Cashion Advance. and Oklahoma State. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 48, Ed. 2 Thursday, April 26, 1906 Page: 1 of 4
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MAGAZINE_SffllTIQS
—" * < I' I 1 . . .. . . . • . I 1 , I I I 1 • 1 I t I 1 > 1 I I . I t I ' t 1 . 1 I
riiv AKKAXHAS I.I MHhH O i „l.l,.«...... «"•'
' celcbratwl LINCOLN PAINT Tlu. P ^^fT ^ iMy5hw ever I. O.W « .lout' wi.h I.INC
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Wednejday
week. We
opped faet i
buy erair.
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to call and
nd Saleroom
R Field',
roprietorr
it'.nc, prii e
1 clean seed,
otter, if you
nd w.j will
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Gin Co.
loot, OUlu.
nipanv thr.
s without
liolin
Oltla.
inco Apr.'.i. iaic
'• License.
If of RlligflhUcr,
A
lit ion'
II at
Frntik Ranb L|i;
d County rierJt
i\«kiiiK Ihut
retail, M U
hot* in nod J,1
nt y itud Territory
link Uub|
>mi A i' i
iitod fin«i in • i '•
V
imlhf hhCI Court v
i, mi)
,Co.Clk
April,
Sander*. Deputy
OHK.
fclobwrleNl)
aidclmd i. i .la"
FroeteiAdcer
Wiwvoh.iyrtm
oefefyooiainue
ai.fl.eb.Kol r'*
sn«gleo b.Sti
uddeil ;i wtiak <>f the
fully guaranteed.
1XCOI.N I'AINT.
[1 " "" ..
,nd all painters material and supplies
Manager
EDUCATION FOR INDIANS.
•'MOTHER K.I THBRISB" DREXEL
SPENDS MILLIONS IN TIIIS
WORK.
Has Founded Many Schools, tmploy-
ine Indians lluild Them. Only
hull-blood Indian Catholic Priest in
the World.
known Mug the Nazareth Tn li.u«e nt
Ml.sh.Wco. will. Il was founded III Wi-
ll WIS beset bv many difficulties dill
|„c its earlier years, but survived tl.e
all and is now a nourishing Instltuti n.
The institutions which have pros
pored tile most, and in which Mother
Katlieriue lias taken the greater Inter
est are, however, naturally these
among the tribes which werealready
under the Inlluence of Catholic teach
1 Iu-'s the Usages and the Iona-
watomies. The Usages had of • ■« r-.'
Ik-ch instructed In llie Catholic failh.
before their removal from Southern
Kansas,
LARGEST BATTLESHIP.
TEN MILLIOS HOI.I.AHS FOR TIJE
CONSTRICTION 01 (HOANTIC
"CONSTITUTION."
Many thousands of Indian childres
in Oklahoma and lndlau Territory
have been educaled b.v means ef ti*
"Drexel millions," a lame liortiou ot
which has for years been devoted In
the cause of Indian education by-
Mother Katherine. formerly Miss Kate | ' ;,i"raniil.v of Italy, whe
Drexel, of Philadelphia, sister of John , < ol ^ ^ ^ .UI1U,1L, ,h,
11. Drexel, banker and sugar ningnatc, ' ,[f(1 r lhlMr removal I® Ihe terrl-
and closely related to the others of t - ■ . scroll of Independence,
same name wl,« have made it famous ory.
In the world of Annuel, It was ' through what is now Okls-
Mother KaU.eriuo who started the In-1 ^ ^ f#r wt>sl ,,ort sill.
dian school at ti octo wbleh baj ^ )iw)imIn|t <)f ,V()rU nt„,mg
government 'and made tlu; (the ^h,"'UoiioU
in Pottawatomie county, are also men- vices to.1jie ^s mp o,, ^ ( n..
touch with her (lory and slruek out^ lid. th^Indian
work, and visits the Oklahoma srhiKiis coun^j ll '1
In which she is interested at least once In 1 i l 1 ' f „ l(l.m,nc
n vimr <ho is nsuallv aceompanleil ln>r the famous
by her slstCT who Is also d^i'ly in-1 tines there, which is the only mou-
lUH-essarv to develop httii sp«ed, or
Ihe greater bunker capacity essenlial
in wider sleamiir: rail us. They point
,ait that in the lJroadnauclit it was ai
lempled to preserve two of Ihex'
factors, t-un power and speed but that
p, do so it was inHvssary to sacfinee
Ihe armor protection, wlilcii they be-
lieve su.Li a blttlwhip should have.
More Destructive and Terrible than Nj Limit to Cost.
the new Floating Giant, the 1 nciisb No Rnorni(.,. h, armament, speed or
"Dreadnaught"—Old "Constitution ,-adius will have lobe mad.-
to be Saved. I ia desicnini; tlie new Constitution,
one hundred thousand dollar for Tt,;;only llniltathm, .da^l ,upe
removal from ^mtnern the preservation 11 f„r"the I
the fa,hers at the old .•onsUtuthm and * «
Affairs I'omtniltee is that her hull and
Miunun, , nr « liutfe'new battleBhifi I machinery shall not e« st more than
Osaire missions, now St. I'aul. hrsl mi eonstni<t • ^ provisions «,:.ihhi.ikhi. The provision f ,r
der ihe direction! of the l^i^Miai hi tlu Mvtl iwraprlt- tlotihlpe Mlchlitnn and Routh Carolina,
Father ftelmmacher, and later un.l r I„. ln< luded u ,„,w t,„. larp-st ships buil.liiw for l; e
(ither Paul rowWIone. a near rel-i;|t,o,. nil. „ to to th navy, was 14.000000 each ,n there
' rfll. ..f w-r atloat. She is no doubt in the inindN of tin. m- n
"" x«d the nrltls" l)?ead,.au«ht i.e~ of .he con,mil.ee that if the
m
■ mothiu katherine" dkexel.
terested In the work, nn.l who heart
ilv approves it, in common with the
other members of the family. All m
the millions she lias expended for In
diau education have been employed
.1,1,1,T diree,inn of ,lif Interior Imparl
nicut, as her lone study of Hie Indian
problem is recocnlzed to have made
her one of the best authorities on the
subject in the country.
Planned the Buildinns Personally.
The St. Louis and St. John schools
nt Pawhuska, both founded by Mother
Katherine a number of years into, aie
Rood examples of the wort she Is do-
biL- for the education of Ihe In,Ian.,
ltolh have handsome and coinniodlou<
buildinus. planned personally Kv
Mother Katherine. and have M en
hundreds of Osauo child,Tn thelr f r.t
knowledge of Ihe wliite iearn ...
Manv of the teachers are thenisclys
Indian4* craduales of ""unl
schools. Who have entered w,,h -
thusiasm into the education of ti, r
fellow Irlbesnien. The Clsace schoo s
receive some assistance from 'he K"
eminent, and their scope is trreal >
widened bv the orders now In inict
from the audit's o.llce that every
i.saL-e child of school a«e must l« I
school in order to draw Its i*are at
the annuity payments.
Used Indian LA>or.
While Mother Katlierlne's
Hoes have always been liberal. I, I
Il J.an to let the Indians do the work
whenever possllJe. in Ihe cotistruc km
„f buildings and work of a slmll.ir
character. When the Si.crcl le rt
school burned live years auo. a id .w .
rebuilt Pottawatomie and Ki.lvapoo
Indians made the hrick for the new
structure, and did much of the work I
towards lis construction, worklmr. ol
course, under the direction of a white
contractor. Much of ti..- t..=.lnt.".-.>.;;
of this school, which Is claimed to
the oldest west of Ihe Mississippi river.
Is borne by Mother Katherine. an
was bv her visits to Ibis school that
she discovered Albert Nevtahmniet. he
fullhlood Pottawatomie boy educated
bv her. and who Is now the only full-
blood Indian Catholic l'rl"-<tl'ithe
world After his irraduatlon at Sacred
Heart, she paid his expenses through
f'urllsle anil the Catholic unlvi'rslty at
Wnshinirtou. Anally llnlshlntf his edu-
ration at Home, from when.* he iv-
turned only two years au-o. to take up
his work an,one his own people.
isterv in the rnlted States sroverned
tlv from France, lis Hrs, a,
was Father Felix DoClrasse, a hueal
descendent of Ihe famous 1- rencl, nd
niirnl. 1'pon his death two years ai
l„. was sue .led by Father Murphy.
■I native of Savannah, <■!,.. and the
lirst man of American birth to Jo,ti
ihe brotherhood at Sacred Heart.
recently launched by Kine lidward by
•IS much as the T ireadnau^iit w,U cx
eel anything atloat when she i- ecu.
pleled. lb-r nuthorl/.ation ma be
said to Is" dlrec.ly the result of lo. -
victory in the Sea of Japan. It «us
the llritish naval attache on Is.ar.l
Toko's flaiishlp who hurried home
fler thai l.altle nn.l war,led ll,« A*1
■ niraltv of the needi «f the llrili-ti
navv, and this brought about the con
struct ion of the Drcadi,aught. Now
we are to follow nn.l eclipse the liilt-
ish naval wonder.
The Navy Department has secured
full information coneernln: the plans
of the Droadmmight. and the arrange-
ment of her powerful armament, so
that it is known exactly what ainst be
done to beat her.
In order that the department may
not be I in.pered in any way In deb i
mining upon the plans of the mew Con
siltutlon the forthcoming hill will pro
vide that the Secretary of the- Navy
may use the contingent fund te secure
information from ship-builders th,
world over, if lie so desires, before
llu,illy accepting the design of ten
million-dollar pacifier.
Provisions for Ship,
This provision for the new America;
sea tighter is in linn with the do ire
of the President and the earnes, r
commendation "t Admiral Dewey
who ntly appeared before the
Naval Committee of the House and
gave a Spirited talk In support of Ins
views as lo the necessity of con
structlng larger and more powerful
battleships for the Amerlemi Navy
At the time the naval estimates were
made Up last fall. Secretary Bonaparte
was opposed to any such Increase, but
he has since come around to the side
of the President, and is now hear.il.
in favor of the committee proposition.
The naval experts In Washington
have long fteen convinced that the
10,000-ton Ixittle ships Michigan and
South Carolina, authorised by the last
Congress, represent the limit of i* ,s-i
bility on a displacement not decidedly
greater. To go beyond, in any ap-
preciable degree, the fighting ellicieu, y
of such ships, it will be necessary to
have not only more powerful arma
nicut but higher speed ami greater
Steaming radius, to gain which there
must be heavier and uiore powerful
machinery and greater coal-cnrrying
capacity.
The displacement of the Drea.l-
naught Is but 'J.000 tons greater than
that of the Michigan or the South
Carolina. Naval construction ex-
he rs of the committee that if tin
Secretary decides to go to >.«*) tons
,,r beyond, the extra f'J.OOO.OHO now
provided will easily accomplish it.
It is estimated that the armor an.l
armament for the ship will cost some
■Ahere in the neighborhood of $"..5,HV
imi, in addition lo the hull an.l ma
■hinery, and that Other fitting! will
. ring the total for the new Const!!.,
lion up approxiinaiely to $t,'.00,1.0*11,.
The 1 tread,laugh. Is planned to
arry ten 1- inch rilles. The Mh lil
an and South Carolina are to carry
ght ll'-lnch guns. The Drca.lnaught
..ill be able to concentrate six gum
for bow or stern tire, with eight on
■ Ither broadside, v. Nile the American
;hips can use four guns dead ahead or
le ad astern, and all eight ahead or
!stern on a quartering lire, with all
Lilt on either broadside. So that in
point of lire they are nearly as ef-
II. M ilt as the Dreadnought, which ex
■i< materially only in the single
jioint of speed. To counterbalance
this the American ships have the de-
ided advantage in armor protection.
The Advantage of Guns
The Constitution will have as high
as the Dreadnaugbt, and the
[louble advantage the British
• hip of greater gun power and more
iple.e armor piotce,ion. She will
.. more able to intlvt blows and bet-
tor able to withstand them. She will
•arry twelve lj-inch rilles, so ar-
ranged that she can concentrate eight
of them in firing dead ahead or dead
astern, or off the how or quarter, aud
teu on either broadside.
Chewing Gum vs. JU/ssons.
The twenty-seventh annual meeting
of the Women's Foreign Missionary
Society of the Presbytery of Washing-
ton 1,'el.i recently, disclosed the fact
that three and a half million dollars
a year more is spen, for chewing gum
than for foreign missions. In other
words $11., h ,i i.i n •() is spent for gum
and only $7,500,000 for missions.
Carefully compiled data show that
<t17S.ihhi.,hh. a year goes for candy.
$700,011.1.1100 for jewels, and tobacco
and millinery go away up into the
millions, tobacco considerably in the
lead.
The Kerosene Lump.
The ordinary kerosene lamp is the
best illustration of the highest type ,,t
combustion furnace. The hot gases
passing up through the narrow throat
of the chimney draw the colder air
through the hot wire gauze at the
bottom and bring it near a tempera-
ture which will feed combustion and
OLD MAINE NOW YOUNG.
paper making has l)l>\e ml'cii
to he ye lop olit new esc-
lasi! state.
Intelligent Foresti y illI crpetuatc
The Maine Woods alio I urnisti I iin-
for Paper-Making to Future
Generations.
When one stops to think of the
tremendous and almost mnglc. growih
of the distant West It «*«a strs ige
that such an old stale as Maine Is sun
largely unknown an.l unsettled.
Almost immediately alter the Revo-
lutionary War the actionem ol
Maine began liv Inhabitant! ot other
parts of New Bnginnd nn.l its growtn
aaa been steady and an;*-, with .he
exception of the years id. and imme-
diately following the Civil War. 1
population, however, has been almost
ntlrely confined to the lower hall ol
ho slate ami only very receatly have
Ihe immense pos ihiliths and re-
sources ot the northern half been re-
alized. , ,
It Is estimated lliat at leai I --1 .-
,100 natives of Main" are scattered
throughout the other parts oi the
country at the present time. Had
this vast army remained to devol
op their native state il Is imposed 1,
to.luaUze the eh*'"'" '•h'1' '
lands
timber
nd placed the cutting of all
er under the direction of the
Government Forestry Bureau. A
rorns of • AjKMts was sent luto tho
Maine woods and a close study made
of ihe trees growing on each acre
of ibis company's holdings. A plan
was agreed npon which assures a i>er-
iK'tual stfpply t f timlier. No tree un-
der line inches In dUuneter to
etit. At the end of sixteen years the
spruce growth will have renewed it-
seK a-.aJn and under this plan the en-
tire three hundred thousand ai res
may N* cut over every sixteen years.
At Kumford Falls on the Androe-
eo - In in wr « rn Maine about 54,-
, I hot e power is now Utilized, and a
reeont stale report says that 4K.U00 ad-
ill!lotial horse power Is available
from lhis stream alone.
Beyond doubt the railroads of
Maine are responsible for the open-
itig and dcvelopu: it of the upper half
of this state, as - years ai'O only
thirty or fortv m.ics of railway were
built north of Ihe centre and manu-
facturing or farming was almost un-
known ahovo this point.
Capitalists at last realised what a
vast unl of valuable territory
wee being Ignored, and huill branch
line i into' the • wilderness" until now
there are nearly 500 miles ot tracks
connecting thriving cities and villages
which have sprung up in tho wake of
Ihe si™*! bands.
'i < p lvont of tho railroad in
OXtN ARC OIIIN FMPUOVI l TO BKIN.i 1KH.S DOW M tUoM l"L HILLS.
BERNHARDT Ol TWITS TRl'ST
Denied Playhouses by Theatre Com-
I bine. She Plays to Vast Audience
in Tent
I Mine. Sarah Bernhardt, the cele-
brated actress has entered the arena
Us a "trust buster." When she made
preparations for bookings In Texas
she found the playhouses of the stat,
closed to her on account of her re
fusal to appear under the patronage
of the theatre syndicate. In Texas,
therefore, she was compelled to appear
in a tent. A veek or two ago, a novel
method of producing a play was in-
augurated at Dallas, when Sarah
played "Cnmille" in a big circus tent.
will, an audience of o,000 persons
Hilling the perform, fully 10,000
persons crowded around the tent and
would have paid to get in if it hail
been big enough. As it was the tent
on|y seated 1.LMH) and had to stand
or .sit on the ground. It was the most
novel wikl west show ever seen. Ihe
tent was a hugo affair, and from the
outside looked big enough to house a
three ringed circus.
The novelty of playing in a circus
tent appealed to the actress and she
gave her Interpretation of the char-
aeter of 'Vanillic" as naturally, as
elcwrlv. and with as much force anil
power as if confronted by an audieuee
,,f New Yorkers or Parisians in Ihe
most modern of tkiTitros. The thou
sands who greeted Mine. Bernhardt at
Dallas deslieil as much to show tla'lr
Indorsement of Iter light against tie
trust as to lie entertained by he|
matchless talent as an actress.
Mine. Ilernhardl tn:u!t arriinirrtiient-
t,, appear 1,1 ,!„• lent at \\ iieo
mid Austin, Texas, and Oklahoma
Cltv oklahoma Territory. In other
Texas cities on her Itinerary laruc
I,alls were secured iiud specially oquipped
for the iiertonuauce.
Is rounder of Serer^ Schools
A number of schools of the same
Ss
THE NEW CONSTITUTION.
This Will be the Most Powerful Bit tic ship Alloat.
sr.?• =']?•!!
Useless lisimruaee. ships Is InsuOclent to a mpltsii all a ~iV,tli"tie coabostioii
A nWBl.r of so -
iCau-,n;:i,rri.r."rtcou°.du-| U.., [ u all. .. -«u.,. the e,.™ machinery I and w,
been made, as nature has done so!
much and man so little.
More than 40,10 square miles, or
2,r,;0,000 acres, of land still remain
ployed and unimproved, waiting
for capital and brains lo make il yield
large returns. The resources are al-
most beyond limit or belief.
Thousand-, of Lakes and Rivers.
In this state alone there are over
live thousand rivers and streams will,
more than fifteen hundred lakes as
reservoirs, to furnish power for in-
numerable manufacturing plants.
Besides natural water power, Maine
is rich in timber, which in this ag«
is a most valuable asset.
The timber lands of northern Maine
can with judicious management, he
mado to yield for generation after
generation and supply a vast amount
of lumber and wood pulp. The larg-
est paper mill in the world, is located
at Milllnoeket on a small branch or
the Penobscot Ttlver where a drop ot
one hundred and fifty feet furnishes
"5 000 horse-power. From this mm
is'turned out ra h day between 100
and 180 tons of newspaper, made from
wood pulp.
It is commonly supposed that papcr
maklng from wood-pulp is "no of
the greatest menaces to our forest-,
hut exactly the opposite Is the case,
where the forests are handled intelll-
-"titly.
Tho modern policies adopted by-
many pap, r makers ill regard to per-
petuating .the forests aro doing much
for the causo of forestry.
One Maine company has secured t
nt '>ooo„o acres of fore, t
BRIDGE
THE SOCIETY GAME
Tauijht by Mail
Complete Course, HI* I,e «ofis
Sen.l ( r Free Hatvlsotnu booklet. Addrewi
N. Y. Bridge Correspondence Scho< 1, Inc
3 Rial 42d Kt., New York City
Ct^ f_ gp,_« M vl. el • t . !• ''' "" ■ ,
i.m mi. *l<b I. . r g' arant . —
. . , . n> e. «" Je®«l*d Amertean
•.vnMb.atlM) balsaee. a.' a,l|ust
„M...i • Nm, ;.,1,7hTu"Vl
III,"II IS ae^MI .!► •«• "*• •"
'lias b ' •• "« • '
northern Maine has Increased the
\aluo Of tin i er I; nils over 2&u per
nt and timber which hefore was loo
remote has become available for uiar-
kettng purjioses.,
Capital from Canada.
It is to ho regretted perhaps from
an American standpoint tiiaL a largo
art of tho capital employed in devel-
oping this "new old state" has liecn
furnished by Canadian capitalists
rather than by New Englanders themr
The farming possibilities of Maine
aro almost as great as the water pow
er and timber business offer, as K has
been demonstrated that the soil and
llmato are particularly adapted to
tho raising of potatoes on a largo
scale; over 10.000 bushels having been
shipped to various parts of the conn-
try in 1904.
The railroad officials realized from
tho start th .. in order to settle and
build up tintry through which
their branch • ran the freight ratis
must ho low enough to enable manu-
facturers to compete with more ac-
cessihle factories, and havo borne thia
(Con tin urd v i Next Page, *
THE
RIGHT
FURNACE
FCR
YCUR
NEW
HOUSE
Prove nt every mlwtako P°"-
dil.le 111 V iur buil'liiiK plan*.
\S rii« f"P « ur free re
i k. Jt'H
•i authority ....
ir iellii bow hikI
wli r « to erect a furnace
. in rlv; how to • t moat
in III Ui of coal. I ; bow to
I ri,i of ■ >ty atovea or
?, i,| it e a ti .. .ed out heater
« ft hour Leadrr bUel Fumm*.
y..u i hi i-iit it ui> youraejf.
It tui.i e\ ry modern ai'pn-
uin ,. We tea. h you free.
h' lit, f i c Ik lit | al«l, any-
wli, N". «•'>, heata 7 to 8
r - -
fin.ill cliureli, Coats $4 . •
oili.ml/'-s. for all pur-
I, -. W riU for freo .
to.ik today.
][.-M Warmmf ft
V"ntilatin( Ootupanl
744 laconic Btui«liii(
ChicH®
Our
EADER
Steel Furnace^
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Woodworth, M. F. Cashion Advance. and Oklahoma State. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 48, Ed. 2 Thursday, April 26, 1906, newspaper, April 26, 1906; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc102888/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.