The Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 5, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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General Debility
Day in and day ont there is tbnt feeling
of weakness that makes a burden of Itself.
Food does not strengthen.
Sleep does not refresh.
It is hard to do, hard to bear, what
should be easy,—vitality is on the ebb, and
the whole system suffers.
For this condition take
Hood's SarsaparilSa
It vitalizes the blood and glvei vigor and
tone to all the organs and functions.
In usual liquid form or In chocolatcd
tablets known is Sarsataba. J00do«es$l.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE
desires of all concerned are obser-
th
ved.
AT THE ENCAMPMENT.
There are five hundred officers and
men a Fort Reno. The encampment will
laj t u itll October 3. General Niles re-
turned to Guthrie yesterday t«> invite
Gover ior Fran ti to the social event 'f j
tli meet, a ball and reception, to be Of / / 1
gl\« n tomorrow night In the hands mi ' L j f (7 flOOCl
Elks home of El Reno by the citizens of j
tint town.
From the adjutant general down the
men are performing their duties with j
a zest that speaks well for the Oklahoma;
martial spirit. Rifle practices are beln^ j
held on the range daify and some «om-
mendable scores made. Colonel Roy Hoff-
man of Chandler, the defeated candidate J
fgr the democratic l'nited States sena-i
torlal nomination Is commanding officer.
NILES A WORKER.
The record made by General Niles,
w! was appointed March 1. 1900. Is ex-1
cellent. He Is a tireless worker and has]
pulled all bo
musty shelves. He Is a great man fur
fcvstein and his Ideas show In the guard.
General Niles declares the proposed
new state should muster a volunteer
organisation of not leas than three thou-
sand men and should have an appropria-
tion of nt least WO annually for every
•Oldler.
""the securities of tLe^banV tHe vTtI
can. Oher hankers say that In time
there will be enough money worked out
In this way to pay all depositors and
leave for the stockholders, who havo
paid In 90,00ft. The stockholders today
made a security bond of $1(0,000 and
turned It over to the associated l>ar.Wt .
In order to do this, many of them
mado Individuals loans. P. fi. Hopikns,
president, made one for 110,000. There
were hundreds of *mall depositors In
this bank. Its savings' department hav-
ing $26,000 on deposit. This was moslty
In accounts of women and children und
laboring men.
The securities of the bank proved bel-
ter than at first scheduled. q
The worst features of the failure- are-®®^^
that Its officers had heavily overdrawn
their accounts without good security, I
and deposits were received Monday night
after banking hours when the president.
of the Hunk of Commerce, who has ex-
amined tho Canadian Valley's books,
states that, so far as he has been able
to determine, there has been no crim-
inal tran« ^tlons in the handling of
funds but the failure Is due to lack
of knowledge of hanking methods. Just
after the bunk had failed, one of the oil
companies in which It Is heavily inter-
ested, struck a well near town.
This oil property is probably worth
one-half of the liabilities of the bank.
THE WEEKLY OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1907.
10 THE WIRE
I New Husband Of
Mrs. Leslie Caretr
Bleeding Sores Covered Her Whole
Body After an Attack f Measles
— Nursed Every Night for Three
Weeks—Nothing Helped Her.
Days' Limit to Secure
Normal Service
CROMWELL TAKES ACTION
CASTOR IA
For Iufanta and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Boughl
Means New
Quarters
Where the Officials Under the
New Regime Would Stay the
Proposition
In the event of statehood the officials
burdens down from | under th« new regime will have to look
hard for quarters. As It Is the federal
building will have to be vacated for
the benefit of the l'nited States Judges.
This will neress'tate another court room
for the state supreme bench, the district
Judges and their staff of clerks and em-1
ployes.
The officials will Increase with the
state regime a propostlon
suitable room likely will assume serious
proportions.
Bears tho
Bijrnaturo of
HOOD'S Sarsaparilla ia the medi-
cine for impure blood, eruptions,
weakness and general debilitv — It
positively and absolutely CURES.
Four Financial Institutions Will
Help Canadian Valley Eank
Depositors During Settlement
Special to the State Capital.
Muskogee, I. T., Sept. 21.—Four Mus-
kogee banks, the First National. Com-
mercial National, City National and
Bank of Muskogee and Bank of Com-
merce, this morning came to the rescue
of the Canadian Valley bank and an-
nouncement was made that the deposi-
tors In the Canadian Valley which
doors Tuesday would be paid
WHEN SALOONS
PAY NO LICENSE
From the Times-Journal:
Oklahoma City and other cities in *he
west half o fthe state will, when the con-
stitution goes Into effect, have to devise
some new plan for raising revenue to
defray the expenses of maintaining their
city governments. Thege expense^ have
heretofore been largely met by liquor
licenses, etc.. but this source of revenue
will cut off with the coming of state-
hood. It would be well for the people
to make a study of this question and be Gesture
of
The Result of the Demands of the
Striking Telegraphers a Noti-
fication by the Attorney Gen-
eral That Public Business Must
be Properly Handled
The Western Union and Postal Tele-
grapit companies have seven days ii
which to get their wires in Oklahoma
In a normal condition, if, at the erpira-
tlon of that time conditions are not
normal Attorney General W. O. Crom-
well will begin suit to deprive the cor-
porations of their franchise.
The Ultimatum is tho result of the
petition of striking telegraphers who se-
cured a mass of evidence purporting to
show neither company has been handling
public business In a satisfactory man-
ner since the general strike.
The demand made by the attorney gen-
eral Is that who companies handle mes-
sages offered them "at whatever cost."
It means that all the offices now located
In Oklahoma must be opened before Oc-
tober 7 und that those which are now t>e-
lng operated with depleted forces must be
tilled with competent men.
Under the terms of the attorney gen-
eral's demand the "Indefinite delay," to
which all messages are subjected must
be eliminated and the same facility in
sending and receiving telegrams prevall-
of securing! before the strike must be secured.
uine serious STRIKERS HAVE AFFIDAVITS
In Guthrie the Postal office Ih closed
and In Kl Reno both companies' head-
quarters are unmanned.The striking tele-
graphers have one hundred affidavits from
business men stating that they have re-
ceived messages by mall. Four of the af-
fidavits were sworn by Guthrie men and
a large number by Oklahoma City mer-
chants.
The action of Attorney General Crom-
well is regarded as n victory for the
strikers. Thev have spent weeks In secur-
ing the evidence. Similar methods have
been observed In practically every state
affected by the strike.
In Indian Territory conditions are
slightly better than In Oklahoma. Both
offices are closed at Chickasha and the
Postal Is "out" at McAlester.
OASTOniA.
Bar.™ the ^Tha Kind You Han Always Bougtil
ready t0 Install new systems.
The cities of the Indian Territory have
never had the liquor license from saloons
for mor • than twenty-five years. but
many of them have, In fact, collected li-
censes In the forms of fines at regular
stated times on the saloons run In vio-
lation of the constitution and statute
laws.
Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, col-
lected license^ In this way until wltnin
a few months, and are now experiencing
■d! some trouble In getting adjusted to the
,0 new condition of affairs.
vents on the dollar now and the balance Topeka never collected a Joint license,
as soon as the associated banks could and front that city valutfole Information
arrange to handle the Canadian Val- | may be received aji to how to run a city
ley's securities. government without liquor license mon-
The announcement made this morning ey.
Wius quieting ana there has lu-on no In- ] The city governments must he kept up
dil ution of a run on any of the banks. , nnrt If the liquor llrenae Is shut ..fr .111
The sssorlnt.M hank« will appoint a | occupation tax or a tax on property
trustee who will tke charge of the Je- 1 mu t be resorted to to secure funds with
tunct bank business. He will work out | which to keep the government going.
THE CHANGE IN
JUDGES WA
II1
WOMEN WHO CHARM
Health I3 tho First Essential Toward Mahing a
Woman Attractive.
MISS HULEA KUGHLER
There is a beauty and attractive-
ness in health which ia far greater
than mere regularity of feature.
A sickly, irritable, and complaining
woman always carries a cloud of
depression with her; she is not only
unhappy herself but is a damper to
all joy and happiness when with her
family and friends.
It is the bright, healthy, vivacious
iporaan who always charms and carries
sunshine wherever she goes.
If a woman finds that her energies
are flagging and that everything tires
her; if her feminine system fails to
perform its allotted duties, there is
nervousness, sleeplessness, faiutness,
backache, headache, bearing-down
pains, and irregularities, causing
constant misery and melancholia,
the should remember that Lydia E.
Plnkham's Vegetable Compound
made from native roots and herbs will
dispel all these troubles. By correct-
ing the cause of the trouble it cures
where other treatment may have
failed.
Miss Elizabeth Wpn, of No, 205
6th Avenue, New York City, writes
Dear Mrs. Pinkham
"For months I suffered with drendft 1
headaches, pain in the back and sevei e
hemorrhages. I was weak and out of sor *
all the rime Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetal *
Compound helped me when all other met i-
fine hod fail.nl It seem^i to l>e just what
looedeU aud ^unkly restored uiy health '
MISS ELIZABETH WYNN
Miss Hulda Kughler, of No, 25,
West 15th Street, New York City,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
"For months I was ill with an internal
trouble- 1 suffered terrible agony, win
nervous. Irritable, and sick all the time I
took different medicines without benefit
Lydia E. Pinkham'v Vegetable Compound
was recommended and within six months I
was completely restored to health and I
vant to recouimeud it to ever)- suffering
woman."
Women who are troubled with
painful or irregular functions, back-
ache, bloating (or flatulence), displace-
ments, inflammation or ulceration,
that bearing-down feeling, dizziness,
indigestion or nervous prostration
may be restored to perfect health und
strength by taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vcgetablo Compound,
Mrs. Plnkham's Invitation to Women.
Women suffering from any form
of female weakness are invited to
rrm cly communicate with Mrs.
v'i - iin. at Lynn, Mass. From the
oms given, the trouble may be
^d and the quickest and surest i
>f recovery advised. Out of her i
« folume of experience in treating
•tr le Ills Mrs. Pinkham probably
lift1 the very knowledge that wii) I
1 your case He* udvlce is free
a", always helpful.
Garber Gives Place to llainer
and Four Defendants En-
ter Pleas—A Sipal Vic-
tory Under the Recent
Ruling of Judge Burton!
At the district court in Pond Creek
yesterday, Jtidge Halner presiding,
a branch of the so-called "Oklahoma
lumber trust" plead guilty to the
charge of violating the Sherman anti-
trust lays and the four defendant
companies were each fined *2,000.
Tho defendants are the Mlnnetonka
Lumber company,' Browell Brothers, F.
A. Amsden and the Gloyds, all of Alva.
The case was originally brought in
Woods county but taken to Grant county
on a change of venue. After exhaustit
all the technicalities of the law for delay
In the argument of dilatory motk
which were promptly overruled by Judge
Milton C. Garber, ag a lust and final
resort the statutory affidavit for a change
of Judge was filed, worn to by F. A.
Amsden, president of one of the defen-
dant corporations, In which It was stat-
ed, upon oath, tliat on account of the
bias end prejudice of the presiding judge
the defendant could not have a fair and
impartial trial.
The granting of a change of Judge,
however, was accompanied by the an-
nouncement that another Judge would
he pi i sent and Immediately proceed with
THEN CUTICURA MAKES
COMPLETE CURE IN 5 DAYS
"It is in my opinion my duty to join
those who praise the Cuticura Hetn*-
dieg. After my granddaughter of about
•even years had
been cured of the
measles, she was
attacked about a
fortnight later by
a furious, itching
and painful erup-
tion all over her
body, especially
per partof
> r m i n g
rateryand bleed-
ing sores espe-
cially under tha
arms, of considerable siae. 6he suffered
a great deal and for three weeks wo
nursed her every night, using all tha
remedies we could tniuk of. Nothing
would help. We then remembered
having heard so much about Cuticura
Romodies. We sent for them and after
twenty-four hours we noted considerable
improvement, and, after using only one
complete set of the Cuticura Remedies,
in five consecutive day* the little one,
much to our Joy, had been entirely cured,
and has been well for a long time. Mrs.
F. Ruefenacht, R. F. D. 3, Bakerafleid,
Cal., June 25 and July 20, 1904."
>\ \
X the upper
^Jj it, forr
HUMOR ON FACE
Cured by Cuticura Remedies
No Return in ao Years.
"My son, when a lad of «Ut«en, was
troubled with humer on his face and
after using Cutioura Remedies he was
freed from every humor and has con-
tinue^ so to the present time after
twentv years have pasted. Your Cuti-
cura Soap has been used in my family
for several years and 1 have faith in the
Cutioura Remedies. A. H. Smith,
Marion, Me., Dec. 1, 1905."
nd Treatment for
Svtrr Rumor of iLf nw, CbMrta. «B(1 Adults. ?oo-
tjiu of Qjtteura §eap w the flkta.
- MaUwI Kre«. Booktai on Skin Humors.
STATE OWNERSHIP FAILED
From the Kansas City Journal:
South Carolina, after fourteen years
of state ownership of saloons, has final-
ly wound up the business and the indica-
tions are that the experiment will nev-
er be tried there again. A commission ap-
pointed by the last legislature has dia-
lled of the last of the stock in the
ware house at Columbia, and henceforth
what whiskey Is sold in South Carolina
will he in the hands of Individuals. Con-
siderable uncertainty prevails a to the
result of a discontinuance of the state
monopoly, but one thing Is certain, aud
that Is that the state failed to make
money out of the traffic.
Aside from the moral questions Involv-
ed, and viewed as a strictly financial
VPAYJO
Boston, Sept., 28—William I,. Pay no
the young nctor. who, under the most
romatlc olrcumstances, was married to
Mrs. Laslle Carter, the celebrated emo-
tional actress.
The suddenness of the wedding which
took place at Portsmouth, N. II. in tho
course of an automobile tour, has sur-
prised Mrs. Carter-Payne's closest
friends, .and many complications are
likely to follow It.
a great deal may have been accom-
plished during the fourteen years of state
whiskey monopoly, although this phase
of the matter Is not made clear by
the dispatches. The fact remains, how-
ever. that South Carolina has gone out
of the Whiskey business because It could
not make money in It It was a clear
case of government ownership proving
a failure.
For Infants and Children
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT
AVfegetable fttpurailon for As
ling (lie S Miatfis amLBowlsof
INFANIS VTHaDRKN
Promotes Di^slionJClwrfM-
ness and RestComains nf liter
Opiuni.Morphine nor Mineral.
NOTNAItCOTIC.
J/ir^ri/OUOnSMlZHICm
Aipkin Sttdm
JlxJUM* \
JMtttt tiffs-* I
Domini* I
'iMtognmi'
Apcrfecl Remedy for Consftpa-
tion, Sour Stomach.Dtarrtwa
W'orms.ConvulsionsXeverish-
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
rantee
Exact Copy of wrapper
LAWTON HAS THE NESDFUL
Can Supply the Wants in Manu-
facturing Cement
Editor State Capital: In your issue
of tho 26th in an article on the uses of
cemnt and the best methods of its
cheap manufacture. In this vicinity are
three elements you specify as needed,
Oysum, limestone and Natural teas.
I have known this country, In a gener-
al way, since 1R82 and have been a resi-
dent of Comanche county since the open-
ing In August. 1901.
Having been connected with mir^s
for many years and believing thin to be
a country especially rich In mines I
with others of a similar faith .secured
the insertion, known a« the Stephens
amendment, of a clause extending the
mineral land laws of the United States
Into the act of congress opening this
country to settlement. In 1901 we made a
mineral filing on a tract of land as a
gas and oil claim. Inside of WW feet
Bauer Gas and Gasoline Engines are known all over
the U. S. for their close regulatio* of speed and easy
starting, jt costs less than i-3c per hour per H- P. to
operate them on natural gas at 25c per 1000. If you
buy a Bauer you won't ueed the '•Trouble Man."
Send for full description.
BAUER MACHINE WORKS CO.,
Ill 1-2 West 18th St. Kansas City, Mo.
(uainees ror two ^5 pounds pressure on a steam gauge,
regulate the sale ftrj heavy oil. We proved up on the
measure, the experiment in South Caro
Una offers food for thought. That state j abundance of gas, giving 150 to
went Into the #aloon bualnees for two j 17,
purposes. It wanted to
of Intoxicating liquors and Improve theirI clatm-after buvlng out a homestead con-
quality. and It wanted to make money. | ,estant-paid for the land and still hold
The latter proposition was not a minor tho flnal rerolpt Issued In INC. Subse-
•ne, by any means, for the state was bad qU^ntiy an employee of ours commenced
"if financially and It was pointed out | a homestead contest and was awarded
by friends of state ownership that the } thfl
revenues of the whiskey monopoly would ( Secretary Hitchcock holding that there
relieve this embarrassment. Viewed as waj| no minerai land In this country be-
ll purely business transaction, the mono- M|]|e lhp ffovfirnment surveyors had
poly might have been In lumber, or coal notM none on Ui0,r platfI of R„rveys! IIft
or tobacco. It happened to be liquor be- | d,d not upon t)ip stephens amend-
cause the sentiment of the beet people; ment making the mineral land laws of tbe
of the state was opposed to the traffic j united 8tates apply; and as his opinion
and in the absence of a way to eliminate wafJ flna| no^ being receivable by the
tilal of th
!ge (Jarber
occupied the ben<
A FEATHBR F<
> fine is the first
dealers
ted pr
ly dest
The
largely
left for Perry to pre-
ice of Justice Halner,
I here yesterday.
II KM BUY.
consummation of
jre tinder the ruling of Chief
ord of the supreme court,
mi tin* Sherman antl trust act
(lahoma. l'nited Suites Attor-
(Cmbry has had personal
e case and the fturrender «-f
is regarded In court circles
tant precedent.
0 Capital reporter Mr. Em
t night:
s at Alva are local and
tlahotna octupus.' exactly
come up at this term of
thrle are .more of that
?rlng a wider scope.
ence showed there was a
00! at Alva, by which the
> 'taxed' on their estlma-
Competltlon was utter-
:-d."
• -called "trust" caf.es are
f a local nature. There nre
cases a!so pending nt Chandler.
When the suit, come u<> here Judge
fiurford will be disqualified and Judge
'rarber will succeed him.
It altogether they voted to reetrict it
by stat* ownership.
The liquor business has always been
considered a profitable one, and the av-
erage man would suppose that a mono-
poly of the whiskey traffic of a great
state would bring In returns on a col-
ossal scale. Almost any dealer in whiskey
would jump at the ohance of securing
such a monopoly and would be willing to
pay handsodely for the privilege. Yet
the state of South Carolina failed to
make money out of the businees, and
So far as this feature of the experiment
Is concerned the state has failed for mil-
lions of dollars. State ownership of a
highly profitable traffic could not suc-
ceed and it has been discontinued.
From the standpoint of public morals,
PILES
FREE
CURED
Get Eid of Your Piles Right Now
Pyramid Pile Cure Can do it
Quickly and Painless.
FREE PACKAGE SENT TO PROVE
IT.
Piles Is a fearful disease but easy to
cure If you go at It right-
An operation with the knife Is danger-
ous, cruel, humiliating and unnecessary.
Pyramid pile Cure has cured the
worst form of piles known. We prove it
By every mall we get letters like this:
"Wishing to give credit where credit
is due I feel It my duty to humanity—
as w< 11 as yourselves to write you re-
garding your pile remedy. I have not flu
lshed my first box and am now well.
After the first treatment of Pyramid
File Cure, the soreness left, and the
swellings have Isept deoreaslng. I also
used your pills and am feeling like my-
self again. Thanking you kindly. I \m
yours truly, C. Crowley, 170, 9th Ave.
Seattle. Wash."
We do not ask you to take our word
We are willing that you should try our
treatment and decide for yourself. Send
to the Pyramid Drug Co., 93 Pyramid
Building, Marshall. Mich., and you will
receive a free trial package by return
mail. After you have used the contents
of this package you can secure exactly
the same medicine from any druggist for
.*(0 cents or, on receipt of price, we will
mall you same ourselves If he should
not have It.
You can go right ahead with your work
and be ca.iy and comfortable all tho
time.
Isn't It worth trying?
Thousands have been cured In this
the privacy of their own home.
easy painless and Inexpensive way, in
So torture. No hill*. SeaJ today.
courts we could not proceed. Mr. Hitch-
cock also allowed an Indian allotment to
be made on every mineral spring known
In the country.
There are several such springs but for
this reason none of them have been util-
ised. Mr. (lould the territorial geologist
seconded the action of Secretary Hitch-
cock by asserting that there were no
mineral lands In this country and no
Indications of mineral except gypsum.
General George G. McClellan, who was
with the Marcy expedition to this coun-
try In In an official capacity mado
a very strong report upon the general
mineral indications, quarries and miner-
al springs of this country. One known,
and marked upon his map as the "As-
phalt Spring" lies about four miles
northeast of Lawton, Inside the military
reservation, and has a strong flow of
petroleum covering many acres of land
around I/iwton noted on his map as the
"Stinking Spring." has a sulphur water
so strongly Inpregnated with the miner-
el as to give It the name It bears because
of Its extremely pungent smell. This
spring Is near Saddle mountain and was
covered by ;in Indian allotment after a
mineral land location upon It. The Mar-
ry explditlon was sent out by the U.
S. government to locate the north fork
of Red River and Its report also led to
the location of Fort Sill as a military
post. The ruling of Hitchcock prevent-
ed the further location of gas and oil
lands and also caused the land office
here to reject all filings upon granite
and limestone quarries, of which there
are many valuable deposits In this coun-
try.
The Homestead locations have general-
ly been proved up and paid for In this
country and of course are open to the
production of any mineral in them. The
ruling of Hitchcock and official opinions
of Gould have however, kept back In-
vestment In these matters. Two years
ago a settler with limited capital, aft^r
securing patent for his land, put down
a shallow well, obtained a gas fran-
chise from the city of Lawton, and has
demonstrated that he has gas by furn-
ishing the residences on two streets, of
half a mile each in length, with fuel.
He also furnishes several manufacturing
establishments with it. He has made no
attempt to boom it as a stock company
or to secure Investors preferring to re-
tain hie franchise himself and extent it
as he has means.
I have been interested In seven differ-
ent wells in each of which profitable
quantities of gas and oil were found. I
As the lands were leased the ruling of
thriving industry in It Is carried on. We
did not go below Wl feet In any of
our wells, and all of them were — lthin
four miles of Lawton.
Tho gypsum Is being utilized In largo
quantities, at Cement on the Frisco road,
twenty miles from Lawton, but there
are large deposits of It in other locali-
ties.
The limestone is abundant, can used
as amcadam Is especially fitted for
crushing, and cuts well. It can be found
In any marketable thickness and site
and has been largely used in building
at this point.
There is a fine opportunity for devel-
oping this Industry In this locality well
worth the teention of any investors.
Guthrie, Oct. lOth
On? Pay Only, Thursday-
Exhibition on Olivpr's FiPlri
LEl
Hltch«.rk lod to the •nmillm.nt of the | ^ify ^ "sp^did «n'd Frm-
Exhibition
GREATER AND GRANDER THAN EVER BEFORE
Only Circus and Hippodrome Exhibiting in New York, and the only
one without a Real Rival in the wide world.
THE COLOSSAL CULMINATION OP
EVERY ERA OF ARENIC EFFORT
Monster Triple-Ring circus—Most Varied
Zoological ' V)l>cl!on on Earth—Royal
Roman Hippodrome—Aerial Enclave-
Musical Congress-Mammoth Hon.i Fair
—First Time ot the latest European Im-
portation, the Riotously Realistic Mid-
winter Rievel or Scandinavia.
SKI-SAILING
Fearful Falson Flights on Skimming
_ Sltls by CAPT. CARL, HOWBLSEN,
Hero-Holder of 70 Champion Prizes. A Startling Headliner for the World's
Greatest TIirlll-Fest.
The Awesome Auto Topsy-Turvy Turn and Flight
THE DIP OF DEATH
A Young Lady Tx>0plng the Gap In an Automobile Up-8lde-I>own—A Fateful
Fascinating Aerial Flight that sets the expectant audience quivering with ex-
citement. i i
America's Triumph .
PEACE
A Btudendous, Stirring and Fanoramlcal-
ly Picturesque Military and Allegorical
Spectacle, founded on the Russo-Japan-
ese War.
ALL KINDS OF NEW ARENIC ATTRACTIONS
Til A \nl aline Remarkable Acrobatic a a d
I il" HUteilOS Trained Animal Act.
Mor® Actual Performers than All Other
Circuses In America Combined.
300 Artists In 100 Delectable Displays.
Three Herds of Trained Elephanti
All Kinds of Animal Novelties.
Clever Canine Actors.
ONLY RIDING SEAL.
6chool of Sea-Lion Jugglers.
100-Cage Menagrie.
Only Captive Herd of Giraffes.
Special Features for the ChlLDREN
10 Furiously Funny Clowns—Tallest man
and woman on Earth—Tiniest Lilliputian
Alive—Baby Elepant Plays—Pretty Pony
Performances—All kinds of Thrilling
Races—High Jumping and Long Dis-
tance Leaping Horses—Grand Prelimin-
ary Promenade Concerts by Carl Clair's
llltarv Band.
S TRAINS OF CARS—12 ACRES OF
TENTS 1300 People—500 Horses—Only clr
ous with Grand Stand Reserve Seat
Platform and Opera Chairs.
There will be no Street parade. Incl-
i Show will be given on the
! Grounds at 11 a. m. and 5 p.
dally.
leases by the settlers, at present such
lenses can be had on patented lands, but
the official reports and long delay have
made It difficult to find Investor? i Tw0 Exhibitions Dailv a* 9 fl d m n ^
In all the wells I assisted in sinking' 7 ■ t*h,D!j'cn" V/ D°°rs 0pen ono Hour Earlier. Ad-
we passed through good vein of lignite ml8Slon ^lth a so*t- 50 Cents. Children Under 10 Year«, Half-Prica.
bef'ire reaching the «iis nd then struck J Reserved Coupon Sea*s, Extra, According to Location.
a flow of heavy petroleum, which would AI1 Keaerved numbered. Reserved Grand Stand Chairs on sale on tha
not rise, but which would furnish toi(*™ ds at the Opening Hours and during the day nt the down-town ticket jt-
the pumps we used a 8and pump to lift !lce-
it-about 2f,0 gallons In ::4 hours. It Is a .. .
line lubricant una Granite, okia.. a, At J. N WALLACE Drug Store, Oklahoma Ave. and First Street
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Greer, Frank H. The Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 5, 1907, newspaper, October 5, 1907; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth352698/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.