The Moore Enterprise. (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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I
I
I
No Niore Wine Cellars.
Wine cellars are said to have
pone out of fashion in England.
I'roud fathers 110 longer lay
down pipes of port for the com-
ing of age of their infant heirs,
and no longer enjoin tipon their
successors the sacred duty of
keeping the family cellar replen-
ished. They may leave instruc-
tions or express wishes about
the maintenance of so many head
of deer in the park, but they care
not whether the wine bins are
full or empty. It is not that peo-
ple have lost their taste for
wines, though fashion has great-
ly changed in respect of them,
and sherry for example, is grow-
ing as rare as Madeira, and Mad-
eira as obsolete as sack. When-
ever a goo.l cellar comes into the
market the competition at auc-
tion is as keen as ever to secure
the best lots, and fancy prices are
often reached. None the less,
the day of the private cellar is
practically over. What is the
cause?
♦ « ♦
Mormons' Underwear.
During the Smoot hearing in
Washington frequest mention
has been made of union suits of
white material which all .Mor-
mons are supposed to wear. Sen-
ator Dubois, of Idaho, in answer
to the query of a puzzled Eastern
man, says it is imperative 011 the
part of Mormons to wear such
garments. "The Indians know
about these union suits," says the
senator. "The Mormon is a
friend of the Indian, you know.
So when Gentiles want to trade
with the Indian they always say
they are Mormons. The Indians
are too sharp for them, however.
This is the dialogue usually on
such occasions: 'You Mormon?'
asks the Indian. 'Yes,' says the
Gentile. Then the Indian reaches
over and pulls down the other's
shirt collar. If he finds the puck-
ering string there he knows he is
dealing with a Mormon, but if
not lie has his suspicions."
An Entorprising Reporter.
In New York recently a re-
porter made several vain at-
tempts to see J. Picrpont Morgan,
both at his office and residence.
Finally his opportunity came. He
Avas interviewing another finan-
cier and, incidentally, came into
possession of the latter's card. He
kept, it then, going to Morgan's
residence, sent in his own card
in company with that of the fin-
ancier. The ruse was successful
and he was shown into Morgan's
presence. When the reporter
had stated his reason for the call
the financier said : "Do you know,
young man. that at least ten re-
porters have tried to see me to-
day with reference to this ques-
tion? 1 have declined to see all
of them." The reporter smiled
and replied: "Yes, sir, I know
that, for I was the whole ten."
He got his interview.
Sorrow Soon Forgotten.
The rapidity with which Demo-
crats seem to have shaken oft their
grief because of their recent over-
throw reminds Congressman Klutz,
cf North Carolina oi an old Ger-
man down in his district. The
man's wife died and the old gentle-
mar. consoled himself by marrying
again inside of a month. The lx>vs
of the neighborhood assembled on
the v edding night and gave the
couple what is known there is a
"belling." Horns wer looted, l>ells
rung, banjoes played and a real siza-
ble din raised. Finally the bride-
groom couldn't stand it any longer.
He raised a front window and bawl-
ed cut: "Whv don't vou boys stop
making of the noise? Don't you
know there was a funeral here so
soon, a'.retty
Slander on Jerry.
A number of politicians at Dem-
ocratic headquarters were < 1 i- •u-s-
ing before election the bucolic ig-
norance displayed by newly elect-
ed congressmen f: m the inter-
ior. "About tlx1 worst instance
that ever came within my person-
al knowledge," said Chairman
Taggart. "was that afforded by
the Hon. Jerry Simpson, the chap
that for awhile was known as
imp
Well, when
Jerrv first came to congress he
observed that he was not entirely
familiar with the McKinly bdl.
He proposed, however, to exam-
ine into the matter, and it he con-
sidered it just he would vote that
it be paid!"
New Benjamin Harrison Document.
John L. Griffiths, to whose care
the late President Benjamin Har-
rison left all his private papers, is
reported to have discovered in
them an extraordinary private
document. This is nothing less
important than an intimate his-
tory of the four years of the Har-
rison administration, written by
the president himself.
The Mikado's Bill of Fare.
The Japanese emperor's yearly
expense of living is limited, For
j this purpose he draws $3,000,000
1 from the national1 treasury. His
I personal wealth is not to be spent
on his own living, so that $3,(xx>,-
,000 is really his salary as mana-
ger of the country. He is re-
| quired to pay out of it some
thousand employes.
The emperor's daily fare is
I Japanese, He is perfectly satis-
tied, for breakfast, with a bowl
of bean soup and a few other
dishes. But his dinner usually
appears in splendid style, in some
twenty courses, although he al-
ways denounces it as a useless
extravagance. When any official
feast is held—the cherry blossom
viewing party at the Kloshikawa
botanical garden, or the chrysan-
themum party at the Akasaka
palace, for instance—he will not
spare any expense in preparing
an elegant European banquet.
The empress is the manager on
such an occasion. She is a noted
economist. She always gives a
hint to her court ladies and the
wives of the ministers how to ar-
range their dresses and how to
save expense.
♦ • ♦ —
Colonial Salaries.
The highest figure paid to any
proconsul by England is $100,-
000, which is the sum received
by the viceroy of India. This
seems a large sum. but it never
reallv covers the expenses. The
South African post pays $55,000.
The governor general of Aus-
tralia receives $50,000 equal to
the salarv of the president of the
United States. The same salary
is paid to the governor general of
Canada. But in none of these
cases is the salarv adequate to
cover the expense attendant upon
entertaining in a style in keeping
with the dignity of the position.
In South Africa, on the other
hand, the governor general need
entertain but little. The $55,1x10
paid Lord Miltier in this capacity
is a dual salary, $40,000 being
paid him as governor of the
Transvaal and $15,000 as high
commissioner. The salary of the
governor of the Philippines tin-
der United States sovereignty is
$25,000.
Roose\elt ' Grandfather.
It is an almost forgotten fact
that President Roosevelt's grand-
father was the first man to navi-
gate a steamboat on the (>hio
and Mississippi rivers. Captain
Roosevelt was a close personal
frined of Robert Fulton, inventor
of the steam craft. Soon after
Fulton's successful voyage on
the Hudson the captain con-
ceived the idea of launching such
a craft 011 what was then West-
ern waters. In the spring of 1811
the vessel was launched at Pitts-
burg and the presi Unit's grand-
father began his voyage to the
gulf. He entered the Mississippi
during the throes of the earth-
quake which devastated so much
of Southern Missouri, but weath-
ered the tumult successfully and
continued his trip to New Or-
leans.
A Silent Candidate.
During his three campaigns
for the governorship of M;i\i
chusetts Senator Crane did not
make a political speech nor write
a political document. His first
inaugural address was the short-
est ever penned in the Bay state
—at anv rate in recent years—
and, like succeeding ones, was ab-
solutelv devoid of rhetoric or am
attempt at literarv quality. except
utmost simplicitv and directness
of statement. It was a business
man's straightforward presenta-
tion of the financial condition of
tin- ~tate. which the lirw go\ern-
or conceived, to he such as to call
h n 11 \ 1 r n tr. \chilli ut. and a
call l'or certain other lorn; needed,
re! tiiis.
A Notable Collection.
It is sai 1 that the czar has
!>• uglit till til. paintings of
Yercstchagin. the great artist
who ;.en-died in the sink:;:.; •!
the Pi ti .pay! .\ These paint-
Adulterated Fruits.
There seems to be no end to
the possibility of food adultera-
tions. One might suppose that
prunes were just prunes—dried
plums and nothing more. But
iiere is the official promological
organ of Hungary charging that
American prunes sold in Ger-
many have been soaked in a flui I
containing from 10 to 12 per
cent of glycerine to artifically in-
crease their size and weight, and
proceeding forthwith to club the
American fruit merchant as prof-
it-seeking anil officious. S'> our
consul general at Budapest ad-
vises .veil intentioned prune ship-
pers to get a certificate of purity
from some chamber of commerce
or board, of health, and k offer-
a consoling inference that not
our fruit merchants but F.urope-
an dealers may be responsible
for the guilty prune roaking,- in
the incidental advice that the
packing be so well done as to
prevent repacking by middlemen
in Europe. ,
• ♦
Dutch in South Africa.
,The Dutch language does not
seem now at a very high prem-
ium iu the opinion of the heads
of families in South Africa. A
petition was recently presented
to the board of management of
the Kitnberley high shools in
favor of the teaching of Dutch to
the scholars attending these
schools. I11 order to ascertain
the views of those most concern-
ed. the board sent out a circular
to 444 parents, requesting those
who were desirous of Dutch be-
ing taught during school hours
as part of the ordinary curricu-
lum to write to the hoard, stat-
ing their wish. Only twenty,
however, were anxious that
Dutch should be so treated, and
these twenty parents represented
only thirty-six children out of a
total of 775 attending the high
schools.
Likes Old Songs Best.
When she was Consuelo Van-
dcrbilt the Duchess of Marlbor-
ough had a sweet voice—not re-
markable for its timbre, but pleas-
ing—and she used to shock her
musical instructors a little by
displaying a decided liking for
tile quaint melodies of the old
plantation darkies. Now, even as
a stately and dignified duchess,
he loves to sing these old bal-
lads jiuI the more modern "coon"
songs for the entertainment of her
friends, and she has made the
melodies so popular tliev have be-
come all the rage in the families
of the nobility. The Duchess of
Westminster has taken them up,
and so has Princess llenrv of
1 'less.
Sensation of the Great. Special Sfimp Issues.
Postmaster General Wynne,] The total issue of the com-
who used to be a newspaper man memorative series of postage
in Washington, hears his honors stamps for the Louisiana Pur-
with becoming dignity, but does chase exposition reached only
not in any way feel uppish over I 287,990,200, as compared with a
his advancement. The president total for the W orld s Columbian
: ane day asked him : "How does | exposition at Chicago of 2,014.-
it feel to attend a cabinet meeting 233.,0°' Die issue was even less
after having spoilt so much time j than of the special stamps for the
Ion the outside trying to find out Pan-American exposition at Buf-
I what occurred at similar gather- I falo, which was 324.070,000. The
|ings?" "()h, it is not so much total issue of special stamps for
I how he feels," said Secretary the Omaha fcxposition, covering
| Wilson, "as how the rest of us the two-year period, was 252.-
: feel." Wynne has Irish blood in j 53^«44°- Hie onlv reason for the
1 his veins and ready wit at the tip
' falling off in the number of these
I of his tongue. He came back in
I this fashion: "That reminds me
| of what Secretary Foster said
when he took charge of the treas-
ury department. I was his private
secretary. One Jay lie remarked
to me: 'Wynne, when 1 first came
to Washington as a member of
the cabinet I gazed in awe at the
distinguished men who were my
colleagues and wondered how I
got there. After I had been in
the cabinet three months 1 won-
dered how my colleagues got
there.1 "
Ethiopian English.
"Our language," said John
Sharp Williams, of Mississippi,
special stamps issued given by
Major Reeves, chief of the stamp
division of the postoffice depart-
ment, is that such newness soon
wore off, and people were satis-
fied with the ordinary regulation
stamp.
The total issue of Louisiana
Purchase exposition stamps by
denominations was as follows:
One-cent, 79.779,200; 2-cent,
192,731,200; 3-cent, 4.542,500;
5-cent, 6,926,100 ; 10-cent, 4,011,-
200.
♦«« -
The Deepest Mine.
The deepest mining shaft has
been sunk to a little more than a
mile in Cape Colony and the
the Democratic leader of the j -leepest bore hole has reached the
house, in the Buffalo Commir- I samc llePth 1,1 *'lcs,a- ll ,s sa,d
cial, "is certainly susceptible of
much mutilation. I recall a state
nicut made bv one of the 'hands'
Spanked Roosevelt
Thomas Dillon, an inmate of
the Summit county infirmary, of
Ohio, is one of the few men who
claim to have applied corpora!
punishment to Theodore Roose-
velt, president of the I nited
States. Dillon is 109 years old.
a veteran of the war of 1812 and
the Mexican war, and at the time
of the spanking of the future
president was a carpenter anil
joiner. He was acquainted with
Roosevelt's parents, and con-
ducted a carpenter shop several
blocks from their home, in New
York. He says that the presi-
dent. with other boys, was fond
of plaving tricks 011 him, and that
one day he caught young Roose-
velt in the act of pouring water
on the walk in front of his shop
on a winter morning. Dillon
avers that he administered a
sound spanking to the boy, who
was then about 10 years old, des-
pite the youngsters threats of
what would happen to Dillon
when Roosevelt's father was in-
formed. The threatened punish-
ment never arrived. Dillon,
nevertheless, very proudly cast a
vote for Roosevelt at the last
election.
An Alaska Marriage.
Governor Brady, of Alaska,
savs that one of the marriages
contracted bv "Swift-wat?r Bill
How to Escape Lightning.
Excellent authorities agree
that in a thunderstorm the mid-
dle of a room is much the safest
place in a house. A carpeted
floor or one covered by a heavy
thick rng is better to stand on
than bare wood. It is well to
keep awav from chimneys and
out of cellars. I11 the open air
tall trees are dangerous. A per-
son sheltered under a low tree or
shrub thirty or forty feet from a
large and lofty tree is quite safe.
If lightning strikes in the imme-
diate vicinity it will hit the high
tree as a rule, with few excep-
tions. Water is a very good con-
ductor. and it is well to avoid the
banks of streams in a violent
thunderstorm.
ar. \ r.
. ■
c!iagm mi
ten a up 'ii tile 1 .Mti ' 11 . >: war
as i: actually 1- m the K:>-
Turkish co:,the. of 1S77-S. lie
had the definite purpose of rak-
ing the representation -> horri-
1 > 1 \ truthful : hat it slio-nM clear
from the minds of the people
everywhere the glamor.: oi lie-
r- 'ic achiev enient.
Peculiar Pets.
ihtby canii I- an great pets
South Africa and are trur-el an i
ten ic i and even Carrie 1 about by
tlie:r attendants, The u rv young
came'.s is an aw k u ..: ! ctv.it u re,
with a 1'mg neck an 1 unci : t.eu
legs. During th<- lirst few months
the) weigh no ::: >r« than an ordi-
nary d >".
Princes Who Painf.
Prince Kugene of Sweden,
ungest of King Oscar's four
sons, is regarded as one of the
most accomplished landscape
painters 011 the continent. He
j spends most of the time in his
j handsome Paris studio. At the
j last salon he exhibited three pic-
! tures under an assumed name.
Tile artistic world acknowledged
their merit, so now. having won
praise for his work and not be-
cause of his royal birth, he 110
longer conceals his identity.
A New Western Senator.
(diaries W. Fulton, junior sen-
ator from ( iregon. had been emi-
1 iu nt both as a lawyer and legis-
lator in his state for a 1 mg while
prior to his electi >11 as successor
1 to Mr. Simon. Senator Fulton is
a man of fine appearance, in the
prime of lite and would impress
1 ex en the casual observer as the
p,,-se sor of high intellectual
qualities and strength of charac-
j ter. He was born in ( >hio, in the
: >wn of Lima, something like
half a century ago. and passed
Ir.s boyhood davs :n Iowa.
Concessions to Convicts.
Following tin abolition of the
1 -k-tep ami the croppi ' Ilea 1 11
til. New ^ ork state pris >ns has
come the doing away with the
stripes 011 convicts' e! thing, and
3.1 suits, minus the stropes, are
being made.
on my plantation that 1 consider
the most ungranimatical combi-
j nation of words I ever heard. I
j had sent for him to do something
about the house. Half an hour
1 later he slouched up to me and
said: 'Mr. Williams, I'm so busy
out yonder I come down to say I
jcain't came. Huh!" put in
Representative Clayton, of Geor-
I gia. "That's not in it with the
j remark a waiter made to me once
in an Atlanta restaurant. I ask-
ed for some rare beef, and he
brought me a well done piece.
'See here,' 1 said, 'I want some
rare beef—underdone, you
know.' 'Can't get it.' said the
waiter. 'We ain't got none that's
[ 110 underdoncr.' "
...
Transmission of Electric Power.
Idle longest system of electric
power transmission in the world
jlias been installed in California.
I'Idle v ertical fall of water 011 the
turbine wheels at Niagara is 180
feet, the California perpendicular
I ranges from 500 to 1.800 feet,
from altitude. The life of a man
struck with a bullet would be in
far less danger than if struck
with a i.ooo-foot vertical stream
of water the diameter of the bul-
let. Such a stream pulverizes
boulders and splinters large tim-
bers. It is controlled with diffi-
culty in pipes, but when these
pipes are a foot or two in diame-
j ter they must be made of the
I stoutest tested steel, held down
: by solid masonry, all of which
'must be replaced frequently
about the lower termini, where
! the wear is incredibly sw ift and
certain.
Wild American Horses.
The work of capturing wild
horses in the vicinity of box
mountain and Madeline plains has
, begun, and several animals have
j been taken. The country is prac-
tically a wild, unbroken stretch
of mountains in W estern Neva-
Ida and Eastern California that
' is too rough for any purpose ex-
cept grazing and over which sev-
eral thousand head of wild horses
roam. The captured animals are
invariably small, but well propor-
tioned, and prove to he hardy,
[serviceable and obedient after be-
ing broken.
Ancient Fork Collection.
A London jeweler has made a
I collection of ancient forks used in
England, which show some little
known facts ai* ut the table man-
ners of a few centuries ago. The
forks, which are of solid silver, date
from the Sixteenth century. In
manv cases the designs ni all this
time have scarcely- varied m any
detail and the forks look like those
which might be bought today. The
old forks were a great luxury in
their time and were used only by
the aristocracy.
The Coming French Navy.
The French naval programme
insures that in 1908 I-rance will
have twenty-eight battleships,
twenty-five battleship cruisers,
thirteen armored coast guard
ships, six first-class cruisers, fif-
teen of the second and thirteen of
the third class, besides smaller
craft, among which will be sixty
submarines.
that there should be no insur
,. | mountable difficulties in carrying I (dates, the noted Klondike ciiar-
fi shaft down twelve miles. A11 acter. was brought about in euri-
approximate estimate has shown 0us fashion. He was smitten by
that to reach a depth of two tile charms of a variety performer
miles the cost would be $2,500,-
000. Ten years would be re-
quired and a rock temperature of
122 degrees Fahrenheit would
be found; while to penetrate
twelve miles would cost $25,000,-
000 and would take eighty-five
years, the rock temperature ex-
pected being 272 degrees Fahren-
heit.
An Enormous Bible.
The Kali-gvur. or Tibetan
Bible, consists of 108 volumes of
1,000 pages each, containing
1,083 separate books. Each of the
volumes weighs ten pounds and
forms a package 26 inches long. 8
inches broad and 8 inches deep.
This llible requires a dozen yaks
for its transport and the carved
wooden blocks from which it is
printed need rows of houses, like
a city, for their storage. A tribe
of Mongols paid 7.000 oxen for a
copy of this Bible. I11 addition
to the Bible there are 225 vol-
umes of commentaries, which are
necessary for its understanding.
There is also a large collection of
alleged revelation which supple-
ment the Bible.
and she favored hi
But later some rival
money came
"Swiftwater Bi
nit a: lirst.
with more
into the field.
' became alarm-
Tried and Succeeded.
Edward Ray, or North Caro-
lina, totally blind and very poor,
is making heroic efforts to secure
a master's degree from Harvard
university. After completing a
four-year course in the I niversi-
tv if North Carolina, outstripping
all his classmates, he spent a year
as tutor. It is with the money
earned in this way that he is en-
deavoring to win his way at Har-
vard. His chief difficulty is the
use of the text hooks prescribed
for his courses. He has not
enough money to have these tran-
scribed into tile raised alphabet,
so lie lias to hire a student to
read to him.
He Still Live.
Former Senator Henry Gassaway
| Davis of West Virginia will s[>end
i the winter in Washington at the
1 home of his daughter, Mrs. Arthur
Richest Nobleman.
The Duke of Norfolk, one of
the richest men in Great Britain,
has a daily income of .somewhere
between Si 0,000 and $15.01x1, but
until a short time ago he had.
never taken a ride in a motor
car. At the conclusion of the run.
which was taken with a friend,
he expressed much pleasure at
the experience and asked what
the cost of the car was. On be-
ing told that it was $5,000 he said
thoughtfully : "Ah. 1 shall wait
until tliev become cheaper before
buying one."
ed. He saw his prize slipping
from his grasp. He learned that
the woman he desired to wed de-
tested the canned goods and pork
an 1 beans that formed the prin-
cipal diet of the community and
lived principally 011 eggs, of
which there were a few cases in
Dawson. Thereupon he went out
and bought every egg in Dawson.
"Now, then, my honey," he said
that night, "you must marry me
or go without eggs. She mar-
ried him.
Railroad Statistics.
Here are a few figures from
Poor's Manual, a high authority
on railroad statistics. 1 he num-
ber of tons of freight carried one
I mile was 90,522.000.000 in 18113.
j and 171,290,000,000 in 1903 the in-
crease in ten years being 80.768.-
000.000 tons, or close to <;o per
! cent. The average rate received
| per ton per mile in 1893 was .893
[cent; in 1903 it was .7881 cent;
1 showing an average reduction
I per ton per mile of .112 cent, or a
little over a mill per mile,
j amounting to a total rate reduc-
tion of over $171,000,000. d he
| gross income of American rail-
roads in 11 )<>3 was $1 ,008,000.ixxi ;
I operating expenses, $1.310.000.-
| 000 ; net earnings, $C>82.000.000 ;
j fixed charges, $5'>0,000.000; leav-
ing $122,000,000 available for
j divider Is.
How Sousa Was Named.
Some one has "discovered'
| how John Philip Sousa got his
! name. The story conies from
I Washington, where the musician
| was born and e lueatcd. (Irigin-
allv. it is said, his name was John
Philipso. W hen lie entered the
j employ of the government as lead-
er of the Marine band he proudly
appended the itials "I . S. A.
for United States army. so that
his full signature read "John Phil-
ipso, I'. S. V" A stranger, con-
gratulating him upon a perform-
ance of the hand, addressed him
all
ever
Where Violins Are Made.
The only place in the v.
>r 1 d j
here violin making may he said
to constitute the staple industry
is Markneukirchen 111 Saxony,
with its numerous surrounding
villages. There are altogether
about 15,000 people in this dis-
trict engaged exclusively in the ,
manufacture of violins. The m |
habitants, from the small boy and j
girl to the wrinkled, grayheade 1 I
veteran and the aged grand-
mother, are employ ed through-|
out the year in making some part
or other oi this instrument.
Variety to be Increased.
"Man will eat 200 or 31x1 more
foods in the year 2000 than he
eats now,'' said a chemist. "A
movement is 011 foot among tlu
world's govern nicut s to increase
the \aricius of our (00 Is, ;tii,
every week from somewhere 01
other a new vegetable or fr.ii: a
nut is added to the intirnationa
bill oi fare. '
as "Mr. John Philip S< nt-a,
his name has been Sousa
since.
A Terrifying Sound.
Congressman Ruppert. of New
York, lias a broker friend who
was hit pre!t\ hard during tlu
recent flurrv in stock-, tin tin
morning of the second da\ of the
break he start ed to walk down !>
the St. ick Fxchange. I le felt tin
nee 1 1 if a bracer after he had
walked a lew blocks and dr. >p] >ed
into a I irrman sal ion. I lie pro
111 i e t o 1 w . 1 s behind tlu I1.11 " \ \
d tin 1.
"1 ,11: t.
11
•11 a
eli.
1 ,r< at
mi tin
-ll 'til, ! the
u tr\in:
or ,1 w e.
Literary Mexico.
Mi Me 1 - ered 11e | «
at the head oi ill
can conn t nes m
let 11 is, Besides |
. I 1. s| 1 n galls 1.1
can pmi nahstn, it
m act 1 \ e e silence
esiabli In ■
now .11 le
Chile, Xi-
ao pap. 1
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Williams, B. W. The Moore Enterprise. (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1905, newspaper, June 30, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105444/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Territories+-+Oklahoma+Territory%22: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.