Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
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E New Architect
; Of St. John's I
| Cathedral |
■i":":"!":-)-;":-:":-:-:-:-;-;-;-;-!-;-:-:-:-:-;-;-;-
RALPH ADAMS CRAM of Bos
ton. who lias beeu i:lioseu rs
architect to complete the Ce
thedral of St. John the 131
vine, in New York city, bus won a
splendid reputation by bis accom-
plishments since he began practice as
un architect in 188U. He was born at
llamptou Kails, N. 11., Dec. 1C. 18li3,
the son of the Rev. William Augustine
and Sarah Elizabeth Cram.
Mr. Cram received his education at
Augusta. Xle.; Hampton Kails, N. II.;
iTVesi lord. Mass., and Exeter, N. II.,
and in 1UOO was married at New Bed
ford Mass.. to Elizabeth Carringtou
Read, daughter of tlie late Captain
Clement Carrihgton Read, C. S. A.
The.v have two children, Mary Car-
rington and Ralph Wentworth.
The principal work done by Mr.
Cram's firm has been church building
and practically always on Gothic
lines. In 1903. in competition among
ten of the principal firms of the Unit-
ed States, his firm won the commis-
sion for the rebuilding of the United
States Military academy nt West
Point. This work Is of Gothic, of a
military type, and about $7,500,000 has
thus far been expended on it.
A list of the firm's works includes
St Thomas' church. New York: Hall-
fax cathedral, First Baptist church.
Pittsburg; Sage memorial. Far Rock-
away, N. Y.: South church, New York;
Taft school. Watertown. Coun.; Cal-
vary church. Pittsburg; Euclid Avenue
Presbyterian church. Cleveland; St.
raul's cathedral. Detroit, and several
churches In Cuba, including Trinity
church, Havana.
The firm has charge of the new
Chapel of tlie Intercession for Trin-
ity parish. New York. w.>rk on which
will be begun this fall, and also of a
great hotel to be built at Colon, isth-
mus of Panama. Mr. Cram's office is
at present preparing plans for the To-
ronto cathedral to be built this year
and is in charge of the construction of
all the buildings for the Rice instf-
"KING CF THE BLACK HAND."
Police Believe They Have Him In
Italian Arrested In New York.
The Black Hand industry in this
country was giveu a jar by the recent
arrest In New York of Giuseppe Cost:i
bile, a shrewd, narrow eyed Italian,
whom they have been tracking for the
last six years. Costa bile is declared
by the police to be the chief and mns
ter mind of a pa up of blackmailers
who have set scores of explosions in
New York, and he is also believed to
be connected with Black Hand gan^s
and operations in other cities.
Costablle was at restt d in the mird <■
of the day in a cro * ied section of th
city with a large yellow bomb conceal
ed under his coat. The missile is
Young Women
Read what Cardui did for Miss Myria Engler, of
Faribault, Minn. She says: " Let me tel! you how much
good Cardui has done me. As a young girl, I always had
to suffer so much with all kind of pain. Sometimes, 1 was
so weak that I could hardly stand on my feet. I got a
bottle of Cardui, at the drug store, and as soon as I had
taken a few doses, I began to feel better.
Today, I feel as well as anyone can."
TAKE The
ARDUI WomansTonic
Are you a woman ? Then you are subject to a large
number of troubles and irregularities, peculiar to women,
which, in time, often lead to more serious trouble.
A tinic is needed to help you over the hard places, to
relieve weakness, headache, and other unnecessary pains,
the signs of weak nerves and over-work.
For a tonic, take Cardui, the woman's tonic.
You will never regret it, for it will certainly help you.
Ask your druggist about it. He knows. He sells it.
Write lo: Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chaftanooca Mcdicine Co.. Chattanooga Tcnn
for Special instructions, and 64-page book. Home 1 reatment ior Women, sent tree. J 59
[will not be tolerated and stringent All.of Fear Page*.
! regulations are published forbidding | iNeariy iour pages including the
J the carrying of arms. It is officially space occupied by tue poetry on tn*
announced that the maneuvers are (subject arc devoted to "Tne Ameri-
ended and that the troops are return can Hebellioa.' 1 be Fletcher-Kip-
ling to Kiev. Out going trains are
crowded and double trains and ex-
it ra trains are leaving every hour.
•Hundreds of well-to-do Jews are de-
parting from the city.
TAFT >OT TO ASK WILEY'S
I RESIGNATION
ling biory ot u is as lollows:
England's sword
Twas not while
unsneatheu
Put hail it world to flight;
i\or wane laeir new-uuut cities
breathed
Secure oeumu her might;
|i\oi while sue pouieu 110m Pole to
President's Opinion ( arrfes No Crit- >Line
Icism but Instead Much Praise for Treasure and ships and men—
j Chief of Chemistry Bureau. Ihese worsnippers at freedom's shrine
j Beverley, Mass., Sept. 15.—Presi- Ane*v 01(1 1101 'J"11 ,ier tmrn
dent Taft, despite recommendations'
'made by the personnel of the depart- ♦N*ot till their toes were driven forth
nicut ot agriculture, endorsed by At- . kngiantl oer tne main—
torney General Wickershani, will not 1111 ,,ie frenchmen lrom the
ask the resignation of Dr. Harvey W.I .North
Wiley, chief of the bureau of chem- Had goae with scattered Spain;
j istry in the department of agricul- . iN,°l 11,1 'he ctean-swept ocean snowed
lture, and probably the best known *N,° hostile hag unrolled,
I pure food expert in the government' they remember wnat they owed
service. | f reedom and were bold
I The "condign punishment" for Dr. i forHatto™ *v«-re IngraUis.
Wiley, which Mr. Wickershani held to I E,°"n all, r ,l"' 01 1 |G:! "a
be necessary, wl|l not be meted out
began to perceive one result of tho
T. G. PAYTON
Auctioneer
Any Place in the State.
—All Work Guaranteed—
Write or Wire at my Expense
R. 1, Phone 515, K. L.
MERIDIAN, OK LA
by the chief executive. The presi- conquest of t'anuda which few pen-
dent's opinion, carrying no word of 1 "ai| expected. Our American col-
criticism for Dr. Wiley, but many o 1 ■ having trench to fear any
word of praise, was made public here lo 8*'r. wanted to be tree from our
today. There Is no indication in that <'ol"ro' altogether. I hey utterly re-
the "president feels that he "turned "Bed lo ■'"> il P«nay ot the HUH mil-
down' Mr. Wickersham by not ac- 'ou pounds 'hut the war (Seen
cepting his recommendations. He ex- irf, ^ I , osl ua> and thoy
plains that the attorney general s eliually refused to maintain a ar-
findlngs in the case were made with j1
i rison of British soldiers.
less complete data than was before] ''"tended to shake off all our
him when he took It up. , restrictions on their trade, and to
. ., 'buy and sell in whatever market th'-
In the opinion of the president Bn(, when ouf parllauient
In the opinion the president ad-1 0Be(1 ln 17tl4 lo make them pay
mits what has been well known to a Bma|] fraction of the cost of the late
many persons close to the adtnlnlstra-, waf u (..lll(,d u .01)l,re8Bl0U. alld
tion, that there is trouble in the de-11)repareti t0 rebel
partment of agriculture Shaking of, „T'he r(,sul, wag ,hat we had tQ
the congressional inquiry into thatifi?lR our coloni,,s an(1 that we falled
department unfinished at the last ses-,,() beatthem- ,, waB a hopeicas bu-
sion but to be talien up again next: Bjne8B frum the tlrst. Tlie distance
This democratic movement is dis-
tinctly anti-Harmon, and apepars to
be in the interest of oOvernor Wood-
row Wilson of New Jersey. It may
work out, too, to help Champ Clark.
the slates hain presidential pre-
ference laws are Wisconsin, Neb-
raska. New Jersey Oregon and North
Uanoia. Through special sessions of
the legislature, California and Kan-
sas may be added to this list before
next spring, ln each ot these stat-
es the progressives are laying wires.' weightier relation than this one to
winter. Mr. Taft says:
was too great the spaces of Ameri-
The broader issues raised by the Ca were too vast for us to hold by
Investigation, which have a much I force, even if we had won in bat-
Copyright by Marceau.
RALPH ADAMS CRAM.
tute, Houston. Tex., at a cost of sev
eral million dollars; Richmond col-
lege. Richmond. Vu.. and collegiate
and educational work is being done at
Williams college. Willlamstown, Mass.:
St. Mary's convent. 1'eeUskill, N. V
Phillips academy. Exeter, N. II.. and
Wheaton seminary, Norton, Mass.
Ilis firm built Campbell hall at
Princeton university, and the plans are
now finished for the Graduate college
and Cleveland Memorial tower to be
erected immediately at a cost of $ GTiO.
000.
Mr. Cram was last year made a doc-
tor of letters by Princeton university,
for which Institution he is supervising
architect. He has for the past three
years been lecturer on architectural
design at Harvard university.
He is a fellow of the Boston So-
ciety of Architects. American Institute
of Architects. North British Academy
of Art, Royal Geographical Society of
I,ondon, member of American Federa-
tion of Ai% "D(l Architectural Assoc la-
tion of London. His clubs are the
Puritan, Boston, and the Century, New
York.
Photo by American Press Association.
OIUSKFi a C03TABILE.
about five inches in diameter nnd re
sembles a five pound shot. It is light
in weight, however, and contained no
slugs or iron, bat merely high explo-
sives. Costabile has been suspected
for years as the manufacturer of
bombs for Black Hand operations.
The police hope to have Costabile
sent to prison for seven years under
the law which makes t lie carrying of
a ''deadly weapon" a felon. The court
refused bail to the prisoner.
Some of Costabi.e's career is al-
ready a part of the records of the de-
tective bureau, lie is a deoonair lit-
tle man—Live fe<*! four iui hes tall,
weighing 118 pounds, with quizzical
blue eyes and a good humored mouth,
aljout which curls a soft brown mus-
tache. IJe is twenty-seven years old.
calls himself a salesman and lives
comfortably with his wife and two
children.
Lieutenant Petrosino. who was mur-
dered by the Black Hand in Italy,
was responsible for Costa bile's first
41 rrest, on July 17. ll>08, but could in
duce none of the victims to testify,
and consequently Costabile obtained
his freedom. In the years that have
elapsed siuce then Costabile has been
kept imdi'r almost constant surveil-
lance. Many a story of his activities
lias .come to the police, but there was
none to make a complaint against
linn.
The police say that Costa bile's gang
had a regular si-aie of blackmail, rang-
ing from $20 to $50 a month, and that
the list of merchants who paid this
Tribute was large. The meml>ers ef
the gang lived high. The identity of
some of the members is known, and
those who have not escaped following
Costa bile's apprehension will t>e taken
into custody.
On Costabile's person was found a
list of intended victims. In court he
swore with uplifted hand that he
would kill the detectives who had
caused his arrest.
LA FOLLETTE TKI1* >KW BLOCK are soing to use their utmost th© general efficiency of the depart-
TO TIFT. ' j endeavors to boom Senator baFol- 11 nient require much more radical act-
' * j letie, and it is expected that in the j011 than the question I have consider-
Managers will Have Him Appear as course of the proposed trip he will d and decided."
< hainpiou of Direct Elections. | make 11 a p°il11 to cover these doubt-. That thlg statement indicates a se-
Washington, Sept. 16—Although l tul tates thoroughly. I rious shake-up In the department next
Senator Robert M. LaFollette of Wis- , llie anti-Harmon democrats are winter was freely predicted here to-
consiu has made no public annoumyv also making an eftort in a large day. There have never been any intl-
tle. The quarrels in our Parliament
were too tierce to allow of suc-
cess. We had no great minister at
home and no great general in Am-
erica.
Washington was a Hero.
"The c olonists called a congress
at Philadelphia; declared themselv-
to be Independent, and in 1776
inent of his candidacy for the prcsi
uency he is in fact a candidate on
number of the southern states hav- mations that Secretary Wilson was luok ,,lu „.ime „f tlie United States
of America, iilood had already been
ing no preference law to have the disposed to retire and it Is not b<
the progressive ticket He"'wiir (log' democratlcsuue cmomitteea arrange lieved here that the president would 1 snea" wnen this happened. Tne real
President Taft's footsteps by mak- for presidential primaries. (request him to do so A genen
l' ! hero, patient, resourceful and bravo
ing a "swing around the circuit,"! Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas, Ken- clean-up ol affairs in the department. cuue(j (jiorge Washington, coinnianu-
late i.i the fall, just after I resident tucKy, OKianoma, Florida .Mississippi, howvver, could easily be required by e(j t|H, American army. Uo never
Taft completes nis jouviey to tL<; and in tact in most ot the southern the president and carried through gent enough troops; we had not,
Pacific coast and retura. statesthe movement is on, and on when he returns to Washington in
The announcement of Senator seriously lor tne purpose of having November.
Jonathan Bourne Jr. that he would uresidential primaries. Utile is heard nie "Wiley (Bsc arose over t.ie
fa-vor tlie nomination of I,a Folk'tte ot me movement in the northern sta- employment by the bureau of cheni-
and the announcement of Senator1 tes that do not have tne preiereu- istry of Dr. H. li. Rushy of New
la tact, enougti troops to send.
Though we oiten won battles, wo
suffered some very severe disasters.
"The Americans veryb soon sought
frenca help and 1; ranee was do-
Cummins of Iowa that Ui Follette. is tlal law though there has been con- York, pilarmacognOslst of the bureau iignlej al 8UCh a chance ol' avenging
the foremost progressive and a iogi- siueiatlon of it in Indiana. " ■ Kebler,
cai candulate lor tne presidency, 'o- Through the promotion of the prl- chief of the drug laboratory, and I)r.
gather with the fact that the Wiscon- maries it is tuougnt tnat the pro- Bigelow, ass slant chief ol the
sin senator will tour the country oil gressives favoringf the boom of Sena- bureau were charged with having
a big speech-maqing trip, delinitel-. lor Lab'ollelte will find it easy to conspired to pa\ l)i. Rushv a salai>
puts La Follette in the presidential iorie action on the senator's name of $1,600 a year w.th the tacit under-1
race. in the republican convention and tne standing that he was to do only en-
IF"ollette has not announced only stunihling bltiek to the accep- ough work to secure litis amount at
puoliclynis intention of b jeou.n g a tance of the nomination would be the rate ol $2U a day. This was held
candidate, pivievn.i,?, it is s".ito the support of the delegates. This is to violate tlie act of congress of ^
await a mor-! propitious lime to to he obtained it isc pointed out by March 4. 11107, which declared that no
Inuach his 00.111. It is thout.ht lhat I...Follette s big swing around the classified scientific Investigator should
he will announce his candidacy im- circuit in tne wake of Taft. receive more than $!i a day. In ad- . . . . otner ouii-Lers of the
mediately after he makes I.is trip | The fall is looked upon for big dltion to the rocommen.latum that 'onously in otner quait r
On this trip he will follow closely things in the way of political stump Dr. Wiley be allowed to resign the
President 'iafts route and if possi- speaking. Headliners will be on personal board held that Dr. Itusby
l b'e speak in opposition to tne presi- speaking tuors, Champ ( lark, Gov. should he /^missed, that r. Kebler of tb#t rock Wllicu ,iuil jasted
'dents views, it is thought that this Harmon, (.ovenior Wilson, Presideut be reduced and that Dr. Hlgelow he voirs
I kind of a program will tend more to Taft, Senator UiFollette, Senator allowed to quit the service. None of "ir «
bring LaFolletle into the limelight i^ourne, benator Cummins_ and lesser [h«se recomme,,'latlonB is upheld in nchm)V Jt,(1 d th;, ill(lept.„dence of
and niaae him a great national hgure lights are to take the field.
I two years hence.
THOOI'S PROTECT JEWS AKTElt
l>! A lii OK Kl'SSIA\ I'KKMIER
her lobses in ttie toriner war. Spain,
and e>en our ally, Holland \soou
joined i rance, ana for a tew months
we had toe navies ol all the world
against us.
when Lord Cornwallis, witll
seven t.iousauu men, was obliged
to surrender to a trench and Ameri-
an force at loratown in 4781, we
>rmiued to withdraw from Ameri-
ca; alter wnic-ii, navlng our hands
tree, we niBned tne naval war vic-
world. ltodney smasned a great
French fleet in the Inuies and ix rd
lleatulield at Uibralturueat off the
At present l>aFollette is only va-
guely known to the great mass of
| people. It is the intenion of
those who are managing his cam-
) paign to have nim appear in the
1 role of champion of direct control
of elections by the people instead of
nn advocate of delegated powers,
such as is favored by tne regular re-
publicans, and .upon which platform
Preisdent Taft' is firmly planted.
The political importance of such a
trip as planned by Senator IjiKoI-
NOVEL CAMPAIGN.
Candidate For Governor of Illinois
Touring State by Automobile.
Walter Clyde Jones, candidate for
governor of Illinois, Is making a spec-
tacular tour of
(he entire state
in an automo-
bile. Mr. Jones
Is the candidate
of. the Illinois
Progressive He-
publican league
nnd has the
backing of
Charles E. >!er-
rinm, who was
a candidate for
mayor of Chica-
go against Car-
ter Harrison last
fall. Mr. Jones
is nt present a
member of the
Illinois siate sen
jones. ate. Former Gov-
ernor Yates is Mr. .Tones' opponent and
bas the support of the "old guard" and
the Lorlmer machine.
A.
■ ■ i
@ by Moffett.
•WALTt
VI)E
WORLD'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER
The Official Gazette> of Peking Cele-
brates Its One Thousandth Birthday.
The Tchlng-Pao, the official gazette
of Peking, recently celebrated its one
thousandth anniversary and claims to
be the oldest newspaper in the world.
Ever since its conception a copy of
Kiev, Sep. 12.—The Russian pre-
mier, l'eier A. Stolypin, died tonight
lrom the bullet wounds of an assas-
sin during a gala-performance at
the Muocipal theater Thursday eve-
ning. Tne official time of his death
\w.s oiinonced as 10:12 p. m. (3:12
p. m. New York time) Almost until
the last he premier was conscious
and for half an hour during the ear-
t. e president s opinion.
Dr. Kebler is reprimand".! for dis- Ameri«a. I'ranee nau been even
ingenous conduct in his letter writ- harder hit by the war than we had
ing to Dr. Rushy and the president ^'le hild haped m return for her
says that the letters suggest a will- help, lo receive valuable iradmii
ingness to resort to evasion," that pn> ileges witn Amcrica, but the Am-
i-ails for official leproof Dr. Uigelo.v "leans showed no more gratitude
is held to bavt been "over-zealous." to Ll'r than they had pieviousiy
and a reprimand by Secretary of Ag- , shown to us, and slie received noue.
riculture Wilson to whom the opinion iiere ti Heal Soli. .
which is in letter form, is directed, is The bnow lies thick on Valley rorge,
ordered by the president. Dr. Rushy ''he ice on the Delaware,
is held lo he as guiltier as Dr. But the poor dead soldiers of King
Wiley i nthis paitieular matter. A George
i barge against him, nowever ,of Be- j They neither know nor care
t i ng the appointment of tlie "com- ,
u. .i, aborers role' of a physician Not though the earliest primrose
an: expt rt "whom he oould use to do break
hs work ;:t a very small stipen.l On the s^nny side of the lane.
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PA0SI1IXLE rOliTlOW OP T(.HINO-rA<
pre
the Pe
each edition bus bet
served ln the art hivi
palace.
A love for accura v lias evidently
been the keynote of its success, am!
in order to bring about this happy
state \>f affairs It is affirmed that a
number of Journalists on its sUilT have
lette would be great. He now Is the , jy rt OI (|ie eveniUg his wjfe al-
only likely candidate in the field om, wag a, hjs beflsl,le
ngamst President Tatt tor the re-
publican nomination, and as his Towards tlie end Stolypin suffer
personal following is large and en- 0,1 greatly. Finally the heart action wh(,n himself was called away, the And seutlliug rookeries awake ,
thusiastic, it. is believed that if he became weaker, ano a* tue ^ ... pie^.ideilt i.u at. to be not ts,>ecially Their Kiigland s spnng again.
does make the trip it will be possible tS'e-v cold the premier realized that creditable."
to guage in a measure the extent ot' death «#«• overtaking nun. At a .u- The case the rpe.4dent says lias They wi.I .lot stir when the drifts
the revolt among the republicans < i(i interval a priest administered made appan t t...- ' u ubtful legisla- are gone,
against the nomination of President extreme unction. The metropolitan tivc.. ,,oluy of placing l.iu tntions t p- Or l.ie ice melts out of the bay.
.J aj, flavian blessed and consoled nim in on bureau cait ls to exact per dleni And the men that served with ash-
In Washington it is reported that his last moments. Give me a red (cn,pensaton lor expeits." ington,
President Taft's hold on the voters' pencil." T. e goveri.iuent he says, "ought Die all still as they.
in many parts of the couutry. es- "Lift me. Light up." i, t to be at a d.sadvantage in this
peeially the west, is weak. Whether He died peaceiuily surrounded by regard and one cann t witu-noid oms The.v will not stir though the may*
that allegation is true doubtless will several of his relatives and state cpnipatiiy w.th an earnest effort by liower blows
be more or less clearly demonstrat- officials. Dr. Wiley to pay proper compensa- In the moist dark woods ol pine,
ed when the president makes his All hope for the premier's recov- tion and secure expert assistance :n And ewry roi-K-s.rewn pasture
long trip this fall. So it is plain ery was abandoned this morning, the enforcement of so important a shows
that, 1f President Taft's trip should Saturday night indications of perit- statute as tae pure food law, certain- Mi.lieui and columbine.
emphasize Ills weakness, while that onitis were noted which became ag- ly in the beginning when the (pies-
of l<aKollette shows the senator's gravated Sunday. The bulletin is- t.ons arising ut >ler it are of capital Each Tor his land in a fair light,
strength, or that the antl-Tat't move-1 sued by the attending physicians importance to t e public. ' Uni ountered strove and died,
ment in the republican party is! early this evening declared that the The presidents conclusions he says And the kindly earth that k.iows no
growing, it would throw serious' patient's condition was hopeless, were ready weeks ago. but l.e did n: t spite
obstacles in the way of the presi- j Premature reports of the premier's put them on paper because he hoped < overs them side by side.
dent's nomination. -death were current for hours before for a time for a report of the com-
The presidential primary is likely It. occurred. mlttee of the house of representatlv
to cut a much larger ligure than ; The authorities decided at first os that was investigating the depart-
many of the politicians have realized, to conceal the news of the premier's ment of agriculture.
For some time the republican In-1 death until morning, fearing anti- ; — —
surgent lenders have been diligently Jewish outbreaks, this was found WllV A.UEItICA IS FKEE
engaged in promoting the president- j Impossible, however and after an- !
lal primary. They have done thle nouncement was made, all attention England "Decided in 17S1 in Wlth-
for tho avowed purpose of crippling j wascentered in the protection of the, draw" Mr. Kipling Explain
the movement to renominate Presi- jews. | liondon, Spet.
dent Taft. They have made no con- I The representaties of the Jewish why "England determined to with-
cealment of thler purpose, and they ' community were panic stricken and draw from America," back, in the
have pressed hard In numerous ] begged for protection nnd 30000 J closing years of the Eighteenth Cen-
She is too busy to think of war;
She bas all the world to make gay,
And, behold, the yearly flowers arei
\\ here they were In our fathers'
day!
i
Oolden-rod by "the pasture wall
When the columbine is dead,
(By Mail)—Just And sumach leaves that turn, In fall,
Red as the blood they shed.
states for the enactment of a presi- troops were poured
dentlal preference law, whereby the j vent excesses. The
into Kiev to pre-
The city is depressed
! voter expresses his preference for a but calm. M. Kokovsoff, the minls-
I presidential nominee just as he j ter of finance who was appointed
Ppi
paid tlit
the responsibility of u
in its columns. This,
carrying things rather
In any case, it must
no little courage in tin
bark upon such a peril
th their 11 v
stakes prlntei
if course, wo:
ar.
have requlrci
<e days to em
us vocation.
.. .mid for a nominee ot any other
'office through the prlmnry system.
Butit not alone republican insur-
gents who are expecting to help their
cause through the presidential pri-
mary. The progressive or radical
democrats aro hopeful of advocating
I their causo through tho same means,
nnd efforts are being made to ijct
'presidential preference laws passed
| In a largo number of states.
acting premier after M. Stolypin was
shot, has sent a peremptory circu-
lar to tho various governors on the
maintenance of order. It is believed
that M. Kokovsoff will be appointed
premier. ,
An autopsy will take place tomor-
row morning. Emperor Nicholas loft
Tchernlgov tonight for Kiev.
Governor General Trepoff has ls-
tury is told In "A School History o£
England" lately Issued by C. R. L.
Fletcher nnd Rudyard Kipling. The
reasons for tho withdrawal, as they
are understood by tho British youth
are made plain at all events.
This book represents Kiplings first
dip into history writing. Ho has en-
livened the work with more or less
appropriate rhymes, while Fletcher
hns furnished the body of the history.
The newspaper critics deal kindly
with neither of the co-authors. Flet-
cher's contributions are called too
sued a public notice that disorders "slangy" and Kiplings too "jlngly."
ICILLTHECQUOH
AND CURE THE LU&i&S
W1TH|
MEW DISCOVERY
FORCsSl
JOLDS
ICE 50* 8c "i 1.00
TRMl BOTTLE FREE
AND AU. THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES
GUAffANTEfO SAT'SFACTORV
Off MOKCY K6FUNDED.
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1911, newspaper, September 21, 1911; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc88392/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.