The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 142, Ed. 1, Monday, August 6, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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TBE DAILY LEADER.
BY LKSLIK O. MB LACK.
M&MBKft OT THM ASSOCIATED mBBg '
rHlfcH every "iitwjwon" t rora Toe Leader tmfkiin;.
10? "West Harrteon avenus and entered at tlw Oath-
t! rostefflr a Bteond Class Matter.
! " ' II . Ill
ubserlptlon Hate Dally
vf week by arrlcr J0
month by carrier
fer year b: carrier. In advance 6e8
per year by mall In advance
VFekty
ilr mnnth ...........
Or year
.SO
Official County Paper.
Official City Paper
aw i nii 'Jf "
& a
)
The Leader la a member of the Aedt5led Free
and receives tbft day telegraph report of that frfckf w
ranltatlon for excluslvo afternoon publication In Guth-
rie nd 0 mllea radius.
Washlnflton New Bureau 1348 B. St. 8.
Ntw York omoe 160 Nassau St.
E.
Telephones.
Business
New ...
75
(9
NOTICE TO aUBSCttlBERS.
In the event of delivery being; Imperfeet or papers
K-uib; rolled twisted or mutilated subscrlberi are ured
to irudw immediate somplatnt to the business offlte In
pwrso". by 'phono or by man.
UmONjfeABEL
MONDAY AUGUST G 1000.
' exclttwrrf !n ttkv Q lartPrt Iho American mbassy was
on the qui .iv thi rfpn-sentaiues of th Arocwan press
In London formed a mtntahire ma meeting In thp vestl-
bule of the HoM CeHl. V. T Stead Sbd John Burn the
latter rtn old fried of Mr. Bryan ran a msck-ftnd-neck race
in hanaetou up tbft eoart of Uis Ocll for Ah auiHence with
the erwit American
Between the hours of 7 and 11 ) night upwards of
a hindid people aaAeil for admission to Mr. Bryan's
utvaendK And not one of them was denied. Prompt anil
2uliie$lke. Mr. Bryan mapped out hi tkne and each
caller of each collection of callers wan granted so piRny
fieronda or mlnutft- a the case might be. Fwo page boys
wf- PBpecIally allotted to carry up and down the schedule
in' 'i Bry.in a mi 'Mtwllnous annilntmenfe.
j It wan a late hour when between engagements grant
ed to (.n ex-cabinet minister and a distinguished man of
U-turn the representative of the Express was ushered Into
the pretence of the projective president of the United
State
To Bngllsh eyes Mr. Bryan Is the last man aupptrotlve
of a statesman. He Is of great statyo thickly net and
extremely careless In his attire. His clean-shaven face 1b
tmggestlve of Irish origin and from the back of n some-
what bald head a cascade of silvery curls flood his coat
collar. He looks half an actor and half tho successful
manager of a large hotel. His blond of personality sug-
gests n typo that only tho United States has produced-
he boss of the great show.'
"But tho moment that Mr. Brynn opened his mouth
It t another tnlo altogether. On the question of world-
wide policy or tho mixing of cocktail? Mr. Bryan is a
master Fpenker. Ho lias tho diplomacy of a heaven-born
minister the persuasiveness of n woman and a vorboBlty
which could only have boen equalled by Mr. Gladstone"
oOo
Hiq hiYMrifiiss Rkirl
m9mmmmmmmmmmmmmxmim'mm"mmmm'
JUSTICE FLEEING FROM THE INFURIATED MOBS.
Wo have had two markable casos during tho last
weok UluBtraUvo of the modern method of ndminlsterins
"Jrietlce." One was in Maryland whore a negro convicted
of a capital offense had to bo suddenly spirited away on a
boat and carried to an Island to bo executed nccordin-: to
law. Thus wo find the powers that bo absolutely ra S
with tho mob deceiving the mob dodging tho mob clrc h
venting the mob In strenuous efforts to uphold tho If w
It Is difficult to conceive of a moro gTiovous farce.
If a. anoro ridiculous rush for tho gallows In crder to
beat tho mob to It could bo conceived of It Is found In the
Mayfield Ky. case. Tho crime was committed on "Wednes-
day and Just a week later the criminal was tried in a few
min-ites and hanged In a hurry according to law I Tho
scaffold was erected and tho ropo bought boforo the trial
began. Tho ontlro fence surrounding tho scaffold hnd boon
torn down by the enraged citizen while tho trial was going
on. It was only fifty minutes from tho tlrao tho jury wao
sworn In nntll tho negro was pionouncod dead. Mnthls
nrrlved from Louisville at C:40 o'clock In charge of Deputy
Sheriffs Oscar .Elmore and John Galloway nnd tho militia
company of Hopklnsvlllo. Tho local militia mot tho train
nnd tho negro was marchod to the cotirt hotmo. Sevorul
attempts wore made io solio him nnd he was twlco In tho
possession of the Infuriated mob. The soidlors quickly
surrounded tho nogro nnd a number of the Hopklnsvllie
company wero rumpolled to draw thoir guns nnd threaten
to uso thorn unless tho mob fell back. The negro would
have met his death by lynching but tho crowd decided to
let tho law Inflict tho punishment after it bad preceded
that far. Tho account concludes as follows: "Tho largest
number of peoplo ever seen on tho streets of Mayfield nro
here tonight and there nro rumors that another negro lit
Jail from HIckmnn county charged with tho samo offense
will be lynched but It Is understood that ho has been
spirited away."
There is probably no doubt whatever that both these
negroes should hnvo been hanged but Biirely all this
dodging tho mob fleeing from tho mob rushing men to
trial through tho trial and to tho death In order to out-
strip tho mob is as much a traversty as Is tho ordinary
rulo of delay and trickery by which criminals of greater
Influence nro turned loose upon tho country for so many
dollars and cents
WHERE GALL RUNS RIOT.
As n production distinguished by unmitigated gull the
Indian resolution adorned at the Republican mass meeting
held at MeAlestor Wednesday Is a mnsterplece.
"The P&publlcan party has ovor boon the friend of the
Indian; provided the mean.! of his education; has ever
Boug'l . . I lilrat lb- i&efoctlnn of his nllotmontj nnd the
ery i-.. b. individual l omo; the ele-stlon of his race
to v "vf'C itlenshlp; atod has placed In his hand a free
bftllet u3 S3 ho will."
This effusion Is h&ttded out to the Indian with a bold-
no& that ls startling. How far pray toll s can a Republi-
can hungry for office allow his subterfuge to go J o what
o.xtremo can a guilty conscience carry hlraT
Tho Indian friendship of the Republican partv is tho
rankest of decoptlon. It begins with breaking sacr -d
treaties as If thoy wore party compacts. It Includes a
roductlon of the Indian vested with nil of thu rights if an
American citizen to a more subject of a guardian without
Afler "30 hal been received in to
telegraph-room o? on .? tho Chicago
newsrmpsrg a faw nights ao the of-
fice manager who In his day had
been a oelabrated "tourist" filled hia
sorncob plpo and regaled his fellow
knights of tho key with tho following
tale:
"It wns a fow montha aftr the big
strike of '83. when telegraphers all
over the country quit wok at the sig-
nal 'Grunt In tioad' that I starVd ouf
aB a 'tourlBL' 1 was In Detroit at the
time and hnd a good 'alt' as assistant
train dispatcher but went out with the
others. Ona fellow who talked louder
at tho mootlngs tl.an anyone else was
tho first to go back and ho was g!en
my placo In tho ofllco. Tho oiUclfila of
tho road sent for mo several tlmoB but
I ignored them much to my sorrow as
It aftorward turned out. Of course we
lost tho strike and when it camo to
casting about for nnothor Job llttlo
Wllllo found that ho had boon black-
listedat least whoro I applied for
work I was told thoro was nothing
doing.
"I hnd a friend who was chief train
dispatcher for the T. & P. at Texar
kana Ark. and I wrote to him asking
If ho could stake mo to anything. In a
few days I got a loiter from him tell-
ing mo to come on and be would glvo
mo the night trick at Terrell Toxag. It
paid only f45 per but that wns a
whole lot bettor than loafing. I rode
the bumpers to St. Louis whero 1 land
ed on a Sunday morning. That after
noon i mado two attempts to get out
of town on tho Iron Mountain road.
but each time I was driven off freight
trains by tho brakemeu. As the walk-
ing was pretty good I hit tho ties to
Jefferson Barracks where I side-
tracked until a train camo along after
dusk.
"It was a through freight bound for
Texas points and 1 hopped aboard of a
-v"N-wrfc-----'.iry-sparTe
M Jr f - ir rj rv
men vvno rteurea in Mntucnv reua wntcn u
Resulted in Murder of J. B. Marcum
heart or' conscience. It Is responsible for tho starvation lilf; .Then ; tackIeti & O"or one
nvifiM tha ftii.iiM.i. I- h. ...... ..t ?nd Jusl a3.truo ns ' sitting hero 1
existing among tho full-bloods In the hills rich thougl
thoy bo in lands poor by reason of departmental rostr! tlon.
That snme friendship robbed tho Indion of his lands
and gnve them to their former slavos.
That samo party hna tied tho Indian's hands with rule
and rogulr'onB and hold him tip ns a victim for grafters.
That samo party has waxed fat In a prolonged allot-
ment of lands delayed lu order to give sustenance u
grasping politicians having unemployed charges.
It wan .he Rapublican Judiciary that blocked the Inn!
Bottlemeut of tho Choctaw and Chickasaw estate by ad-
mitting vc citizenship thousands o." ;raudilent applicants
thb elimination .. which entalir n j enormous eosn bus-
talned by tho tribes themsolvos.
Oh yos .he Republican party nas "ever sought to aid"
tho Indian to part with his ostnto.
It has "provided means' iaken from the indian
treasury and not a doilar from any .jthor source.
It has "selected his allotment"-whore inO vhon.
except In enfeos of obstinate fulllbloods who aro n n
small minority'
It has erected his home hoias !n uie groun Tor nany
prison cells for otharfi n lecont iiof "or none
It hos elovatsd his rac yos moral;- by
civilisation protection mm ducat n aono -
1Ik?x&& TnLflBaBBBHHpBHkwfldSaaW JfsBdKA I MMriMBK BFaViuBBIHBBBBr
Beattyvllle Ky. The Jury in the
Hargls-Callahan trial returned a ver-
dict of nuot guilty In short order
after one of tho most desperately
fought battles in a Kentucky court
for years. Judge James Hargls and
Edward Callahan were charged with
tho murder of J. B. Marcum.
Ourtls Jett who was brought here
from the Frankfort penitentiary testi-
fied that he killed Marcum.
Tho verdict of not guilty is the
culmination of a long and bitter fight
In courts in an attempt to convict
James Hargls and Ed Callahan aa
chief conspirators In one of the dark-
est crimes in Kentucky history.
James B. Marcum was a' mountain
Republican lawyer of excellent stand-
I ing. Ho was engaged threo years ago
as an attorney in tho contest against
Hargls and Callahan respectively
. . ' i JiurgiB ami juuaiiao respectively
flat car on which were vwo broughams. Democratic Judge and sheriff-elect to
Tho carriages were covered with can-1 ouat trom offlccs 0n an
ma and Heated and said to myself. ! f corr.mt rfnctlon. Much
if could only get it bitterness was aroused and freauent
"Urn idd boy if
to ono it those wagons r. Pullman
Mcepei wouldn't bo In k crawled
up under tho -anvas covering and
tried the doora of one but nothing do
Tho law means llttlo In places whore tho law la not'lUonf-retl by any man or ollJ-a. rgauizadoi ou.
uii .viutiriLau ouririne ioo sacre 00 'I.TniOi IS
horitago by any ono.
That irei ballot
permitted to tako its con ran without tho piovorblm delays
to surely defeat Justlco In tho end. Tho law moans oven
less when mobs omist bo docolved avoided nnd placated
by mad rushes to the court house through tho court houso
to tho gnllows llko thoso In Koutucky and Maryland. Law
thus applied has as its basis passion and cowurdlco rather
than lntoillgunco nnd Justlcp aiid whore Huch trials and
executions mutst bo relied upon It is tho rulo of tho mob
rather than tho law of the land that prevail.
Thoro le nothing whatovor to bo proud of and ovory-
thjng to bo nslmmod of lu "triumphs" of this character. If
OXiO.ldlug
ub'O' U
B
tV Renubilsar gram mar j'. Cn.
consistent . not. ii i ewe' with h 'usUo ; i ut:y
diamond. May that :.nhie io jallot bo (rwolsot! by tho
Intllnn with an lnteligenco hlc'i lli be a insMng -e dioc
May tho homes thus clalmeu te ovar rotoc'fei rom no
party of gall. Tho Republican gift f 'caUonsnir" aano
can best do it. MeAlestor Dally CapU. i
-oOo
Tho Memoorats will not hold their congressional con-
we have been going in the opposlto direction fio far that i ontms untJI fter tho constitutional convention. For-
our scandalous fnilures are proverbial what mubt bo said
of tho turn that has been takon of a policy which delays
falls and excuses the strong tho Intelligent nnd tho In-
fluential criminal while It actually lynches tho wonk. nnd
ignorant oven wltb tho sanction of tho powers that bo and
of Juctlce itself?
oOo .
BRYAN THROUGH ENGLISH EYES.
Tho Star man of tho Landau TivprOBS introduce his
Interview with Mr-Bryan In London ns follows:
"The advent of Mr. Brynn cronted quite a thrill of Domoonu.
ainately Mth ihom here doesn't eem to bo any demand
for snap proceedings o present .ho pegple from having a
frt. voico 'n the selection -tf candidates. Kingfisher Free
Prosr
oOo
Fi 'in '.rnpaJio to the Warren amondmont" will go
down In the political history of tho First congressional dis-
trict m ho most famous 'plgram vor ottered by Dunnis
rlynn. Tho fact of tho matter Is it's o dufned infamous
It will not stand explanation. Excont nrivatal?. Ada
FIGURE FERGUSON A LOSER 'trlct congressional race. A Gwthrle
. nolltlelan who la known for his con-
Politician Can't See How Ex-Governor ''' prellctlon declares tho
jWatonga man has no whow for the
plum.
Can Possibly Win.
'Take It anv wnv vnu nleaaa." ha
-.uj.ug ... Huu no Dwiwr now . ..... w lo(M ....
sklllMlly It is simply out of the . The 8trolg mAmim Fer- tJ rexrments i ' tho eg slatu e
tlon to flguro ox;orornor Thos. B. ro ffMl n. ... to l)0 I'oriments let tho legislature
Burford or; Constitution.
Ohlof Justice John H. Burford of
the supreme court; Is averso to making
the now state constitution n field for
experiments In which ovary aspiring
politician Is to have & dnb.
Judge Burford sal'J: "if thoro 1
mjiHJii uru neuiv. cit iiiiuvnr! a rt. mi.n !... r.H ...!. .... ...
Fergus a winner in th. Second d.s.nde of WoodwarU; G f -j; 7 bo Tn
1IT .1 -. mi -a I
""' ( inompson. oi cBuoo.jBtructCHl alona; tho lines that have
OOOOOOOQoqqooooo an aro i0i VQe8 frora lhe Sooond been triad and proved satisfactory
Q Q.Kt tho nomlnaUng convention. Con 8 of pe0ple of cootsb want to put
vwiui mrguwii uny. iwv.'y ukiu- thlngB in various plnnkB that havo
lioma. Canadian and Cuswr. he will never been sn In the constitution
W 4II1 1a1. .U .. ... .1. v '
wi mun nn uiwmrf uirnsiu. un 0 any state. Tho best plan Is to
me other hand ox-Sheriff TLoiu.on wt."
O NEW STATE DEMO-
O
O CRATIC
O -
PRESS. O
claims at loest half of the Canadian!
"Make Hay While tho Sun Shines."
O (From the Geary lhrtletln.) O county delegation and has good roo-
C The Deinopraey of the new O sous for aninir it with nil n nina
O state )im the m..oTt of nearly O IiamB! oounuas Par ii . Thero u a lwtmn n & wwH or tUG
rs oil in. i..ti. m.i..i. .i "" ""' '
w .i w. lauuuiK utviiuiutt uu.iy w c0tlv ono hundred votaa. In ndH.
thrifty farmer. He knows that tho
found ono of tho doors unlocked.
"Thero wns Tuclr for you; . crawled
Into tht 'ar'-Iago through a narrow
space wasn't as flVshy then as I am
now and say thoro were cushions
lnsldo that'd drlvo a man crazy. 1
didn't do a thing but fix up a nice bed
for myself and I toro off about nine
nours if the ni03t peaceful slumbot
inat '!. nad over 'ieen rav good fortune
to enjoy
"Tho noxt morning the train got to
tho enu tif a division whero I got out
and bought somothlng to eat I aUo
.quenched my thirst at tho depot
pump and an ' had something like
13 In my Jeans 1 bought some tobacco
and a clay pipe. After the train
nulled out I got back into tho hack
again unnoticed by the crow and 1
enjoyed my smoko like thoso Turks
whoso pictures you soo on tho cigar
ctte boxes
' When we got to Walnut Ridge
about 225 miles from St Louis. I had
another opportunity to replenish the
commissary department That lasted
me until got to Beobe Ark. where
filled up on goose plums and
neaches
When tho train reached Toxar-
jkann after a run of 600 miles from
t. .uouis f got out and hurried up
o the chief dispatcher s ofllco of tht
'Joxaa & Paclflq road : know the
train would lay over at Texarkana nt
least half an nour giving mo time to
see the dispatcher and catch my pil-
au :ar ueforo sho pulled out for
Oallan.
'The dispatcher was pretty busy
when uroke 'n oh hlra but ho took
time to te)' mo tha' ths job at Ter
rell yas still open an) to get there
at once. I was delayed soveral min-
utes In seeing him nnd when I hiked
back to tho yards whore I had left
my special I saw It pulling out. Ths
flat car with tho carriages on it was
in about the middle of tho train next
to a car of 'oal. I stood" bohlnd an
oil tank keeping out oi sight of the
'brakles' and when saw tho roal
car come along with no flat behind it
my heart sank. Whllo was up at
tho dispatcher's ofllco they had cut
out tho flat car Texarkana being it?
destination.
"There waB nothing for me to do
but go back to tho dispatcher's office
and braco him for transportation to
Terroll. On my second visit to his
office I found him not so busy nnd In
an offhand way I said:
" 'By the way. Jack I forgot to ask
you for transportation when i was
bore a little whllo ago.'
" 'Yes' said he 'and 1 was so busy
at tho tlmo I forgot all about it my-
solf.' "He then wrote me an order on the
superintendent which got me the
pass. I oaatiaued snr Journey wlthta
an hour Da paBsengci raln. Oui
would rathoi- iave been on the flat
car.
"Since then I ntd rlritlen on somo
of tho most luxurious sleepers that
were ever pulled over a road but I
never onjoyed a trip so much as I did
that ride from SL Louis to Texarkana
in a brougham" Chicago Record
Herald.
open iuptures occurred.
Killed nt Jackson
ih May )903 Marcum was shot to
death from behind in tho Jackson
courthouse. Curtis Jett and Tom
White wero convicted nnd sentencod
to life imprisonment for the murder
It was charged that jhe were the
tools of Callahan Hargls and others.
Jett after bis conviction confessed
that ho iihot Marcum and that his
act was inspired by Callahan and
Hargls. On tho witness stand how-
ever ho repudiated the confession
nnd said ho alono was responsible
Tho acquittal followed largely on this
repudiation.
A Jury of Clark county citizens re-
turned a verdict for $8000 damages
a year ago against Hargls on tho al-
legation that he had caused Marcum
to bo killed. Tho suit was filed by
Mrs. Marcum. Hargls and Callahan
are yet to bo tried In tho Lexington
court for tho killing of James Cock-
rell under similar circumstances.
Ewinp; a Star Wltnes
B. J Ewlng. who was bta ( In
tho courthouso door talking tth
J. B. Marcum when tho latter ras
murdered by Curtis Jott and "Tom"
White was tho star witness for tho
commonwealth at tho trial of Hargls
and Callahan Ewing waB a doputy
sheriff under Callahan and a close
nnd trusted friend of Judge Hargls.
He said Judge Hargls was confidential
with him and told him of many of
his troubles and ambitions He said
Hargis had .sked him why he did
not kill Marcum ono night when tho
latter bad remained at his house all
night
"Noxt tlmo you get & chance take
that fellow on a walk and return
without him.' Ewlng said ho under-
stood Hargls to mean that ho wanted
him to kill Marcum but ho did not
tako tho blow He said Hargls after
tho murder of Marcum had asked him
to resign as deputy sheriff so that
ho could sit on a Jury that might try
the men accused of Ms murder
Attornoy Young for tho piosccn-
tlon attempted to mako light of
Ewlng and was robuked by Judge
Dorsey. Ewlng said that ho had
Identified Jett and admitted that h
was tho first to reveal tho name oC'
tho assassin. Ho was also asked if.
his hotel had not been burned to tb'
ground shortly after ho had mado
tho admissions which resulted in the
arrest .t Jett and White said that it
had been burned nnd that he bad
been forced to lenvo JackBon for fear
of assassination.
Other witnesses who told of parta
of the plots to tako tbo life of Mar-
cum were Johu T Noble who was
a clerk in the Hargls store Kezeklah
Combs E. L. Noble N. B. Combs and
others. Tho widow of tho murdered
man with tho boy whom tho father
had carried to and from his office
with hln arms around his neck to
ward off tho bulleto of tho assassins
who feared killing the child was in
tho courtroom
Hargis toot a deep Interest in Ho
rial while Callahan as usual waft
listless and gave llttlo attention to
what was going on. Jttdgo Dorsey
mado several 'tilings that greatly dis-
appointed tho tc-mjrtpnwcalth.
Curtis Jett tho oif-confessod as-
sassin of Marcum and CocUrlll camo
hero to testify from the Frankfort
ponltentlary In the obargo of prison
guards. Ho was brought here U tell
tho story of tho assassination of Mar-
mm and of th- allegt d plots formed
by Hargls and Calalhan to havo him
murdered.
Man Officially Dead Still Lives.
For un officially dead man Henry
Pancoast a local liveryman manages
to enjoy his meals and surroundings
fairly well; and his is ono of the odd-
est of records. Pancoast enlisted In
tho civil war from Atlantic county and
was discharged from tbo Echlngton
hospital Washington D. C on Janu-
ary 7 18C3. Somehow the dates got
mixed nnd he was reported as dead
by tho Burgeon and so tho record's
Btato to-day. It took him 20 jears to
provo ho was allvo enough to got a
pension.
For 31 years Pancoast has been In
tho livery busluess here und during
that tlmo he has never entered a
church uover attended a circus never
was In tho local opera house or attend
cd any amusement whatever and
nover went to a" Fourth of July cele-
bration. Tho only placo of entertain-
merit he has visited was a reunion of
his regiment tho Twenty-fifth Now
Jersei volunteers In Atlantic City a
year or two' ago. Ho says there is not
another record llkn his In the state.
The old boldler Las left his homo
avery morning before tbo family was.
up and returned most of tbo tlinq
after they had retired for the night
and hardly bad a speaking acquaint-
anco with 1i1h four children all of
whom grow up to All prominent posi-
tions in life.
XaiBer Plans World's Fair.
Borlln Tho government dids docld-
od to Invito the' nations of tho world
to participate in a great International
exposition to be held horo in 1912.
It is proposed thnt the exposition shall
surpass all world's fairs not except-
ing tho marvelous expositions for
which Paris is famous or tho two
great American fairs at Chicago and
St. Louis.
s;c
O newspapers. Over in the Indian O tlnn tn ..- tWn ru tlvn ' niMimul urBht sunshine may last but a day and
n. f. .. .. ... -"- - - 1 .t.t.
j xerruury iu Aniiuuro womp- U
O crat the Ardmorlte MoAloster O
O Capital Muskogee Democrat O
O Tulsa Democrat Tulsa OonetiUi- O
O tlon and Wagoner Sayings nro O
Q wnrklnt? hknd In tin mi fnr thn n
O party's success Ovor here tho O L"e r9l8.nc 8 lP n ocLCholora and Dlanhoea Roniedy which
O Gutbrte Leader the Oklahoraao. O Polltftnf-dhrtee to the rumor tliat MeF8 the best known medicine for these
O Shawnee Hewla and tho Lawtdn 6 ur6 "0MU Forguson have formal a disease should aSway" bo ' kept at
O Demoorat aro doing the same o 'oo1 wnch spells tho nomination of.hnnd. as immediate" treSltnjent Is
candidate) in Oklahoma county and to
cap Uio climax oomee the new that
Judge W. O. Wnolman at Watonga.
Ferguson's own hqme has entered tbo
race.
he prepares for the ahowors which are
so liable to follow. So It should be
with evory household. Dysentery
dlarihoea and cholera morbus may at-
tack some member of the home with
out warning. Chamberlain's Colic.
O thing. There aro numerous small o larn n nl respective dljtrlcL It is
O dailies doing effective work. The O not believed that Ferguson has enough
O weekly Democratic press Is lined O strength to spare hW from the Bur-
0ip solidly for vlotory and iio fac- O faco indications in the Firt the con-
O tlonal fights will be recognized o gressm&n has not much cause to
O O worry or need to ask outside Inter-
OOOOOO6OQ0CO0OOOO ference.
noceseary and delay 'may prove fatal
For solo by F. B. UUIe & Co.
"Whether wtather Is cieaaant "out
side" make little difference to tha mtn
er. And the day's barralns and buying
Chances make little difference to those
who do not read the ad. '
The Home of Good Goods and Low Prices
We Lead Them All
Paint $i.oo per Gallon
Wall Paper 4c per Roll
The Celebrated Crown Perfumery 25c
per Ounce and everything: in the same
proportion.
Her Lovely Sunday.
"I had a lovely Sunday" twittered Mrs.
Jones on Monday
"1 went to clmroh and heard tho sweet
est sermon 'was about
'Strict Honesty In Little Thlnits It was
go fine that It'll
Remain within my memory forever I'vo
no doubt.
And coming home a tbUig" occurred that
certainly did tloVIe
Me half to death the street car man for-
got to take my nickel!"
Cleveland Leader.
The Discouraging Han.
"What do you"want with an auto-
mobile?" asked the discouraging man.
"I want to get out lc the country
und hea; the songs of birds and smell
the perfume of the flowers "
"Oh that's Itl Well what you'll
hear Is the bonk of the chauffeur's
born and what you'll smell is gaso
llao." Washlngtoti SUr.
RENFRO'S DRUG STORE
206 West Okla.. Ave.
VAMA.v.vA.l
NV.V.WWV.VW.V
:WiS
aG3 coffiffiffiffiffisffiffieceti!tr?ffi9
I HOW ARE YOU FEELING?
t Are you in a run-down condition irregular appetite a bloating sensation after meals
$ pains around the heart? Do you have dizzy spells sick and nervous headaches heartburn
g sour stomach and That Tired Feelino?
S If so it is an indication that your LIVER is not performing its duty by throwing off the
x poison from the system.
I Our Valuable Prescription flfo 20
I "Will correct this at once. Purely a Vegetable Proration
Wo Gua.ra.ntee it to restore a "torpid and inactive
Liver to a perfect and natural action
TR-Y IT. ' 35 CENTS A BOTTLE
Tirr m a xrir inn 1 ''
kjdP Baia 3(m .
DRUG CM STORE
Edward Nichols. Prop-.
i i ' ' '. n
;i)Bfofri)frMIlv.Iiaiat(a
r
4
J
tl
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The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 142, Ed. 1, Monday, August 6, 1906, newspaper, August 6, 1906; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc76518/m1/4/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.