Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, November 16, 1896 Page: 4 of 4
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PHOTOGRAPHING THOUGHT.
J!
Or. Ilarmlur Aiiiiouih •<« 111« ami
NIioh* 11st* I'latet.
It may be rash to pronounco that
anything is beyond the photographer*
art. But the communication just mail®
to the Paris Academic de Medicine by i
Dr. Baraduc Is so astonishing that if j
he had made It before Dr. Roentgen
had rendered his discovery public, very
few people would have been incllne;l
even to inquire into the matter. In-
deed, Dr. Baraduc affirms he has suc-
ceeded in photographing thought, and
he has shown numerous photographs
In proof of his assertion.
His usual method of proceeding is
simple enough. The person whose
thought Is to be photographed enters
a dark room., places his hand on a
photographic plate, and think#* intent-
ly of the object the imago of which
he wishes to eco produced. It is sta? -1
by those who have examined Dr. Bnra-
duc's photographs that the most of
them are very cloudy, hut that a few
are comparatively distinct, represent-
ing the features of persons and outlines
of things. Dr. Baraduc gone,
further, and declares that it
is possible to produce a pho-
tographic image at a great distance.
In his communication to the Acad-
emic de Medicine he relates that Dr.
Istrate, when he was going to Cam-
pana, declared he would appear on :i
photographic plate of his friend, M.
Hasden, at Bucharest. On the h of
August. 18!).?. M. Hasden at Bucharest
went to bed with a photographic plate
at his feet and another at his head.
Dr. Istrate went to sleep at Campana.
at a distance of about 300 kilometres
from Bucharest, but before closing his
eye# he willed with all his might that
his image should appear on the photo-
graphic plate of his friend.
According to Dr. Baraduc that marvel
was accomplished. Journalists who
have examined the photograph in ques-
tion state that it consists In x kind of
luminous spot on the photographic
plate, in the midst of which can bo
traced the profile of a man.—London
Standard.
TO CCRK A COLO IN ONE OAV.
Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tut lots All
Druggists refund the money ii It fails to cure. Joe
Montana lead*, all other states this
year in the production of wool, with
21,530,013 pounds. The National Wool
Growers' Association estimates the
crop this year to be. unwashed, about
*272,474,708 pounds. When scoured the
total weight will l>e reduced about <10
per cent, or to 11.'H4..%79 pounds. Ore-
gon comes next to Montana, with
10,88'.i.! 7tf: California third, with 10,-
179,761): Texas fourth, Ohio tifth. New
Mexico sixth. T'tah seventh, Wyoming
eighth, Michigan ninth, Colorado tenth
Washington fourteenth.
Thf Fault* n<l Kolilm of I he
Are nnin<>r<>tia. but of tlio lutt >r none it mora
ndiculou* than the promim-mms and ruti«1nm imo |
of laxative pill* nn<l other tirnsllr raMiarti<>*.
The#e wrench. convulie and xvonktii both the
■tomarh aiul the bowel*. If llnfttetier's Stomach
Bitter* be u*ed Inateail of I ! ••!•♦• no remeilior th<
reault i nrcompliBhed without rain and with
great benellt. to the bowels, tb< Mornarh an I the
liver. I thi* remedy when > on<«ti|intion is mani
fested, thereby prevent it from becoming rlironlc
The importance of the fruit crop t<
the people of California cannot he over-
estimated. says tin' Anaheim Independ-
ent. In value it exceeds, the wheat
crop. This fact is quite a surprise tc
many who have not examined the sub-
ject and although fruit has declined in
price, the increased production tnort
than counterbalances the difference I
caused bv diminished prices.
When bilious or costive, eat a Oaaenret
randy cathartic, cure guaranteed, loo, '25c
Argentine has 10,000,000 cattle.
Use
The eiperienee < f those who have l>oen cured
of scrofula, entnrrh. rheumatism, by H-hmI's
Banaparilla, and obtain liko benefit yourself.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
!• the l e*t In fart the On* True Wood Purlfli'f,
1 KrljH
PONT lOWEfte
GET MM
WET.
FISH BRAND
SLICKERS
WIU KKP YOU DRV.
Ik l. M. «Um f • kf IM
■ ; i.. • •«•• •< p
llinucliu • '.•«. a.I
■ilia. 'W « • • •
• li.aatM. I ••
r.->. •• c • ♦
m. i *• . Ma'*,
n*. i... h . . i *.*.*. huMma*.
Iti -••Ilk
ttMl *• •«•••-« « **
*!•"-«. 'I
«™ I0NS. PATENTS. CLAIM,
'Johnyi Moaaii,«M.i r,t8i. g t
Iw ln • e i MimV'ui
If* •• i«I • i -ati*® a. «
aarMt^iit • II. «•!
SUBJECTS OF THOUGHT. |
Tiik truly valiant dare everythln ; ;
but UdliiK ao.v nthrr ImhJ.v an injury.
Soi.irrDK Is as nretlful to tlm Im-
aKination as society is wholesome to ,
the character.
Tiik hardest trial of the heart Is
whether It eau bear a rival's failure
without triumph.
Tiikrk is a paradox in pride: It
makes some men ridiculous hut pre-
vents others from so.
WliK.N' moral eourane feels that it
is in the right theio is no personal
darinK of which it is incapabio.
Mosul! hath three things in It:
The vantage to do jjuod; the ap-
proach to kitiiis and principal persons,
and the raising of a man's own fort-
unes.
A oknti.kmav is one who under- 1
stands and shows every mark of def-
erence to the claims of self-love In
others, and exacts it in return from
them.
Tiirkf. are many women who have ;
never intrigued, and many men who j
have never (rained: tint those who !
have done either Imt once are very ]
extraordinary animals.
Muxt mrxts may lie bullde I to ex-
press the affection or pride of friends,
or to display their wealth, but they i
are only valuable for the characters
which they perpetuate.
In a man's hands, silence is the
most terrible of ,il| protests to the
woman who loves him. Violence she .
can endure. Words she is always
ready to meet with words on her side. [
liut silence con quers her.
If you want knowledge, you must
toil for it: and if pleasure, you must
toil for it. Toil is the law. 1'leas-
ure comes through toil, and not by
self-indulgence and indolence. When
one gets to love work his life is a
happy one.
Tiikiik is no labor so productive as
that which we give to au object fir
its own sake. The more we forget
ourselves in our doings the greater
the returns they will yield. The
more we are willing to lose our life
in our pursuits ttic more surely we
shall llnd it ill the fruit of our work.
Ik a man tlnds that he is every-
where esteemed, considered honora-
ble and trustworthy, he will be stim-
ulated to become still more so. If he
finds every one suspecting him, he
will much more easily succumb to;
temptation. And so with all other
merits and demerits, showing how
powerful a factor in human life is tile
emphasis we use.
Wk touch one another in all life's
associations: we impress more or less
all with whom we come in contact.
In the home, in society, in business,
we leave our mark. It becomes us
all then to inquire what kind of an
Impression W'- are making upon child-
hood and manhood in our several
spheres nf influence. Is It for good
or for ill? If for good, then our life
is worth living: if for evil, then it is
a failure.
Nkvku lie influenced by external
appearances In forming your judg-
ment of a person. This is an impor-
tant rule, for many a noble spirit is
covered by habiliments i f poverty,
while not infrequently a showy ex-
terior conceals a villain of the I asest
kind. Dean Swift said that nature
had given every man a capacity of
being agreeable, though not shining
in company; and "there are a hun-
dred men suttieiently qualified for
both who bv a very few faults that
they can correct in half an hour are
not so much as tolerable.
Wk must never forget that, what
ever be the circumference which
claims our allegiance, we are still the
center, and must remain self-poised
and resolute. lie who despises him-
self, who neglects himself, who tim-
idly conforms himself in nil things to
other people and has no respect for
his own individuality, can never Ii" a
force in the world. This in 1 1 is
only another form of selfishness
loving ease and hating toil. Ilvlnn
without energ.v or purp> sc. ami link-
ing like a dead weight on whoever
will bear It. It Is perhaps difficult
at once to preserve our centralia and
to Identify ourselves with each cir-
cumference; but what Is thereof the
highest and the lu st that does not
present difficulty? Hmerson says, "it
is easy III the world to live after the
world's opinion; It Is easy in solitude
to live after our own: but the great
man is lie who In the midst of the
crowd keeps With |s'rfeet sweetness
the Independence of s litudc."
i in- \ii< ti nt mi lektMli••
The blacksmith occupied in Im-
port ant po«lt Ion among I lie craftsmen
Of I hi' Middle Aye. 'I'll,, in in ii i
of life and property, which was
oti'' of tin' chief grievances of the
limes, made stremith of mat• rittl In.
dispensable, wh ther to g i.nd the
•Inine of a saint or t i pt'iit111 after
a more homely fashion tin family
okmi or eofft r. Hm -in Bfiii aaa
durability of Iron led to Its use for
the defensive purpi.es fri hi ■ arl.v
Hues I titil coal cam, into general
use, says i hauli ers' .loutnal, malba-
hlc lion was produced direct from the
ore ts Ith charcoal fuel i t couiiiiu<>ii«
Working Mtisseti was from early
tlllies the chief seat of t lie Itoti Indus,
tr> Tli" i arlbst | ,.itivr record t
the trade there is ><.titaltod in a
grant hill de tit K itia llenit III to
He' town of |,i wi s. in Unit in which
the I lltlH I 'It II tit • Wire empowered ti
tills, toll for tile I•'|Mir of the toWli
walls iifti'i t he Imt ti' Kveti 'art
load of lion destined for sale which
cum from the neigblsiring weald"
whs to pay oie penny toll, ami c i ry
horse load of I will, half that sum In
I Sim, i sum of tnunei wis ia | t,
■•tttln Ma«t"f I lee ||r. of I,..* (,,,
t||e IMMI *' tK to thf Mi'ttttltitPhV *tf
ilanrvlll , in w «tinji Afci y
whleh remind its licit li fa "tiled
•mlths #eh> I 'i„!ii fi hi Ion,;
llsUuett lor Imt 'i'ii r n rks
PROMINENT CITIZENS TALK.
WELL KNOWN RESIDENTS OF
CHEROKEE ADD THEIR TESTI-
MONY TO HUNDREDS
OF OTHERS.
On* of Tlit'in a MlnUter of the ('•<>• pel —
Another an l-'x-roatimt'atpr All I nit*
In Pronouncing I'lnk I'llla for |*ul«
r«ao|ile the <• rent eat of Kenie<||ea.
From th«' Sentinel, Chorokoo, Kan.
Rev. J. B. Wiles, mlnlfiter of the
M. K. Church, who has been a resident
of Cherokee, Kansas, fur the past four-
teen years, said recently to a reporter:
"About four years ago I was a ffreat
sufferer from rheumatism, and my con-
dition became such that I could scarce-
ly walk. I lost flesh and suffered un-
told misery for many months. Dur-
ing: that time I tried several remedies
for rheumatism, but I p« t no relief fr« m
any of them.
"One day my nephew advised me to
try l)r. Williams' Pink Pills, as he
stated they had cured his wife of sciat-
ica. I dlil so, and hail taken only a few
of the pills when I 1) jfan to improve,
and when 1 took the last (>111 In the box
I was cured, and there has beon no re-
turn of the disease since.••
Mrs. Nellie Liscnbeo, wife of City
Attorney T. J. Llsenbee, of Cherokee,
Kansas, In an Interview with a report-
(I her down. He tnen sprang at- her I pr on July l.'th. 1896, said: "One year
The l>'i te anil th« Ua<l ftnf.
"You cannot alwaj ^ Judgn ;i boolc
by tlie cover," said Major Tom Speed-
well at the Laclede. aIf any man
despise* a dude 1 do. I am prejudiced
against any man who uses perfumery,
wears a silk hat, a stand-up collar, or
carries a cane. When I llnd a man
doing all those ridiculous things at
one and the same time it is all I can
do to refrain from personal violence.
1 yearn to hit him, just on general
principles. Add to these offenses
against the canons of horse sense i
button-hole bouquet, a curie I mus-
tache and a lisp, and my fingers fair-
ly tingle for a grip of his neck, my
toes f« r a coup de grace.
44Vet I saw just that kind of a
biped perform an act of heroism that
made me think better of mankind.
M1 was walking down Madison
street, Chicago, last summer, when
there was ouddenly raised that m st
appalling of all cries of terror, 'Mad
do#!* An old lady and a little girl
were crossing the street, down the
center of which a big mastiff was
plunging, with bloodshot eyes and
foaming mouth, pursued by a couple
of officers, lie made straight for the
old lady, caught her dress and drag-
ago last March. I had a severe attack
of la grippe which left me with sciatica.
I suffered Intensely and my limbs b°-
came so drawn that I could not walk.
The family physician could give me
only temporary relief by injections of
morphine. My aunt adv.s -d me to try
Pink Pills, as they had cured her of
.rheumatism, and I commenced their
use. I began to improve immediately,
and by the time I had taken two boxes
of Pink Pills I was cured. I have felt
no pain since."
Ex-Postmaster Joseph Lucas, now
one of the leading merchants of Cher-
okee, Kansas, has suffered for years
with rheum? tlsm. His left arm was
so badly affected that at times he
could not use it. He tried a number
of remedies without receiving any bene-
fit until he commenced using Pink
Pills for Pale People. These pills have
effected a complete cure. Mr. Lucas
carries a box of Pink Pills In his pocket
all the time, and says they are a splen-
did medicine for all forms of nervous-
ness.
Dr. Williams' Pink Piils contain. In
a condensed form, all the elements
necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific
for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis. St. Vitus' dance,
sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nerv-
ous headaches, the after effect of la
grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale
and sallow complexions, all forms of
weakness either in male or female.
Pink Pills ai sold by all dealers, or
will be sent i st paid on receipt of
price, 50 cents a box. or six boxes for
$2.50 (they are never sold In bulk, or
by the 100). by addressing Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Company, Schenec-
tady, N. V.
fool Iturclnr. f'notor Victim,
* In the current T ittell's tJving Age
Is copied an article by W. S. Lilly on
"The Theory of the Ludicrous," in
which article the following story is re-
lated:
"I think about the most curious man
I ever met," said the retired burglar, "I
met in a house in eastern Connecticut,
and I shouldn't know him. either, if I
should mepf him again, unless I should
hear him speak. It was so dark where
rs should adopt the name of Frugal
ists. Felix I. Oswald.
About Hosiery.
English hosiery is till cnn^iiltrel
tin1 best In quality, anil some of the
tlni'st inlton hosiery i-, itili mailt; In j
Kntfhinil, but the prices are higher
than those of the same quality i I
Herman make. The Frcnch inukii
the liest slia|ei| silk hose, Uit in rot
ton they are too heavy. It l< alsmt
iwrtity year* ago since Hie new!
Knitlish patents in uiaeliinery werul
Intimlu eil in Germany, and sine.!
that time they have mails many
further improvements, ami tiwlay
I; el Hill n> excels In mrlfltyof colon j
anil weaving.
Some of the black hosiei v lias the I
\arii ilvcili but I Ii it kilel is not v
|mipiilar In tiiis country, us the llni-h
is not as perfect lis wlietl tlie live I,
given after the stocking is worrn it
lucks glims liliick niIk hosiery wa,
never more worn than at p ■ s, nt,
anil some that Is eiubroii|ere<l In col-
ors Is as lica'ltifill us it Is possible to
Imagine.
throat, but before he reached it a
youngster tricked out in the toggery
I abhor hail him by the neck.
"The beast raged like a demon, but
the dude held him fast until an otfl-
eef came up and put a bullet through
iiis head. He then picked up his silk
tile, brushed it with his elbow, and
said, witli an Idiotic lisp: 'Every dog
in the thty thould be killed; every
body that kcepth a dog in the tliity
thould be hanged.' His philosophy
was sound a6 tils nerve. I went home
and wrote with a piece of chalk across
the headboard of my bed: 'A man
may dress like a cad and look like a
fool, and still have sand and sense to
giveaway.'"—St. Louis Globe-Dem-
ocrat.
I'rufiilliin.
Vegetarians are elated by the fact
that within the last twenty-live years
the fruit-producing resources of tlie
I 'tilled States have increased just ten
times as fast as the meat-producing
resources. Apples, oranges and
grapes are getting cheaper from year
10 year, while meat is getting dearer,
thus, as it were, bribing a short-
sighted generation to relinquish their
tlesh-pots and try the panacea of Dr.
llronson Alcott. That much desired
consummation could, no doubt, be
greatly promoted by dropping the
name of vegetarianism with its water
cresses and root house suggestiveness.
nut of ten tlesh eaters nine could be
persuaded to test the merits of baked
app i s for one who would under any
circumstances consent to try tlie >pc-
cillc of King Nebuchadnezzar. And
seriously speaking, there is not a ves-
tige of proof that adults of our species
were ever intended to feed on "vege-
tables," in the green grocer's sense ol
the word. If we admit the axiom
that our natural diet should consist
eli icily of substances that can be eat-
en without repugnance in the coiidl-
t ion we receive them from the handi j i met him that I never saw him at all.
of nature, cabbage and spinach aro \ had looked arjund the house down-
6very whit a- objccllopablo U I> ■ rk j srairs. lOd tctutlly fctd&'t seen a
sausages. Man, according to all the ^ thing worth carrying off, and it wasn't
evidence of his dentition and tlio a bad-looking house on the outside,
structure of his digestive apparatus, j either. I got upstairs and groped about
11 not an herbivorous, but a frutfivor- a little, and finally turned into a room
ous, animal, and our diet-tic reform, | that wa„ ^arkP1. than RK).pt , ha<ln-t
gone more than three stepa in this
room when I heard a man say: "Hello,
there!"
" 'Hello,' savg I,
"'Who are you?' said the man, 'bur-
glar?'
"And I paid y*s. I did do something
In that line o anionally.
" 'Miserable business to be In. ain't
It?' said the man His voice came from
a bed over In the corner of the room
and I knew he hadn't even sat up.
"And I said: 'Well, I dunno; I've got
to support my family some way.'
" 'Well, you Just wafted a night here,'
said the man. 'Didn't you see anything
down stairs worth stealing0'
"And I said no. I hadn't
" 'Well, there's le?s upstairs.' snyi the
man and then I heard him turn over
Ty j and settle down to go to ulecp again.
I'd like to have gone over there and
kicked him Hut f didn't It was get-
ting late and I thought, all things con-
sidered, that I might Just an well let
him hav his sleep out,"
\ I limine fr'itrtitr)-,
Major T. II Law, an attach* o|
tin- llrltish Kmbass) at M I'• t rs-
burg, stati - ii the result of personal
Investigations, thai, the famine I1 mnr* of ">• nunili*r
I arc HiMmthl|ii.
Bimni«hlp urn helmr ronmrui 'ed of
;*r* r nnd rvrr l«ri"r rtlm n«li>n«. Out
of *omo Inn in coum*' uf col-
«lruction In (Iri-iii llrltHln and Ireland
si ih Mid of Hi" (lr t quarter th'« v>-ur
eastern und northern province* i« apt
lo I'l-iMtne a clirottle evil The agrl-
euit ii ml i tiini inltl- s of the Kniplm
litre managed mi a plan which mm-
p Is III" eulti\atom if lie «o|| to g!\0
up Ills farm "inry tlilid vear, and as
1 a cotiw queliee the ptodiietIvccapacity
"I Hi Hill I Is being i itpidly eshau-t'-d
Mori titer llin fori t • of Hi" I ritl
border lint,i Ii"' u cut n uy bv liiii«
' iloiof lien s, mid tie i old north" a«t,
• till lloWstti'ip lltlolMtrilcteil liter
Hie o;ion plains of tie Vniga emifii rv,
and cot"i Hi" Ileitis with rinuou'
| smut drills.
I Mi is \\ tin ii of 111111 ti a 11 ofTt red
ti I ril'l" Ills I itl filf n W Ife, 11 Wis
III"' I'l 'l' Ii 'f a title, but all o^e lit
singer sMaiiped it up. Mi" wild .bit
tt f tit Hill bail ;|IHI,IHHI llotiIIs III
renin v «h was had hot i Hill ti,
til Ii f toll e Wna crfti liitl ti little rims'
I . .II I t" II ■ tlstdt li'lle dt ptli V W
lie IIitoo *iitti« ii d>* ice and bir
III ake of *i tllr< It |it 1.1iIn* le W
t||l|i|!le A fill pre i' u I l|t> tit U hi* (►'*!-
I II ntl|t|i it lti'it<yllitlieil doiitri|* lln
«,'l tit :':i\'il N nn tin in irkPt *ott#
| ;->llt
Mn , bfllj *f I < it- NMk
I oi, h • l|o: fnf •* nii«| *34
M ; I ui'l •g , N r t-1<i• • 11) ii H9
t IhmU In dth lit it
con(*lete«| of \es-e|* hetWefQ .1,000 and
R.'mhi totif. On the Clyde alon<* durlnn
the month of April the total output of
shipping v n* Mime 39.i*i*o tone nnd
•even of th ' vesseU whleh made up
this total otirr'MMtt'd In themeeKeii no
|e«« than !W.|:W tons. The swi age
•Ife of the Venae III built At lle|fss wm
n remarkIthln feature the nutpio 'or
lust )enr. and the same thing hold*
true of the wotk no* oh h«Qd At lie!-
fgst Marland k Wolff * ateamera I #if
year, seven in number *er* enHAlder*
ably over * o«i tons ranitihg from tha
<| orgl., of toi 77 ton# to the Veda*
rn«oe of 'on" ih" i«v raga being
Mi high a« • loo tntis
!tn< 11 Ctfit* in lllvtr
, . ;t , |,I,4 • - I . I . « ,l -art| % Pt"ts
inth"\< NMiili A MM
Hr- ule . .f |, • t at I ••• 1%
•ti'l the* ai'i •• ha "M aiati i t -| aiil
■t a«tln( at|«er • tt I •* *« I* iicl HiMt
• X' * l« ' > n • a* ♦ ••«<!* ta
§(■■>. • ( if III. lit. ♦ l«*-4'|ti' ll Hi nit
IhlCtte " ' * !!,
Wall kM M'l n'lii I' I !t >«|fti*«iai rti'nf.
ft la ret* Med *hat the t;§r\plian e«t-
teoi er* H thia yeat ^111 the largest
#ter In that iiHtdti t
Ah Idaho mtn ia« ;a.iftst
LATB NEWS MOTE*.
Favton K. Chandler, Chicago capital*
tst. ia dead.
Frank Hamilton, a well-known Texaa
financier, committed suicide at Austin.
The American fishing fleets have
made a large catch of mackerel off
Cape lire ton.
Two men were killed and nine hurt
by an exploding boiler in Perry county,
Kentucky.
Itellefontaine. Ohio, the famous local
option town, is bankrupt and is altout
to lose its electric lights.
Halt imore chamber of commerce has
started a movement to "take the gov-
ernment out of the banking business."
Rev. E. 1. llenedict of Larrahee,
Iowa, shot Druggist llarrv McYVhirter,
who, with another man tried to assault
him
Prince A. Lyon, claiming to belong
t« New York's "400," secured a divorce
in < Ik lahoma from his wife for aban-
donment.
••Commonweal" Coxey has evolved
another scheme of government and has
called a conference on it for January
l'-J in St. Louis.
The skeleton of a woman was un-
earthed near the fair grounds at St.
Joseph, Mo.
Kev. .1. I). Mentor of Troy, Mont.,
was killed by a liear.?' •
There has been quite a fall of snow
all over the Northwest.
Iowa Savings bank, Sioux City,
failed. \V. T. Manley, receiver.
(ieorge Riggs stabbed John Oardner
fatally in a-hog quarrel at Guthrie.
Ike Lambert is slated for I'nited
States attorney for Kansas under Mc-
Kinley.
Taloga. Ok., court house was burned
by incendiaries and all records de-
stroyed.
Torpedo l>oat No. 4 of I'ncle Sara's
new ones was launched at Baltimore.
William Osborn, an old Kansan, who
died at Waterville, N. Y., aged H7, was
cremated.
S. M. Allen, a Princeton college
student, is in jail at St. Louis for rais-
ing £•.' silver certificates to $10.
The alien law in Kansas, which
passed the legislature, is void, not
having been constitutionally adopted.
Samuel S. Tucker, a Tacoma, Wash.,
painter, killed I)r. James Winter mute
and himself on the street.
W. Ii. Watkins, who murdered Wyatt
Williams at Ardmore. I. T., in Octo-
ber. will be hanged February 13.
Captain Thomas Morrison, ex-mayor
of Florence and Kmporia. Kan., is dead
at Dan vers Port, Mass., aged 73.
Kx-Treasurer Oeorge II. Morrison, of
Ken>salaer county. N. Y.. got ten years
and five months imprisonment for a
S j.V.U-MIO shortage.
Sandy Campbell's house burned near
Peningtou. Oratiot county. Mich., and
his cousin aged 1! and two children
and 4 were burned.
Kngineer (ieorge Fairehild of Mis-
soula. Mont., was killedcin a wreck on
the Northern Pacific, and Fireman
Frank Waldron injured.
I'.reidenthal says the Kansas Popu-
lists are going to put in the winter in-
vestigating things, such as drunken-
ness among state employes, insane
asylum management, etc.
William Scarf. Mabel Wallace. Harry
and Sadie Itauer are under arrest in
Chicago for shoplifting. They hav.
stolen §!." .ouo worth of stuff ami sold
it in New York.
Jefferson City won over Sedalia by
over 1 ."in. ooo.
Mrs. Ilungerford. "the Duchess." has
typhoid fever.
Washington has a handsome new
theater, the Columbia.
Wcyler has taken the Held in pi'rson
against the Cubans.
Woman suffrage vote in California:
Yes, ho.ooo: no. u.'i.ooo.
Massachusetts woolen mills are re-
suming on full time.
t ieorge M. Fisher, pioneer resident of
Leavenworth, is dead.
Kv-Presidcnt Harrison would not ac-
cept a cabinet position.
New York gold Democrats will run
tinue their organization.
Ilank of Hays City. Kan.. Klwvn Lit-
tle. president, has failed.
Hellefonte. Pa., glass works Will re-
sume. after six years' idleness
Steamer \/.nafarche sunk at Seville,
frowning twenty duck hunters.
Chicago has a new theater the
(ireat Northern—on Jackson, near
Dea rliorn.
Illinois supreme court has decided
'he Torn lis land title act unconstitu-
tional.
Fire at >i>eiiccr. W. Vn.. burned
thirty-nine stores and hoo*es. Loss.
9 .'no. ooo
I nitcl Mates battle ship Texas lies
at the Hrooklyn dock again in sad
repair.
John J Ingalls would In* satisfied
with a foreign ministry to a respect-
able | tower.
Oregon *h« rt Line Is to lie taken out
of the hands of the f'nion Pacific
receiver*.
sch miner Hi mora was wrecked and
five li\i s lost on the lalt** near ItufTalo,
New York
Muiixelielmcr A Hanla1, ,\rdtn«>r«*. I.
T merchants assigned. Liabilities,
IPloo.iaNi
N « a ivault of the Hgltt on lillek. the
laoislon agency max !*• taken out of
\\ ahaas
I h'll \ ail /. la'ter, **t Stev*'||s. « .
went era/x mid killed his wife and him-
self.
Oold continue* to |a or Into the Silh
treasury so rapidly a* to tax the re
• eivltig teller*
\ folding Is d closed on Warren H
Ma«on a < hleaifo drnnuner. broke his
ba« I and killed Itltn
Iron and *tc«*l plant* about Harris
toirg Pa are resuming work since the
sound money vielorv
Idle hhoftal hid |f lass factories are
starting nit him! active owes aie In-
• rea^lnt# t(i .ir fortes
Haxibf Mills i hlltonville Ma.t
after t* o year* Idleness, will start up
s aai with f m hands
• I hatiet s i Miss Frenchi
ewiilri ie«i at i lover Mend Laxy
h Ho countv. Uh burned
ai*| . u eandidates for verv {*~w
plaee I ••••#!V ha* to ta*stow la a' o it tU#
Hif it s'au l* in kansas
TI
Th« Woman,
The Man,
And The PHI.
She was o Rood woman. He
loved ber. She was his wife.
The pie was good; his wife
made it; he ate it. But the
pie disagreed with him, and
he disagreed with his wife.
Now he takes a pill after pie
and is happy. Po is his wife.
The pill he takes is Ayer's.
Moral: Avoid dyspepsia
by using
Ayer s
Cathartic
The French excavators at Delphi
have unearthed a life-size bronze statue
of a bearded man, the largest, yet dis-
covered. The date of the work is .* 00
B. C. The statue is holding the bridle
of a horse, and portions of the horse'n
figure have also been found.
• tOO Kwwnril lOO.
The readers of this pap«-r will he pVaaM\
to Uaro tlmt tl. re is at l-nat on" dre.i led
disease flm? s -Un.f has I , u' | « to cura
In all Its stages, and t at 1^ « ..tiirrh.
Hall's Catarrh I'ur^ Is thf only posltlva
cure knoxvn to th^ ni *<ll"al fraternity.
Catarrh beln« a conatltutlonal «i seaae, re-
julrr? a constitutional tr^Htment. Hall s
Catarrh Cure Is taken Interna 1 art'n«
directly upon the hloo«l and mucous sur-
face* of the system, thereby -1 winning
the foundation • f ha •' -• a! '1 *
the patient sttenpih 1 y hulldlni? up the
constitution and assisting natur - in dolna
Its work. The proprW t rs have so much
faith in it- curative powera that they
ofTer One Hundred Dollars for any ra^
that It falls to cure. Send for list of tes-
timonials.
Address
F. J. CHENEY & co.. Toledo, O.
Bold by Druggists. TCo.
X rays are to be applied to practical
agriculture. Dr. liractz. of Munich,
has given a pictuie of a one-day-old pig
showing its bony construction. By
continuing to make pictures of the pig
the action of fixsl on its growth will be
shown.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.
11 you want to quit tobacco using easily
and torever. regain lost manhood, be made
' well, strong, magnetic, hill of new life and
vigor, take No-To-Hac, the wonder-worker
that makes weak nu n Mronir. Many gain
ten pounds in ten «lay.-. <)•,er•-!0 '"N cure«l.
Buy N-..t,,.! a< fiom yo Bl who
will guarantee a cure. Hook let and sam-
ple mailed tree. Ad. -terling Uemedy Co.,
Chicago or New York.
American wealth is estimated at
£<*>0,000,000,000. and one-twentieth of it
is owned by rich men. this was
equally dis ributed every inhabitant
would receive but £4.'. the earning
power of which is about 9 ' a year.
If t'.i# Hnhy In Cnttlii'; Terth,
P- lift u e hit I I iin I %*. I 'nr.I ■ iu.itv MRU
Wh i.nH 4 SooTaiK . m m r fur • lul-tien In-ttiliig.
It is claimed that during the last ?.r
years but « ne person for every 1..* 00,000
carried by the railroads >f Denmark
has been Willed.
Ileal
i I nin| linr I«
I Ostriche-. arc usually plucked once
| pvery eight months. The average yield
j is one pound of feathers each.
1 Pito't Cure for < ons iinptiou i« the hen
">f all cough ciiret. nre W. I.otz, Fa-
j bucher. La., August 20, l"i .
The Kmparor of (iarmaiiy lUsda
j twenty-first in the direct line of sue-
i cession to the British throne.
I Cascarets stimulates liver, kidneys and
bcwela. Never sickrn, aken or tcripe.
I The (lulf of Mexico has risen one
I foot since Is.'iO.
Just try a loc box of <are -., the fine«t
liver and bowel Hv'u'ator rxer i a<le.
The south s cotton crop: 7?.' .ooti hales.
Gladness Comes
With* iM-tt.-r iiniliTKliimhi'ir <>f tlio
trwii*.!.'til imIiiiv •>( tin1 iiihiiv |iliv**
k ill IIIn. wlili'h vuiil*li ln-fiiri- |'rij r«l-
fori* iri-ntli'rlTiirtR |ili>«M,iil ■■Ifiirt*—
rltrlitIv illr.vtiil 'I'lirrr l i-i'infiirt In
(lie lnini«l>'iliff. Oiii •milium fiinnMot
«li'llin'*i> n' not 'In.' to Hill ui'IiihI «l' •
••■M-. Imt nlmplv t b r uintliMii ilrotiill-
tlon o( thr i-r«ti>iii, wli'i-li tin' plrN (lit
family l * tivr. M\rii|i >( I'lir- pn-mpt-
Ijf r -iiioTi-.. Tlml i" "li.v it I* tin- only
rrini-ilv with mlllloiiKof (urnI ill-- mulio
' i>rywrli« mtwitH'il lilflil.v l>y nil
1 Willi Vullll< fiNNl I It'll It II It- !•• II, ill III I
rffi*i t- r>' iIiii' tn tin' (in I. Hint It I. th
! no* n-im-ily wliu'li |iininoii« Intrrniil
clrmillni— wltlimit ili'lillllutlnir thf
.irirun- mi will Ii It tii'U. It l« lln rrfnr*
•II linlmrtmit. In in-tlrr to ifrl IN l 'in'-
tl< lul i*(Ti'i't«. tn hoti* w ln'ii ynn jnir*
i'lm«' tliul von lmvi< tin' iri'iiiilnii nrtl'
i-li". wlili li I* Iti iiiilfni tnr.Ml In I hr ('nit*
' irnlu Klir Bvmpt " only unit nihl hy
•II rcputiilili' ilniirirl-K
If In tin* I'll |in lllrllt of foml health,
•ml thp iv.ti'in l r 'inil«r. I«**Iivf* nr
otln'f r nii"lli' nr.* thru not mi'ilrtl U
• Mil 't«-i| with nilv rtrt'iiil on*
mm t*< i'iHiinmmliiI In thr nn«t uhlllfiil
tih\«li'iun« imt If in will nt n IntHlli-p.
•m# -h'tnlil hn i' thp l «l, mil K llh III#
w ll Infnrtnpil mnrvM hi'fr, f vni|i nf
ritf* t«nil« hl|flii'«t nH'l l« tno-t Infifi'lT
•wmI wlfli-p*ttnml ifi'itim! ««tlnfur'Ion
«.N. W.**WtOMtTA,**VOC, 9. NO 4f
9t*m h.*mi
■ MtM lfe|H «•
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Perry & Welch. Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, November 16, 1896, newspaper, November 16, 1896; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111908/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.