The Hennessey Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 8, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 18, 1893 Page: 2 of 4
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Jlennessey Democrat.
WKKSXKR A TAXMCI.. PlIUMWM.
Hennessey, Olcla.
Kiko Lobknotla of Matabololand
futl Mr. Sclouti tbo lion huiitor.
dead or alive, but wautlng isn't
always having, even with an African
potentate.
Citizens of ffcrtl 111«' talking of
•rocting a statuo to Russia If thoy
do so they will have something to
pull down later when the present
love shall have grown cold.
Thbrc 1b a picture going the
rounds of the press of Quoaii Vic-
toria smiling. She is probably
thinking of what a humorous farce
monarchy in Knglund is, anyway.
Field Maksiiai. McMahon lived to
be 86, and spent flfty-threo years in
the servioe of his country. Such a
record under most trying disappoint-
ments is little loss than marvelous.
Pkmiuknt Barrios of Guatemala
has undertaken to dictate to tho
press of tho United States. Perhaps
if Mr. Barrios would conoentrato iiis
intellectual parts into tho effort ho
might dictato fairly well to a typo-
writer. but he has undertaken too
f reat a contract.
It has been predicted that uo
world's fair as large as the fono just
closed will again bo possible for a
huudred yearn. This is perhaps true,
as tar as foreign countries are con-
cerned. but in this country tho last
world's fair that Is hold |will always
be tho biggest ono.
Admiral Stanton argues that a
flag afloat must either l><> saluted or
the hull under it pounced upon as a
pirate. On land this would mean
that you must elthor salute your
neighbor whon you moot him or
"jump on him" as an outlaw. But
then the navy may have a codo of
manners peculiarly its own.
THR Illinois naval militia is to bo
given the brick and tin hattlo ship
Illinois with all her wooden guns.
This will relieve many Chicago main-
mas of a harrowing terror lest a too
indulgent paternal government
might give their boys a real floating
.ihip of some kind and guns that
might go off and hurt thorn.
AMICK'S discovery.
ITS GEARING ON ISOLATION OF
THE CONSUMPTIVES.
The Action of the Michigan Hoard
of Health In l ealgnalluff Con-
sumption n Contagious IHirau
Dl«cu «'d—Cuio tho llest Alterna-
tive.
The recent nation of the Michigan
State Hoard of Health in pluc'ng " >
sumption on the li*t - f contagious «ii--
eaM'h and requiring safeguards 1" pre
vent its spread, is c ausing nidi -end
newspaper discussion as to the p - pri
■ty of similar uction in other Mutes.
Not onlv bus the Michigan Hoard of
Health taken this radical step, but tin-
County Medical hoeiety. of Philadel-
pliia. lias petitioned tho Hoard «>f
Health there to isolate consumptive..
The Han-American Congress also
passed u resolution ut the recent Wnsh
ington convention calling «"> the
National Government to take steps in
the same direction even going so far
as to ask President Cleveland to giv
his personul attention to the matter.
The result has been thut National
State and civic authorities have been
appealed to. thereby causing conster-
nation to thousands of consumptives
in every State in tlif I n'u.n. who nr.
in terror lest they sliould be torn from
their bonu s and friends. and l.iiiud
for to "special hospitals, which, in
•ality, will be pest holies.
The turmoil which the proposition
has created, is steadily increasing, ami
a great wave of opposition is appear
Friends of consumptives declare that
If isolation of the patients is attempted
in special hospitals, numerous outrages
will result and that not only will lul-
ling persons who want to get rid of
nick relatives dump them upon the
hospitals, but machinations w ill arise
of a most evil character. Small trades-
men, for instance, a filleted by ti cough,
may suddenly find themselves moved
oat of their competitors' way. by a ju-
dicial process which will send them to
the special consumptive hospital to end
their days.
Some of them declare that while the
appearance of smallpox or cholera in
the land is the signal for immediate,
widespread alarm, and the inaugura-
tion of severe repressive measurca. con-
sumption which is always present and
is chronically epidemic, is allowed to
take uu unchecked course, tho neon
not realizing that, it is far tnore deadly
than any other disease, and is slowly
but surely increasing its silent ravage
It is claimed that half of the people
ho have consumption do not
years, to devote himself to curing con-
sumption. said:
"lam, of course, opposed to isola-
tion. becuUHe my theory is that con-
sumption is not directly produced by
any outside causo. I hold that the
bacillus mien Im* Is the effect, or prod-
uct, and not the cause of the disease,
so it is very evident, in my opinion,
that isolation would accomplish no
good." , ,
"Von mean to soy, then, that the In-
haling of the dried up sputa, contain
ing these microbes, is not harmful".''
••(in tho contrary,' I'r. Aiuick re-
plied • nnv dust or c itranooua matter
would produce a mechanical irritation
of the part-and be likely to occasion
lung trouble- !>s the inhalation of tin-
dried sputa of a consumptive, •lust as
a speck of dust irritates the eve. the
inhalation of any foreign matter Irri-
tat-s the air passages."
Continuing. Dr. Atnick said:
"You inav state an my opinion that
fie natural' secretion of tho healthy
mucous membrane either destroy 41""
germs so Inhaled ' - *u—•
Rrsidrnts of Los Angeles having a
rope and a oitizen that they thought
they could spare proeoodod to hang
the latter, devoting the former to tho
purpose. Whon tho man was two-
thirds dead they relontod aud re-
leased him, a circumstance denoting
a tenderness of hoart that tho carp-
ing critic can afford to ovorlook.
Thr czar la a shrewd diplomatist
When the choice of a commander for
the fleet to visit Toulon was to bo
made, he rojected tho admirals
speaking French fluently in favor of
Avolan, because, he said. "If I solid
an admiral who speakB French,
Heaven knows what he might say
and I must prevent any Indiscretion."
the fact. tlie\
demnatinn. Full reports of the prog-
ress of the test-wore to be published
frequently until the end of the under-
taking and the patients either died or
got well.
Acting on this plan The Host adver-
tised for patients and secured several,
including one of chronic asthma of 37
wars standing and others of consump-
tion which had progressed into the
third stage. The treatment of all the
i a-cs was persistently carried on for
over six mouths. The progress of tho
test was duly chronicled and became
familiar hi all the people of the Ohio
Yallev and contiguous Motes. Marked
interest was excited and the outcome
was as anxiously awaited by the public
as by the unfortunate patients them-
After the lapse of the time mentioned
the Host suited that all of the test pa-
tients were alive and
At the p
patients
formula to every Tom. Dick and Harry
to monkey with, and he therefore 'vio-
lates the code'."
The success of Amick's treatment
has brought into the greatest promi-
nence bis theory that the disease pro-
duced tho microbe, as against the the-
ory of Koch and many physicians that
tbo bacillus microbe was the cause of
consumption. Koch had directed bis
efforts towards the destruction of this
microbe, while avoiding killing the
patient. In this be admits that he
failed. As a result his medicine
"tubercullm" is not now used.
It is Itelieved that something like
one-half of the medical profession now
adopt Amick s theory, although lie has
l>v no means a uuanlmous support in
his beliefs.
It will 1h« soon that Dr. Amicks
theory is in direct conflict with the
ideas'of those who. through lack of a
s«-nt time one of these tost j bettor term, may l e called the bicteri-
i;vim / at North Hcnd. o . ' ologists of the profession, and who as-
xvliile another resides on West Fourth I cribo ull lung troubles to bacteria or
Street. Cincinnati, and is continually I bacilli. .
praising the Amick cure as a dual relief Those bacteriologists demand as will
from long continued trouble, and the be noted in some of the interviews
third w'io I pounds in six given above, that all consumptives bo
in ktri'n/th « ■! treatol as though they
Main Street. ' have smallpox or yellow fever. 1 hey
ind lives no
.lust bofoi
list had
c| aratcd
husband
to avoid
cut and the
Italy is so poor that she finds it
^iard to pay tho oxponses of her army.
Some day it may occur to tho Italian
peasant to ask why ho should sturvo
himself in o' dor to support an idlo
soldier. When tho peasants of
Europe got to asking these questions
in concert European statesmanship
will bo puzzled to find a satisfactory
answer.
It is announced that l'rofossor
Hazen will cross tho Atlantic in a
balloon. There is in this announce-
ment a manifest spirit of optimism
not warranted by tho facts. Tho
mere circumstance that the professor
intends to start across the ocean by
balloon does not necessarily imply
that he will get there, not by several
marine leagues.
Thr president of Princeton theo-
logical seminary has decided that
football is beneath the dignity of
divinity students. Hut students or
any other men who aro too dignified
for healthful and exhilarating exer-
cise are too formal aud statuesque to
reach the hearts of men, and this
should be one of the main ends of
divinity students.
A serious question which now con-
fronts tho country is what to do with
the Spanish caravels and the Viking
ship which the governments that
built them have rid themselves of
through the presentation process.
Ten or twelve years ago they
wouldn't have looked particularly
out of place in tho navy, but that
plan is not now to bo suggested.
ali/.c
end a fa'se confldencc
among their friends, who carclcslv al-
low themselves to come in contact with
the victims, and are, in turn, fatally
infected.
The N. Y Herald, commenting on
the subject, quotes the action of the
Congres do la Tubcreulose, recently
held iu I'tiris. in which the following
resolution was adopted:
"iu view of the fact that life in com-
mon of consumptives with tho other
patients in the hospitals is dlsnd-
ventageous both to themselves und
others.and that the risks that they run
and to which the) exposo others aro
not compensated by any serious profit,
the members of the Congress are of tho
opinion that all consumptive patients
should l o gathered together in special
hospitals in groups, according to the
period of their disease, and that these
groups should bo as small as possible
at the earliest stage of the complaint.
"In consideration of the fact that in
the present condition of the science a
continuous ami snfllcient supply of
pure air is one of tho most powerful
elements in the treatment of tubercu-
losis, it is also advisable that these
hospitals should be built in the coun-
try. or at the seashore.
"••Finally, as a transitory measure, to
last as short ti time as possible, con-
sumptives should, for the time being,
be united in special wards in the hos-
pitals, apart from those of the other
patients, and the walls and furniture
of these wards should bo disinfected at
stated intervals."'
Another scheme for the Isolation of
consumptives, which has just been an-
nounced by the Denver (Colo.) News,
Is to the effect that W. N. livers, rep-
resenting a syndicate of lloston capi-
talists, has applied at the oftlce of the
Colorado l.aud Commissioner for sec-
tions of land on which to colonize
consumptives from New I'.njrhtnd. The
idea is to erect suitable building
put the patients a| gentle woi
tending to fruit and poultry, b
1 had fo
by the fact thai
willing to send ou
of tiie
>i no
far as any intrinsic power to
produce tho disease is concerned. If
consumption was either contugmns or
iufcctious, I would have had it long
dncc. as I am daily closeted with the
vorst po-sible cases, and during the
nvestigntion leading to my di>< nxery
f the cause and cure of the disease. I1
tought out the worst forms of it ami
nade microscopic examination of dis- j
•aved sputa a marked* feature of m\
professional work and research. Not- <
i-ithstanding all this, ami although 1
rcdisposed to consumption 1 have in !
aled the diseased breath and germs
f tuberculous patients almost continu-
ally without ill effect."
• tin what grounds, doctor, have all
those appeals for the isolation of con
sumptives been liiadeV '
• tin the theory of some bacteriolo-
gists that the disease is communicated
bv microbes expectorated l>y the con
sumptive."
Asked as to how many of the modi
cal profession agreed with his theory
to the contrary, Dr. Amick said: "From
ull I can learn perhaps one-half and a
msjoritv of the other half freely ex-
press tiieir surprise that, considering
111 x treatment is not based oil the bacilli
theory. it proves so efficacious. A year
or two 1 was practically alone in ad-
vocating my theory, but today the
progressive 'physicians agreeing with
1110 are numbered by thousands, and 1
prophesy that In a few years very few
will contend that, the microbe causes
the disease. I make no attempt to de-
stroy the bacilli in my treatment, for
they disappear of themselves us the di-
ease is conquered, and this is observed ~ - —
In HHlnit the micros.-,,)!., by pliyalrinni Ami. lt replied to Ihose ontu-s thut
nn-M-rllW inv medicines. Ironside,- his reuson for keeping the formula
this the strongest possible pi that ere]: wan to prevent the tinkering of
microbes are not the cause of the di- inefficient doctors.who. by adding to
sense, and that they cannot exist under subtracting from the medicines would
normal healthy conditions. It does uchievc varied
not require u scientist to understand ustrous.and the whole-nx stem w oui.l
that inasmuch as the bacilli are not j ^cripti« n which, however, gives no
found until the expectoration becomes a n« w thery or prn< tu xmih11 1
purulent thai they could not produce fronted t.v the opposition of old turn el. w to th
this purulent condition. No, unlike ulcus and prejudices, an-d ivc.j salti-
smallpox,the disease does not announce guard was needed that could be di not
b^Lwlthg,ud.uin'y inei,';;"'^ i^rVtheCh.ldean Hercules.
Hess, loss of strength and nppct ite. and until such tune as tho tieatinent should when to Sow <;rn«*« seed,
is firmly seated before the bacilli are j Income universally approved und ae- rorrespondence National Stockman
produced.thus showing that the disease ; ceptod, when the formula in I gut. | tried all times of tho year ant!
preceeds the genus. Suppose v.,u your-. out further restraint, he freely g.ien ^ ha,t tlle ,„ec,ss in wet sea
self," said l)r. Atniek to i lio 1'ost man, to the world. sons. Hut taking one year with an
• caught cold: suppose thut cold ran Dr. Amick, in the early daxs or hi , oth(11. | fln(l SepU.mber and Februarx
« '<• eatarrhal pncinonln. .vhich, in . was la-set d.,nl.ts , ^ hcsMimes. It^ I dM not wantj.,
alwavs sow in Septemlier. but if I
for themselvc-* and to
medicines and directioi
While their test cas-
ing in various ivirt.s
other physicians wh
riil of patients wlcm t-
longer treat with any -h • \ ' -
sent the same to Amick. ■•• '.or -.. . *
shift all responsibility upoa
perchance cause a failure of a >:c:w
of treatiiient which _ would muse •.
unfavorable comparison with their
Some of them declared that Amick *
refusal to make public his formula of
medicines was a great wrong ami of
itself suggested a money-making sp;—*
Amick insist that a wife shall be
tod I f K.vh. from her sick husband and
{•'-.ysK-iaii and from his dying wife, in ordo
The"opp rtunitv to freely tost the
\1-1ick cure is still given to regular phy-
v -inns in all States of the 1'nion and
,.v,-rv dav. in rosjH nso to calls, over
- free outfits arc sent out to appli-
1 he criticism continues t > be made
I t.'nMv-aih of the unchanging and
.. v-v-s.ve soluail that Dr. Amick.
-.. wing tho uewspaivi-s to exploit
cure, has outraged his profession
A • n >uld ts severely reprimanded.
\ .. rx p'. v is made to this charge that
V -.v.Vhad no control of the s.'cu-
>, —.-vs. *ud he very frankly says
:< he ha i he won hi not have dis-
msissil aay honorable eflorl to bring
h s treatment at onoe thoroughly bt
, ,mvu. Had theuwofsb.v
rHiamarlt of the medical iournals b.'d
.v. - of p-.'.b'.c t\. thousand*
• v.s . \. s wouUl ha.c died in the
A u.ck does not go. in his opin-
• | firthsr in allowing public
" to be called to his treatment
thin did Dr K.v i. the Herman scient-
ist spreading the news of his.
A litAUt Spear.
M de Sar/ac. who has loon carrying
i halden with the
THE HAWAIIAN QUEEN TO BE
REINSTATED.
£0 SAYS SECRETARY GRESHAM.
n a I.tins letter to tl n I'retblsnt lt«
Mil she Wu Wrunjifuliy livpoaed
by the landliii «f l)nltu«l si^tei
Murluea, aud That Junllca
l>rinanile<l Th.it Shu IS*
ftostored to l'uwer.
i-liaiui I.-1. :,,i,....,u \v>vriun royal p-llat-o. It
ient Ass\T*ian roval pala«
ho colossal had of an iinmense
made of copper or bronxc. four-
•entimetcrs wide and eighty long,
six holes to attach it to its han-
At the point of the spear-head is
vod a lion with its claws ill tho
of attack, llelow it is an in-
of the
jod arcluvologists who have
xamined the lance-head are of the op-
i that it was once carried by lsdu-
lievc it was a microbe instead of a the desnc.ate cases of ! wheat I would rather sow grass
draught or exposure which occasioned sent to him b> otlici ph.\suin |.(,i,n,arv tlien I got a full crop of
vour catching cold, and yet you admit tieatinent. lie iscan id..km w bun, 'T , (>f nmrs|, the jrrJlss will not
the cold produced the .lis,-use. No. I i the virtues of the trctment hc d ( d itp ns f.,st tlu. (irs, ye
firmlv contend. " concluded Dr. Amick. originated, and trembled lest iii.ii \, | ]w clj>vpr , woum ralhep smv
•that the isolatiou and separation of « eat lis shouldi occur on his hnints and |,| sowing I aim t- sow in 1
these poor sick consumptives front the discredit the treutinent. , fuU mi(on (if t.tther month.
onlv ones who for affection s sake i Hut a large percentage of tin tlwid
would oare for thom, Is not only in stage cases sent to him improvenvlsl To Keep Ants Away.
human but unnecessary, and not only j bly under his care, and finally ended , |>„t, a lijfht film-coat of balsam IN
Washington. Nov. 13.—A letter od-
dressed to President Cleveland by Sec-
retary tircsham, on October IM, has
t>een given out for publication. The
secretary reviews in detail the acts
leading up to the revolution in Hawaii,
in January last, and takes strong
grounds in the opinion that Queen
l.lliuokalanl would never have been
deposed had it not been for the land-
ing of United States marines from tho
United States steamship lloston.
Ho maintains also that the pro-
visional government has boon main-
tained solely by tho fear of the mili-
tary power of the United States, lie
cites much evidence from lllount's re-
port and from the reports of Minister
Stevens himself to sustain this view.
The government of Hawaii, ho says,
"surrendered its authority under a
throat of war until such time onlv as
tho United States should reinstate the
constitutional sovereign, and the pro-
v sion": government was created to
exist until terms of union with tho
United States have been agreed upon "
The treaty of annexation w.th-
drawn from the senate should not, he
argues, be submitted again.
"Should not tho great wrong, he
says, "done to a feeble but independent
state by an abuse of the authority of
the United States be undone by re-
storing tho legitimate government?
Anything short of that will not. I re-
spectfully submit, satisfy the demands
of justice."
DLOODSIIED AN'l) UANKItl'lTt'V.
That'* What a IlaMmllMa Say# I In Store
for tlio litlaudit.
Washington, Nov. 13 —l*rofessor
'. C. Alexander, surveyor general of
the Hawaiian islands, is in tho city.
Professor Alexander is an American,a
graduate of Yale ami a inali of great
intelligence. In response to queries
he said:
This is a great blow to us. If this
policy is carried out it means the
bankruptcy and ruin of the Islands.
If the attempt is made to restore tho
queen, bloodshed will follow I doubt
if the queen herself would live to sit
again upon the throne.
Ft) It AN INCOME TAN.
Representative Hull Addre««M the tVnyi
Mud Mean# Committee on the Sulijei-t.
Washington, Nov. 13.— Representa-
tive Hall of Missouri made, by special
invitation,a presentation of his income
tax theories before the ways and
moans committee.
In his speech Pep
took the position that
could be framed that '
flexible revenue
demand. I f the
Two Attempt* Mad. by • «r l rlou.
Siit*ii* r to th« Governor.
Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 13.—Yester-
day forenoon a man past middle age
with shaggy beard aud disheveled
hair asked one of tho policemen at the
state capital where he would find the
governor. Executive Clerk llarrsel
was sent for and asked the
man his business with the gov-
ernor. The man declnred he had
private matters of great importance
to diseuss, and on being told that Gov-
ernor Me Kin ley was engaged he said
he would see him or there would be a
^The man was ordered from the
building, but stoutly protested against
leaving. He finally left to avoid ar-
The man returned last night and re-
newed his demand to see the governor
and was again put out. Ilu refused
to give an account of himself and
officers have been ordered to arrest
him if he again appears.
MORE TRAIN ROBBERS.
An Illlnola Central Train Held I | and
KiprMl Car and l'«i*ein*ri Robbed.
Cairo, 111., Nov. 13.—'Tho Illinois
Central train No. duo hero at 1:30
o'clock this morning, was stopped at
Mayfield bridge, Kentucky, about
eight miles south of here, by five
masked men who boarded tho train at
Pardwell.
Tho robbers then gained an entance
to the express car and secured 8-TJ in
cash and a valuablo package, said to
contain $1400. The passengers were
held up and then tho robbers made for
the woods. Conductor Charles Shearln
and Messenger K. II. McNealoach fired
several shots at tho robbers but with-
out effect
llloodhounds were asked for and
were at once sent to the scene.
OUTLAWS ROUTED.
Thk business of the government
must go on whothor there is a popu-
lar Interest In It or otherwise. When
the mass of tho people pay little at-
tention to polities abuses and corrup-
tion begin, and mako rapid progress.
If more peoplo accepted their politi-
cal rights as Involving corresponding
responsibilities and duties, our poli-
tics would be cleaner every way.
ture and gardening, insisting, all of
the time, upon suitable physical exor-
cise. The idea is that patients in the
first stages of consumption might be
benefitted in the mild, dry air of Colo-
rado and that their light lal>
itself ill tho question of the e;
consumption mid the possibility of its
cure. Since that time many other
newspapers have devoted attention to
the subject.
Recent statistics, carefully gathered,
have shown that one seventh of all
the deaths in the United States from
disease are caused by consumpti
ssary but impracticable I lease
remember that they are numbered not
by hundreds or thousands, but by
hundreds of thousands, and that ncarlx
everx* one wdio reads The Post has near
and dear relatives in consumption x\ ho
properly administered t«> can be re-
stored to health, but whom isolation
might place beyond all hope. II will
require no argument to convince you
that the relatives of these sick ones
will vigorously protest against any
such enactment, and tho good citizens
of this country will help tlici
The fame of Amick's new treatment
had by this time become generally dif-
fused'throughout America, und vast
numbers of letters of inquiry came
pouring in upon the Cincinnati physi-
cian from the north, south, cast und
west The doctor finally awoke to the
fact that ho had become famous.
•onml near the bottom of tho table
kitchen safe logs just a narroxv band
will do and renew- the balsam every
txvo or three weeks. This will k
suits away from tables, kitchen safes,
etc.. and'what they hold or contain
1 provided there is no other ant-
| than up the legs.
A
spr.
One drop balsam
nind the upper part of
No
curing tub,
,as made xvitli
public test in New
I tion of that journal to the Amick test
' cases which had been conducted by tho
Cincinnati Post, and as the Recorder
the carrying out of the proposed cruel was in the field xvith an offer of a
inip(,siti;,u • 11000 prise for the demonstration of
firTlirunntng said: I successful method * -
"Consumption is increasing in cities I losis, an arrange-
on account of the favorable conditions f I
which exist for its dissemination. All York.
cases of tho disouse are communicated. I he Recorder selected 10 patients,
There are no sporadic cases. The whom I)r. Amick took under his care,
irerms are in the atmosphere which ! with the ultimate result that all but
e very bod x breaths, but they only take one were pronounced cured, and the
hold'in a favorable soil, in the proper Recorder, having satisfied itself of the
type of human organism. Isolation of fact of their recovery, paid Amick the
SlTth^n shot; 1 Id" u si* g re at 'core' 'in j "'thi^riumphTurn Cincinnati's-
irldiV,,';:: pccm,i"IT "llv"'""g°I "". T f "j"1
c"
Health's action in putting consumption seeing tho rise of Atnick s ne\\ tu.it
in the list of contagious diseases, along I mont, opened fire upon him through
xvith smallpox, scarlet fever, diphtheria
and cholera?"
•Well, there is not quite the same
iger from consumption as there is
from smallpox. Most diseases are con-
tagious. Consumption can never be
and this startling fact, prominently I stamped out by law People sullering
presented, has served to increase the | from it cannot l e dragged from their
cspondoiit of the I a syn,p b0ttle will keep the ants ti
called the atten fllt. tlllll,ths iu il one ounce balsa
Jiiths. Roll
I'eru in one gallon rain water for half
an hour, and sponge this water,
hot. over xvooden floors and walls, tin.1
it will keep ants away for a loug time.
—Scientific American.
Her 1'art of tho Worry.
One of Washington's bright xvomen
was present xvhilo her husband dis-
cussed the financial situation.
• I must confess." he said, "that the
money market has worried me a great
••It wasn't the money market that
worried me." observed his
"What was it?" >
"It xvas the market money." — \N ash
1 Star
gitatiou which litis been aroused. hoi
In order to get at the opinions of the I
tending physicians of Cincinnati on the no
latest aspect of tho case, i o . that re tio
lating to the proposed isolation of con-
sumptives. interviexvs were secured
xvith Drs. Wbittaker. dudkins. Amick.
llrunuing and others.
l)r. William Judklns said: ' I thor
oughly believe in the
ilumns of certain journals, and
i endeavored to uonvince the public that
' somehow- or other the doctor's discov-
ery xvas not all it seemed to be. He
; had long practiced medicine in Cincin-
' nati, however, and had been of excel-
lent reputation iu the craft. So innu-
endos fell fiat, more especially xvhon
I liis brother, the well known Prof.
ii**s vu ti nut'i .al hospital. | ... . ,,
• r. C. T. Minor declared that he took '• Amick. also of the
stock in the theory that eonsump ; lego of >ledicine ^and
tion is eontaglons. ' '
• The death rate from consumption
is ulxvays greatest on tho sou coast and
gradually diminishes toward the in-
terior A moist climate develops lung
trouble. I do not belie
counted for by tho
d"rRl
A raisoNKit arraigned for assault
with a deadly weapon makes plea
that even If he did split a man's
skull he was not so wicked as to uso
means prescribed by law. Ho em-
ployed a rock, which he contends is
not a deadly weapon, but something
that can be hurled against tho ail
jacent cranium quite within legal
toleration. or possibly approval.
With knotty problems like this con-
fronting the judicial mind it is not
surprising that there should l e an
occasional resignation from the
bench.
In tho Countess Pappenhelm
another American heiress who foolish
ly married a good-for-nothing scion
of the effete nobility of Kurope has
returned to home and mother heart
broken and humiliated. These object
lessons are piling up with such
frequency and regularity that ho
would be a sorry pessimist who did
not hope that the American girl will
in the near future and the lauguav'o
of the street "take a drop to her-
self" and quit marrying into the
lean and hungry sristociacy
the old countries
iluti'ou of consumptive patients. The xvottld be the height of
best plan is to take the patient out of ; late consumpti v. - froi
Ills home and put him in a house spec and relatives, w h
iallv built for consumptives. The idea who xvill properly
may seem a harsh one. but it is cor ! Dr. V I'orchhoimor sum m u-u,
tainlv in tho interest of friends of the • < onsuuintion is sometimes contagion
sufferer. The great trouble xvith the but not always I cannot now discu:
project would be to get patients iu the
first stages of the disease to go to such
treat. Most of thom don't believe
that they have consumption, und von
unnot convince them to the contrary.
Dr. W bittaker said. I do not ap
>rove of the isolat on project simply
because I do not think it would do any
practical good, lso'ution. the taking
f a consumptive from his home
• forthor
natter fully."
AMICK S THEORY.
treatment, bringing xvith him the ripe
results of txventy-llve years' medical
labors.
Dr. W. R. Amick did not at the time
dec hi re. nor does he do so now, that
It his treatment la an infallible one. lie
o 1 insists that no extravagant claims
,|s shall be made for it. and asserts that
,.s not more than JO per cent, of third
: stage eases can receive any lasting ben
v: I etit from his medicines, lie does, hoxy
that the treatment
edundanti
| most a specific
consumption wnere me
| given by him are carefully
| and no complication of otne
arlier stages of
direetioi
obser
Hird
> l r*
cut.
and friends, would be rather
Is every ease of
inbu-
ilt the
It Is a common mistake to regard
our political duties too lightly. In
times of great excitement, when im-
portant questions of public policy
are to be decided, the mas< of slug
Irish voters arouse themselves and go
to the polls. So, too. they do usually
In presidential elections, when the
blare of brass bands aud the loud
calls of partisans to arouse public
attention aid in getting out a full
vote. Yet quite as often as not little
of importance beyond the disposal of
the offices is decided by the result of
k pruUtiHil iltitiM
uiuptic
result of contact xvith some otlicv case,
or is the disease sometimes sporadic,
like choleric.'"
••No. There la no suoh thing aa spo ;
radio consumption. It is not even an j
inherited disease, l'.very case oxvos its
origin to communication. Many cases
of consumption arc contracted at bed
aides. Ono patient can give it to
twenty xvoll (hm-soiis strong men.
with no predisposition that wax get t
W hy. one of tho xvorst places to con
tract consumption is in u postortice
corridor. A consumptive coining in
spits on the floor. Ho spreads the
genus of his disease to Ik- inhaled l x
others who enter. There should W
cuspidors in postofilces. in market
houses and in all other public places
.Spitting by consumptives upon side
walks is not so dangerous, as the open
air disseminates the germs more xvidely
than in a building."
"Do you think that consumption is
increasing, or decreasing?"
• Probably decreasing, on a«-« ount of
iH'tter methods used in treating 1
The newspapers can do great good I
calling attention to the great dange
of consumption and noting the neeos
sity for great . are in guarding against
the disease. People arc too careless
No doubt isolation would U- of ben lit
to patients and do good, but it e ml.I
not lie enforced
Dr. W. R. Aiuick. xx ho resigned his
professorship iu the Cincinnati College
of Medicine and Virgcry, held for 1
II..W II t'onlllrl* With
Opinions.
When The Cincinnati Post under
took, over a year ago, to examine into
the causes "of tuberculosis anil the
methods which had been advanced for
its euro, the idea xvas to so thoroughly
sift and test alleged "cures that their
merits should finally be settled to the
satisfaction of the public.
Dr. W. K. \niiek had just announced
that consumption could be cured by
the use of n nexv method, which ho pro-
posed to introduce. Other doct
bv
The Post
lose of tho tests
nd the Recorder, many
tlier nexv spa pers throughout the
nited States have conducted similar
ests. and so have numerous hospitals
The Minneapolis Times, speaking
ditorially of the spread of the Atnick
1 the
• I hirty or more physl-
city have taken the medicines com-
pounded by Dr. Aniiek and are testing
them in their practice. Ono of the
doctors gives it as his opinion that tho
considerable numbers, derided the idea I medicines, in the tost cases, accom-
thut anything more efficient than old | plishod more than ^ the discoverer
school 'treatment with cod liver
creosote and the various hypopl
uld Ih1 devised
phltc
thom entered tlie
ieal journals to
Kligltsh. Others
so confident that
sol on co had bee
ew spa pers
iiVain, who x
dical
bed. xverc .lis
Amick's meth-
od. before giving their opinions.
It xvas at this stage of the prooeoi -
ings thut The Post conceived tho id 1
of select ing test cases of consumption.
and also one or txvo of asthma for
Amick to treat. tho doctor having tie
elared that his formula xvas equally died, two
effective in asthmatic troubles. The s'lowcd
plan for the test, as laid down by The three xve
Post and accepted finally by Amick. | eases ther
that a
liable cure has been found, but if
>t that, a help has been introduced
and med- which will greatly assist in the uno-
hrusque quill battle that must be fought against
not I this enemy of human life."
\ not her editorial article published
the Minneapolis Journal says:
■ Dr Amick. who has acquired a
cat deal of celebrity of late by his
eeessful treatment of phthisis, has
cent ly had his euro investigated by
id at "the instigation of the press of
evcland. Of tcu almost hopeless
ses wlrch xve re selected onlv one
•d. four
ingtc
A New Ology.
That pupil xvas a bright
bright, in fact, that xvhi
essav-writing she becain
adjectives.
•My dear." said her teacher one day.
going over one of her efforts, "you uie
too many xvords and phrases meaning
the same thing. Don't you knoxvn that
is tautology .'"
• It seems to me." she replied, "that
it is untaughtology; xvait until I have
been at it a little longer," and the
teacher is waiting in groat hopefulness.
Detroit Free Press.
Shocked
••I xvas very much shocked." said
llunlow. moetinir.turley on the striv .
•when I saxv itronson this morning.
He looked ten years older than when I
saxv him last."
• W hen did you see him last?"
•• P.ronson'.' Oh. I guess its boon some
fifteen years since I'd seen Itronson
last." -Harper's Ha/.ar.
A Rift in the Lute.—"I don't know
what you ever saxv in me to admire,
she remarked demurely- "Oh. xvoll.
von know, little one. a fellow who is
anything doesn't look for mere beauty
in a girl; it's " lie stopped, because
hi« heart xvas alright; and beside, he
wasn't entirely a blamed fool —only im-
petuous and thoughtless in his xvay.
Puck.
Bachelors nnd Spinsters.
A parlimentary blue book relating to
to the last census for England an1
Wales shows that there were tak-«
8,?U .3rt3 unmarried males and 8.90S.* 4
unmarried females. 4,s.M..'i48 inar.ail
males and 4.1 ltt,«49 married four
4S4.UUO xvidoxvors nnd 1.1—4,310 xvidoxv
Journalism. -Reade- T thought y«
xve re going to give up nexvspaper xvoi
on account of having to ho out of doo
in all kinds of weather." Wright
•Oh. they fixed mo all right! Dor
have to go out at all now-. Reade
••What is your work now?" Wright
• I'm doing tho • Man-About-Toxvn' 01
esentativo Hall
no tariff law
oitld provide a
lect the flexible
to be reported by
committee should
provide enough revenue to meet the
demand for 1895 and 1890. it xvill pro-
duce a surplus of not less than $i0,-
000,000 for 1897 und 18*. H au 1 the sur-
plus ivould continue to increase.
The only xvay tho revenue could bo
kept equal to the expenditures xvou'd
be to biennially change the tariff
laws. These radical changes would
have a tendency to unsettle the busi-
ness xvorld. Hy the adoption of an
income tax the per cent could be low-
ered or raised to moot the shifting de-
mands for national revenue without
In the least disturbing tho regular
tariff tax.
Mr. Ilall cited some thirty writers
oniolitieal economy sustaining his
argument His bill imposes a tax of ."i
percent on incomes of over P.'..ri00,
and xvith this tax he estimates that a
revenue of SI85.000,000 xvill be derived
and enable the committee to place on
the free list all tho necessities of life,
farming implements and products
and tho tools and supplies of laborers
Complrtn Iteturim From Colorado.
Dknvrr. Col., Nov. 13.—Complete
returns from the interior of the state
now being in, the fact is clearly
demonstrated that the People's , trty
is no longer a factor in stale politics,
and after a year of experience, the
Republican party is once more safely
in control. The silver issue of last
year carried the Populists into poxver.
The leading mining towns, xvith fexv
exceptions, retuined their usual Re-
publican majorities, and even in coun-
ties where they xvero formerly strong
the Populists have elected their tickets
by greatly reduced majorities
Klglit Kentucky Do«peradoe« Raid b
Town and Aro Twice lt<*|Hila*d.
Paris, Ivy., Nov. 13.--At 10 o'clock
last night eight strangers rods Into
North Middletoxvn, this county, and
shot at every person seen on the
streets, mortally xvounding an old
negro named Hurt Morris.
Tho citizens opened tiro 011 tho des-
peradoes, and they ansxvered with a
volley from their pistols. Tho citizens
kept up their firing ami the desper-
adoes left, but returned in one hour,
xvhon they xvero again charged upon
by tho citizens and driven out of
toxvn.
The men stopped nt a house on tho
roadside about a mile from toxvn.
Throe of them xvero badly wounded,
but those not xvonnded took them on
in the direction of Mount Sterling.
Charged With Msny MIndeed*.
Ciiicaoo, Nov. 13.—Andrew Warren,
80 years old, nnd said to be worth
$300,000. has sued for divorce from his
wife. He alleges that she tried to kill
lilin with both knife and poison; that
she has been very cruel; that she has
a mania for speculating on the board
of trade; that she has stolen money
from him, sold his clothes, hav from
his barns, trees from his yard, in fact,
everything she could find, to secure
money for speculation.
Itumor* of Culiun Trouble.
Kkv Wkst, Fla., Nov. h —Cuba
revolutionists xvho make their head-
quarters here, claim to have learned
that fifteen counties iu Central Cuba
declared against Spanish rule last
Friday nnd aro in open rebellion
against the government. An armed
expedition is said to bo preparing to
leave for Cuba from this vicinity xvitli-
iu txventy-four hours.
I.odt 111 tlie Mini 11 t i In*.
Missoula. Mont, Nov. 13.—William
Ii CjTrlin, son of tieneral W. P. Carlin,
of tho United States army, hisbrother-
in-laxv, John Harvey Pierce, and A.
Hillmel Wright of Nexv York are
sribwed in f t the head of Clear Water
in tho Hitter Root mountains
anil grave fears are entertained for
their safety. -
THE LOW WATER MARK II
THE TREASURY REACHED.
expenditures exceed receipts.
The Net Avallalde Colt Dnltnoe oi
Umid •• •00,008,341, or Winch
984.6.1(1.414 U the Gold H«-
,erve—The Treasury Author-
ities Hope for Hotter Time#
Soou to Help Out.
Washington, Nov. 11.—The loxv
water mark of tho net available bal-
ance of the treasury xvas reached yes-
terday when the total stood at 5.M.-
<JU.\ :ti, of which $84,050,412 xvas tho
gold reserve. The large expenditures
over receipts so far this mouth is re-
sponsible for this condition, but 110
alarm or uneasiness is felt at the de-
partment The hope is expressed that
better times xv.ll soon como anil tho
reservo as xvell n? tho net currency
balance xvill again begin to rise.
It xvas saitl at tite department no
orders having in viexv the actual coin-
age of tho silvar bullion in tho treas-
ury purchased under the Sherman act
have yet been issued, but they aro ex-
pected at any time.
Tho low state of the treasury s
available cash has given rise to fresh
rumors of nexv ineaus to be devised
for replenishing the gold reserve. It
is said at the treasury department,
hoxvever. that other than tho coinage
of the bullion above lefo red to, Sec-
retary Carlisle has no immediate stops
in contemplation involving a change
in the fiscal policy of the government.
There is said to be no d.sp -.ilion to
issue bonds at present, an I no such is-
sue is thought noccssary before tho
meeting of congress, xvhon tho vioxvs
of the president xvill be set fort In his
message to that body.
TO IIAL CO AND 11BFK.
Blauuf.icturer* Kater I'rotegt Against
Any Increuie of Taiei.
Washington, Nov. 11.—Tho com-
mittee appointed by tho tobacco man-
ufacturers to appear before the ,iya
and means committee had a hearing
last ovoning. Mr. Spenco of Cincin-
nati said they represented eighty of
the most prominent manufacturers
and had been unanimously instructed
to state that any increase of the tax
on manufactured tobacco xvould bo
inimical to tho interests ol both tho
manufacturers and groxvers of tobac-
co, by reason of the lessening of tho
consumption. The committee recom-
mended that if any legislation what-
ever be enacted, it be a repeal of tho
laxv of 1890, xvhlch permits the sale of
leaf tobacco to tho consumer without
tho payment of taxes.
They argued the repeal of this law
xvould largely increase tho govern-
ment revenues on tobacco.
Mr. McMillin gave no intimation of
the intentions of the committee xvith
regard to the schedule, but it has been
frequently rumored that tin majority
of the committee favor 1111 increase of
the tax as a moans of supplying the
necessary reventt s of the govern uent.
The correctness of those rumors aro
doubted by the tobacco men.
Messrs. McMillin. Turner, llrcckin-
ridge, Hynnm aud Montgomery of tho
ways and means committee had a con-
ference xvith Secretary Carlisle, with
reference to the tobacco and other
s Kedules Mr. Wall of Wisconsin
subsequently saxv Secretary Carlisle
during xvliich he protested against tho
tariff bill increasing the internal
revenue tax on beer, lie xvas also op-
t osed to.reducing the custom duty on
imported Canadi 111 lumber.
All AN QUESTION.
tim:
.Mil
. to :
voro pronounced en
larked improvenu
e much improved.
tvorld'* Fair
Chicago, Nov. 13.
bergor's report up
shoxvs the receipts xv
and total disburaeun
The cash on hand i
which amount
of
of
to November
ere 8'J: ,40i,00 ).
ntsM 1,031.585.
1 8v.'5:i,rj8.7:t,
luded S-J14.H71
hlof
follows: (late
The
Kiullnu tho Agony
Mr. Stalate—Won't you sing some-
thing. Miss Minnie?
Miss Minnie (yaxvning) W by. Mr.
Stalate. don't you know it is consid-
ered unlucky to sing before breakfast '
Truth.
nt.
In all
fight
and the subjeots had only boon under
treatment txvo months.
••The physicians xvho xvatched the
course of treatment expressed them
selves as satisfied xvith the cure and
testified as to the great value of the
discover^ Hut a nuuilicr of doctor?
,, B...a thut if Amick mi.- i •!... «w iuU;rv ■««!. mml r
•edetl in curing the test patients he Amick of 'violating the code. Ilsha*
lould be given full and free credit made one of the most xvonderful and
>r the frame and that if he failed the J valuable discoveries ever hoped for 111
eatincnt should rseelve merited non-1 med loin*, but hp refuses to give the
affected xvith tnl>oreulosis. three xvhost-
cases had passed beyond the initial
stage and xvould therefore be past the
assistance of such treatment as eouhl
be given by the standard methods ol
the day.
There Is 110 use trying it you can
not crop land continuously xvithout
feeding it. I'erhaps you have been
trying to do so. und that is the reason
you think fanning doesn't pay. It
never will pay. in that xvay. Itegin
now. if you have never done so before,
to study hoxv to feed the soil.—Mirror
Tourist tiu Ireland!--" I should like
a room xvith an iron beadstoad." Hotel
Proprietor—"Sorr. 01 havn't an iron
i.'dstcad in the place—they are all soft
wood. But you'll foind the mattress
noiee and hard. sorr. "—Tit-Bits.
ipts, $10,570,^08: from concession-
aires, 83,3115.003; from stock. 8.i,.il\\-
072; from souvenir coins, {519,705 and
mlscel 1 ancous, $ 1,704.230.
A Valuable llorne Killed.
Ami.kne,Kan.,Nov. 13.—Andy I'ogue,
the fast stallion owned by Stain baugh
& llurd, of this place, died yesterday
of cancer. The stallion had done ex-
cellent xvork on the tiack during the
last season, and attracted much atten-
tion during tho meetlngf at St. Joseph
and Holton. He xvas valued at ?."i,000
A 1'oHtiiiitntRr Shot mid Killed.
HaIOLER, Neb., Nov. 13.—Asa P.
Beam, postmaster at Lansing. Col., a
little xvest of here.was shot and killed
xvlthln four feet of the postoffice door
about 0 o'clock last night The mur-
derer is not knoxvn nor is any motive
known.
The Total rrndnet Till* Year l the
Smallest In Ten Year*.
Washington. Nov. 11 -The cotton
returns of tin department of
agriculture for the month of No-
vember do not indicate a high rate of
yield, but point rather to a diminished
harvest as compared xvith that of ISO'-',
which xx*as less than any iu tho last
doeade.
hoe.XIrKane to Ho i'linlshed.
Nkw York, Nor 1 - At a meeting
of prominent Brooklvnites last night
a eommitteo xvas appointed to devise
and carry out plans for the punish-
ment of .luhn I MeKane. tli • I■ rax*e-
send •■boss." for tho many crimes with
xvhicli ho is ehargo.1. Th • treasurer
will >o appo'nted to re •< ivc subscrip-
tions to furjher this end.
Large Ntim'mr or F.illuret Thl« XX>rtc.
Nkw York Nov. 11.—R U. Dun's
statement, issued to-morroxv, xvill
state the number <>f f lilurc* in the
United States for the past xveek xvas
361 and twentv-soven in Canada,
sgaiust 353 in the 1 nited States for
the preceding wejak and twenty-eight
iu Canada and !Jlo in the United
States and twenty-six in Canada for
the corresponding period !a t year.
NEWS NOTES.
Burglars gagged and bound Post-
master Shryock of Louisville, Neb.,
and then robbed the office.
Robert Carter, an Arkansas convict,
committed suicide bv getting under a
falling tree near England. Ark.
County Treasurer Cushman of
Greeley. Neb., loaned W0,</()< county
funds to farmers nnd they did not pay
back.
The official count in Nexv York gives
Bartlet*. Republican, 05,005 majority
over Max nurd, H.inoerat, forjudge of
the court of appeals.
w. Garvin, a church organist*
who has been living with a woman
not li's xvife at Springfield, Mo , xvas
fined Sr.Ot) and sent to jail.
Sheriff Magner and Deputy Shanley
of Woodbury county, Iowa, are under
arrest on a charge growing out of tho
recent elections.
J. C. Thompson of Sedalia xvas ap-
pointed receiver of tho Sedalia, War-
saw and Soutlixvestern by Judge
Richard Field.
The trip of Mr. Carlisle to Nexv
York and Mr. Cleveland's devotion of
time to his forthcoming message have
further delayed internal revenue ap-
pointments.
At liar wood, Mo., J. T. Nelson,
nged sixty-five, xvas married to Miss
Dora Green, aged seventeen.
Mrs. Louis Long and her youngest
child perished by a fire near Stanch-
field, Minn., dm to burning brush.
Fire in Republican City, Neb,, de-
stroyed the bank, txvo hotels, the col-
lege and three stores, causing $25,000
losses.
Henri Rocheport, the noted French
political exile now in London, de-
clares that he xvill probably not ae
cept the amnesty granted by France.
At a meeting of delegates of tho
trades and labor unions of Philadel-
phia it xvas resolved to form a xvork-
ing men's political party.
Martial laxv has been proclaimed in
the province of Barcelona, Spain, and
the police have been reinforced by de-
tectives from Madrid, and are hunting
tho anarchists night und day.
II la Kvldant 1
Told <u III® Matter.
Washington, Nov. 11.—It is evident
there is much to be told in the Ha-
waiian matter yet. Secretary <! resharo
declines to impart any inform ition on
the subject whatever. Hisottl egives
no ray of light upon it. The dis-
cussion of the policy toward Hawaii
at the cabinet meet'ng on Tuesday
seems to have given information to
some members of the administration
that have lacked it heretofore. Hits
of talk on tho subject have trickled
through to the public sin o then in a
way that does not indicate that tho
source of the information is friendly
to the policy. It is evident t at it is
not a policy friendly to the present
provisional government of the islands
or the purpose for xvhicli it was
formed, xvhicli xvas annexation to tho
United States.
There is reason to believe the pres-
ent provisional government is re-
garded as the result of the landing of
marines from the Boston, iu II lulu,
at the time of the revolution, and tho
desire of the administration is to go
back over all the s-eps taken by tho
last administration and undo them.
HEItVICK.
years s
l.nci.k saws
Mat-
Yhe Superintendent C*rltlcl* i
ter of Subsidies.
Washington, Nov. 11—The report
of the superlntende-it of the foreign
mail service xvas m i lo yesterday. Too
most interesting feature is the criti-
cism which it makes of the subsidies
granted under the a ,'t of March 3,
1M 1. The subsidies have made very
little, if any, change in tho increased
number of trips or the time made by
the vessels, the report states. Tho
subsidies arc knoxvn as tho contract
service in the department, and tho
superintend! nt savs this service has
cost the government S40i'i,0.'7 more
than the same service xvould have cost
xvithout the subsidy act
Ind I in* suck a Town.
Deming, N. M., Nox-. 11.—Frank
Siebold, a merchant of Palomas, Mcx..
four miles beloxv the border, arrived
here yesterday and brings news that
fifty Tomochi Ind ans yesterday sacked
that toxvn. They arc one of the scat-
tering bands of Indians xvho survived
the horrid mas acre in tho engage-
ment xvith Diaz's soldiers lust May and
have since been roaming in the moun-
tains.
I. ir.iiuor, o. ..:ir.;.-
rotary of the Mutual Fire
company of Frederick, Md.,
committed suicide. A committee
ported that he xvas a defaulter
£41,000,
Three masked men entered tho gro-
cery store of John tierau, in St. I.<
at midnight, and while t vo held the
clerk and two customers at bay xvith
their revolvers, the other xvent be
liind the counter and took out the cash
draxver and all it contained
Columbia Sealers tViint n Million.
Victoria, Nov. 11.— Claims aggre-
gating a 31.000,000 have been for-
xvarded to Ottawa by Collector of
Customs Milner on behalf of tho
British Columbia sealers and xvill be
presented against the United States
government under tho arbitration ar-
rangement.
■iMrksonvlllo Will ll ox the l-'Iglitt
New Yor.k, Nov. 11. A telegram
from Jacksonville. Fla , agreeing to
the suggestions made by Brady and
Thompson, representatives of Pugilists
Corbett and Mitchell, was received to-
day. A certified check is on its xvay
here for ?"..o io to defray the training
expeusvs of the txvo men.
l.ady and (■entlemau linn Ilown.
Sr. Johki'H, Mo., Nov. 1 1 —Joseph
Funk and Mrs Ida Broxvu, while
walking on the track of ttio Kansas
City and Council Bluffs road near this
city last night xvero run down by a
freight train and killed.
!XIordered liy a Woman.
Maushai.i.toxvn,
Mrs. Kinlly Bonnet
ship xvas indicted.
Joxva. Nov. II —
ested and jailed
yesteiday for the murder
W io.se, the night of August -ti, near
Green Mountain.
Ileraaae lie llhln't I.Ike lilt Supper.
Paris, Mo., Nov in -Willie Gosne.v,
aged 14 years, committed suicide here
last evening by firing a bullet into li's
brain. Ho xvas tho support of 1
widoxved mother. Tho only can
known for the rash act xvas his be-
coming displeased xvith his supper.
Over a Hundred Thousand Majority.
Philadelphia, Nov. 10.—With full
returns from almost every county In
the -tate It lo. ks as though the Re-
publican majority on th-- state ticket
would not be less than 135.0SK). Tho
vote in aim* st every instance has far
exceeded the estimates of the most
sanguine Republicans.
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Tansel, A. & Weesner, R. The Hennessey Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 8, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 18, 1893, newspaper, November 18, 1893; Hennessey, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109767/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.