The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1894 Page: 3 of 8
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friend of america.
LATE LOUIS PHILLIPPE
FOUGHT FOR THE UNION.
He Remained In the Army a Year As
Captain Under McClellan—In Ilattle
t Yorktown aud Kichiuont!—His Mar
Record.
HE LATE LOUIS
Philippe Albert
/d'Orleans was born
I in ll e Tulleries in
/Paris, Aug. 24, 1838.
' .V Y/On the morning of
Feb. 24, 1848, Louis
^ f Phillippe, king of
J|t- the French, hear-
miDncllH^ inff a fusillade be-
/ , x fore the gates of
7 TrnT^ his palace, and fully
aware that it "meant business," abdi-
cated in favor of his grandson, the
count of Paris. Hut this attempt to
establish an Orleans dynasty was
fruitless. A second revolution had
beeu proclaimed in France and the
i widowed mother of the count of Paris
and his younger brother were forced
to flee from the country. They went
to England, where the yountr count of
Paris, whose full name and title were
Louis Philippe Albert, duke of Orleans,
was educated.
The especial interest which Ameri-
can readers will feel in connection
with the dead count dates from Sept
fiVK
General In the Revolutionary army,
where he held independent com- 1
mand and saw much hard fight-
ing, it must not be forgotten
that the former has devoted
his leisure hours during fifteen years
to the preparation of the most careful
and important account of the Ameri-
can civil war which has yet appeared
in print It was chielly, if not indeed
entirely, in the interest of this monu-
mental bnt incomplete magnum opui
that the count came among us again
for a mouth to visit Antietam, Gettys-
burg and other hotly contested bat-
tlefields of our late war."
As illustrating the growth of news-
paper enterprise in New York, it is
worthy of notice that the same news-
paper which disposed of the arrival of
the count of Paris in 1801 in less than
lialf a column devoted an entire page
to the subject of his second visit to
New York on Oct. '6, 1890.
daughter of the Due de Montpensier.
She is celebrated for being an ad-
In 18l 4 he married Maria Isabella,
vanced woman. She smokes cigarettes,
goes shooting, and wears knicker-
bockers.
In 1886 the Comte de Paris was ex-
iled from France, having been unob-
trusively intriguing for his restora-
tion to the throne, for by the death „
of the Comte de Chambv 'd, whom Pc<
many have accused him of poisoning,
he had become the only pretender to
the royal throne- It was through the
action of an officer, who owed his
career to the kindness of the comte s
uncle, the Due d'Aumale, Gen. llou-
KILLING OP DAVIS.
CHOSE THE RIFLE INSTEAD OF
THE NOOSE.
111I.I.KT8 P1KRCE THK
DEREK'S HEART.
Authentic Account of the Flr.t Etei-utlon
of the Kind t'udcr Written
\va a little heet about 6x4 inehe*, no WATER FOR THESE ANIM ALS
such as physicians ordinarily use to :
write prescriptions on, In its center I
was a blue pencil circle t'ntll then
Dltir, Antelope rtinl Coyotes Who Live In
American Desert Places.
Students of natural history have
A NEW IWDU8TWY.
fb. A.nn.i Drouth. More fifowbl.
Than Too Much Rain.
A new industry Is growing the
Davis sat Immovable and firm in his , n ^X l to know whether finer pTonuTpmnes and tort" cher-
chair. lint now he looked down nerv- wUhouVwitr ries. Ih. pre^Un, of the Stark
Davis Was a
Crime.
Had Mau Generally—Hi*
IlE LEGAL EXE-
cutiou by shooting
, of the wife mar-
Sji aerer. Enoch Davis,
at Salt Lake City
the other morning,
was attended by
sensational in ci-
dents which fitly
closed the murder-
- er's criminal o a -
recr. The manner
by masked and con-
cealed men, invested tl.o execution
with such Ti n intense interest that the
authorities had to resort to various
to escape a great crowd of
who had traveled in hundreds
to Lehi, in Utah county, where the
penitentiary is situated, in the hope
of witnessing the killing.
Although Davis had been able to in-
voke the law's delrfy in his behalf foi
has ex-
of the shooting,
he remained until death caine to re
lieve him of his many humiliations
and sorrows.
COLLECTOR OF BUTTONS.
Mrs. Mary
Huh
more than two years, there
isted to the very last an undiminished
langer, that the expulsion was brought (.anj vig0rous public hatred of him
about lie went to England, where wllicj1 caued loudly for lys death,and
i .i ,i„„.i, ,.„tnA tore there were many expressions of re-
gret that the law of the territory re-
quired that to him should be afforded
the small" privilege of even choosing
between two methods of execution,
hanging and shooting. When the
various appeals in his case had been
decided, and the day for the execution
finally fixed, United States Deputy
Marshal Fowler, who had charge of
the preparations, began to wonder
where lie would find executioners who
were not soldiers. To the marshal's
surprise, he found that he had much
more material to select from than he
required, as apparently every mau in
Utah county who could handle a rifle
volunteered his services for the ex-
press purpose of witnessing the kill-
ing.
i Six men known to be good rifle shots
THE T.ATF. I.OXJIS PHII.rPTE.
13,1801, when he landed on American
soil. He had crossed the Atlantic in
the old side-wheel steamer Africa,
whose dock was in Jersey City, and as
it was 10 p. m. when the vessel reached
her warf, he and his distinguished fel-
low travellers remained on board until
the next morning. Imagine any At-
lantic voyager with the price of a
night'' lodging in liis pockets remain-
ing aboard ship all night after making
a landing as early as 10 p. m. in these
days!
The fact is also worth commenting
upon that the leading New York
newspaper of that era devoted less
than half a column's space to the land-
ing of the royal party the following
day, saying, among other things:
"A great number of persons assem-
bled yesterday morning on the wharf
of the Jersey side, but strictly con-
forming with the express wish of the
l'rince de Joinville, who headed the
royal party, every thing was got ready
for leaving the Africa in the most
private and unostentatious manner.
The prince, accompanied by his young
friejiils and suite, went over tlie side
of the steamer and entered a rowboat,
which took them to the foot of Cham-
bers street, where carriages were in
waiting to convey the party to the
llrevoort House.''
The party, whose arrival in New-
York city .was thus summarily dis-
missed, consisted of the l'rince de
Joinville, his son, I'ierre Philippe,
Due de Penthievrc, and his nephews,
the Comte de l'aris and the Due de
Chartres.
A genuine sensation was occasioned
a few days later when it was knowo
that they had applied for permission
to enter the Union forces in the war
of the rebellion, which was then rag-
ing. and been appointed to the rank
of captains of the staff of Gen. George
B. McClellan. The terms under which
tin count of Paris and his brother
were received into the army stipulated
that they should serve without pay
and be privileged to resign whenever
they saw fit. They served a little less
Harris
Pastime.
Mrs Mary E. Harris of Roxbury,
Mass., has had for thirty years the
hobby of collectinj
now her collection
different kinds.
Thirty years ago
she made a wager
iiiat they were
more than (J09 dif-
ferent kinds of
buttons. She reach- .
ed the thousand $
mark inside of a
year, but once
started in the fas-
cinations of 1 'col-
lecting," her pur-
suit was kept up.
some interesting buttons in her col-
lection. One was wprn by a soldier
in Napoleon's army; another by a sol-
dier in Washington's; there are but
tons from the uniforms of half a dozen
Kuropean armies, as well as from
those of the South American republics,
the Confederate army and the uni-
forms furnished by different states:
during the civil war.
buttons,
12,000
numbers
harris.
Harris ha?
ously at the paper, and as he did so
he visibly lost nerve It affected him
as the tirst sight of the gallows noose
does a man about to be hanged. He
called for whisky and began to talk
excitedly about the unfair treatment
I of the courts and the governor. There
were indications that lie would go to
pieces nervously, and, observing this,
a deputy quickly bound a handker-
chief over Davis' eyes, and Marshal
Urighain stepped hurriedly to the side
of the tent, lie gave a signal against
the canvas and six Winchesters crept
out of the holes.
"Make ready!" said the marshal.
At this order the crowd hastily formed
into a semi-circle facing the chair, the
tent in the center of the semi-circle.
"Take aim!"
The rifles steadied. Every eye was
turned on the murderer, whose hard
breathing was absolutely the only
sound heard.
"Fire!" There was one report. The
man did not seem to have been struck.
For several seconds no oue moved.
Then the body was seen to quiver,
aud tli« doctor hurried forward.*
The target paper was punctured in
four places near the center and onfco
at the edge. Six bullets had entered
the body. Ave of them penetrating the
heart.
Death had of course beeu instanta-
neous To the spectators the execu-
tion had but few of the shocking
features of hanging. If the arrange-
ments could have been made in a way
which would have concealed the ritie-
men iu a less conspicuous manner, in
some room of a building in which the
execution took place, instead of in a
glaring tent, the method would cer-
tainly have much to recommend it
over hanging.
On June \ 1892, Davis killed his
wife, the mother of his nine children.
He buried her body in a potato patch,
and told one of his sons she hail taken
poison. He was a companion of In-
dians and a worthless fellow general-
ly. keeping his large family in a oue
room hut, although., he could make
good wages as a blacksmith. He was
but
for a long time, says the New \ork
World. In Central and Southern New
Mexico there is an immense desert
to which the earliest Spanish adventur-
ers gave the name Jornada delMuerta,
or Journey to Death. This desert is
over 100 miles long and from thirty to
seventy miles wide and is entirely
waterless. This if known to be a fact as
every mile of it hps been traversed in
the past twenty years. The nearest
permanent water to this desert is the
Uio Grande, from which it is separated
by the lofty range known as the Ca-
vallos mountains, which are almost
Impassable to man or l>east. Previous
to 1880 this desert was inhabited by
vast herds of antelope. There ure
some antelope there now. besides
coyotes and other animals. From May
to September is the rainy season in
this region, and the moisture derived
from the scantj herbage might be tuf*
tieient to sustain life, but during the
other eight months there isn't a drop
of water obtainable, and the vegeta-
tion is as dry as tinder. It is claimed
that many wild animals feed in the
early morning and thereby obtain
an abundance of moisture from the
dew which covers the vegetation, but
in the elevated region of Jornada thoro
is no sensible precipitation of dow in
the dr\ reason.
. pres
Nurseries, of Louisiana, Mo., lately
returned from a western trip and
•peaking of their Dvuver orchards
grown on the plains without irrigation
water, aim pi v by intense cultivation,
the wonderful crops ftf plums and
prunes ami hardy tart cherries
grown there. he said: "After
close observation and some years
experience 1 am quite con-
vinced there is a great future for west-
ern Kansas, southwest Nebraska, and
the Cherokee strip, as well as Colorado,
New Mexico and further west, in grow-
ing plums prunes and cherries; of the
latter such varieties as Montmorency,
Ord., Suda Hardy, German Ostheimer,
etc.. and the Lombard plum, the
gages, prunes, etc. Some of the ad-
vantages are favorable climate,
ft suitable soil. 1,.>00 miles
nearer the market than the
Pacific coast, cheap land, cheap
rates, cheap labor, and. greatest ad-
cantage of all, in shipping green fiuit,
It may be allowed to come to matuiity
Instead of picking green as they must0
do on the coast; this fruit will, there-
fore, sell one-third higher on the Chi-
cago markets, just as Colorado peaches
for the same reason sell one-third
higher on the Denver markets than
California sorts.
"The plum, prune and cherry need
little water comparatively; it is too
much rain, causing rot, a* well
as curcu^o, etc., that makes grow-
ing these tiner sorts hazardous
and uncertain in the east.
The
i i n ' 1 111 . ■ . ,
rill' most desolate territory in North country named belongs to the urtil ana
45 years old, a native of Iowa,
had lived iu the territory nearly
his life.
all
AN IOWA MYSTERY.
were appointed for the work. 1 lie
night before the execution, there were
so many men in Lelii anxious to see j , lmri!,.,i „ltl. 1
the shooting that a ruse was decided | N(.„.l¥ Wlfe.
upon to keep them in ignorance.of the
actual execution ground. A tent was Mrs. Ella Mason,
nitched in the jail yard and other \ Mason, a treston,
preparations apparently made, and at pher, died suddenly the other night
the same time a report was eircu- under suspicious circumstances
lated that Davis would be take
the railroad. With the
ness of the crowd thus divided, tne j ueuce ui
ife of Charley
Iowa, photogra-
jAmeriea, south of Labrador, is the
peninsula of Lower California. Capo
San Lucas is the extreme southern
point, and about ten miles north of
this a spur of mountains runs from
west to east, or from the Pacific to the
gulf of Lower California, forming,as it
were, a basin toward the cape. This
basin is mostly covered with a dense
growth of dwarf trees, growing lux- |
uriantly out of the dazzling white sand, i
Not a particle of surface water is to be j
found anywhere in this basin, and,
strange as it may
deer. The Mexicans living uuio, .
asked where the deer get water, reply
that there is none and the deer do not
require any. The east and west coasts |
of Lower California abound in islands, j
some of which area few hundred yards |
in diameter anctothers miles in extent,
and with few. exceptions void of vege- t
tation and utterly waterless. An j
American who has spent a day, and
sometimes two days, on each of these
islands, reports having found there the
coyote, or wild dog. The only water
the thirsty coyote may drink is the salt
water of the Pacific. Hut does ho
drink it,, or (Joes he get, along without
...mi-arid region, but sufficient ruin
falls to insure crops and the thing to
do is to plant on a commercial scale
and cultivate as the Stark liro's, Den*
ver orchards are cultivated. Success
will follow. Half way work and
neglect will not bring success there
nor elsewhere. What has been done
on the plains of Colorado can bo done
in western Kansas.
"The apple may also be grown in the
same belt if enough work is done, but
not so successfully, for more water is
required than for stone fruits which
come to perfection in dry seasons.
This
em, this place lias year Lombard and other finer plums
.s living here, when and prunes throughout Nebraska :«.nd
Kansas, in the rain belt, matured, and
choice specimens were received to be
named. Had there been the usual
summer rains the fruit would have
rotted.
"Struggling farmers of western Kan-
sas trying to grow corn but burnt out
with the usual annual drouth should
know and realize the possibilities in
the culture of these fruits If they get
a crop of corn it may net them $10 per
acre; the right sorts of cherries and
plums will net them several hundred
dollars per acre, and a ten-acre orchard
more than a quarter section devoted
to general farming. Think of it; try
But start right, cultivate right and
be sure to plant the best sorts. 1
l.ots
executioners were conveyed at
o'clock in the morning in closed car-
riages, over a wagon road leading to
a lonely spot in the foothills, known
as Dry Hollow, six -miles north of
Lehi Before daylight the men had
pitched a tent iu the sage brush, and
thirty feet from it placed the execu
tion chair. This was a heavy oak
chair, such as is usually used in legis-
lative halls. It was securely fastened
to a stout board frame, which ex-
a baby carriage with a good fat baby tended several feet above the back of morning, when he started for medical *
the chair. , When lie returned with the doc-
Davis, in his usual manner of sullen tor his wife was dead. The peculiar
bravado, took a big breakfast in the ( actions of Mason caused ugly rumors
jail before 8 o'clock, and was then to be circulated, implicating him as
•as eircu- under suspicious circumstances. Mie ' dl.jukin,r „-atei" at all" Or are be sure to plant the liest sorts. The
ken south was taken sick at the gallery and was - ^ imu,s „f Southwest like the majority of failures arc from plant.,ig
watchful- I taken home. According to the evi- ^ a
vided, the deuce of a servant which is used as a reservoir for water, • is just the weather needed for
' " she vomited until —sw- x . . . . - *""" J .....
MONEY CURED HER.
of Human Nature in This Brief
Street Incident.
A tired looking little girl dawdled
down Eighth avenue yesterday morn-
ing pushing before her with one hand
her stomach was
exhausted, suffer-
ing intensely. Not-
withstanding this
her husband was
with her all night
; without calling the
| assistauce of a
j physician until be-
i t w e e n 3 a n d 4
! o' clock in the
CIIA.RI.r.V MAS
with it*. Under her arm, rolled up in
newspaper, was a large block of ice.
The child's thoughts were evidently
not on baby and ice, for she hummed
dreamily to herself and with a far
away loolc in her eyes.
Alb at once the paper burst, there
was a crash and her ice lay on the
pavement in a thousand pieces. Then
she came back to earth and broke
dowu in a violent bit of sobbing,
(lazing sorrowfully at the ice, she be-
gan picking up the pieces, and after a
second's thought discarded.the broken
paper and set to packing the fragments
in the carriage around the baby's feet.
As she did so a big tear splotched upon
every one.
The baby kicked at the
chips half uncomfortable, half amused,
and every kick the baby gave was a
fresh reminder of misfortune to the
little girl ana was answered by a
catching sob. The bystanders looked
on pityingly, but no one offered to do
anything. There are two ways of in-
tervention in a case like this and re-
sults are quick to prove the better
one.
"You foolish, silly little girl,'
ailed out one woman, breathlessly.
spirited away in a closed carriage, the
"spiriting" being done with such suc-
cess that not more than 200 men fol-
lowed in his wake on-horse back, in
all kinds of vehicles, and some on
foot The marshal and his prisoner
arrived at the ground, at 11 o'clock,
and to the amazement of those already
there, Davis was met not only by his
brother James, but by two of his sons,
Arthie and Belden, 15 and 1? years
old respectively. These two boys
had been asleep in the hut where the
murder was committed, when Davis
crushed in his wife's skull with the
butt of a revolver. They were accom-
panied by Davis' attorney, a Mr. War-
ner, and the latter approached Davis
as soon as he arrived, and as he sat
manacled in a covered wagon, and
informed the father of his sons
presence. Then the lawyer added:
"Davis, all that your boys ask is that
the old man dies game."
£Ilis two sons and his brother were
then allowed to bid him good-by. 1 he property.
ago, bi
happy,
being the cause of his wife's death,
and a post mortem examination was
held. Mason appeared to ,be ,in a
great hurry to have his wife's body
embalmed. Almost as soou as she
eased breathing he called an under-
taker and insisted
upon embal m i n g
the body immedi-
ately, which was
done. At the post
mortem the physi-
cians were unable
• to tell whether the
poison found in her
f s t o m a c h w a s
y \ placed there by
the cmbaliners or
administered by
VltS. MASON. . .. rvx
other parties. 1 he
stomach was sent to Des Moines for
analysis. The coroner's inquest de-
veloped that Mrs. Mason herself had
bought two ounces of arsenic Sept. "J.
Mrs. Marson owned considerable
lie married Mason a year
and is filled by the camel before going
on long desert journeys and drawn
upon for water when needed? It is
said that Arabs, knowing this, when
themselves suffering from thirst, slay i
their tatncls and appropriate their 1
water supply. ■
Very Simple People.
The simple people of Alsace, who
retain ill thi irjiearts u strong lot e for
France at the samo time that they are
desirous not to offend their German
rulers too much, have a hfcrd time of
it when they are brought to the Iml-
lot-box to vote for representatives in
the (ierman parliament. In one
■ lection in ii certain Alsatian, district,
the t\vo candidates were Kable, an Al-
satian of French sympathies, who had
protested against the annexation after
the war of 1870, and a (Ierman On
election day, a peasant came to the
polling place, having in ono hand u
ticket on which was printed the name
of Kable, and in the other a ticket
bearing the name of the (I. rnian can-
didate. "Mein llerr," he said to the
German election officer, "will you tell
tne which of these two tickets i* the
better one?" The officer looked at
them. "Why, this is much prefera-
ble," said he, indicating the German
ticket. "Ah, I thank you! 'answered
the peasant; "I will keep it next my
heart." He folded it carMtUly and
put it in his Inside eoat-poeket. "As
for this other, then," saiii he, with an
air of putting it away from him as an
unworthy thing. - I will leave it, here."
And he put the Kable ticl« i iu the bal-
| lot-box Argonaut.
just
maturing these crops. Seeing isbelicv
Ing; if you want to see more, some-
thing on a large scale, go a little far-
ther west to the Stark liro's Denver
orchards, which ean scarcely be
equalled in California or elsewhere. —•
Nurseries and Orchards.
i.lvi■>k > i> to in. i,ir«.
"That new hand I hired this morn-
ing," said Farmer Ilaycroft, "plowed
fine furrow across the field and then
went and laid down, and lie hasn't
moved since."
".What was the matter with him?"
"lie said be believed in goin' accord-
in' to seripter, and that when a man
has put Ilis hand to the plow he never
ortto turnback."—Chicago Tribune.
Wlilit Told.
"It must be pretty hard work pound-
ing the pavement with that great ram-
mer," said the idler.
"Sure." said Mr. (irogan. "it ij, not
the droppin av the thing on t he shtones
tliot is tlie har-rd work at-all It is the
liftin av it up.
\ iUia 11 My card-Duel- IS paces ■
in the ravine—to thil
G::to m morning
death.
Dude Why, I
*7:00 o'clock ill 11
never got up before
life; s"i that lets me
jilt.
Husband
what home is.
until long aft'
Advertiser.
Hx|>erlenced Vioiv.
A bachelor doesn't know
i) some married men
ui night. New York
ui t
You're positively wicked. Don'tyou youngest boy burst into tears, and at ,'1L,0[ but the relations have not been
" aby? You'll the conclusion of the interview ran
and hid behind a rock, where he re-
COMTKSR OF TARIS.
than one full year, but during that
time the count of l'aris sa-v lianl
fighting at Y.orktown and Richmon'l
and formed impressions of American
soldiery which aided him in writing
as it doubtless influenced him to
write, his celebrated history of the
civil war. Said den. .lames Orar,.
Wilson in a paper which he prepared
after Ihe count's second visit to
America: "While the active service
of the youthful count as a staff oflicei
with the rank of captain in the Army
of the Potomac cannot, of course, for
a moment be compared with that^ of
the Marquis de Lafayette, a Major-
see you're chilling that b;
give it its death. Stop crying, throw
out that ice and wheel the child
home."
The little maid sat down on the
curbstone at this and bawled. 'Twas
bad enough to face a probable spank-
ing, but a scolding beforehand just
broke her all to pieces
Feeling she had done her duty, the
woman passed on, aud then the right
mau came along. He was a jolly
faced truckman. "Why, cheer up,
young 'un," he said. Ihere ain t
uothin' ou earth that money can't
cure. llow much was it'.' Three
cents. There, run now and get anew
piece."
And the transformation in that lit-
tle woman's face was worth many a
three cents to see - New York Herald.
A Successful Woman Farmer.
Miss Mary E. Cutler of llolliston,
Mass., is a successful farmer. She be-
-ole manager of Winthrop Gardens, an
estate of sixty-eight acres, after her
father's death ten years ago. She de-
termined to carry on the farm against
the advice of friends, who thought it
impossible for a woman to make a
business success of agriculture. Pro-
ceeding i ar fully, the business has
constant.v ncreased under her direc-
tion. She gives her attention chietly
to the raising of fruits and vegetables,
which are sold directly to the con-
sumer, the surplus going to the
canneries. She has 1,400 bearing
peach trees, and has not had a failure Qa coa^ directly over hi& heart
of the crop for seven years.
4
Prepared for Dentil.
I William Weitinjj, son of John ('.
! Weiting, a leading jeweler of Peoria,
111., committed suicide the other even-
ing by hanging in his father's barn.
His body was found about o clock
the next morning and cut down by
the eoroner. The jury returned a
verdict of suicide while insane tem-
porarily. He was 'i~> years of n^re No
cause is known for the act His ar-
rangements were most deliberate in
their character.
Quail* at the Camera-
Miss M' 1'. liraddon who has writ-
ten fifty-four nov« !s, «[ua;!s before t i
camera. One hundred dollars and a
royalty on every picture sold have
been offered to h« ' if e will cons, nt
to be "taken," ' u* she is not tempted.
oldlug Ood.
- you anything
madame, and it '
ess. On arising
touch a spring,
a v. a-distand and
bath tub. Aft'-r \ our bath, you touch
another spring, and it beeomes a
dressing < a • , with a French plato
mirror. If you breakfast in, your
room, a slight pressure will transform '
it into an extension table. After
breakfast, you press the.^o three but- .
tons at (yice, and you have an upright
I volution of the I
Mrs. 1). Flat Ha\
new in folding beds'.'
Dealer Only this,
really is quite a succ
in the morning you
and it turns into
After
spring
, the Point.
that kissing is un-
to his
piano. '1 hat s all it
that when you d
into a rosewood
it,
will do,
an b(
inn
( M1i<
ENOCH DAVIS.
mained until after the shooting.
•When the youngster began crying
Davis showed some signs of emotion,
but the elder brother scolded the
younger for his weakheartedne-s.
Davis then said: "Boys, I hear vou
want to see me die game. That is just
the way I am croing to die."
His bravado had not left him, but
the next incident in the proceedings
took most of it away. Dr. Witcher,
She knows and fears 1;
the "snap shot
abroad, is const;
protect herself front :i p
a probable, koda . '11
ubiquitous buttore j
ever, Miss Braddon * i
escape much Ion ■
A < liild'H s *rrnu
The bright 1 - n. nt
of Lawyer Roseoe < <
cie, Ind., admired the
potatoes in a natural
tire. She crawled up<
re our ccs - <t
nd when she is
on the alert to
p ^ible, indeed,
I njust I*
r IMianev.
lookin\ Mike.
(Mil--, r O'Moi'i
the chief, be hut.;
. ()fli« < r Phane \ _
I ! t )'..! •
•The doc tot
healthy," said the young
girl. -What do you think about it?
. | never had much faith in doctors,"
she replied." New Vork l'ress.
A
NEW TRAIN
THE
'Knickerbocker Special'
DAILY BETWEEN
ST. LOUIS,
CINCINNATI,
new york find boston.
id
,-old daughter
riflith of Mun-
red hot clay
as open grate
in the hearth
tin
dish'
Tlx
Pope-
Mil
"l is ti. fault of
■ How's that?
sure, an1 he put
• ' r a fruit stand
at nr blaggard!
nh.
"Th r«
ti «
who was present officially, stepped up j and tried to pick one out. Her little
to Davis and pinned a piece of paper hands and face were terribly parched,
It j but, she got one of the potatoes out [
The -eulptor Marasai has begun
*
the pope's tomb. It i-> of black mar-
ble, surmounted by the figure of a
lion, having on the, right a statue of
faith, with a torch in one hand and
the bible in the other, and on the left
the statue of truth beat ing the pope's
eoat-of-aruia.
Leave St. Louis, 12 CO Noon
Arrive Indianapolis, 6 50 p m
Arrive Cincinnati, 10 43 p ni
Arrive Cleveland, 2 20 a ni
Arrive Buffalo, 6 30 a m
Ar ive New York, 6 30 Q m
Arrive Boston, 9 °5 p m
'
AND DIM NO cars, w 11.1. UK IN AlOl 11ATKD
SEPTEMBER 30,
BigFourBoute
ike Shore & New Vork Central
1NOALLS. Pre ni 1 mi' K. O * COtpUCK.
• i Trattl. VUnfcifHi l>. U MAKTIN, U«MroJ
• uo Ti kr\ AK*nt
CINCINNATI.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1894, newspaper, October 19, 1894; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115580/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.