The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 130, Ed. 1 Monday, September 23, 1895 Page: 3 of 4
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The State Capital.
By the State Capital Printing Co
BATtt «V lOMOFJFnOK.
TO MATT. luiKwiin:
Oia year... .95.00 I Thr«e month# fl.M
BUmoatha.. 1.00 | On* montk... 71
DBLITBBBD BT OABBlBBf
UlN'K REVIEW.
Fluctuation la th« tiratn M rket the I'Mt
Week «ml the ( ttu*e.
New Yoke, Sept. 22. —R. < Dun &
Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says:
In &pite of tfold exports wheat ad-
vanced for some days, in all nearly 'i
cents, mainly because a single specu-
lator bought, but on Friday fell about
1 cent. Corn rose and fell in sym-
pathy with wheat, with as little rea-
son. Western wheat receipts for three
'• ; weeks of September have been 16,791,-
15 mdU bushels against 19,491,639 last year,
•5 ciuti while Atlantic exports (Hour included),
1 have been 3,941,693 bushels ugainst
7,621,986 last year.
Good reports of foreign crops, weak-
rwwiuii d iw " r r — ——
Mat; othtrwiae there may ba a dalaj
In making the charge.
Sample copies sent free.
HTLlberal inducements to Poetmaat-
ara asd Club Agents ______
Time-Table.
NORTH BOUND.
No. lOfl Chicago Kxprees, leave*
A:|3 s. m.
f :W p. m.
7.(t0 a m.
1U::«) p. ra
«:30 p. m.
1:00 p. in.
No. 40tt, Mo. River Kiprenn
No. 4 , Local Freight,
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 40f>, TeiaB Kipress,
No. 407, Local KiprenH,
No. 45W, Local Freight, • - -
Passengers should procure tickets
before getting on the train and save
money, in purchasing round trip tick-
eta to local points 10 per cent off.
L. R. Dklanky, Agent.
Oaa week • •
Two weeke
WBBBLT BDITIOB
Oaa copy, per year 91-00
iy In rcquaating a change of Poatoffice — .~r - • , ,
addreas alwaya give the name of the ness of Hour in Minnesota and larg^
PogtofHce to which the paper haa been exports of corn from this country, all
tkara mav ba a dalaV WOI'u llguilist U 1'isc ill wlll'St,
though scarcity of contract grades
may help a speculative advance. Pork
products have been reasonably yield-
ing, with prospects of a large corn
crop, but before the close had a strong-
er tone. The cotton market, lifting
and falling a fraction each day, al-
ternately, shows no settled tendency,
big stocks balancing an undoubted but
yet not definite decrease in yield.
The failures this week have been
213 in the United States against 210
last year and 32 in Canada against 48
last year.
A LUCKY FIND.
A Draft for $1,000 Discovered by a
Child in a Book.
FOUND POISON IN A PEACH.
A Mlohll.n lVm.mii Trl.nl to Kill a Wheel-
nutii for Injuring Her Chilli—A Hlg
Lomt on Cold Coins —Wal-
ler's Family.
BASEBALL OAMBS.
National League.
At Boston-Boston. 5: Now York. 3.
At St Louis—Chicago, 4; St Louis, 0.
At Brooklyn —Brooklyn, 6: Baltimore. 5.
At Cleveland -Cleveland.« Pittsburgh. H
At Cincinnati Louisville. tf. Cincinnati. 0
At Philadelphia—Philadelphia, 15. Washing-
ton, ti.
Western League.
At Kansas City—Kansas City, 10; Terre
Haute, 8. Second game—Kansas City, 9; Terre
Haute, 6.
At Milwaukee—Milwaukee. 17, Detroit. 11
At St Paul -St. Paul. 23; Grand Uaplds.9.
At Minneapolis—Indianapolis, 20; Minne-
apolis, 8.
Western Association.
At Qulncy—Rock ford. II Qulncy, 3.
At St Joseph—St. Joseph. 9; Dubuque. &
At Des Moines—Lincoln, tt; Des Moines. 4.
At Burlington—Burlington, 10, Peoria, 7.
Dalian. Texas.
The General Christian Missionary
convention, October 1^ to 25; the
Texas State Fair and Dallas Exposi-
tion, October 19 to November 4; the
Corbett- Fitzaimmons entertainment.
October 31 —for the above occasions
the Santa Fe Route will sell excursion
tickets to Dallas, Texas. October lt to
31, inclusive, at one lowest standard
tirst class fare for the round trip, liin
ited to continuous passage in each
direction, good to return until No
vember 10,
l. r. Dklanky. Agent.
For the American Public Health a*
sociation's convention, to be held at
Denver. Colo , Oct. 1st to 4th inclusive,
the Santa Fe Route will sell round
trip tickets at one and one-third fare
for the round trip. Tickets on sale
Sept. ; 0 and Oct 1. Final limit, Oct.
25. Stop over will be allowed at
Pueblo and beyond.—L. K. Dklanky.
Agent.
Notice.
To Whom It May Concern;
Notice is hereby given that 1 W. lie-
bout has this day tiled his petition
for license to retail liquors in Orlando,
Logan county, Oklahoma, and that un-
less objection to the same as required
by law be filed by the 2nd day of
Oct., A. I). 1895, said petition will be
granted.
Guthrie, O. T , Sept. 17, 1895.
k. KmmkttStkwakt,
County Clerk.
It INKS TO SUPPLY GOLD.
To whom it may concern:
Notice is hereby given that W. 11.
Wilson has this day filed his petition
for license to retail liquors in Guthrie,
Logan county, oklahoma, and that un-
less objection to the same as required
by law be filed by the 1st day of
Oct., A. D. 1895, said petition will
be granted.
Guthrie, O. T., Sept 17, 1695.
R EMMRTT STKWAHT,
County Clerk.
The Statk Capital carries a large
stock of all kinds of typewriter sup-
plies and can sell you at 25 per cent
cheaper than you can buy anywhere
else Call and see our stock of ribbons
erasers, oil, etc.
Thirty Millie
i) the
s Said to He Pledged
-usury if Needed.
Nkw York, Sept. as.—A special from
Washington says: The easy assurance
and confidence of treasury officials
that there will not be a bond issue and
okUlit.
s Association.
lly virtue of the authority vested in
me, I hereby call a meeting of the
Oklahoma Press association, at Nor-
man, O. T., on Wednesday, October 10,
Stkvf.SB Point, Wis., Sept. 23.
While little Mabel Ennor was cleaning
ing her doll house a day or two ago
she found in an old treatise on
mathematics a 31,000 draft on the
Adams Express Co., bought by Thom-
as Woodward in 1851 in San Fran-
cisco, payable at sight to lhomas
Woodward in Chicago, through the
prrvate banking firm of G. 11. Smith
Co. Woodward was the child's grand-
father and was an eccentric old man
who was drawn to California
during the gold craze of 1849.
In 1858 he decided to come cast
and bought live drafts for 31,000 each,
of which this was one. lie had no
faith in banks and hid his money
in oat bins and bran boxes. Once
mice ate up 819,000 in bills that had
been placed in u barrel of oats.
Another time in his absence his wife
fed a barrel of bran in which there
was a large sum of money to hogs.
The draft will be taken to Chicago
next week and presented to the officers
of the Adams Express Co. for payment
by J. G. Gate, attorney for Mrs. Wood-
ward.
Found Poison lu it Peach.
Hay City, Mich., Sept. 22.-Two
weeks ago a man on a bicycle ran into
a baby carriage, injuring the child,
but not seriously. The mother, whose
name is unknown at present, made
a search for the man and finally
decided that it was Dert Becker, a
clerk. Yesterday the woman offered
to Becker a fine peach, lie took it
and she left. He fortunately looked
the peach over before biting into it
and was surprised to find the skin
cut in one place. Further investiga-
tion showed that a part of it had been
removed and the hole filled up with
arsenic. The police now have tin
peach and are looking for the woman
who gave it to Decker.
A lilu Loss In liold Coin.
Rociik.sti.ii, N. Y., Sept. 32.—'Th.
Rochester banks, which rccentl
shipped 8550,000 in sold to the sul
treasury in New York are out Jl,r>00,
The face value of the coin which they
sent was correct, but upon the delicute
balances of the sub-treasury the #1,500
shortage showed.
Waller'. Family Sc r 111" 1'rUon.
I'ahis, Sept. 21.—The family of ex-
Consul Waller have arrived at Mar-
seilles, where Mr. Waller is imprisoned
by the French government on convic-
tion of having supplied information
of the movements of French troops to
the llovas In Madagascar.
that there will not be a bond issue and q —m (Q {ralM>act su,h
that the treasury gold reserve will not „ mav properly come before
again be seriously depleted is explained
by a prominent official, who says that,
through the good offices of
the bond syndicate, promises
have been secured from bankers
in the principal cities of the country
thut in case of necessity they can be
called upon to place up to $30,000,000
of gold in the treasury in exchange for
legal tender. This important matter
has been quietly negotiated by Messrs.
lielmont and Morgan during the last
fifteen days.
business as may properly come before
the association, and to take part in
the excursion to Galveston, leaving
Norman at midnight the same day.
T. F. Hbnblky, Pres.
Lon WHOBTox, Sec.
tilk cotton < koi
Fully
eport Colt
Cent.
The Secretary of mi
change ICepoi't*
I.eMH Than l.ust Year.
SlIRKVKl'oht, 1.11 , Sept. 22. Secre-
tary Hawkins, of the cotton exchange
ami board of trade said yesterday:
"The cotton crop tributary to Shrevc-
port, that is north Louisiana, south
Arkansas and east Texas, is fully 40
per cent less than last year's yield.
This result is from various causes:
First, excessive rains during the
months of May, .Tune and July; then
the long drought that followed th
Senator Teller's !• iiKitgeinentB.
Topkka, Kan., Sept. 22.—The Kan-
sas Republican Silver league has ar-
ranged for a series of speeches from
Senator Teller, of Colorado, the firsl
to be made at Arkansas City.
Civil Service K*au lnatlou«.
Washington, Sept. 22.—Civil scrvici
examinations for bookbinders and
stereotypers in the government print-
ing office will be held at Kansas City,
Mo., October 14; Springfield, Mo., Octo-
ber 1H; Salina, Kan., October 23; Garden
City, Kan., November 11, and Okla-
homa City, Ok., November 18.
The Duke Own* Cp.
New Yoiib, Sept 22.—The engage-
of the young duke of Marlborough to
Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, which has
been repeatedly affirmed and denied
during the past month, was formally
announced last night. The duke him-
self is authority for the statement.
TRLKGKAPI1IO HHKVITIK*.
The wife and baby of William Mon-
roe were fatally injured in a runaway
near Guthrie, Ok.
The "Kansas on wheels" train will
start from Leavenworth about the
middle of October.
Oscar Ott, salesman for a St. Louis
drug firm, was robbed of a $250 dia-
mond stud on the train near Clinton,
Mo.
Heavy rains fell over the greater
portion of Nebraska on the 21st after
five of the hottest days in the state's
history.
At Lone Star, Mo., Milton Clark killed
himself in the presence of his sweet-
heart because the girl's father would
not let them wed.
At Topeka, Kan., the 3-year-old son
of Prof. M. L. Field, of the Lincoln
school, died from the effects of swal-
lowing Paris green.
At the annual examination of Chinese
students at Hong Kong an edict was
read from the emperor fiercely attack-
ing the Christian religion.
A dispatch from New York says
Pugilist Corbett is suffering from bad
feet and a swollen knee-cap, so much
so that he has quit training.
State Labor Commissioner Hird, of
Kansas, says his annual report will
show that there are several million
dollars more invested in manufactures
in the state than in agriculture.
A Chicago paper has interviewed a
large number of senators and repre-
sentatives of the next congress, a ma
LAWYER S OFFICE DOCKET.
Something Which Kverj Attorney Should
Have.
The State Capital has put in tock
a lawyer's office docket. It is demy
size, printed on the heaviest linen pa
per, handsomely bound, with front in-
dex, and in every way a neat and con-
venient book to have in the office. It
contains the number and style of the
case and eveiy particular about it,
with space to place citations, etc.
When you see this docket we know
you will declare you cant do without
it Price, 3 qr. % bound, $3.50; 5 qr.
% bound 86.00. Cash invariably in
advance.
IPl
t Pub. in State Capital Sept. 5, 18W5.]
Notice of Keleanlug.
op the Boa hi) ron Lkasinu schooi
rjifiinm. O. T., Sept. 4tli, IWft.
in all canes wlier*
•w leuHeH will b.
Notice is hereby tfi'
leases expire Oct. 1st
made to former lessees for a term of one yea
at the same annual rental as that heretofor
P ld- , , ,
Applications for the renewal of leases imo
be made on blanks prepared bv tlie Hoard <■
or before tho :totli day of Sept.. 18W>. or th
lessee will l« deemed to have forfeited hi
rights In the premises.
All lands for which the leasees fail to uiak
application a* above provided will be lease
to the highest bidder- for a term of three veai
from Oct., Int. lK9f , bids to We received betwee
Sept. SOtb, and Oct., 20th. lHUft.
! All bids by persons other than lessees mu;
I >... nccompauled by *25.00 in draft or mom
lie applied on the first payment
adc to tlie applicant, otherwise
lied t
where leu
of other par
In all
ished in fav
has not been made ot r«
the School Laud Ottict
under such rellnquishi!
at the oftt
s ha
been rellnou-
„_.d the transfer
oil the Books of
parties claiming
ill l e
ich tr
of the Board with proof of
ed to reject any
.... .itfht is hereby
nd all bids.
William c. IUnchi
Governor and Chairman of b<
William Blincob. Secretary.
THE
Amateur Sportsman!
Published monthly at One Dollar per
Year, contains interesting, instructive
and practical articles on
HUNTING, FISHINC,
CANOEINC, CAMPINC,
NATURAL HISTORY,
RIFLE 4. TRAP SHOOTING,
FISH CULTURE
and THE DOC.
Send 25 cents for three months
trial subscription.
THE AMATEUR SPORTMAN CO,,
6 College Place. New York.
the lolltf droupnt inat jority o{ whom favor sending a com-
tackedVn6 boU^wonns and sharp-shoot- mission to Cuba to investigate matters
tacked by boll worms and sharp
crs, and at the present time the cater-
pillar is doing considerable damage.
The plant is vigorous, but woefully
bare of fruit. The present weather,
however, is very favorable for the
plant, and some top crops may be
made, but it is very late in the season
and the chances arc that frost will end
all hopes for any material increase ol
present prospects. I believe 40 per
cent, decrease a very conservative es-
timate."
81'L'AKTS RESIGNATION.
Bomor II.. " rimt Th. lnUI.nl
Chief Justice BMlgnwl In <l"'l Intn C"n
Washington, Sept. 25.- There is a
good deal of speculation among men
from the southwest now In the city as
to the reasons actuating Judge Charles
Stuart In resigning his ollice as
there.
The fetes in Rome celebrating the
twenty-fifth anniversary of the entry
of the Italian army into Rome were
concluded on tho 20th with the unveil-
ing of a handsome statuo to lien, (tar-
ibaldi.
Tho home of Samuel Newton, a
wealthy miller of Eldon, Mo., was en-
tered by robbers. Finding but little
money they beat their victim with a
club, injuring him severely, and made
their escape.
A dispatch from Toliio says Kalwan-
,!u, tlie old capital of Formosa, and
Chang-Wa, an adjacent town, were
captured by the Japanese, who lost
twenty-four men. Of the Chinese gar-
risons #50 were killed or wounded.
Clearing house returns for the prin-
ipal cities in the United States for tho
II. Stuart in resigning ins omce { - I emU,d S(.|lt,,nlber 20 showed an
chief justice of the supreme I avel.aff0 increase as compared with the
the Indian territory ll« u>ULIl>r...' corr„sponding week last yearof 20.3; in
on the bench arc ox-i ongrcssmcn KU- , the increa8e was 2S.4; out-
gore, of Texas, and Springei, o Now York the increase was 10.4.
„°ls. Judge Stuart Is also, a_Jexan nn(, reilr0IW, officials In
and was forl,1')rly'1 ' ,' rlimore,l 1 Kansas City, Mo., are running down u
Congressman Halley I r , i , „f rttUroad thieve*, whose pecu-
that Judge Slmirt resigned in |„(ions have been going on for months,
go back to Texas and go n training I ,,ootyK wl'|1 exlenil into
'°r representative from ^ I Hmusands of dollar, value. Thomas
now represented by Mr. a y. | ringleailor of the gaug, was ar-
latter will undoubtedly ," au ru ' , , ln„ juinpodU|s bond and is now
for senator, to succeed lion. IL VI res" , _
Mills.
Have
You
a Boy?
Do you wish to place him in a
school built for the purpose of
providing a boy with a Christian
home, while he is receiving the
very best moral, physical and in-
tellectual training ? Do you
wish to know about the only
school in Kansas where supervi-
sion is constant, yet pleasing;
where boys are happy, while
their morals are under constant
scrutiny? Then send for a cata-
logue of ST. JOHN'S SCHOOL
Salina, Kansas, of which parents
and pupils speak in unmeasured
praise. Splendid equipments,
excellent table, cheerful sur-
roundir.gs, able professors.
St. John's School, Salina, Kas
The Bishop of Kan., Rector
Walter M. Jay. A. M ,
lleiul Master.
The Oklahoma State Fair Association will hold its
Second Annual Meeting at Guthrie, O.T.,
Oct. 8, q, io, ii and 12,1895.
OCT. 8
IS CmOH'S DAI!
Grand time is Expected. All School Children free on
that date.
OCT. 9
Look Out for Bloomers.
OCT. M
IS GUTHRIE'S BAT.
Every Or.e Should Go.
"is OlD SOUK DM.
Old Soldiers will be admitted to the grounds Fiee on
this date.
WILL BE THE GRAND
Od. 12-
Display of Stock.
Farmers should be interested in this stock show.
The Best _ _ ^ •
nvlixjihl track !
In tlxe Sou+liwest
There will be 200 of the Fastest Trotting,
Pacing and Running Horses in attend-
ance during Fair week.
Everyone should see the Grand Exhibition of the
Different Fire Departments of the Territr
its ill the a Kile ult mill Department. Kvcry eouulv
There will he special eoiinty exhibit
nested to help out in this department.
Everyone should attend, us the exhibits and laelwf will he llrsl-Hass.
rho Territorial Militia will have a number of Sl.aui Unities during I an week.
TI
The Territorial Slilitia win nave • ~
The Oklahoma Territorial Mililarv Hand will be in attendance and furnish music.
Tho Territorial Keuiiion of Old Soldiers, Grand Army of the Republic, will be held at
(iutliria O.T.. Oct. 9, 1<> and « I, lH r , during Fair week.
p®^«s0 ^rite the Secretary, A. A. Hun.pl,re ., Oulhrle, O. T., lor a Premium List ol
l air, vvliich will lie mailed free.
B. F. BERKEY,
President.
Very Itehpecf fully,
A. A. HUMPHREY,
Secretary, Guthrie, O. T.
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Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 130, Ed. 1 Monday, September 23, 1895, newspaper, September 23, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103805/m1/3/: accessed July 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.