween Uiem
the question wHl probably ba setTT.-d.
or Ituntz will like!' take it bffore the
Interior department
UTilte recently ordeied lvi?o hore
killed al Newklrk. although th- laid
not been Inspected by unj terrttoii.il dr
federal ollker Tlie disnoslllou of th
Whit !a Wll fellow the txttlfupond-
eoce between Morrb1 and Ki.intx
.Muddy Complexions
Bl&ck He&ds
Pimplefe and Eruptions
CAN BE CURED
i
fhey are auc I8 troiurltie in lite blood
and it has bee) feuad that a course of
mviMuM menu vai'rs. th wwi
known K'tlney and Blood Hemedy will
viuiIKmI. the tixubl promptly. Why
he moitltl. J by ub umUajBtly compleilon
when thrf i ure I sti tanili und cheap.
&0 cents.
J. N. Wallace pharmacist
Guthrie Okla.
Sfir
I SCHOOL BOOKS AND SQHOOL SUPPUE!
g At
g We are headquarters for Drugs Perfumery and Druggist
S Sundries. We
tf
I C. R. REN FRO
Opposite P. 0. 2o6'W. Okla. Ave.
ss"
SfiffifilKr
A New Stetson Slor
In dlscusaing a recent li&ported thea-
ttlcal vonturo that failed becauso ot
Its inadequate presentation David
Henderson brought to light a romatk
by the late John Stetson that was
now to New York;
"It was at the time of tho produc-
tion of 'The Uondollers' sala Mr. Hen-
derson. "The night before tho open-
ing Jlr. Stetson and I wore watching
the dress rehearsal. Tho opera was
very protty but tne cast was not equal
to It. It was easy to see that a failure
Nkfas in store for us. Stetson snt and
scowled. Finally ho loaned over to tat
and said: "The name of this opera
ain't "Tho Cfbndollors." '
" 'What is it?'
" 'It's "The Gonedollars." ' "
The Well to Do Brother.
Frank Ver Beck the Illustrator hai
a brother who Is a very successful
business man. Among a party of vis-
itor? to Mr. Ver Beck's studio ono
day recently was a lady who met him
for tho first tlmo. In tho courso of
tho conversation one of the callers
made a reference to this brother.
"Sdmo friends of mine" observed
tho lady "know your brother. I be-
lievo ho Is very well to do is ha
not?"
"On the contrary" replied Mr. Vet
Beck sad) "he is ver hard to da 1
asked him to lend me $6 last week
and he had the impertinence to say
that when I returned tho five I bor
row. d last summer perhaps he would
think about letting mo have this One."
Saturday Evening Post-
Exceeded His Instructions.
The curtain had rlspn on the thlid
cct and the momenta-- hush 'hat pee
ceded the resumr-IoE of tho perform-
anco on the stage was broken by a
stentorian voice from the rear of tht
auditorium:
"Is Dr. Dlnltlosplkor in the house?"
A tall heavily wnlskorcd man oc
cupying a front seat stood up.
"If Dr. Dlnklosplher Is In the house.'
'resumed the htentorlan voice "he toli
me I was to come hare and call him
out at lOVclocl:."
Whereupon Dr. DInklespIker look
Ing Very red picked up "his hat and
eane and walked down the aisle amlt
temd and .enthusiastic applauio.
For Cuts Hums. Old Sores. Eczema
Pile and all Skin Diseases there Is no
remedy equal to Hawkoye Family Salve.
MB cents. J. N. Wallace.
WEALTH AT SEA'S BOTTOM.
Untold Treasure of Pure Manganese
Lies Under the Pacific Ocean.
In spite ot the enormous inroads
made on this earth's great store oi
wealth diamonds gold oil gas coal
lion and other materials recent In
veetlgutlona have brought to light the
Interesting fact that treasuro fields
containing fabulous wealth still re
main intact.
Investigations hae proved for In-
stance that huge areas of tho floor of
tho Pacific are strewn thick with Im
inenso deposits of nodulos of pure
manganese. Invent a practical ana
economical method of recovering It
and the individual who does so wll)
at once become rich beyond the
dreams of avarice.
The most crying "fled to-day la c
substitute for pars rttbbor. It Is cor
tain to be discovered sooner or later
Celluloid and oxidized Unseed oil art
useful for some purposes for which
nibber Is used but for cycle and auto
mobile tires real rubber U tho ?nly
material with the necessary elasticity
The Inveutor uf a substitute would
soon become a multimillionaire.
No need to tur sudden .1 Haiku of
clwleru infantum dysenteiy. .licrrhoee.
summer eonipLtlnt of unv ho t If von
have. Dr. Jowlei's KxlraU of Wild ritravt-
beiry In the utdlelne chest
Removes Run.
To remove rust stain sat a box of
Ruatlne ISradlcator at Leader on 4
Price 10 centa
THE
LHHLMHslHLHssiHBMHBHfili
Penf ros Drug $tore.
undersell them all. Come and see us.
Prescriptions a Specialty.
E1IIKHRSQBZUIBBIMaiasiKHKHSIS!EIBHUBMIIUIIIl
si
M
m
m
n
M
Lodge Directory
KBREflBBlBBIBBBB5BBK5aHflHKXBBBRBRBBBBBiraBBKNBl
Quthrle Lodge No. 3 I. O. O. F.
Meets overy Monday night at 7:30
Vclock at Odd Fellows' hall comer
Harrison fend Broad.
L. L. BHIInQS Noble Grand.
H. L. Strough Secretary.
Renfrow Division No. 3 Uniform
Rank K. of P. Meets second and
fourth Friday nights at Masonic ball
119 Kabt Oklahoma avenre.
Q. E. Dunnlca Captain.
W. T. Warren Recorder.
Hartranttt Post No. 3 G. A. .
Meets on first and third Fridays :d
each month at 7:30 j). in. In Odd Fel-
lows' hall.
M. L. Mock J. H. Talt
Adjutant Post Com
Guthrie Lodgo No. 1 A. O. U. W.
meets every Thursday night in the
new Masonic hall on Hast Oklahoma
Visiting brothers welcome.
E. H Ruthven M. W.
W. J. Leatherman Recorder
CANTON GUTHRIE No. 5 PatrL
arch's Militant. I. O. O. F. Regular
assembly every sexond and fourth
Tuesday night In each month in Odd
Fellows' hall. Visiting Chavallois
welcome
P. K. Abbutt Com'dL
W. J. BarnhJrt Clerk.
Guthrie Chapter no. 2 Order of the
Eastern Star. Meets in the Masonic
Temple every second and fourth Fri-
day evenings In each month.
Hortense Doye W. M.
P. M. L. Ray Secretary.
Al. Hlxon W. P.
(luthro Canton No. 6S07
Modern Woodmen of Ameri-
ca moots every Tuesdty ev
ening In I. O. O. F. hall.
corner of Ilarrluin and Broad
Vlsltine Neighbors cordially
welcome
D. M. T1BBBTTS CoucsoL
J. E. BrtEWER Clork
Woodmen of the World Gut.rle
Camp No. 3. Meets every Tuesday at
T.'30 p. m. in the Woodmen hall over
Spencer hardware Btore. Visiting
Woodmen welcome.
Wm. Conntlly. Con. Com.
The Kiss.
.Ye wsr walking- home tocether
Through the fragrant fields of Juno.
In the sweet enchanted weather
Whrn the earth is all In tune;
Beerets In our henrts. unspoken:
Over us the blue unbroken
tave whera llki a lover's token.
Hunt th slender descent mesn.
Love and Hope were -nine to g-uiae mt
In th scented atmospuere.
And with Beauty close beside me
Paradise Itself was near;
Love was In the air. I knew It:
Leaves tbty lisped It; brtties blew It:
And upon tne grass In dew it
Mlncled n the moonlight clear.
White she was a moonlit Illy
Were not lovelier to see
In Its rarden boudoir stilly!
Fairer than a flower was she!
Music was her volet; her laughter
apea as .were a lyric snarl Her
Lips let go. and Echo after
Follow a us with melody.
Echo followed as did Cupid
Whispering alone the way;
I ooUld besr thm murmur "Stupid
Why not klsi hr when you msyt
Why not tell hsr In th twlllchi
While tbs stars and moon on high light
All tha world with love's own. shy llghtr'
"Hssr" my heart said "and obey."
Bo I took: my heart's suggestion.
And when next I heard a sleh
.11 ot love wsnt tn th question
And returned In hsr reply;
Thsn came ena brief blissful minute
With a first kiss tangled In It.
Think what luck it was to win it.
With a horstshot In th sky'
S"elU Carmsn In Life.
JTtWKlse-t
vljjyvjif wi
$&xw
HIGH SCHOOL
Will find more than a one and a half
ton stock of
TABLETS and SCHOOL SUPPLIES
at the "Eagle" from which to select
wants. Lowest prices"
ever oflered.
EXCLUSIVE MANUFACTURERS
OF VALUABLE PRESCRIPTIONS
I. O. R. M. Meets every Tuetl
night In K. of P. hall. Visiting cl
always welcome.
Frank B. Sarber Sachet
H. C. Barney Chief o5 Rocords.
Guthrie Lodge No. 2 K. of P. Mi
every Ft !ray nlgbt In Matonlc l
119 East Oklahoma avenue
L. S. Page G. E. Dunnlc
K. of R. & h. c
Guthrie Chapter IV. No. 6 R. A.
meets the first nnd and third Fri
nights in each mo.th at A. F. & A.
ball Visiting companions always tl
come.
NCo. A First RegL Ok. N. 3. Mel
tvery Wednesday night at 7.30!
Armory hall 109 West Harrison ail
G. E. Dunnlca Capta
C S. Curran Orderly Sergeant
Guthrie Commancary No. 1 Knfgj
Templar. Meets ovory Wednesti
evening at 7:30 at their Asylum
the Masonic Temple. Visiting
Knights always welcome
Guthrie Lodge No. 428 a P O.
Meets the second and fourth ful
day nights ot each month In Elk hfj
H. W. Pentecost E.
J. Foucart.. Secretary.
MmmI D.k.t.k I M HI.. t tl
...win iiswBn.il l.uuyQ 1V A l.gBJ
O. F. Meets first third Tues
nights ot every month In Odd Fell
ball.
Lucy Hemig Noble Grand
Maggie Milam Secietary.
Oklahoma Encampment No. 1 I.
.... .
O. F. Meets every "Wednesday nlj
at 7:30 o'clock at Odd Fellows' hallJ
F. A. Meystte 0. K
P. K. Abbctt Scribe.
F. A. A.. Guthrie Council fro. T4
Fraternal AM Association. Meets el
ery Weunesday night In Odd Fellov
ball corner Harrison and Broad Visa
Ing monbers always welcome.
Guthrie Commannary- Knights Temi
lar meets second and fourth Mondal
nights In each month at frelr nsylun
In A. F. & A. M. hall. Visiting Sfl
Knights always welcome.
DENVER. ENID t SllLF fl
SPECIAL EXCURSION
Garfield County Falp and Street Carnlva
at Enid.
Kept. 12 to 16 tiahiH le.n. 8 I-1!
depot duthrle t 9il0 a m i d 5 3
p. HI. TliketH on ale Sept it i 16 11-
clynlve. tine tm t in. f ut jukiJ
trip.
On fuixd.is. Tl iiixduy md Sj i 6 y
sne li' tt ( i will 1-ivf 5ni f. r iit-
rle at 11 oclotk p tl.
J J. OlNNlVJUUr
ii K Jt r A
O J. TI'RPIN
n ib'
INDIANS DISPOSING OF TIMBER
Par's Texss r pt 7 -t'ul J ot-
Rovne. In tht i-lly lutliiy from his i. h
near 'I t Hkonon. t I '1 itor"i h.'t
tht re Was Ki"t aitivhv Roini on -i iho
Territon in tht timhei btiMm - Tu
men. hard wood mnbei m u .rj.l fno
men are all Ki-abblns or ifnlici i t htf
ludLuis are inpidl; x.llnt thru 1
O . 1 O 3HL "T -
Bsintu ) Tli Xmd Von Haw Always EtM
j The Kind Yoi
2W5S
Signature
sf
iDRUG
EDWARD NICHOLS PROP.
Co THE ' j9
STORE
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The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 24, Ed. 1, Thursday, September 7, 1905, newspaper, September 7, 1905; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc76248/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.