The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1894 Page: 1 of 8
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We will have a Depot row.
j-'-
Trains must Stop at Enid now
1.25 per Year.
IT WAVES. SURGES. ROARS AND REBOUNDS ONLY TO COME BACK AGAIN WITH GREATER f CF.C: r-CB ENID. O COUNTY. OKLAHOMA. AND DEMOCRACY.
. By Wave Printing Co.
ON TRIAL
The Assassin of Pre .'df.nt Carnrtft
Before the Judge.
OKLAHOMA TERRITORY: SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 4, I894
Single Copy 5 Cents
Vol. I, No. 35.
Up
• \ es," replica Cie.ario, wit a great
tference. ... i
. \, reply to1 the jr. . :v's que /.ions in
ml to his chil.iiio > I >ud h: taking
in reluriaus pro j . uons. Cajsario
. (•red inockin<rl.: • hildren do
it ti:
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
THE ACCUSED' VI'.
COOL.
know wl
■Mi judge then
i as to his
i v 1u spite <
•e doin<v."
lined Ciesario at
action with an-
>m the pre >. 'r
Powder
inn 000 first glass brick
ll/U^UUV FOR SALE BY
I
I
Office with Win. Game o;i Go
J. W. GRENSHflW, Enid, 0. T.
GG©2XDGOffi©GO0
0
ario Sy,nto II -ron-
t
rV
inl
*■>1. i aul pr o:
the com t v. .) , v
out incident.
M. Breuillnc,
-presides over
* onrt, is the*.ji
sum ol
crime,
tlv
.¥ S
her. Addressing the jury at lie
Oj-'ain'- of the u-.siza July 23, ■ Ih-eu-
il. used the following words: "While
the eli;'.mber of deputies, actlnT upoj
tiip prop:: !s from the govern::'. *:i t. i ^
endeavoring to releg-ate to the common
le ,- courts certain crimes wae-U you
were ncea .ionally privileged to ba
called u > ui to try, we, in this court, oy
tlie aid of twelve honest and free citi-
zens summoned from the bosom of the
nation,will punish the murderer of yes-
terday and endeavor, according" to the
measure of our power, to prevent the
peril of to-morrow."
The palace of justice was to-day
guarded in the most thqrough manner
against possible ebullitions of anarch-
ism. The regular police guards were
enforce I by aji entire battalion of in-
fantry and the vicinity of the court
had in consequence verv much of the
appearance of a military cantonment.
Soldiers were stationed upon all ap-
proaches, while a double cordon of
troops surrounded the building itself.
The trial is expected to occupy the
whole of this and part of next week.
There will be no long speeches, the I
public prosecutor contining himself to
a forty-minute address. Some people
who should have come forward will j
not appear, doubtless fearing reprisals,
but twenty-eight indispensable wit-
nesses have been called by the govern-
ment, and they include all those who
remember having spoken to Ccesario as
he was journeying from Cette to Ly-
ons; the owner of the lime kiln where
Cmsario worked in 1833; the baker who
employed him at Cette; Gen. lloria.
the chief of. the late president's mili-
tary household; M. Rivaud, prefect of
the department of the Rhone; the two
men servants who sat on the rumble of
the late president's carriage, and Dr.
Uailleton. the mayor of Lyons, who
rode in the carriage with M. Carnot
when Ciesario struck the deadly blow.
The evidence of M. Artigaud, the
gunsmith of whom Ciesario bought the
dagger, is expected to be very dramatic.
Several times before he paid for the
weapon, Ciesario, who is theatrical in
his emotions, tried to see whether
he could handle it properly, and several
times, before the gunsmith, the assas-
sin rehearsed his idea of how he would
stab his victim.
Santo proposes practically to defend
himself, but will have the assistance of
.M. Ilebreuil, a Lyons advocate of con-
siderable note in criminal trials. The
touch of the gruesome, always note-
worthy in French trials, will be sup-
plied liy the Instruments used in oper-
ating on the president, a drawing of
the carriage in which the president
was sitting when stabbed, Crosario's
dagger and the liver of the murdered
president preserved in alcohol.
The court opened at 9:1a a. ra., and
the judge president was no sooner
seated than he called upon the gen-
darmes to bring in t'.ie accused. All
the persons present held their breath
as the assassin of President ( arnot was
brought into court. The prisoner was
short, and looked somewhat seared as
he came in securely handcuffed to a
gendarme on either side of him and two
others bringing up the rear.
Ciesario, as he marched to the dock,
wore a somewhat strange costume. His
coat was of a yellowish color, his vest
anil trousers were gray, he wore a
white shirt with a turn down collar
and a gray necktie. So soon as he was
in the dock, his counsel, M. Dubreuil
and M. Degeneral, professor of Italian
at the Lyons business college, the lat-
ter having been appointed interpreter
movements at Cette and other places
p:"i>;-Y < . > the :
*Ti«-k "ft 1 1'
■ ' *!> " ' ' ' YlV'V
b'rol
■ ■ harl '' ' " "u "
' 1 in l);' ira '
492 jjfc$)udgealt rwardsqu
ti ,i e ^M5IiSoner concerning how
l\ey he 1ml remaining n.'tcr
I lie had paid his bill at Cette; askin /:
"What did you do with the remaining
five franc;-.?"
"I bought a poignard," replied Csesa-
rio. defiantly.
iie assii-.sin narrated the incidents
< i lis approach to and attack upon
President Carnot, replying- to a ques-
tion at its close by M. Breuillac, if he
did not know the penalty of his act .
would be death: "1 am an anarchist
' a • ivI 1 hate the boursreoise, society and
ABSOLUTELY PURE
PACKERS STOP.
Omaha Packing Houses Close on Ac-
count of Butchers' Strike.
THE A. It. U. CONVENTION.
several IAv
V orth of I
All?.
. ..>3:.-3.;0t.n.xD©3xxxx ixix3©i2ex^0ycc&Q0
PftBST ice CO.
IK;
I he heads of the state.'
wak nl;vv*
ISo-
O.r.dal Telegram* Kelatlcu; t; the W>\
tweon Chinu and ./ap.ui.
London, Au/\ 3.—A dispatch from
Shanghai says reports have been re-
ceived there from officials at Seoul that
the Chinese, under Gen. Yes, on Sun-
l .iy last defeated the Japanese forces
near Asan. The Japs withdrew to
,joul. Twenty thousand Manchurian
Chinese troop-, crossed the Corean
frontier and are marching1 upon Seoul.
An oilieial telegram received from
*'ien Tsin says that in the battle
i j;ht July 27 and 28 at Yashan the
Japanese were repulsed with a loss of
over 2.000 men.
It is officially announced at Copcn-
lia^an that the Chinese northern fleet,
consisting of thirteen vessels, has left
C: foo for Corea. The announcement
i accompanied by the statement that
a battle between the Chinese and
Japanese may bo expected any hour.
It is ofiicially announced at St. Pe-
; tcrsburpr that Russia, desiring a settle-
! ment of the war between China and
Japan, will act in complete accord with
Great Britain in an elfort to secure an
immediate solution of the difficulty.
Failing this. Russia will not allow any
p.nver to take even partial possession
of Corea.
The Chinese minister at Tokio has
demanded his passports. The Chinese
residents in Japan are being placed
under the protection of the United
' t: U'S legation.
The steamer Wuchang, which ha,
ived at Shanghai, reports that the
iaese fleet was at anchor at Weihai-
wei, on the evening of July 31.
insurance kates put 1!'.
san Francisco, Aug. 2.—War bavin?
been declare! between Chiua and
J .; an, the marine insurance compa-
nies which have agencies in this city
will not write any more policies for
merchandise shipped from San Fran-
cisco to Japanese and Chinese ports
unless a special war risk is included.
SI l'l'Iti:>S!()N 01 I.OTTEP.II>.
The Kansas City, Ivan., Lottery Crowd Lob-
bying Against Uroderlek'a Bill.
Washington. Aug. 3.—Representa-
tive Brodericlc called up for considera-
tion to-day the senate bill for the sup-
pression of lotteries, the provisions of
which are unquestionably broad
enough to utterly exterminate those in
Kansas City, Kan. The objection of a
Louisiana member sent the bill over
after it had been ead in full.
l't 1 s Hold Behind Closed Doors—Five Hun-
dred and Twelve Unions Represented
—St. I'aul Car Shops Open
for Work.
Omaha, Neb., Aug. 3.—All the pack-
ing houses in South Omaha were forced
to close to-day by the strike of the cat-
tle and hog butchers. Over 10,000 head
of hogs were received at the yards to-
day, but packing house men instructed
their buyers not to buy at any figure.
The only trading done was by shippers.
Little effort was made toward a set-
tlement of the strike and the situation
was practically unchanged.
Cudahy killed 1,000 hogs and 200 cat-
tle to-day at South Omaha, and Ham-
mond will try to kill a like number.
The Omaha house is not killing to-day.
Swift will slaughter 350 cattle, but no
hogs. The sheriff and several deputies
are on guard.
The cattle receipts were small, but
the packers have sent out word that
they will be able to handle all cattle
to-morrow. They are putting in cots
to house new or non-union men.
The managers of the Hammond,
Swift, Cudahy and Omaha houses this
afternoon informed the men that if
they did not return to work by Mon-
day the houses would be opened with
a full set of new men and that none of
the strikers would be re-employed.
the a. k. u.' convention.
Chicago, Aug. 2.—President Debs
presided over the American Railway
union convention which njtst at noon
to-day. The neighborhood of the h;cll
was thronged with men, mostly work-
ingmen, who were deeply interested in
the meeting, but who were not dele-
gates to the convention. The meeting
began behind closed doors, and Presi-
i Lost and Ove
ipnrty Consumed.
The lumber dis-
■\ the loss will probably
m 1,500,000 and $2,000,-
it will be twenty-four
the damage can be esti-
©
Deliver !ce In any part of Gity at Lowest Rates.
hours J
mated with accuracy.
Th1 burned district is about six
squares from east to west and about
three from north to south. The grc.a L-
est portion of the district, bounded by
l'.luo Island avenue, Lincoln street, the
river and Ashland uvenue. was burned
over and forty acres of lumberyards
are now nothing bat smoking embers.
Several firemen were injured and
two men received injuries which will
prove fatal.
IOWA DEMOCRATS.
They Meet in State Convention and Nomi-
nate a Tleket.
Dks Moines, la., Aug. 3.—The demo-
crats of Iowa met in state convention
here yesterday, about 400 delegates be-
ing in attendance. J. M. Parsons,
temporary chairman, made a speech
saying Coxcyism was McKinleyism
carried to a logical conclusion. Ex-
(lov. Boies was made permanent
chairman. The following ticket
was nominated by acclamation
Secretary of state, H. II. Dale,
of Polk: auditor, John Whitfield,
of Guthrie; treasurer, L. W. White, ol
Wayne; supreme judge, long term.
John Cleggett, of C'erro Gordo; supreme
judge, short term, Edward W. Mitchell,
of Fremont; attorney-general, J. D. F.
Smith, of Cherokee; railroad commis-
sioner, W. L. Parker, of Oceola; clerk
of supreme court, T. R. North, of Dal-
las; supreme court reporter, J. J. Shea,
of Countsil Bluffs.
ORNER & CO., Agts.
I
s PEN CE R, PR em DKKT
J. W. SMITH, Vice Phksi >t.
INCORPORATED.
B. F. BIT I-FINGTON, Cashier
O County Bank,
OrrosiTi: I^anu Om ici . Enid, O. T.
1: N S ATI O N A r. SUICIDE.
Au Omaha Politician Blows Ills Brains Out
at a Eathlng Resort.
Omaha. Neb., Aug 3.—William Wake-
ly, Omaha's city clerk and a well
known politician, was the principal in
dent Debs said before going in that a spectacular suicide last nipht.
the sessions would probably continue accompanied a party of ladies to a lo-
although some were in favor cal bathing resort, aud after seeing the
ladies to the water's edge, climbed into
ntercd the the ropes marking the danger line and,
in secret
of admitting the public.
Vice President Howard
convention hall just before the meeting facing a largo crowd of sightseers,
came to order. He said it was irapos- slowly drew a revolver and with a smile
| on his face blew his brains out and
dropped into the lake. His conduct
had not been unusual lip to the mo-
a ! ment when he drew the gun. llisaf-
were 250 delegates present, represent- j fairs are supposed to be in good order,
in" 512 unions. and his family, one of the most promi-
sible to tell what matters might come
before the delegates. The strike and
boycott would, he said, of course be
the main subjects considered. There
shopmen going to work.
St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 2.—The Oma-
ha car shops opened for work to-day
with eiglity-five men and will soon
have a full force (it work. All the
American Railway union men were
pnxious to get back, but the company
is taking in only such as they see fit.
This ends all signs of the strike on the
Omaha line here.
MISSOURI SCHOOL FUND.
Th. Forty-ninth Annual Apportionment
Undo by the State Superintendent.
Jki'FERSOK City, Aug. 3.—State Su-
perintendent of Public Schools L. E.
Wolfe yesterday made the forty-ninth
The Kansas City, Kan., crowd has i annuaj apportionment of school mon-
been lighting this measure vigorously, , eyg r['|le amount apportioned is ob-
for it means the destruction of their < tained as follows: One-tliird of the or-
business and gives ample power for its
immediate suppression. The hill will
; ■ pushed with all possible vigor, and
its ultimate success seems assured,
despite the lotteries' resistance.
Omaha. Neb., Aug. 3.—Private Ceder-
quist, of the Second infantry, Fort j
Omaha, who was sentenced to the
guard house for refusing to shoot at
the target on Sunday, has been re- j
leased. President Cleveland having re-
mitted his sentence. Maj. Worth, who ;
Issued tile orders for him to shoot on
dinary receipts into the state revenue
fund from July 1, 1893, to June 30,1894,
8017,077.75; interest on invested school
funds, $180,090; sundries, (05.09. Total,
8803,263.40.
The returns from the clerks of the
various counties to the department of
education shows that there are 928,309
children of school age in the state, and
the per capita distribution will there-
fore be a fraction over 80 cents.
In the apportionment Jackson coun-
ty gets S4.-i.180.70, and St. Louis city,
Capital Stock,
,000.00.
Transact a General Banking Business.
Correspondents. Xatlonnl Bank, New York: Metropolitan National Bind;, Kansas
City; First National Bank, El 1 no; Bank of Klngflfther, Kingfisher; s, dgwlck County
Bank, Wichita.
DAN RYAN'S*
MONARCH
./J®
Sunday, has run against a Sunday 01- j wiU| 15g)S52 school children, gets S137,-
iler issued by President Lincoln in 1802 38. The money is in the state trcas-
and will be tried on charge of violation ur^ an(j wjjj 0i1Cckecl out as soon as
of army regulations. i the school and county officers through-
A Mail Clerk Aeeu.ed of Theft. out the state make the local apportion-
. Chicago, Aug. 8.—Benjamin F. Tufts, ments.
exchanged a few words with the pris- head mail clerk on the Chicago-Iowa Washington, Aug. 3.—When the
liner and the prisoner took his seat, and city run on the Chicago, Rock Island it ],'uns(
liner and the prisoner
Vie reading of the long indictment bo-
Wan
jj-When the reading was finished names
llt( thirty witnesses were culled and the
!ge, M. Hrcuillae, began to
accused. The judge first
t),l ited the known facts about the fam
, V of the pri Miner, the latter answer-
msi, . . ,....1 .. .1 la.
"Just
me
lllal ' w"'1 oru'
ionK1' president
jrc
sir; I never had a dis-
continued: "'How
it your morality?"
ipposu it was the same as that of
young men." replied Ciesario,
ng slightly.
plying to further questions he said
not one of his family was or had
weak-minded. The presiding
then turned to the prisoner and
•Since your arrest did you not
to your mother, saying that you
the president 'from anarchist
v Are these your words?"
Pacific road, has been arrested charged
with stealing money from the mails. <
The accused is ft brother of ex-Con-
gressman Tufts, of Iowa.
1'oHt manter, Appoln I eli.
Washington. Aug. 3. These post
office appointments wore made to-day:
In Kunsuv-At l-'lorul. Cowley county, Jutm-
tliun Koroi-s, vice Joel Cole, removed: at Kleli-
Ueld. Morton county, A. Wilson.
In Missouri—AI Hriimlsvlllc, Howell county,
Osi-nr Uoyd, vice William llced. roinmc-d: at
Carr.ill, Howell county. John McMurtry.
aston-Moore contest case was taken
up in the house to-day it voted—140 to
87 —to unseat Funston, of t hi' -ond
Kansas district, and to seat the con
testant, Moore (democrat).
Ivkiihi.m Odd Fellow. Will IteorranUe.
nent in Omaha, can assign no reason
for the deed.
Itnfteball Game..
NATIONAL I.IAOUE.
At Chicufjo—Chlc:iK> . -.'it: St. Louis, 8.
At Washington—Baltimore. 6: WashlnRton, 5.
At New Vork—New York, fi; Hoston. 4.
At Philadelphia Philadelphia, 0; Brooklyn,
' At Pittsburgh-Pittsburgh. 15; Cincinnati, 5.
WKsrr.KN LEAGUE.
At Kansas City—Kansas City, 6; Detroit, 1.
At Sioux City Sioux City, 27; Toledo, 10.
At Minneapolis—Minneapolis. 15,Grand Kap-
Ids, 8.
western association.
At Jacksonville—Des Moines, 10: Jackson-
ville, 4.
Haiti makers at Work In Nortli Missouri.
Trenton, Mo., Aug. 3. -The weather
here has been very hot and dry for
some time. With the exception of a
slight shower Sunday morning there
has been no rain for weeks. The peo-
ple of Trenton and the farmers adja-
cent to the city became anxious for the
corn crop and raised a purse of 8700 to
try the rain producing experiment.
The rainmakers are now here and be-
gan operations this morning. Indica-
tions are good for rain.
Andrew Jii'kMm'i GravejIJaseeratod.
Nasiivii i.i . Tenn., Aug. It.—Informa-
tion has been received here from Her-
mitage, where Oen. Andrew Jackson's
remains are buried, that his grave was
disturbed last night by unknown per-
sons. A hole 18 inches deep and 3 feet
in length was dug at the head of the
grave, but the culprits were frightened
away before they accomplished their
object. The Hermitage is 12 miles
from this city.
.Joe Wlsby for Congress.
El. Ukno, Ok.. Aug. 3.—The territo-
rial democratic congressional conven-
tion convened here yesterday. Dr. J.
M. Iteale, of Oklahoma City, was sc
Most Popular Resort in City for Fine Wines
Cigars, etc. Courteous Treatment.
Liquors Guaranteed Pure.
Second street near corner E street.
The West Side Senate.
Wliul In Oklahoma.
Gutiiiiik, Ok., Aug. 3.—A cyclone
near Carney destroyed several houses
and did great damage to crops. No fa-
talities are reported.
James J. Corbett, champion of the
pugilistic world, arrived In New York
Wednesday on the stea ner Majestic.
I to was very enthusiastic oyer the
Odd Fellows because the members re-
fused to pay a special tax of 81.50 each
per year to raise the mortgage on the
1)0 Uoissiere home at Silkvillo, Kan.,
which was given to the grand lodge
for a home for the widows and orphans
of Kansas Odd Fellows by 10. V. De
Boissiere. There are 400 lodges in
in- ivik-i v. Kansas and the members of 10-1 of
eeptions tcndere.l him in London and those took exceptions to paying the
Dublin. special tax.
Topeka, Kan., Aug. 3.—The ini ■ chairman. Over 300 delegates
lodges of the Independent Order of were present, together with many of-
Odd Fellows in Kansas which sus- flcials and prominent democrats from
ponded a few months ago are making all parts of the territory. Joseph
preparations to reorganize. The lodges Wisby, of Outhrlc, was nominated hy
were suspended by the grand master j the convention at 11 p. in.
of the Kansas Independent Order of
Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
(}2dw
S. HAMMERSLOUGH, PROPR.
SOUTH OF FUQUA BUILDING.
I'ltF.ll. HEALL,
Washington, I),
F. M. BE ALL,
Oklahoma city, O. T
Fred, and F. M. Beall,
LAWYERS.
OfficesWashington*;'D. C., and Oklahoma
City, O. T. Special attention given to
litigation before the Interior Department
and to apneals in town lot contest cases.
Lewelllns on the Stump.
Hvracusk, Ivan.. Aug. 3. —Oov. Lew-
elllng spoke here yesterday to a fair
audience. lie expressed sympathy
with the strike; and the common weal-
ers, censured the government for pro-
tecting property instead of individuals,
expressed some dissatisfaction with
the decision of the court . and de-
manded flat money and government
ownership of railroads.
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Isenberg, J. L. The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1894, newspaper, August 4, 1894; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111562/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.