Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 22, 1900 Page: 2 of 8
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NOBLE COUNTY SENTINEL
Fo*t
c —
Ardi
**:a: - i *
FOB BOYS AND GIRLS.
PEF.F.Y'
OKLAHOMA
re reoeatlT
uli- scNooL
'n't - « rf» at ErJ
f- • • i ii-
Tgmc. --d its firs:
SC V £ GOOD STORIES FOR OUR
JUNIOR READERS.
.'•-U*v -i.cz
••• =. :-m-
«
OIUDUllA A5D t5DI 1> IE£*i:
1
@
:• 1 ®
h held 2> ' iy- trace
Ti ' ® '
f FTZ.Z.S. :rti‘
_ t i:
TY* J»rt of ItfM Bay Klip — “Ikt
c,-r: - *. vv - ir. 7-.:. fn;
n«.<l v« A «*•*’ I>im to v* . is
W iy:—H»::a of IwU.
fee: of :re» trank attached to it *n
.averted .a tie m.iile of a bit of lawn.
Vis.es and plants were trained OTer it
aad grew luxuriantly. A colony of
■ i: - •- ' ' n-xt to
tie trank, crawl tag titer a bit of isos- j
ere: bark. H*re they were allowed to
remain and every evening or in rainy America »ad
weather, they trooped on: and hopped
a: or tie :=ur rg sat -tti: th*.
- — —. • ■ - . . ■ — c - E
ENGLAND ON DECLINE ! ^
LOSING prestige in world s
TRADE.
:p ti'.ti.ng insect*.
German* Boondinc For-
ward While Great Britain Beat* Con-
tent with Her Laurel* — America's
AdTance.
May, ISO#, there will shortly be
cial iasue of stamps. as follow;
a spo.
Dis-
covery of Brazil. 100 rels; indej*T
dence, 200 reis; abolition, 5<»
public, 700 rels. "“’ ***
Men are misters to women but wo-
men are mysteries to men.
-
led
'.niaorr
mace loir On Canoe.
~C
8
Y-nsi'
n ' - S-
. . , .4 ; -
"
• n: : •>
r “joer
Buyer- arc :«ay
f : - i-' - '-itf
There arc only
Or- - t*.r a;'.
The Strocd state bank will
£r- ' - - lit; in pr
EiJi vemo' e r.v- --n
in ' ■ 'f-fr— n
N ' - - - ' ^ r
tew
lAliT
1: a I S rth
A nati
an a '., an r.
h S:-
cap-.ta.
nai back a
ha- ■- • r. ,-^ar. .
Optima claims to hare the firsx plat-
for leave.-
Bill ng-s now f -nr tEK-ntis in. :i
mi: hive v-- a • r. .sat: t- t.
in T. lark of >t..lwater. <• T
La- — r nted f; —A., .erk
*. ■ f $ • f,' '• =.
wi', urani -icwc by tr.e En. t .ty
*o:n L
The w - k f - :rre. iB-Z f ie past art-
land- of the •-art nat n w m-
p • ’ - -
Ldwar ; G. Melntire an-a wife of Ye-
xxed were the first persons to t*r mar-
ne. .n ».ds o acty
Thir rt art a number of ('k.ahoma
pe-jple interested in *.i- Amer aa col-
ony a*. 1 il<rica. ul-a.
IVori to commence May 1st on a
§4.«**i addition to the high school
building n Ponca • .ty
Would he land Sice It rks must go
to Kit-a- i ity and pass eiam.nation.
Th- .ate ha- not been fixed.
Man; probably nearly ail of the
Mil," .s . f Oklahoma w illc-i'serve Arbor
1 ay n w...-k on their school grounds.
The trial of Territorial Treasurer
Thompson, charged with receiving in-
i' ■- : f - -1 Mi:
-oath M.A.t-ter has
paper iliei tit New Era.
■ ol. nrri. e is to have
*) ’
.. . . ....
l«:- sc., a p rt.on of each a_otssen
. at .- t f ". alt an
-. ■ - s - et at Foci
1 •--r.' r i - .t„r- a.- : art w .11
met: Marco. .it .t i.t.otne: -ee
SOL
Hart - 'V . e ia-a .ty park assorta-
*.:• t at- . .- ra.-mg n, ney beautify
a para.
• -klat-: ta new spa per- many of them
are r a .»mpa:gn ago. r.-t arry.ag
vreape-ns.
Capta.n Fiemington. n;o ivt-s east
f V:- - get aim- to be t ie nventor
* t r. Remington gnu.
A grand army en.ampm-.n'. ana ban-
qaet for the veterans is to occur March
--. at r-.uth McAiester.
. • - at .- - • • i ttf
Epworth League for the two tetri tor-
.e* x»- held at El Reno.
-even ca.ses of export beer were
-t- lea (ran a -.-a.- at Sowth M Alester.
t - *"
Supervisor Ballard of the Creek
schools has been visiting schools at Sa-
pulpa and the country adyacen'.
Davis. L T.. has had an •• fire,
with little insurance. Ten places f
bn-iues. were burned: all small except
two stores.
At a mass meeting of K: wa L T..
citizens, Jsdgc H. P. ,Vaid was in-
: Fav-rtc
-1 - ■ . it.. i t-.t m —y limy.
; w-vF.« I've seen a ft*.
But f: _r.d :: cett-r in every ciime
7 -_f:e =: c-vt :iay
Ms want* its I arc not it ai
If my i»:s art ^u.:i vk*a cue
. -I ' . - - ' - ft -it cl
T. if.
- -
my -i
.ar-je.
Ctsoru*.
- - a •
. c
And never s;t d.»:
frown.
T fif.if
as you--'
ravelin* tknoik.
• i
_ Her Life for Her Jewell. @
In t/Ns* J;.-s-v n*t very in?
ago a d*rli.ng-io'uie. oc. ikied by a
'.are* family took fire in a sudden and
unaccountable way. It was late in the
afternoon, and the ladies werf upstairs
dress.ng far i.nner -Amtng tiem was
a beautiful.girl who was just making
her de:ut n s-> ety’ Fcr her the wt.-ld
a as made up of parties and dances
an “
From her proud position as av&no'*'.-
eiged head of the trading nations of
tne w'orid. there is a possit-.ity^ and
even a probability that Great Britain
w - the- near fut.re te reiegat-i Come to a rerta.n perteitLagr e: a.. ..he
a ; la. - on tne .‘-t teitw a me':, a, people. Probably Toper cent, cf these
Spring Humors
oi the
Germany. _ ^r^nce and other nations
that are = .ooa mg more enterprise :n
the world of commerce and trade and
people are cured every year by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, and we hope by this
advertisement to get the other 25 per
which have teen rounding forward ce-? to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. I;
-9
dinners She was in the gush of
her firs: social triumphs w.th life and
the world before her and her fond fa-
ther ini mother hid lavished ,rpon
. i
I hav» t-o *.f» ft t- ther my life.
No iover to prove imime.
B-t the )e .^i .m* w-.:h a
and a sons.
I t-i if e m > ._*r : a r. :-e
I r ase - • ' i-£
to dark.
I do- what ! hive do
I m car* f i. .f I've ordy the
health
To - my on iwn:*
iff 'r:~ da: 5 :
her nil the luxuries that wealth could
buy. Her dresses and jewels were the
envy of all her girl friends. When the
fire broke out the ladies made a -dash
for the stairs, but these were already
.a games, and escape -as cut off from
below They ran to the windows and
with tireless energy while England
has been resting seem.ngly content
with her .i .rels. says &• writer in the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Only those who watch the course of
nations fully apprec.ate the laxity and |
carelessness which have marked the | Scrofula
■ lions of Great Britain a trading Scald Head'
nation within the last twenty-five All kinds of Humor
years and only those who now look Blood Poisoning
at the figures and who consider what catarrh
ehrieked for help. The fire engtnes
It's an very wen to depend oa a friead.
... , -7 -
B-f :• i- f.r.-J :t better by fir ic the cr z
To pid-ile your owr. canoe
To "borrew .= d-arer by fir than tc bay '
A a . i. rr t - . a - : '' -
T: . never will =.»h :f you only w:'.'. try
To paua.e ;• a_r : * r. canoe.
1 ‘ . .77 - - - '
An ' - view.
J!:ve -tea::.;, by with a steadfast eye.
And paddle yo_.7 own car^>e.
The daisies that grew in the bright nreer,
fields
Are biwiring so sweet for you.
So never t:t i:»r. with a fear or a frown.
But paddle your own canoe.
To.
Th- capacity f the O.’.thrie watcr-
v. - _• n- - r-.
tme-ha f ■ ‘ thiv ainotitt - the average
us.-.
is to be br<'tight into Ala
vitrified piping-, from Elm
The piping has been pur-
Water
Ihr- ’ :a-h
bprinp-.
cha-< .
Th* <-ontractors who ■( r.g the
railroad between Guthrie and King-
fisher, expect to see trains running by
June .
11 K. Brown, the Parsons Kansas,
politician, it is -aid, v. .11 buy a resi-
dence in Guthrie and settle there per-
manent ly.
Reports are pretty general that more
oats ar- t-eing sown thi- year than ever
before and that the wheat crop outlook
was never so bright at this time in the
spring
\Y s ..per of Guthrie has been
appointed superintendent of the con-
st ru< : n of th< vernment i ui.ding-.
Indian schools for Arizona. New Mex-
ic. Indian and Oklah- ma territories.
■ ’ I rril tor K P.
The story of Three Boy ^,iDC*-
Sume years ago King E-igar. a boy of
15. ascended the English throne. He
was called the peaceful; why. it is bard
to say. for he was up to as many plots
and villainies as a bad boy could be.
The king one day heard of a girl that
was said to be wonderfully beautiful.
He thought if this were so he would
make her his queen So he sent Athel-
wold. h.s favorite jtrt.er. all the w«y
dorsed for principal chief of the Choc-; to her biker ■ ast.e to find out about
taw nat. n. ®
T:.e • r— say they t je-ct t- thearo-
f their tribal • • ;rt- b<ecause to
con-ent wonld be a refection upon
their hone-ty.
The docket for the April term of
court at Ardmore has 515 cases on it 1
besides comn. -- i t) uaseripts, ap-
peal .sv- and the fin ting of the next
grand jury.
The h< -1 arriers on the new brick
building at Pond Creek struck for an
advance in wages which was refused
by the contractor. Other men were
engaged.
The- -hawnees were granted lands in
Texas by Mexico and President Sam
Houston, of Texas, ratified the grants
The tribe is now asking congress 7, do
something about it.
A presses! brick school building sixty
feet square two stories high, having
eight school rooms is now expected to
be finished at Chandler in time for t e
fall term of 1»
At a depth of twenty-- x feet the
drill brought up pieces of rock which
• 1 nta.n bc.tr. lea,': and -liver The Ger-
man farmer, east of Fluid, feebs satisfied
with his prospective luck.
M 1 al»e has presented the Young Men's
n • e arn f t A. M. K :r
."e--man-
When Athelw:,;j got there he-founi
she was r^i iy very teautiful aui im-
mediately fell in love with her himself.
Then instead of saying anything to
the king about it, he married her him-
self. When he returned he told the
king a tig lie. He said that she was
rich, but ugly, and therefore he mar-
ried her himself Now the king did nut
believe this. So he prepared to call
on the youne couple. Athelwold, scared
almost to death, told his wife to make
herself look hideous, or else the k.ng
might do something dreadful to him.
But his wife. Elfnda, like most young
ladies, coaldn t bear to make herself
look ugly, especially as the king was
coming to call, so she dressed in her
best gown and received him with hefi
most charming smile. Of course, the
king fell in love with her. too, and—
wicked man that he was—he had poor
Athelwold murdered and then he mar-
ried his widow Elfrida. Elfrida had
a son whom she wanted to have made
k.ng when Edgar died, but Dunstan.
the old monk made another boy ki^ng.
His name was Edward. One day Ed-
ward was passing the castle where El-
frida lived with her little boy. Ethel-
red The king, washing to be pleasant,
stopped to see them, and while he was
talk.ng to the little boy the old queen.
Elfrida. told one of her servants to go
around on the other side oMhe king,
who was on horseback, and. when he
were coming, but by the time they
reached tie house the fames had made
frigntful headway.# The firemen ra.s-d
their landers to the window of the
room where the poor women stood.
The young lady welcomed the certain-
ty of res-ite w.;h lively Joy. She was
too sure. In the moment while she
waited her turn on the ladder she
thought of her jewels Before any one
eouid stop her. the rash creature had
rushed back into the blinding smoke.
"I shall have time enough.' they heard
her say. Hers was the next room, and
upon the bureau lay her lask-t if i.a-
monds. In vain the firemen called her,
an-d tried to follow her: the fames
drove them back. In a minute more
the house was a raz.ng furnace. The
next morning, in the rums, the fire-
men discovered an unrecognizable
body. But clutched in one charred
hand was a small metal box that some-
how had escaped destruction. It was
the jewel case for which the girl had
thrown away her precious life. ■ The
gems were all safe, but the:: worth
could no: ransom their owner. It was
i too late.—Youth s Companion.
How the rhiane Coen? Tice.
Tne Chinese sun-dial embodied the
usual prim.pie tut was trade indeed.
A rod or nee-d.e set upright reisited a
shadi-w in a rat s.rda:^ as tne s.n
li 'n ; were oi.ru tens
rating :ne h:
nese a.s: _se:
te 1st Tne Chi
a water :a_Iec toe
: epsydra. It was x :so of topper or
other material v.u u eitreme.y small
aperture from v:.:h toe water tr. ik-
ied drop ty drop Tie tiegsyira of
, Canton a tn.s desert :*i ty 1 mu.Te.e-
I: is a vase :: ipper : i s lated
in a pa-T::tt hum.: :n a iota e Area
that tresses 1 street einig from, the
great south gate :t tne ttty to toe
palate of toe treasurer if toe pruTtoce.
L:k-- that wo. o ensued, and peroaps
exists st— _n toe Pekin observatory,
it .5 compoeerp of four topper 7u«.
when water r;os from, tne to oottoe:
by little :. tee fined at the tase The
vase that rests to toe fioor oas to its
wuodeo xver a kind if too lie tr tese:
by a rule mounted :n a ioa: mi cov-
ered woo ■ tara ters r-presentmg toe
hours When toe water oas run oat,
toa: • .0 toe mtm.ng or eTemug
is pt.re: iwar. .u't the appe—pst
vase There .s a tt.e hr.ti staircase
by wham the itaeniant astends. In
the temp.es there are attendants worse
business it .s to hanz up a placard.
at Guthrie, with a handsome and sub-
stantial library, of which the ycunp
im n ar> very proud.
• • Mrs
Marx H lb. llamy. mother of a member
«jf the legislature, wandered away,
walking "ver • miles. She is 'years
old and . .»- n t i«n r irht since the
«. -
A \Y. Wt-'tlake. a Teacher of I.yon
Valley •: strict Kingfisher county,
challenges the xv. rld and Kingfisher
county toa mathematical contest.
® Tt e ithrie Nati, nil Rack ar. :
Capital National, of Guthrie, t|d the
Western National Bank, of Oklahoma
City, are now I'nited -tates del- to-
rus*.
The Guthrie land office received a
letter from J. D. McK ill* ,p. , f Belleville,
Ontario, askftig whether there were
any T"wn lands" for sale .n Okla-
homa.
l-arnorh :s_assured of the extension
of the Blackwell. Enid & So ithwestern
railroad, and is destined to make a
go,si 'vc. ® i ® ®
The livestock board has removed the
embargo from a herd of cattle under
« . a! 1' : a it; ; - v* - tie-
cattle pas- a satisfactory inspection
and a bond is given.
It is said that where Indian and
white children attend the same school,
the In .an children come clean and
well dressed and that they excel the
white children in writing and drawing.
Kay county is the only one in Okla-
homa that has three cities of the : rsl
class.
Hugh T’itzer. of Oklahoma, has a
.erkship in the interior depart-
'L r.t. .
The M*-th"dist ministers met in < *k-
lahon.a ' ity to receive prop- sit: ns
from cities desiring to obtain the lo-
cation of the Oklahoma M. E. college.
There was quite a number of ministers
present bnt no successful results were
arrived at, although plans :u regard
to it were discussed.
at-large from Kansas, sixes up the needs looking fast stall bio. And the
mac aid. That was the eaf of the poor
of the Indian Territory a- ft Hows:
That as a starter the Dawes commis-
•
er I ' ■ department of the interior,
that all town sites be surveyed and ad-
justed so that fee simple titles an be
obtained by July 1st. and that a:’,
parties be compelled to designate their
allot :r er I
mbs f Half
Moon ranch, who owns the greatest
horse raiseh in Indian Territory, has
recently sold between six and seven
hundred thoroughbred, standard bre .
and drait horses.
- ...... ..
Hopkins. President Iiarid R. Boyd of
the University of < >k’ahoma. and I’res-
ident E. !' nrdangh, of tbe t
torial normal school, are attending the
aianual convention <•{ the National
Teachers' Association in Chicago this
week «
■ ' hr. 1 - M K r. • . <1 • i.tSlinc
last week. He was a tinner and had
lived there eight years; He
>r- of : ' r, . .v- -
The two home missionary boards of
king called Edward the Martyr. The
w. iked queen. Elfrida then put her son
Ethelred oa the throne, and he ruled
for about thirty-six years. He was
g i.'.ty of bringing about the very worst
rime Q it u ■ ver 1 een mnutted
on English soil He ordered the kill-
ing on a certain night of every Dane—
man woman or chili—in the whole
- • ri ; r. i r — I s "fi ta;r Titles hafi
:: tried E=g : ■: 1- an t - -- quiet
peaceable folk . When th- Danish k:nz
h-ard of it he 10’ile ted a great See:
of warships and ante ever captured
England and laid it waste. The weak
English king fled to another country
and staid there till just before he died,
and one historian says that the only
good thine he ever did was to die. and
»► g :ess he was right. So ended the
reign of the -hree boy king?
, dicated the he ar They -tr.ee the hours
of the day on a drum, ant at night they
beat a gang Tne attendants who thus
itt.k' after the f. git if :.tne occupy
the intervals between in tnak.rg sticks
of incense, on which are marked the
hours. These are. sticks so arranged
as to bum a lertam length of time for
every hour nr these are used
peasants and others. The stick is
lighted when the gong sounds, and in
this way the p.-.vate individual can
keep very tolerable account of the
hours a; they -2c*
the Transvaal war can count
the cost. The truth is that England
has not kept pace with the world's
progress and that to-day. whether she
conquers tie Boers or not, her trade
supremacy Is threatened.
No branch of industry exemplifies
th.s more fittingly than the manufac-
turing of cotton goods. Not many
years ago Liverpool ruled the raw
.otton market, and Lancashire mills
ruled the manufactured couon goods
trade of the world. Today English
mills consume but 40 per cent of the
otton spun in Europe, and the posi-
tion of Liverpool as the dumping'
ground of the cotton crop is more a
theory than a reality.
France, Germany. Switzerland and
P. assia have made m.ghty strides in the
.otton manufacturing business, and all
a: the expense of England. In Ger-
many the greatest progress is shown,
tut within the pas: ten years America
has had an impetus to this branch of
mdustry that promises ere long to
place her in the front rank.
Par: alar attention is paid to cotton
because it is and has been for more
'.nan fifty year; t-he greatest industry
Eng.it i furnishing employment not
only for hundreds of thousands of op-
eratives. bat making up a goodly part
of the stuff sold by Great Britain to
ner colonies and to other nations.
Now however. England appears to
; - reached the ap-ex’of her suprem-
acy in. the cotton trade. Within the
ast five years the number of spindles
: Fug and have in .-eased only '
vc e tie other entries of Europe
retort an increase of 4.-VX ' Fif-
een years age England manufactured
- ter :ent -- g; ; ;made
.n Europe Last year England's per-
entaga *ras only 4<>. ana by the signs
now showing, the percentage will be
it- - • let t; - year
W.th nations as with individuals, re-
t :se comes with plenty. England, ap-
parently. has been content of late to
-est on her trade laurels. While Eng-
h«d has been resting the other'grent
nations have been exerting themselves.
Germany and America being particu-
larly enterprising, and unless a great
mange comes over the spirit and char-
i'ter of the English merchant within
'me present generation the struggle for
ommercia! supremacy w;il be between
the Teuton and the American.
Ir. one department of the world's
c as.ness England is yet supreme. That
is the ocean carrying trade. Not only
is she supreme In this, but never be-
fore did her ship-owning subjects en-
• . such prosperity as now.
has made more people well, effected
more wonderin', cures than any other
medicine in the world. Its strength
as a blood purifier i« demonstrated tij
its marvelous cures of
fait Rheum
Boils,Plmplei
Psoriasis
Rheumatism
Malaria, Etc.
All of which are prevalent at this season
You need Hood's Sarsaparilla now
it will do von wonderful good.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is America'* Greatest Elood Medicine
Valuable Premium;
FREE!
Cur mettled of advertising. Sav
tbe round tnie-ntarks—one on e\
err twopo ;tri picfeaje of FRIEND!
Oats. Tfcej call for valuable prt
chums. If you are unacqastate
with tbe premiums will mai. vo:
poi'age free, an illustrate:
c01r.pr.1Ing many Lirdsome ul
useful ar; cles.
Aspire Vi irfrs..
FRIENDS’ OATS, Muscatine, lowi
Planning to Paper This Spring
There v* wnt
lit • i 1
1 *> Ct»j
P LET ELY Trar
f 'r yosr Hf MF
p<ftt of HEAL!
BEaUTY OF c
SELECI
WALL
PAPER,
Vt carry ALL t
H'mi l+* r 1»: y-
:>• s. t
\c ic .,
f Mb
r» .. Oir .aryw tj
mat a v. :i;
tt - L - •
Carloai> Lcn
L- * we caz tt
All k-t
f-V-l ity
k.£.r LOW A 4
ft- e r i fan tie* te
r m k / »wnr feat trie- T* * caba- cat
• -axe rL-S* FT-rV-N i vt E*sT WJLaP. t:
Ewi- ,.1-i J0RX 1. SHVTH COUPAXY.
■■f 154 u M West M*4Um ? „
Orecr tr tin Sc. All CfilC.400. !a
POMMEL
SLICKER
The Best
Siiiie Cost
The "Griodin* Stream."
The n.irls:rtm. which means liter-
al;;,' the gr.ndmg stream." is the most
remarkable whirlpool in the world. It
is situated Da the Norwegian coast just
southwest of the Luffoden isles. It
run; between the islands of Moskenes
number of whirlpools, of which the
maelstrom is by far the most danger-.
never
Habits of Toads
The toad in spite of its ugly looks,
has many interesting chara :eristics.
It will no: to . h food that is not alive.
Even inserts or worms that are curled
up and motionless they never disturb.
although they may have seen them fall I oil*- Such extravagant stories have
into a condition of inactivity. They been told of this great eddy—how ev-
very easily learn where to find their erything that enters the border of its
the Baptist church engaged in work in I food ©supply, and frequently station | current L instantly sucked down into
the Indian territory, are trying to Utemaelws n-ar a light where iMeetsV a bottomless abyss—that its very ex-
striking against the glass become mo- _■ istence has been doubted. However,
mentarily stunned, and fall fluttering I from an examination made of it by the
to the ground. It is related that in a j Norwegian hydrographic survey we
certain locality eight large toads are
in the habit of collecting under an arc
light. The flies and other Insects that
str.ke against the-glass globe furnish
them a full and savory meal, which
Action*. Not Word*.
There are those who say happiness
nothing: that one should not care to |
.look for it. When you hear such a
sentiment expressed, know that the
speaker is saying what in his inmost
soul he disbelieves. While nobody be-
lieves that happiness is the only object
to be spught in life, there is not that
human being who. while he lives, say
what he may, is not seeking it openly
or unacknowledged to himself. He
who loftily waives off the acknowledg-
ment of this fact, generally is at the I
same moment finding plausible ex-
cuses. of duty or present necessity., for
securing to himself all possible ease
and enjoyment. What is uncomforta- |
hie and disagreeable to do is sure to ho i
contrary to his ideas of “right.” What j
he wishes to do ean never be "wrong.
Keeps both rider ini saddle per-
fectly dry in the hardest stones.
^nhbHhitM wi1* 1?r.-i-f
Substitutes wi'! disappoint Ask f^r
1897 Fish Bra-d Pocrce1. Sbcker—
it is entirety new. If cot for sa,* tn
your town, write for cita.log-LT to
A. J. TOWER. Boston. Mass*
m
i^ALZER’s
3 EARED
"Corn *
1
m
and a large, solitary rock in the mid-
; - ^ ,The stro“f CUILents | By men's actionsTuVt W their"wmis.
rushing between the great NN est Fjord
and tbe outer ocean through the chan-
nels of the Raff odea isles produce a
just.al! differe.nces and unit* under one
management.
- \ deaths have oeeured from -earlet
fever in the Chickasaw nation. Pub-
lic and private schools are being closed
and precautions taken to prevent the
- e disease.
A soldier from Manila found a de-
serter in the G^age ^serration and
started back with him to be tried by
. - '.Vr. uent.
The oil >-ompany holding oil leases
in the Osage reservation, has sunk
three wells near Bartlesville. I. T.,
with very promising prospects.
The Seneca Telephone company has
Nen granted the right to construct and
operate a telephone line between the
town' of Seneca. Mo.. Wyandotte. I. T.,
Grand River. Fairland. Oscuma, Afton
and Yinita.
find that in summer the current is com-
paratively calm for a short time at
flood or ebb tide, when boats may ven-
ture upon it. In calm weather steam
ers can cross it at any state of the tide
they eviientiy enjoy , The food is cap- or large ships if a steady wind is blow-
t :re-i by the extensile tongue, which is
covered with'a glutinous coating. The
rapidity with which the tongue is pro-
truded and drawn back is such that
unless the light is good, and the posi-
tion favorable, it is impossible to see
the act of capture. Toads are of great
vai '? in gardens and greenhouses, and
shc ild never be molested if they take
up their abode among the plants. Their
sense of locality is very strong, and al-
though they move about and wander
some distance from their homes, they
are certain to return to them. Some
ing. In winter or in storms it is highly,
dangerous for any vessel to try to pass
the whirlpool. During a storm from
the west, for instance, the current runs
continually to the east at the rate of
six knots an hour, without changing its
direction for rising or falling tide, and
the stream will eddy and boil In such
mighty swirls that the largest steamer
could hardly contend successfully with
the waters. Of course, the danger Is
not of suction into the heart of th*
whirlpool, as the legends have it, but
of being dashed to pieces against th*
must we judge them.
e»* xrawil’r^Tr-.J-
vtouiicc*xra rieiit-j s
1599 ia UinoTvo:*. 400»««. per tc**
Illti FOTR OATS
ISO ,ut. p<r i.tj, aci jog
c*x New tiat!
SPFXTZ
" a»iH: {'*
k:lk«Tffodtb!ft:i‘4rUt a:ar»
BARLEY. BEAKDLE&S.
I jie.i* :a V Y Tfraifr'-
R APE A TO*'
I Gir« not. r?fa foefci for ?»:: «
I »Vf?, *w;ne. pc*-'try. «?.. u SSs-
fau'n. Wear, s.n* r.Li of lt«
Ka*« w*i tiei in T ?
BKOMrs l>ERin
Grrate*: f-»G r: earn*:. Gr-** *0
fw^uk't la Awi.i *ttrT»kr»-
?oltfr varraata
T1IE MILLION POIXAR
| potato!* tlx », j: u.ti4 a? p»-
t-»to ca ea*:v asi Salaer 81x
@ Tho Kaiser An Ardent Sportsman.
It is well known that the Kaiser Is
tn ardent sportsman, but the following
catalogue of his bag since 1S72. care-
fully cpmplled by a journal devoted to
sport, is quite startling.. The Emperor
William, we are told, has killed during
twenty-seven years 1.223 bucks. 1.467
does. 2.54S wild boars, 771 roebucks, 17.-
446 hares, twenty-two foxes. 121
chamois. 1.392 rabbits. 13.720 phea-
sants, 694 herons, and other birds and
beasts, making a grand total of 40.957.
It is fortunate that the kaiser has
other occupations, pictures to paint,
operas to compose, sermons to preach,
impromptu speeches to prepare, other-
wise Germany would run short ot
fauna.
TA fcki 1 tv:.h » . . tan tm rirk
1 a-*ft»: fra*or #f FcUioM uJ
Fmt 1g iFf w-r.i.
VEGETABLE SEEPS
Larywt. -i»: is IT 8
Ox nSfeiAV. '.b. F-wti nf
Warras t*4 :e rr*. 55 rtfa «a:
l «*» fgfytat ea pnatyatA. f-
FOR 10c- STAMPS
Ml tkll Rollcc. »• Mat (-rat
Catar^ »ti ’Ojitp Farta >j*t>W4
CsxsLmg ajta .V-
JobhASalzerSeed Co.
LACROSSE WIS
DROPSY.
■ I a. 1 .A n.fcr —1!7!
ri'«- Book of iwCact'i list i* b»ts-
mu. be. 1. h oinv sou. t i-iiu. —-
PISO'S CURE FOR
i ta Use. Boi \ K drutriiu. _i
years ago a large stump with about six rocks.
English Postal Employe-.
The English postofflee employs no:
far short of 80.000 women, and it is
probable that tho largest number are
employed in telegraphy, or in duties
relating thereto. In London alone the
number would appear to exceed 1.500.
of whom no fewer than 1.000 are em-
ployed at the central telegraph office
at St. Martius-le-Grand.—Scottish
American.
Ctmpmiin Wealth of l*ogo»s*«-
The English language—according
e German stai • ::an who has made
study of the comparative wealth
languages—heads the list with :
enormous vo 11 alary of 261.W war
German comes next with 90.000 wor
th ltal ia w th 75 w. French wi
:: • T :-k.sh w.th 22.5'N1. and Spa
ish w.th fio.ooo.
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Whorton, Lon. Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 22, 1900, newspaper, March 22, 1900; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1077132/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.