The Oklahoma Representative. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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■
HOI
ateSEesststs
arL-w? JFJnlx
maim aoalaally Mcarad by aUrar baa I
lion bat actually rtdwntblt la gold
bacan to paaa the point of aafaty What
wo«U ka>« baao tmi raniova* from In
■atlon with llver and gold at a pat
Ity barame daagaroua bacanaa raallni
aaiy upon a narrow fouadatloa o(
gold. Tha structure of papar Booey
waa built hlghar at a ItM wb«. ball
tha foundation (allvar) had crumble.l
away and tha aLbar haU «aa iiatng dug |
Into to aupply tha Inrraaalng aaad* of
Ciaroytn natltnt Of\tat ni with this j
ta gt aat laiuatr'al *11 * l y and a rt
•ultlng Incraaaa In artual wealth. With ,
tha volume of actual money ronataulU j
dlsiloiahlag and the volume of waalth |
lugraaalng a disturbance In the ratio
wga loavltabla
In rrerf market In which tha aalural
tendency of price* la downward tha fall
In prlcaa la resisted by an acconuln 1 ... ■ ■ m
Hon of stock. Tha daws wHo buy to 1 *orw.y baa M w.hmI pulp mills.
Mil at n profit will hold property on^e plan'- Cur* mml me of • Throat and
bought an long ■ poMlblfl before Mil- i Lung trouble ol ilirw ye«n' at an ding
Its at a loaa They will atraln their *■ c* *. ni Unrt n. Ind Not. 1-', I**
crutjlt to the utmoat limit before aban Mor, .t|rBlloB j. wt llow attracted
donlng the effort to gustaln prlcas, ((J Ule Wv«,mln* oil Ha d. tl.au aver
mortmain* tIMr |#rop«rty. berrowfng I ^
on collateral, exrhanglnft accommoda-
lion paper and delaying the payment
of their bt I la.
It la the inlTfnrtnn* of allTer that It
ha* been fcaaged 0rat and condemned
afterward,* l*revftoiiS tf Itf demone
■Ht-aAiiv «•
aUTWWH. OKLAHOMA-
contains «ia
OP ITANDARO
l-t ONAIM*
• ILVCM
-alart Dupoat tha po«4 r
_ t ta ba able ta eonu IbuK
later eating matter ta tha maga-
flaetoty StHd t* Onclnaatl haT #-
laalaad a aocletv for the suppreaaloa o!
[usalp Thla looks Ilka a eervrt sttamp'
l suppreaa society
As a factor la ■plUUnt had sMtaU
■g tha human race the new woman i
tlhla can never hope ta rival tha aid
eomans roek book.
Thara may / <! may aat ka sa «tri
isaslna of congreaa. but the
11 tha hour Is. will Harraid moat Uh
it football nait fall?
With the general adjournment al
•uta I efts Igt urea Uiroaghout tha na
•Ion the country once more resume* th<
kspect of tha times of peace.
Tha frlands of Prof, l^ughlln asaerl
Ihst In his Joint debate with Mr. Her
fay ba waa "all wool and a yard wide,
!he other side claims he waa woretad.
As as eperator In wheat and an «x
part In ruining a corner the Hessian
(y seems to be quite as skilled as any
profeaslonal board of trade mnnlpula
lor
It cost New Tork 120 000 ta secure •
jury that disagreed as to the guilt o>
Inspector Martin. What will It eos'
to And a Jury In New York that wll
kgree?
Millionaire Marker tells an Inter
viewer that he never waa so happy ai
When he waa swinging a plek. Well
there', nothing to prevent him from
taking his pick now.
Thera waa a sturdy old Sioux,
Oeed to hunt by tho stream Klcltaplous;
tn sheer desperation
Ha's quit the durned reaervatlon—
As ha went ha blubbered blouz htoux.
Qaorge M. Pullman has oaaftded to
aa Interested public hit slowly formed
conviction that he was much happier
when he waa a poor boy earning his
Uvlng by his dally labor than now when
ha la worried with his millions and
burdened with the weight of vaat In-
terests and business cares. Wealth, he
aays, does not bring happlnem Mr.
Pullman Is evidently getting ready to
buy happiness for the reat of his days j(non"«^
by unloading his surplus and with |
drawing from the Millionaire olub.
Tk* OaM IMki 1. «*• - W« s«l Dmt-
|M a« —IM PmkMtol «■• • la
IM.-U ay M aMit.uu . —
■atera u< TMi 11IM,
la tha Chicago Dally Record of May
ft Edward Atkinson repeats tha dota-
tion of honaat money glvaa In hla u-
tlcle of April M: "Coins which, being
malted down retain fbe eattrs vain#
for which they Were Iggal t«>d«C * -
| fore they were melted." With thla defl-
i nltlon aa a foundation be builds up an
| argument agalnat the fr«e rotiugt of
allvar. calling M a "dlakonest aMgrf,"
j as such to be raiasted u a colt
metal
la another paragrsph of the same ar-
ticle he admlta of states a fact which
upseU his own eondnslons by eertrylnt
a principle which he Ignores In hla ar
guraenL
He states that the silver coinage of
India poaaeaaed a bullion value equiva-
lent to the value of the coins them-
selves until the closing of the mints.
After the closing of the mints the rupee
while not redeemable fn gold as Is oar
silver money, yel sa bearing the atamp
6f government and made a Irgal tender
I for the payment of debts had a greater
value than the equivalent wslghtof un-
! coined silver. On the same principle
closing the mints of the world to gold
j would ciuae the coined gold mnde legal
I tender for the payment of obllg"tlona
to have a greater value than an eqttlva-
1 lent weight of gold bullion, lltideflnl-
' tlon of unsounilneas applies to all coin
money for all money metals depend
for a part of their value on their use
for coinage purpose*, and while of In-
trinsic value for use In the arts lose a
part ef their value as compared with
other products when mado the object
of unfavorable legislation which limits
or stops their coinage
A sound dollar should represent a
certain amount of labor and be capable
of ready transformation Into any prod-
uct of labor. The rule Is the world over
that what costs little labor to get Is
worth little, blue aky may be quite
dealrsble, but as a product entirely of
natural conditions and not of labsr It
Is net counted aa having material value.
When a promoter by artful psrsunston
succeeds In getting money for some-
thing which has no value except In the
mind of the crcduloun purchaser he Is
said to have been selling "blue sky."
The value of any commodity whun car-
ried to Its final analysis Is the value
of ths labor expended to aecurs the por-
tion of the required supply which Is
produced under the least favorable con-
Mt activity wuk
Miwn. whlfb pr*v*at«
f.i.l 1IWM re.il II.I
tram Ikatr turllM Tkla aurtltf
iMMtir msiti— aslanil, rkwuaiia • 4
4;i ipSi Maphiut >•< lavtaaisiw ah*
akaU ayatraa
a* oakrtml ksaaaaraaaat
**I am told that Smlthers is qalts
cured of hla il)nr«a "
"I don't believe It," replied tha
blant eltisaa
"Why not?"
"1 haven't aeen his picture • tn any
patent medicine advertisement. —
Waahingtnn star
liSarlaaa* laaila aiaai lanlhar* la Mr
a« I'arkar a Ulsarr Ttmlr." I< iu«* Itlaaafa.
I Ul iwJIarruMa salaaaad law 4 r *rr "nlatM
Boosae tunnel co«t MTU a f< t
aia raw ua aa
NRSSHMLS.
s.°
Tike aickrl I'ltU l Tr ln
The new train eerv^ee of the aNIrk^l
Plate roao. which went Into effect Bui'
day, M«y Uth. has met the approval of
the traveling public. On all sides are
DKCK.KR,
UW1ER
l'p Stairs, Over Postofllce.
Guthrie, O. T
aae k eaeta J. e. sum
ORKKV A RTRAKO,
ATTORN KVS-AT-LAW.
Heoaaa aaer tka PaaUftta.
Gatbrle, .... Oklaliome
Put
Your Adv.
Iti this Space
And net RICH!
Burlington
Route.
Solid
Through
Trains,
—— raoM -
St. Louis Kansas Cit>
TO
5t. Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha
l)cn\cr, helena, Portland,
Wichita. Oklahoma.
afid the North-
west.
Through Trains, Oklahoma and
Teias to Chicago (via M K. A T.).
Three tralni dally, Ht. Louli to 8t
I I'aul. Free Hfrllnlnf ( hair ( art.
I). O. IVES, 0. r A T. A.
St. I.ouls, Mo.
Hantlon In 1*73 It ns worth most o( heard espr ■►s'.ins of unlvereal
the time more as bullion than when tlon regarding the efforts which, ula
. .... . . popt-l.ir road I* making In the tnter-
Tha old foolishness that women of
learning, or eloquence, or brain, are
never pretty, or eveh good looking, la
extinct, and has been put on the upper
ahelf among the dead scarabs of old
Bfypt. In this generation we have
Women professors, lecturer*, scholars,
authors, politicians, and philosophers,
who are beautiful Indeed—far more
beautiful than those bralnleas women
it did who left nothing better than their
pictures for our Instruc'on.
' Ths Insurrection In the republlo of
Colombia has ended leas pleasantly
than that In the republic of Ecuador.
There was a good deal of bloodshed In
ths one. but little If any In the other.
The Colombian rebels are tired of trea-
son, the Ecquadorlan rebels are amnes-
tied; Colombia was disturbed for
months. Bcnador for only a few days.
President Caro Is a revengeful man;
Prealdent Cordero Is the moat forgiving
of rulers. For Ihc fun of the thing,
the warlike wa> s of Kcuador are much
preferable to those of Colombia.
There Is nothing In the cruelty of a
man-governed world more cruel than
the deception complained of by Miss
vCTtlard and Mrs. Somerset In securing
thalr signatures as members of the com-
mittee on the new woman's Bible. They
signed without knowing Just what they
kare subscribing to. and In that thej
ware Just like the man who signed the
petition to have himself hanged. The
new woman movement ought to be
aiora careful about making snch old
masculine mistakes In getting out
a woman's Bible.
A Brooklyn man who was "convicted"
of n burglary he did not commit, and
pardoned" after he had served nearly
two years In Sing Sing, has sued the
state of New Tork for 9101.MS. 18 dam
agsn. Of this amount )25,000 Is claimed
for Injury to reputation and mental
and physical suffering while In prison;
(he rest Is kis computation ef ths
amount he lost In business by this false
Imprisonment, with his attorney's fees
sdded Since the state authorities ad-
mit that he was Innocent of the crime
for which he was convicted, and his
"pardon" waa granted because of his
Innocence, they have a very Interesting
rase on their hands to defend. They
may set up the claim that he Is the
victim of misfortune rather than
wrong, but the state la responsible for
Ha part In the denial of liberty that
caused bis suffering and loss.
In the army and the navy and In the
police, lots of officers who ought to be
good for msny years of service are re-
tired on pensions Some of them hare
but reached that time of life at which
their powers ought to be at their ban!.
It Is ridiculous to call them veterans.
The system Is costly snd wrong
The Olobe I emocrat suggests that
England name her next two battle-
ahlps the Belllff aud the Constable If
tfeg names are to be suggestlvs of
tbtflf business whst Is the matter with
tka Bally and the Capt. Kldd?
Disregarding the speculative element,
in mining, whtch Justifies greater •*-
pendlturea In prospecting and develop-
ment than are sure to be realized In
profits, the average value of sliver or
gold Is measured by the labor expended
In working the least productive deposits
and reducing the poorest grade of ores
necessary to supply the worlds de-
mand.
Coined money has an Intrinsic value
which makes It universally acceptable,
because when melted up and ased In
ths art* It releases to other occupa
tlon* labor which must otherwise be
expended In mining an equivalent
amount of metal tor such use.
If the labor cost of producing the
metala remained the name, whatever
the demand for them. If, In other words,
the precious metals were merely a prod-
uct of labor, and not a natural product,
occurring In small and Isolated quan
title*, an Increased demand for any on*
metal would bring about *uch an In-
creased production aa I'puld in a short
time restore the equilibrium of values
A corner in money wonld bo like a cor-
ner In wheat—only maintainable for a
short time. An Increased demand for
any precious metal canses the deposit*
of that metal to be worked more closely
and a greater amount of labor expended
In proportion to the product, so that the
labor cost of the most eipeaslve por
tlon ts greater and the value of the en-
tire product correspondingly Increased.
When the amount of actual or re-
demption money in the channels of
trade falls to Increase as rapidly as the
commodities to be exchanged the result
must be a fall la prloe* unless the short-
age In actual money is made good by
an extension of credit. It is not auf
flclent that the amount per capita be
maintained, for the tendency In An In-
dustrial nation where property rights
art secure Is toward a per capita In-
crease In all form* of wealth. What 1*
called general overproduction of goods
la more properly underproduction of
money. We can norer have too much
of everything, the consuming classes
bolng la a position to buy, but so long
as onr financial system 1* based on the
use of gold and sliver only aa the gioney
of final redemption every period of In-
dnitrlal activity «uch a* we call "good
times'' will be accompanied by an ex-
tension of credit and la likely to be fol-
lowed by a period during which credit
I* curtailed and a genera) fall takes
place, first In the money value of com-
modities and second. In the price of
labor. Thl* recnrrence of hard time*
will continue until some mean* I* found
of effecting exchanges In which the
metal* will have no greater part than
other commodities
The panic of 1893 and 1894 I* a direct
re*ult of the demonetlxatlon of allver
In 187S, the abandonment of silver and
the sut'*<ltutlon of a gold currency by
■evers! lwdlng nations of Europe and
the half-way character of the remedial
legislation adopted by our government.
The downward tendency of prices
was well defined from 1873 to 1878.
Prom 1878 the coinage of illver and
later the Issue of treasury note* In pay-
ment of silver pursbaaa* offsol In a
measure the doweMNird tendency and
brought about an era of good times last
lag uninterruptedly till U9B. when the
coined at the ratio of 18 to 1
It la proposed by-Its friends to re-
store to It the rights as a money metal
which It enjoyed prior to 1873, and
which were taken away quietly, almost
swretlv, without any public demand
and without any of tho reason* wblck
are now so clamorously urged agaiuit
It* restoration. That a rc establish-
ment of the parity between gold and
silver would benefit this country no
fair-minded man will deny. Whether
the commercial Influence of the United
States I* sufficient to atom the tide and
off et the Influence of the European na-
tions who have adopted a gold standard
can hardly be ascertained without an
actual test, but when we face the con-
tingency of gold going to a premium,
nothing Is seen which will affect unfa-
vorably the prosperity of the country oi
make such a change in value* as would
work a hardship to the creditor class.
It has been argued that sliver money
cannot be coined with sufficient rapid-
ity to replace the gold displaced. It I*
not necessnry that It be coined at all.
There are In the trtasury of the govern-
ment 369,000,000 silver dollars In addi-
tion to those now In circulation.
With this Immense reserve silver cer-
tificate* calling'for CiHver dollors and
made legal tender In the payment of j
debts could be Issued on tho deposit of ]
bullion, and since there would be no ;
question of the ability of tho govern-
ment to redeem Its promise would clr- |
culate ns the very safest form of paper '
money, preferred for tho settlement of j
all large balance* to the coin itself.
The United 8tntes produced In 1S90
nearly one-third of the world's produc-
tion of gold It will alway* as a nation
popi.l.i
est* of It* patrons Three fust trains
are now run In each direction dally.
Supi rb dining enr service; no change
of cars for any das* of passengers be-
tween Chbsg'v New York and lloston
City ticket otlice. Ill Adsms slreM T'l
Main 3S9 Depot. Twelfth und rtark
streets. Tel. Harrison -00
Paper gloves are on band
II t^ll t!rk«ta
to ]t«iiTer in July, in I
• t once at (u mtfi and
only one and that
Kirnralna to Colon
i h* croat if k liltnd Honlt
cheap f u this r vui
> i.u thwiild |>o*t juu
route*.
4end by foatal rani or letter to .Inn Hpbaatlan.
O. i' a . « hicaft". (<«r • beautiful a« iit -nir itaued
the 'bira*o. lalamt and i'ariflc h y. call-
a 1 tba Tourist t® «*her." that tells all about th«
trip It will t>c ••tit free It it a gt in. aud juu
tbould nut d«lay tn atklnK (or it.
jfo. Sebastian. u. iv a . Chicago.
Paper la the lait bi insulator.
The Cures
flr TTood'it Sarsaparilla are wonderful,
but the explanation it ainiple Hood's
Harfuiparilla' purifes,
vitalizes and enrichm
the blood, nnd dis-
exs« cannot r« M*t its
powerful curative
powera. Head thin:
• My prl had hip dia-
ea*e v> lien l!v** ycara
old. She waa con-
fined to her bed and
_ for six or aeven weeks
Che"*doctor applied weighta to the af
fee ted limb. When alie pot up ulie
was un.ihle to walk, hid lest all her
Strength and day by day she becahie
tlutiner. 1 read < f a cure of a f
case by Hon 1 * £ai snparilla, und <1« eided
to give it to I.illi.m. When she hart
t.i!;Nl or..- I), t!l<? it li.ul effected so much
DON'T
/<'• INJl'MOUS to ti top si upesly
rvui don't be ivipv9td Upon by buying a
rrmetty that reoutret ]/ou ti> do to. ut it it
nothing more titan ft tuhttitute. In the
tudden stoppage of l-haeeo you vutt hart
n<me stimulant, and tn ntoif ail c<urt the
effect of the stimulant, be it opium, mor-
phine, or other opiat'i, letrtet a far \t orse
habit contracted. Ail your druggist about
BACO-Cl'RO.
/( is purtly vegetable.
You do not hare to stop
using tobacco with
BACO-CURO.
Your
tine as the day before you t >ok your Jtrit chcw
An iron-d'i.l written guarantee to absolutely ure the tohacro I* it
It will notify you tchen to stop, and your desire for tobacco will rente
tystem will be as free from
or smoke.
in all its forms, et m >ney re funded.
treatment and guaranteed cure) f
sent by mail upon receipt or price. SEND SIX TWO vkXT STAMPS
FOR &AMVLE H0X. )io< llt ts and proofs free
Hureka Chemical A Mfg. Co.9 LaCrosse, irt«.
Price $1.00 yer box or S boxes (.10 uiys
For sale by nil druggists, or will be
Orrici or THE PIONEER PltlSfl COM I* ANT C. W. Hnaxici. fl.i.
8T Paul, M Ius., hapt IT. 1R^
Puraka Chemical and Mfg Co . I.aCroi#^. Win.
l>ear £lr I ha e h+*n a tot>aeeo fiend for ninny jeirt and Murine the p t two ytart
hava amnkad ATtcaa |o tw# fitr cigar* rrgularly utry day My whole narvoun
became affected. uat{i my physician told uie I m'.'st pira up tho u«e of to hare* far tba
tiroa helnf. at lea«t 1 tried tha •<> called "Ke*1sr lure." "No-1 o-Hbc," an I rarioua
othar remedies, but without sueoeis. until I accidentally learned of four BACO-Cl'RO.
Three week* i| to-day I oeinmcaeed uatui yrur preparation %nd to day I eons Uer
myself completely cured, I am in ry*rf'*ct li*;<!lh, ai.d tho horrible craving fur tobacco,
whle^ eterjr invetrrate si* oWrr fully apnrrciat*". has e>'uipl«-ti ly left iue. I consider
yuar BACO-CURO simply * 0 lerlul, nnd oen
fally r«<
Youri very truly,
C W. HoBNlCK
o o o
PATENTS
TDoaui r Rimf*
lAlneo. W rlto for
, \r*Nhlnc o
mil I'at'ent o
veutor'tUuliJ'
ROOFING
aani/\auoniv w.tiohiik,
riOlV^n Washington, I>. < .
lyrtla lul wbt, liiwlJiidtcBlliif claluia, Btty sjuc^
. _.*mg ted Iron, et*rr11r\f
and Fell Hoofing, Mrt*l
Iblntrte*. Itteel Imitation Brtrk
m.l Stone, Uulldl ig I'eper, et<-
Tka (utu City i'll1 loolaf ml Carri?«l«C Cmjiibj,
111 Itoitwtr* ti, Ktmt* City. me.
jipnssr
Clerrtn tni ueul-hcs the hair.
fr a lnuiieiit |rv 1h-
Ntur Falla to Kcetor* Orey
Zltlr to its Youthful
Curr. tra:p dlMMM I h«ir lallmg
am . and |1 et l>'"«1sf
Ely's Cream Balm
QUICKLY Ct'lIM
COID-HEAD
I
fria. W Casta.
rool tli.it I kept on ^i\ intf it to her
U. ,U. . .. .... ..W.J. -- - | 5„ti| t:lKl.n three unties. Her
have gold to sell as a commodity in the t|)p<.utl. w „tlien . v. eli. nt an.lslie
best market it can find. It mined In , w<.|| nm| strong. She has not used
1880 thrce-flfths of the world's produe- crutches for eiilit n• >ntlis anil walks to
tlon of allver, and to far from being ' icliwt every day. 1 cannot Buy too
flooded In the event of free colnane with : hutch for .
silver from India, China and Japan Mood's Sarsaparilln
will always have silver to dispose of at jt ^ n ,p|en(ii(i „,..,ii i„e and I would
Its market price In exchan*e for the fecommend it to any one." lilts. (J. A.
products of other nations and In pay- j LaKohk, Oroville. California.
inn principal and Interest of Its securl- Hnri«l*H Pills '
ties held abroad The United States, a. "oou s
a nation, Is a debtor nation. The
greater part of Its debts were contract-
ed on a bimetallic basis when the dollar
measured In wheat was worth a bushel.
The Measurement of Valaet.
Money Is the universal yardstick.
Now an honest yardstick must alwaya
be thlrty-sli Inchea long Whaterer
length was laid oft and called a yard at
the beginning must always be a yard.
If a merchnnt uses a yardstick only
thirty-two Inches long he Is dishonest
and his yardstick Is a dishonest yard-
stick. If on the other hand the cus-
tomer after contracting for cloth brings
a forty Inch rod and Insists on its be-
ing used as a yardstick he will be sus-
pected of dishoneity When we com-
pare the value (money length) of all
staple commodities we find that the
yardstick of value has been made long-
er so that each dollar will purchase
more of almost everything than It once
could. The single standard dollar Is ■
dishonest dollar.
legislation which will Increase val-
nes by making our monetary unit a bi-
metallic unit, raising the price of sil-
ver and al! other staple products snd
releasing our gold to the settlement
of foreign Indebtedness has not tba
slightest element of dishonesty. It If
Just because It will restore to the prod-
uct* of American labor the debt-pay-
ing power which has been taken away
by class legislation.
It Is patriotic because It will protnott
the prosperity of the whole country.
and do more than anything else to se-
cure for It financial Independence.
For the United States to loin with the
money powers of Europe In the adop-
tion of a single gold standard Is to doa-
ble Its debts and to fasten around Ita
neck forever the chain of financial
servitude. It Is as mad an art aa that
of self-destruction, and, If I may be per-
mitted an Illustration in dealing with
so serious a question aa unreasonnbla
and uncalled for a proceeding as that
of the man who sat on the limb of a
tree and sawed It off between where he
sat and the trunk It le time the com-
mon sense and patriotism of the coun-
try ahould prevail, it Is time that a
majority eipreaaed In law their deter-
mination to see Justice done between
the debtor and creditor classes nnd tha
producing classes relieved from tha
maehlaatlone of a gresptng wealth-
abaorblng. bnt not waalth producing
combination.
WIMJAM D. WAMM
e>
&
o
I v
t*r
i A
O
O
o
9 x O
*<30[>X00
WALLY ONG'S CAFE— °
FRESH FISH, • 9
OYSTERS, V
and OAME. a
_ All Kilitis of Meats.
IZ9
o
Every thing Strictly I'lrst
Class and Short Order.
he*
Regular Dinner From
13 to 3 p. oi.
O ©
v
s
. . T. M. I'l.AI... .
THE LUMBER MAN.
Noble pvenue Between
First and Dlvlaton atreeta,
Guthrie, Okla.
t
GET MY PRICES BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE
I W MM* Ala
EWIS' 98 % LYE
toimro amd rnraaft
(f ATKWT1D)
merie Uoilk* other LK K b#tnf
a floe powder ai>4 ps«W m a aaa
Ith removable Hi. the
_TB alwayt rr*1* for UBB. ▼*>'
nutke the btti perfumed Herd Roap
la iBlnai«e Aeuf feniitna. Jl !•
the heat for eleanainc Hp**
dtaAnfertina alnka. oioeeta. waah'nf
bottlee psklnU. treea etc.
PtNNA, SALT WPG CO.
Oea. Afente. Fhlla^ Pk
A5K YOtIR DRUOOIST FOR
JMpERlAL
BEST ★
The
CAPITAL
8URPLU8
, A. j. SKAT, vie. fr.ald.Bl
GUTHRIE NATIONAL BANK.
$eoooo
lO ooo
k'^Y linn W. J, HORSFALL, CASHIER.
Board of tMreelora lo addition to Hank OIB'
HOKACE SPPKt), ROHKKl MARTIN, IIfc
TO BE HAPPY YOU MUST EAT!
The Oldest and Best Restaurant and Short Order House in Okla-
homa is yet running, and for a Good Meal go see
ANDY FRINK
Everything the Best He will treat you the best and furnish you
Coffee Like Your Mother used to Make
/Nursing IIothers.Infants/
CHILDREN
ft JOHN CASLB * MflR. N«w *•«*• *
Subscribe
FOR THE
GUTHRIE REPRESENTATIVE.
■w..,.. Ill ^y^.ta m ■Iiiif lilt- - !1"-J
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Vincent, Leo. The Oklahoma Representative. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1895, newspaper, June 6, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc94789/m1/2/?q=%22United+States+-+Oklahoma+-+Logan+County+-+Guthrie%22: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.