Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 219, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1897 Page: 4 of 4
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II
I KANSAS Will
GOVERNOR LEEDY MAKES
SOME CORRECTIONS.
HE AMENDS HIS MESSACE.
The of tlir *ur|ilua I'mltm*
tlnry ('mil i<> vliiioU, Town*. Cliln
•ml Count li' Ki'i-oiuiuttiMlril -
Thr kmiihn t Ity Work
Yard* <«int| * it) wm
Alwcil Mt Originally.
Torr.KA, Kun., .Inn. 11. lioveriior
Leedy wut it brief message to the Sen-
ate this morning iii it. xift«*r stating
that through some inadverteiiee a rec-
ommendation had been omitted in hi*
first ineNsaife, he says: "1'iuler the
present law tlie penitentiary coal in
used first to supply the various state
institutions, the remainder sold to a
contractor for the highest price bid.
I believe it would bo wlhe to provide
by law that school district*, towns,
cities and counties might have tin* op-
tion to purchase coal of the state at
contract price in carload lots for pub-
lic use."
The governor also added the follow-
ing: "In my original message the
Kansas City Stock S'ards company was
referred to as the Kansas City Live
Stock Commission company. This was
n mistake. The paragraph refers to
the Kansas City St ek S'ards company. "
Among Governor Leedy's early nomi-
nations to the Senate will be appoint-
ments of Populists to succeed AI baugh.
Lockard and lllnkesbc us trustees of
the state charitable institutions. \l-
baugh s time will expire April 1 and
Lockard and IMakesbe have not been
con tinned by the Senate and therefore
may be dispossessed without notice.
Kclscy Wilcocksc n, Hepublicun. whose
term will expire in lS'.is. announces
that he will resign April I This will
leave George Clark the only Repub-
lican on the board.
CORPORATIONS.
Mr. Harris I iilrtHlucfR * l.rngtKv Hill in
thr Nnatr titlirr Mcmnri'i.
Topkka, Kan.. .Ian. 11. In the Sen-
ate this tuornihg Mr Harris introdu«v<l
ti bill entitled "an act concerning pri-
vate corporations It contains I'.'o
sections. Some of them it re a* follow*:
"11 No corporation, hereinafter in -
corpora ted and organized under the
laws of the state .* hall be of r v valid-
ity unless the amount « f capitnl stock
is paid up iu money or its equivalent
at the time its charter is tiled for
record in the oftiee of secretary of
state
• I . No person shall be eligible its
director in any corporation heretofore
or hereafter organized who does not
own at least one share of capital stock
in such corporation
**29— No iHiuds or notes of any cor-
poration in tiie state shall ' «• valued
unless registered as aUtve prescribed.
•\'l* -The president and secretary of
each corporation shall, on .lamiarv 1
of each year, prepare and deposit with
the secretary of state a detailed state-
ment of the company's condition on
that date.
*' !t>—No corporation shall employ it.*
stock, means, assets or property for
an\ other means than thr legitimate
accomplishment of the company*
objects.
"Section TI - Vll certificates of stock
heretofore iMtued and not legally can
eeleil by any railroad corporation or-
ganised under the lutvs of Kansas,
shall tie valid and binding us against
such railroad corporation, unless an
action be brought to annul ami cancel
the same within one year after the
passage of this net and successfully
prosecuted."
Mr. King, chairman «'f the commit-
tee on agriculture, intnsluced a live
stock hill to license stock yards and
regulate the sale therein, which is
practically the same us the King-
Shearer bill of the last session passed
hv the senate and killed in the nouse.
Mr. Householder also introduced the
maximum freight rate bill wnich was
introduced by hiui at the last session.
Mr King presented a petition from
Doniphan county largely signed asl<
ing for the repeal of the flan law It
*as referred to the committee on state
• tfairs
Hills were then introduced as fol
lows My Mr forney, to create h
board for the sale of the state silk st
tion at IYal*st.> by XIr Titus, provid-
ing that no telegraph cotnpanv iu
Kansas shall charge in excess of fifteen
cents for ten wortls and one-half
cent for cat It additional word for tin
transmission of anv mesaagt '"o milc
in the stat« . I \ Mr l ntsseti, ameiidin/
the canto of civil prisedure relative to
evidence in divorce cases by prcs*
ing that if there has Item sepurati hi
for seven tear* it shall he de« >.• I
Hldt mt tor till It b\ M Colt
making it cuuptilsory upon conn tie* f
over (,\,taai inhabitants *obttibl cotiniv
High sehtstls
Mr L welling Intrafctuced a eon* ur*
rent resolution prottding for a
legislative e"millittee of three to ; •
wl Klta ta hi !■ • • v, •
apret the buildings futn<*bn r« an I
ground of the deftiitet (tarfb id mil*
versit> with a tiew towi ,l the sta*
purehas^ng them fo a «tate normal
Mb.si M • xplainrd that the etun
Millet would '*• tiilertalnetl grattti*
tottslt Im Wleh'fat M* «• * it
titillated that f aeonttttlltev s%# ftt upon
a JtMbor'ftg lour eWlertallied bf M i h
Itatis their re|* rt would is ,• | artiit.
oe. Mr « t4e*ian lb pub an *i*
tun* -scd I he f^ao'atbm and t wa«
withdrawn m mttttta .
In the aftetn«« n I affelii lnt«.«iln ed
§ im|i ftfttvidintf that tu« tarttin«« • t
debtor to tb. amount of • o «h nM
no* is ti tilled in pavmeatnf m««lrmt
if neeIn Iht tna'Ulenttpt • •
hMMilt
I a'dwe i >atrtslwtstl a bill ft*
the ts mho a' of pol'tlcnl ilsabiHUe* of
all et ton federate soldiers in Kansas,
that thet u at vote and «j n eiti-en
th<|«
SHORT SENATE SESSION.
Ilarutt l'|ihi lils the l*wwer of Cniigreaa
tf K«rii|nliK Vfw liotrwrnments.
n ashisotox, Jan. 15.—The open
session of the Senate was much cur-
tailed liy an executive session lusting
two hours. After thla, the balance of
the tiny was given to Mr. Hacon, of
(icorgiu, in a speech upholding the
power of Congress to recognize new
governments.
Iu the house a bill to uiuke oleo-
margarine. butterinc and other iuiita
tions of tlairy products subject to the
laws of the states Into w hich they are
transported was bitterly opposed bv
Mr. Williams, Dcmocrut of Mississippi,
oil the ground that it would establish
it dangerous precedent, inasmuch as it
would place it in the power of any
state to prohibit entirely the sale of u
wholesome product by the exercise of
its (Nilice powers.
The house adjourned at 4:4.1 p. m.,
leaving the bill undisposed of.
Arbitration Treaty In the Senate.
Washington, .Ian. lft.—1The Senate
committee on foreign relations yester-
day had under consideration the gen-
eral arbitration treaty recently nego-
tiated. It was announced at the
conclusion of the meeting that the
treaty would probably remain in com-
mittee for some time. The meeting
served to develop the fact that the
committe is a unit in favor of the gen-
eral principle of arbitration between
nations, but it was made evident that
each individual was likely to have his
own ideas as to how the desired result
should be attained.
Merret Nnlall* Wedding.
Skoai.ia, Mo., .Ian. lft.—A sensation
in society circles has lteen caused by
the announcement of the secret mar-
riage of Miss Nellie Dignon. daughter
of William M. Dignon, a prominent
furniture dealer, to C. A. Karon, a por-
trait artist of Topeku, Kan. Relatives
of Miss l>ignon luul planned for her to
wed a wealthy stockman of Lafayette,
Ind
foiey Work men Strike.
Mamsii.ox, Ohio, Jan. 15. — While
General Coxey is organizing his new
party in St. Louis, his stone quarry-
mcn are refusing to work unless they
arc pai«l w ges now some weeks past
due. Two leaders of the strike have
been discharged and there is hope that
the trouble may be bridged over until
lh" return of Mr. Coxey.
C'lt'urn for the Cabinet.
I opkk ■. Kin.. Jan. 15.—The Kan-
sas S ock Breeders' association in con-
vention here gave Secretary F. 1). Co
burn of th • agricultural board a com-
pli. ntary indorsement for secretary
• •f agriculture in McKinley's cabinet.
Two other agricultural societies also
indorsed him
*t*rk Appointed Warden.
•Her. i m. Mo., Jan. lft.—Gov-
ernor Stephens sent to the senate the
names of John U. Stark of Cooper
count* to be warden at the peniten-
tial-; - rvi l r George li. Williams, of
• ape ardea'i, to lie prison physician.
Both w^r* referred tj the penitentiary
> mmittec under the new rules.
l;iv.rr«« Downgrrof Japan Dead.
W t n.MiToN, Jan. lft.—The Japan-
, sc in.lister. Mr. Hoshi, has received
:t telegram from his government an-
nouncing the death of the empress
dowager on the 11 th of this month.
NEWS IN BRIEF.
•iallies I*' Cibbs of the Norwalk,
Ohio. NcMcctor. is being boomed for
public printer under McKinley.
'I he lUinoi* and Wisconsin Lumber
• oiiumiiy of Chicago, failed, with I in -
ii 's of jvoo.ouo ami assets of 9110,001).
Thomas Godfrey, a Lexington, Ky.,
. was assassiuated by two un-
uiiov men. who entered his place and
utile.I drinks, which were refused.
Five persons were killed in a mine
.icci'lent at I'ottsville, Pa. A heavy
liiplter fell bito the bucket in which
ihey were descending the shaft.
IM.ring a wrestling match at Port
• ri'V h. Pa.. John Kaynot. one of the
conUatu s, plunged a knife into Jo-
•ph KouIter's neck. The latter fell
dead
THE MARKETS
Kawias t'rrv J.in 15. ttisst sample^ of
wheat sold re.idllv to-dav at about <toa.lv
j.rlres. Low tir-nlr* uiet with v rv little de-
■aad 't'1 • "• gs wei
liartl Wh- tt .a i. 7'Jc: Na .1 ??4c.
.s.« t To re r.-te.t . • i t
Bnft u >!.••• |9u IL "i.. Ha * I0H
N'tv « H'Je rejected t>% t7 ■
Aprlnn Weest No 3. 7s. Nu S. 7.V
ret te.l 5*<N .v.
f ti NaJ l*Hc N(\ .1 14e ♦ 17 .
Ho ,1.1c 1 ti W ntto t'ori. \ J. Is f.
N • is |s>4 Noil7\.
t>-t% s. : hw >'«v t iv N k 4 14«
- w Ulte. 17 . No t N' v 4
14'. i.h
No „ xy S< V\ S'\ 4. . "~
|t an 4« d4.' per o t sa, 4c.t. bulk ■
ON THE BATTLE FIELD! A NEVER-FAILING MAQNET. I HIWDRANCI TO OUW TRACK.
II '
\ t'hol« e t.n. 'ta e^ics &t• N I. •
v.. ; . > .o%. . nilv I No l <,
. \ «t • j t \ti e f. •
I 14 io j.i. N.i J. lilt NU J
t'h'iitf.t llo« d of Tral«s
||IMII t .,w ft'« l- se
IHsIt I,. W j4r l;|
t It# «lmk
S tM «s t M.. , ti# «|r.
♦ 'I u ♦ riive- ^t sh 4 • I
situ mi . aivea TV aitkti m m*iiit
Mr* Hs.e
• t
•I «r|tve .at «t,
lti shi| | . |a-
ht#s^r ts-
• a h sales >a> 111
♦-.♦i v>
a- ji . |iH | «>t
aiif nef fit irttve
r a sre lir • es
I 4 4 . rs 4 .at
bravest keenly sensible
of danger.
•i
Hnt Their Will Powrr Coai|U«n Their
Ipar. (irrat Holillrra Who Wrrr Nrr-
,mu —c'llmblnv I'p Hill lli ■ Tun-
«l rj .n Crmt. .'mirage.
VERY on# has
heard the story told
o( Marshal Ney, to
the effect that he
was observed just
prior to a desperate
charge apostrophiz-
ing his trembling
legs and telling
them that they
would Bhake a great
deal more If they
only knew where he was going to take
them. This physical sensibility to dan-
ger and mental resolution to face it
constitute. In the opinion of H. W. Wil-
son, who writes on "The Human Ani-
mal In Battle" the highest type of cour-
age.
"Fear," he writes, "is greatest where
the Imagination is strongest. It Is nn
emotion which seriously affects both
body and mind. On the physical side it
checks the flow of saliva, and brings
that peculiar thirst of the battlefield:
it causes organic derangement and a
certain dogree of muscular relaxation,
increases the tension of the voice, and
is accompanied by a desperate effort to
avoid the danger. On the mental side
It paralyzes the Intelligence and leads
to the blind desire for flight, though
sometimes it goes even further, and
deprives the victim of all power of
movement. If flight takes place, It Is
the flight of panic, a reflex and often
Involuntary act. Only strength of will
can overcome this tendency to run. As
a matter of fact, flight is rarely the best
road out of danger: In battle It Is the
worst. To go forward and die is cer-
tainly better than to go backward and
die; for, In the first place the enemy,
who Is experiencing precisely the same
emotions, will lose courage and shoot
less steadily, thereby diminishing the
risk of the assailant. Nothing is more
contagious than panic; a single man
with ashen face rushing to the rear will
draw others after him and shake the
confidence of all who see him. Hence
the problem Is how to implant courage
and avoid panic.
"Courage is pimply control of the
nerves, and is largely due to the habit
of confronting danger. General Sher-
man thus defines It: "AH men naturally
shrink from pain and danger, and only
incur their risk from some other hipher
motive or from habit; so that l would
define true courage to be a perfect sen-
sibility of the measure of clanger an I a
mental willingness to Incur it. rather
than that insensibility to danger of
which I have heard far more than I
have seen. The most courageous men
are generally unconscious of possessing
the quality; therefore, when one pro-
fesses It too openly by words or bearing
there Is reason to mistrust It. I would
further Illustrate my meaning by de
scribing a man of true courage to be
one who possesses all his faculties and
senses perfectly when serious danger is
actually present.'
"Pride, habit, duty, these are the
forces which enable men to control
themselves. All can be fostered and
Implanted by training. Sheridan reck-
oned that, of the able-bodied men.
•bout one-fourth have not the requisite
capacity for courage, and are. there-
fore, useless for battle. Such weak
hearts must be weeded out. 'No mat-
ter how brave a veteran may be,' says
Private NVIlkeson, of Grant's army, he
relies on the men on either side of him
to stand there till they fall. He must
know that his comrades are as staunch
fighters as he.'
"Even In the bravest and most fully
tried men fear Is subdued and not
wholly eliminated Skobeloff said of
himself. 'I confess that I am at heart
a coward." He despaired of General
Gourko because the latter would duck
to avoid bullets and shells. In the
Northern army, at the close of the civil
war, General Horace Porter tells us
that there were only two men known
to him who never bowed the head to
Iron and lead Of these, one was Gen-
eral Grant So purely .1 matter of hab-
it. a reflex action, hail such ducking b ■
conic, that after a great battle men
would Involuntarily bob as they stood
or sat about camp, at the slightest
noire. How. then Is courage to be
taught In peace* A Russian general once
proposed to 'salt' his soldiery by load-
In* one rifle Iu ten with ball rartrM«> <
during manoeuvres This ghastly pre-
parative was to. revolting to clvlllie.l
minds, and It has never been carried
o.'t. hut. If adopted it would make th"
army trained under such circumstance*
Invincible, and so In ihe end tend to
shorten war and save life, It would
accustom the soldier to the sl|hls and
scenes of the hatlleflel I, and overcome
his dread of ihe unknown It would
enable hi in 10 .. <tii rol his nerves In ihe
tumult of ihe actual encounter
iMch a pursuit a. climbing ha* (he
same moral clfe. t tnduran - mutiiol
truat. .elf.control ma> be learned on
the high tips, "f (or the mailer af that
in a Wast dale where a slip on Ihe fa. ■
of the mountain mean* deatM'tion
The volley of stones down some pfe> tp-
Itous gull®* la no. lew deadly th.n ihe
hall of shells and bullets on Ihe halt)**
field And lit a less degree hunting
and ihe manlier form, of athletic, give
the same -e.iii• gpofts Involving rlsh
H life are thus of supreme value from
Ihe national point of view and ihla
skauM be reHiomliefH wh*n th# la
narwdi a#d daaenefa'* aaaaM the*
In Ireland a * it of o*«n * half ta
placed aho.it a 'hiid ta kaap harm
s*a< *• i gat' . sail *>eead atd steak
sea put lt.tr the cradle «f a fee* toe*
■ah; ia M dlafe*
Why I be . ruivil (iatlier. <! noil Kenialued
for the Mliow.
For days beforehand tLe billboards
of Queen City had been aflame with
posters, announcing the nature of an
entertainment which was to lake place
on the out 1.Iris of the city nn the af-
ternoon of ,7um 111 and which was her-
alded ti tha criatOt effort to which
the proft lonal entertainer could
aspire, says ihe N-.y York World. Great
were the excitement and Joy When the
news became known, for what man had
not clierl: he 1 the fond hope that he
would sonic d.iy belleM thia wondrous
sight? When the day came round the
residents of Qu 11 I'ity lurned out en
masse and, with teaming faces that
told of caus for the once forgotten,
they repaired to the rendezvous on the
outskirts of the olty. Arrived there,
they found a nquare inelosure of great
area which lad been boarded to a
height of mki'c twenty feet, added to
which, after one had been successful In
the mad rush . .. . dnii-slon, one beheld
a three-s orv liriek house in the center
of the Inil :el Tills house was all
that the : r. na contained, nnd as every
spectator 1 e a point of getting as
close to it as pi> ; :b!e, it was evident
that It v.as ti f-ur- prominently In
the day's spectacle.
The ground, wrre quickly packed
with an c.:_ 1 surging multitude that
impatiently Ited the happening of
what was des ire' l to be the greatest
event In Que :i City'., history,
"Hush! It has begun!" As the crowd
Is breathlessly p.: > ed. every one is on
tiptoe, with eyes riveted on the .brick
house.
Five, tea, fl-tecn minutes pass. Dur-
ing this time the Immense throng
stands transfixed with awe and ad-
miration.
Tin 11 com's the rude awakening
from that Ki--:;ful r pos-\ for the block
and tackle hr-e done theli' work, and
as the flreproo" safe disappears through
a second-.ito.y window the mob
breathes freely agila nnd then sallies
forth to con uuie the battle of life.
Wllil Hoar Against Tiger.
The wild iioar never kuo*s when It
I is whlppni. In India recently Col. G.
j II. Trevor . a i;oar light a tiger,
j and he t. .is a'>out It in the Badminton
Magazine. The !!: lr. ' s pulled off in
a pit ton y.u'il-; in diameter, with a
i sanded Ho^ 1 - IM en-foot walls.
| Several trap-d >ors sewed as entrances
through which lo introduce the ani-
mals. A trail of itrain through one of
these doors set- 1 to d > 3 two-year-
old hoar into tlie arena. A tiger, near-
ly full pro>\n. in." u r year had lived
an inoi'1'1 a.: - > ;e in a c. ge, wa3
forccd dOWO a plane from another door,
and the ;-,yo !■ .. were together. The
We Kewl Setter raellltlee for Carrying
Our (isoda Is Foreign Markets.
! .. Wn need better facllltiea for carryIni
' our goods to foreign aarketa, says th.
North American Review. The Unite.
States ia practically of no account It
the ocean-carrying trade and in many
of the large ports of the world th.
American flag Is almost unseen and un.
known as an emblem of commerce
! In fifty years our foreign commerc.
has Increased from $227,439,713 to ti,-
1162,316,962, but the total tonnage ol
I our merchant marine engaged in for-
eign trade haa decreased from 1,047-
454 tons to 822.247 in the same time.
With nearly eight times the foreign
commerce we had half a century ago,
we now have only four-fifths of the
ocean-carrying tonnage we then had.
More than two-thirds of our Imports
and exports formerly were carried In
American vessels, while now but little
. more than a tenth of this trade Is borne
In our ships. Not only ilo the profits
earned In transporting millions of dol-
lars' worth of merchandise to and from
our ports pass chiefly into the hands
of foreign vessel-o *ners but the ves-
sels themselves are built In foreign
yards,-giving employment to thousands
of men Jn an Industry which ought to
be planted In our country. As In our
ocean commerce, so also In our finan-
cial relations with other countries we
nre dependent largely upon the ser-
vices rendered by foreign Interests.
Particularly In our dealings with the
tuitions to the south of us we are in
urgent need of direct International
banking facilities. We do $150,000,000
worth of business with South America
In a year and yet all our balances have
to be settled through English or
European banking houses. In the
great trade centers of South America
the English, the Germans, the French
and the Italians have their banks, but
I think that I am right In saying that
there Is not an American bank in all
South America. Manifestly this Is a
serious hindrance to our trade.
jatorfs Tarwy Hill.
i£gt55^ffVToi5 BELIEF FOB 10IEI
iBltatioss (tot c*TO J . aa4 sasaJJfJJft
At draifUta or taut Mated, 0I< Ow MiliHi
aiaia- CATON SPEC CO., Boatas. *aaa.
PERRY ICE AND
COAL COMPANY.
—OfBoe At—
►rry Mill
Co.
—DEALERS 1N-
Genuine McAlester Coal
and the Best Kan-
sas Coals.
Leave Orderi
At .Toe Stout's Cigar Store and
at M. Greenwald'a Second hantf
atore, eaat aide of Square.
All deliveriea free inaide city limit*.
F. O. Moong,
President
Q. A. McCaKDi.ua,
Caahieft
XCHftNQe
BANK OF PERRY.
Opposite Post Office*
PERRY, OKLAHOMA
tJTSolicita accounta of Farmer*, Mer-
chants and Corporationa.
II. U UOYES.
I'resident.
L. D. TREKMAN.
t'askiee.
FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK.
General Hanking liQtioiMS Traatacled.
1 tiger v t '
i hung do'vn
liis tail rtr
| parent ly :.o
i natives beg
i tiger. The'
| Suddenly t:
d to
like ;
i lozon feel brv.-<
j immediately tc \
1 from him in 11?.
i and made for ti
, tlttM tl( '1" • '
i but the fourth
away, his head
whipped dog's, and
Thr* flsht was np-
ho a fizzip, when the
ih;-3v.- tiiinga at the
i i r began to growl,
tt i.im. The
.ir. and the hoar
h and weiu half a
I. puzz' 1 the 1) iar
• thr ti^er got away
v but he turned
'iC'T s;j!n. Three
apetl above the boar,
imo the boar threw
I up his hafttf, and the tiser got a rip
With ti; 11 ' ti l!*« iilo'Mi. Then
the eat turned . i rhe rig. grabbed him
, by the nap of •• k, and ihook him
l aa a s-. hoolma : 'e? a ^niall boy.
I This done, the tiger dronnel the boar
i«nd walked T'-i? ti ^r had mere-
ly inter1ie. to pur.: th- little beast.
The boar got Y b • :*h :>nd recovered
somewhat fror: l"s «l.zjin- s. nnd fac-
ing the tig' r - iin. made for him just
as if the t r . n several times
bigger. Th . • ' i : ,i ihe charge
easily. T! 1 - ^r op ned. and
the t - r • I • ■ i :t a: full speed
leaving ti tsr v. i' i for a flght.
A Ciranonc Bohemian Churrh.
In the centre of the arched roof ol
All Saints church, Sedlec, in Bohemia,
hangs a chandelier constructed entire-
ly of human bones. The church In
which this remarkable object is sus-
pended is decorated from the floor to
the celling with the blanched bones of
human bodies. Garlands of bones
stretch across the walls and hang from
the celling. Pyramids, topped with
golden crowns, are artistically reared
from the ground with these whitened
remain? of the dead. The altars are
literally covered with skulls, among
which are hundreds of those which
had been pierced by bullets or crushed
by murderous blows from swords and
other weapons, denoting that these
grim relics of humanity have been
gathered from adjacent battlefields
Tradition says that these piles of
human bones were gathered by a blind
friar of the Cistercian Order, who
stored them in a corner of the church.
As they were fatit changing into their
original elements, a man named Kint
devoted himself lo the task of cleaning
and arranging them In the church
Prince Carl of Schwarzenberg took a
strong personal Interest in the restora-
tion and arrangement of the church,
and ordered all the repairs to b don>*
at his own expense A large number
of tourists visit this extraordinary
church every year
There Is
that can-
fill Inllt • r
for Ins:an>
soon < ih
once hi
slt.n.-r
* areer
victims
lima th
er men
re* 'nil
10 o : r influence
evil :<s the bale-
'■>' eye Take,
can recite. As
11 encored on the
milsinc# to her
) the public. The
. 1 h«, and she
I with her
>- ho refuses
i i-r he has
..i i .Int. The
Inging at ema-
il he:i she Is a
her The cheap
ih- Ir downward
ill I on* are also
\ has more vie-
I th . an' a (rest,
•nm'inliy for the
n no pledge and
rt form Atchleoo
i <>.,rii*kntt i.r \ .
n her* her*
.miliar thus
i Un Maurler
i mi,l l
. •. il. are*, se
i . fr.enda
Udf who
i m d mrullf
*hich, Nnd«
• " i M*'t.
• f Mr
ieie . i* very
li**a a oftm*-
v In >tit
eh>4 led
• •* M*
e* *•« nf
Kettles. Klephants.
The e'ephant Is so bulky we can
hardly believe that he is really a most
restless creature, and the natives have
a saying that an elephant's shoulder
Is never still.'' A curious Instance of
their restless habits is given by a sea-
captain In whose steamer forty ele-
phants had been shipped. The vessel
uas anchored In a perfectly smooth
I -fa off the coast of Zanzibar, hut. to th '
great surprise of th« passengers, the
I steamer began to roll At first they
I supposed the motion to be caused by
| the ground-swell, but when the motion
1 kept Increasing there was a general
alarm, and the captain made an In-
spection of the ship. Then it was re-
vealed that the elephants had In som>
way found that by swaying to and frc
all together, a rocking motion was pro-
duced which seemed to pMane them
Immensely. i>o th* great heads and
bodies rolled and swung In unison, un-
til the steamer, which had no other
cargo, and rolled light, was ,n Immi-
nent danger of rolling clean over The
| drivers were hurried down into the
I hold, and, after a great deil of shout.
Ing and thumping they mad* the el*,
pbanti "break *t p " so to speak and
thus slopped their dangerous amuse
| men i.
Til* Willi* Uses*.
■ Hr Rmma Torsvlhe is an American
| woman who is r*|M th* «hl(* ifievn
1 by ih* nallv** of the ilnuth M*a Island*
• h r sh" owns lJ".o#o acre* of land
><h* will soon have four «hlps, built for
' trad* Kh* ha* mad* a large foriuge
by h r own hualn*** s*n*« and leet,
hit leg i fen left a widow wh*n only
l *em of *g* and In almo*i a p*n*|.
i ieae conditio* Kt hant*
to Trei* Nrlitoh e*l4im.
^rrana^ni-ms for ih* training ef
Ftriiish infantry n «i winter sr* in he
, on • more eiebnmi* se*i* th**
lid **t<*eiel pmml*** e is «n h* (tv*n
• o |e*g'dl*ia*ee merhln*
Tie Are* « iHmeri * i*kNir« k eir* i*
'Me co'intri wt* from (lov*m*r« til-
in hi* f -t*et l« Yntk i(i,|
1**1
i.. A. MORK1S.
i. W .IOUNIOV.
Oklabona Cliy.
MORRIS & JOHNSON & KELL066,
LAU) FIRM.
Prartica io nil Courts of th« Territory aad Fa#-
#rnl coarti. Also in the I'. S la-id otftaa of Ika
Territory an l lnkerlor L'ep rtniool.
k'EHHY, OKLAHOMA.
"btm* clark,
Attorney-At-Law,
Will practice in ail Territori*J **/
Federal Courts.
office in .Touea Building.
VIM. VIGOR, VITALITY,
RESTORED
IN 30 OAYt.
GOOD FFFKCTa AT OWCB.
CATON'S V1TALIZER
Carta avnvral or •partal debility, aallftl*
nva«. ipfrmat'>rrbu*a. otnUaloaa. ImpoUa-
ej. |iar*«U. etc. Corracta fanctliMal 41a-
nrtlfr*, causal by erron or HicwaM a, ^alckly ra-
•torinf Loat Manhood m old or yotaof. ffivlag
vtaur and atrrngth whsro f..rn cr waakoaaa pr
vailad. • orivfoitol package aimpla. affaelaal.
and l8|ritim te
CURE IS QUICK AND THOROUGH
ll< nl be de««ived ty liu.Ulions: iu« t oa
I'ATOM'S \ ii.«ll/**r«. >vui II ?..«
ilnifMitt J- '-* r.ot hata it I'r.rn 91 per ,
H tor ad, with wriitau guarmntaa uf com
pl**t«• cava laforaNtUaa. r.-f#r*oita. eU frea
aud CKin IfOt al Mru«l ua Ut«U)*Dl wf caa*-
•45 ft* f r a • trial trwatuiaot Obaon.y
•rut to earl, {>«rson
CATO* MFD CO.. BOSTON, MASS
Joarph, 8. Rosa. 4, Julia, 3, aai
Louia, 1. children of Paul Hartcovitch,
Chicago, were left locked in bj their
mother and when aha returned tha
bouaa wd btirned and the childrea all
iaad.
Juatice Field sava that Claveland
•hall not appoint hia aucceaaor if ha
•an help It.
It ia stated that Olney haa told Spain
that the Cuban war roust be anded
within three inontha.
bland'* frienda *ajr that ha will
•urolv lead the minority in the Houaa
Frank IM Wolfe, an opera ainfar.
took hia Ufa. owing to deapoadeaey.
due to statfe fright.
McK inlay 'a majority af tha popular
vote, wi h tha otllcial votaa of but a
faw diatricta m aa.ng, ia I4S1I5
<iodfrad Hunter haa tha Kaatucky
•anatorial nomination la hia fraip.
but bradley may not call an aatra taa-
aioa
A tawer pi pa truat it bamf for mad
at Pittsburg
Paprr mi lit are forming a pool ta
hob1 up publiahert.
Ohio and Pennayleania mlnera ara
preparing for their annual atrika.
Pittsburg Plata <tlaaa company haa
res in., d work In all ita factortaa,
I r. A l( Cowan, 1a Jail al Fort
Worth, Teiaa, killed hlmaalf by aatiag
glaaa.
Antbracita coal
•hie •' \ ptrai
lawi i.
p Tia .aveatof M f«aa
■*** •arid IMA ti# tiiid r af ia §
foal truat afroameat,
January I, will ba ra-
lle'-rewa ara ratatag|M0,000 for lha
Hebr. I nioa eollaga al ClaalaMli.
Aaf# blawora got 18,000 la diamoado
aad aaah fr m Jawalar Hlrahburf'o
•aft ta uoiaha
< amegie library truttoaa have or-
larad (Cundaf e*>aearta la lha Maala
hall al PUtaburg, daaplla objaetiona of
the minister*
Manager lleary ft. Abbaf left a
talala.
Hen a tor Parklai of Califarate la tara
af ra eleetioa
Maaautr t^dga aaali aolhlaf bat to
My la the Hanaia
*1 lioait iaWatloa A nay win faad
l.0 a> noor oft t hriettaaa
Now York atoiAi aiehaafa la prtM*
tag t« more oa tha ttait ^agroaa fm
fcifhar datiea
t'larlaattl ehataber af
• a«i« . ••. rvtary of
rnannUi t.ir#« iH the prMi4t«i' eab
IM*
¥a itfa*l.ir fv Haeanl ti ilftllt*
•oe. tire. ..alioica to Iktl Ikl
Atlamie m4 « m MM If,
•■ah -n ** •'!• nereaa* W IWMI
trade
iiir« Vathew,. falha, in law uf It'll
^ *-o« a ei,.f wnrnWAf M
•h - -m and remat* T«H Mr***
• lw IIM. 1*4 I M MM •*
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Perry & Welch. Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 219, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1897, newspaper, January 15, 1897; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111954/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.