The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1894 Page: 2 of 8
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Tqb C^&ndler JVewa
41UTRAT A C.ttftkAl*, rro *.
CHA.NUI.FK7' ~ : : ufc
lHEKF, is a regular Napoleon boom
on in Franco now and the manufac-
turers of memoirs of his reifjn nrq
working overtime to keep up with
ordcre.
Ji'dging from the rush homowardiui
evidenced hy tlio paHwnj.'cr lists of the
steamers, there must have been a (food
many Americans independent enough
of tho uull times to enjoy their ut ua)
outing in Europe.
Canada has lieen offered $4.10,000
as a settlement in full of her Behring
sea claim*, and will doubtless jump ai
the otter. So much money all ut onos
is enough to shake her strongns)
nerves, but decorum prevents Iter ito-
ceptance of tho sum until sho has hag-
gled for a dollar ami twenty-flvo cents
more.
Another use for aluminum Tiai
been tried in Kussia. The mitres ol
tho bishops are iieinjr mado of the
metal. The metropolitan of Kn-uti
has such a mitre, as has also tho onq
of Kieff. A mitrn of alumlnutq
weighs only a little more than a pound,
while tho ordinary mitres are five of
six times as heavy.
Record breaking on the part of tho
ocean steamships goes on with great
regularity. The New York onirics In
with a westbound log showing six
days, eight hours and thirty-eight
minutes, 'lhis reduces the time 1X
1 ween Southampton and New York by
fifty-nine minutes. Tho six-day ship j
is ono of the early jKjsaibilities that Is
evident.
r rm—
The Vanderbilts are not to bo out-
done by the Astors. The Mrs. Colo-
man Drayton incidAt of a few years
ago puffed tho Astors up and put "them
on a footing with the prince of Wales
and I'rince Oorgo and cream of tho
English aristocracy. Hut now that
Mrs. \V. K. Yanderbilt is suing for di-
vorce on account of Mr. Vandorbllt'e
social irregularities the two families |
meet on a common a veiy common |
footing. If (icorge Gould ig going to
break into the Vanderbilt set tho
Gould's will have to point with prido
to the modest scandal with "Zcllu"
Nioolaus and hopo for tho best.
iN" tho long list of "immortals'1
whose figures encirc le the base r,f the
Albert memorial in London, fully ono-
half are Englishmen, and not one is an
American. in thejwenty-flve celeb-
rities whoso busts will decorate tho
new congressional library at Washing-
ton only six are Americans, the other
nineteen being Englishmen. People
aro asking whether this is as it should
be. and whether soroo of these Eng.
lishmen might not appropriately givo
place to Americans. Tho question is
not why any of the six busts selected
should bo there, but why a number of
others equally deserving should not bo
there.
One grower of apricots at Ventura,
Cal., sold in one year sixty tons of tho
dried fruit, receiving therefor ? 15.000,
The apricots were all grown on forty
acres. Ever cat a ripe apricot a few '
minutes after it was plucked from its
tree? Ever watch the fare of a halt
starved child as some tempting viands
were offered it and disappeared past
the palate portal? Ever see a man
who had been choking for a glass of
water as glass after glass of the spark-
ling liquid went to irrigate his parched
body? Sorrow is at least temporarily
banished from the mind of tho man
whoso mouth first envelops tho dead
ripe apricot.
Heat holidays have now been estab-
lished by law in tho public schools of
Switzerland, and our educational au-
thorities might do worse than* tako a
hint from this enterprising and pro-
gressive little republic, which for cen-
turies has been famed for itg enlight-
enment and common sense. Recogniz-
ing the well-known fact that the brain
cannot work properly when the heat is
excessive, tho children are dismissed
from their tasks whenever the ;hcr-
mometer goes above a certain point.
Were this sensible regulation to bo
adopted in this country steps would
have to be taken to safeguard the
thermometers from being nefariously
doctored by the enterprising American
schoolboy.
The calculations on the military
strength of C'iiina which assume the
possible Chinese army to consist of all
the male Chinese and that the Japan-
ese will be obliged to kill something
over 10,000 a day for a long term of
years are certainly a little ••olT."
Taking tho most robust ando warlike
people in existence (and the ( Itinera
certainly aro not) their fighting
strength is much less than their nu-
merical strength. Tho real question
is the proportion of actual efficient sol-
diers to the population, which, accord-
ing to most accounts, is greater among
tho Japanese than the Chinese. (Jet-
ting down to fighting figures and tho
odds are not greater against tho Japan-
ese than were at times brought against
Frederick the Great. Tho question
may In, "Which side has the Fred-
erick P"
The city of Son Francisco appro-
priates ifKu.OOO for street cleaning, but
the stroete do not get cleaned. Tho
merchants of the city have offered to
have the streets well cleaned for that
amount providing they alone handle
the appropriation.
GENERAL NEWS IN BRIEF
PARAGRAPHEDCURRENT EVENTS
OF THE WEEK.
Gleamed from tho Tour Corner* of
th* World and Condensed in Short
Paragraph* for the < on venienro of
■lurried Render*.
Conffreat adjourned Tuesday.
The big "font hundred" ball cam*
off at Newport the other evening.
A tenement tire in New York Citj
Tuesday night, resulted in Revera
deaths.
Forest fires .in the northern state*
are terrible. People and towns burnec
by the score.
THE TWO TERRITORIES.
CONGRESSIONAL AMD
SUMMARY.
tew* in General of Oklahoma nn<l
tlie Indian Territory Pertaining; to
* the l'ule Fare and the Ited Man.
Wilson & Chase's dry goods store, a1
Fighting has taken place at Shiad- Cedar Falls, la., was damaged Mon
r near the Tenseft river, in Moroc-
co. The rebel loss is over 100 men.
M. F. Brenton, a hotel clerk, of
Columbus, O., committed suicide in
Chicago Wednesday.
A case of cholera was reported
Monday st Niaport, West Flanders.
day by fire to the extent of $15,000
insurance 812,000.
A broom factory, two dwellings ant
the colored liaptist church were burn-
ed at Sturgeon, Mo., Monday. Loss
gs,','00; insurance, 8:.\7iO.
'1 wo cases of cholera and one deatl
000 will te paid the Iowa Indian^
at Perkins this month.
It is reported that the Choctaw will
begin building at McAhster October 1
The Chickasaw legislature i - now in
The cotton fins at Daacaa are now
running at full blast*
J At Waukomis salt has been struck
LOCAL at tt QCpth of eighty feet.
!n Okarche last week 13ft loads of
wheat were purchased in one day.
Colonel Ellis, a Guthrie man hi*
i opened a variety theatre in'< hicago.
In a • ew • <pnty in Oklati na a man
is never opposed to a county seat tight
so long as the county seat is in anoth-
er town.
Round Pond is to have a dej-Ot. '1 he
, Rock Island trains commenced to stop
1 here was also oue case at Spennlse. from that disease have been reportei
at Amsterdam. At Maestrieht thert
has been one additional death frorr
cholera.
Point an Pic, an annex of Murrav
Hay, the well-known summer resor*.
about seventy.five miles below Que-
bec, was destroyed ly lire Monday-
Loss 880,000. ^
Wm. Neely hus commenced sun
against the Lake Shore railway, de-
manding 85,000 damages for injuries
sustained by the trotting stallion Jal-
isco while enrout« -to (-osleu, Ind..
from La Porte.
The Roumanian Government has de-
cided to issue a public works loan ol
8'.'1.000,000 in 4 .Tiit. bomK The
At Wilkesbarre, Pa., the wages of loan will be taken up by a Berlin syn-
200 employes of the lla/.ard Iron Rope dicate, which includes the llleichroer
Works were reduced 10 per cent. The banking house and the Diseonto lies
superintendent of the works says it is selschaft.
necessary to reduce prices in order to The residence of Henry Stormer was
meet foreign competition, hence the broken into Monday uigiit and a gold
cut in prices. watch and were stolen. It was
A dispatch from Berlin says Prince ascertained that the burglar wasJohn
Kainashina, a nephew of the Japanse Storiner. a brother, and when he wa?
Emperor and a Japanese court official, arrested most of the money was found
paid a visit to Krupp's iron works possession.
Saturday, and it is rumored that Jap- j)ave Brummal,
One death occurred from the disease
at fioksmeer.
The "Financial News'' of London
sayi it is stated that the owners of the
Nicaragua Canal concessions have ap-
proached a syndicate of British cap-
italists with a view of its aale to them.
William and Katie Raymond and
Annie iiclinont were bound over at
Xew*York Thursday, for working a
Badger game on a Kansas City buck-
et*.
Heavy fighting took place last
Thursday between Kaffirs and Bo-rs
in the North Transvaal. The Kaffirs
were defeated antl ure now suing for
peace.
session, it opened up last Saturday, there Tuesday. There was great joy
Many settlers think that the Fort over occasion.
Sill country will be opened up early A girl in a white dress always looks
in lw0f). pretty, but it is said that in the Okla-
It is said that the Santa Fe will be- homa atmosphere she looks prettier
gin the erection of a depot at Perry at than anv where else.
olored, and his >
! wife became involved in a quarrel,
I which resulted in Brummal striking !
his wife to blows on the head with at
1 ax, which is thought will prove fatal
Brummal left the city at once with of
ficers in close pursuit.
. A suit was filed in the -circuit cour*
hey refuse to obey meduxil orders of ( l„11l.erl.1n.i Mon.iav, bv .1
nnd conceal their sick from the doc- J.\ Basford. through attorneys, against
an is about to give Krupp's a larg
order for armament.
Cholera is reported to be raging ter-
ribly in Russian Poland. Htopnica,
Mieohow, DziaLos/.oe and Pinchow are
the chief centers of the disease. The
inhabitants are camping in the woods.
tors.
Tho steamer Saginaw, Captain
Rockwell, brings no news of any dis-
turbance in Hay ti. President Hippo
lyte is said to be mortal>y ill, and
when he dies it is thought that a very
uncertain state of affairs will prevail
and a revolution would be among the
possibilities.
Over 1500 cloak makers went on b
strike in Brooklyn Saturday against
the task and piece work system. They
want a 10-hour day antl regular wages.
Secretary Reichers, of the Gar/pent
Workers' Union says that 'JO,000 men
and women ici fht «top work in .New
York and Brooklyn soon. >.*•■ «
^hc police of Kalooga, cap.tal of the
Government of that name, ninety-five
u ilea southwest <4>f Moscow, have dis-
covered a p ess that was being used
by the nihilists for the publication of
literature for dissemination through-
out the Empire. Many persons have
been arrested on the charge of being
interested in the press. j
Thomas Welch, Jr.. was arrested at
Clinton, Iowa, charged with the mur-
der of Lester Johnson at Monmouth,
Iowa last Sunday night. Johnson
was struck on the head with a club,
from the effects of which he died a
few days later. Suspicion pointed ts-
ward Welch, as it was known that lie
*nd Johnson had quarrelled over a
*; irl.
"7t is stated by a member of the
"eoria, Decatur A Evansville first
mortgage bondholders' committee
•.hat foreclosure proceedings will be
instituted early next week at Peoria
under the Peoria and Kvansville di-
visional mortgages. The committee
invites deposits of first mortgage
bonds until the foreclosure has been
carried out.
the village of Greenup, 111., for S:.\.r>0(
for failure to enforce the fire limit or
dinance, a frame building having
been erected adjacent Mr. Basford'?
property.
The Sassaeks are advancing alone
the high bunk of the river. The forc<
commanded by the Capt Lindgreen i?
surrounded by Balinese. The Dutch
warships are continuing the bombard
ment of Mataran, the capital «of Loin
bok. The (Balinese garrison cf tha*
city has not ventured to attack th«
Dutch force at Batavia.
Disorder and revolution are spread
ing in Central and Southern Morocco
The towns of Demnat and Xamza have '
been pillaged. The town of Zania ha*
been looted and two Jews brutally kill
ed, and the wives of some of the form- 1
er Cadis outraged and their familie?
enslaved. The outlook is threatening
j and sci ions complications are feared
I The ministerial crisis has been pass
ed by a remodeling of the Cabinet.
Senhor Kiberro, the Prime Minister
| will retain the finance portfolio, aban
doning the position of Foreign Minis
ter, which will be taken by Senhoi
D'Avila, the former Minister of Public
Works, Industry and Commerce. Sen-
hor Henriques will succeed tienhoi
D'Avila.
An imperial edict lias been issued re-,
warding lien. Yeh and TOO Chinese of
ficers for their victory over the Japan-
ese at Ping Yang Dn Avgust 17. (Jen
Yeh reports that the Japanese lost
over " ,000 men in the engagement at
Ping Yang during the day when the
Chinese were in pursuit of the enemy,
while the casualties of the Chinest
were small.
Archduke Charles Louis, acting or
behalf of Emperor Francis Joseph,
The new car building and repairing Monday opened the International Hy-
ssops of the Missouri Pacific railway fftenic Congress at Buda Pcsth. Rep-
company at Sedalia, Mo., were opened resentatives irom all the leading
on September 1st. For the present countries were present. Dr. Billings,
only repairing will be done, and for . speaker on behalf of the American
this reason only twenty-five men were Government and the scientific boards-
put to work. Cai building will be in l,u> United States, says the fact
; that the American delegates had comc
so great a distance showed the impor
tance attached to hygienic questions
in America.
The marquis of Lome, son-in-law of
Queen Victoria, has written the libret-
to of an opera and will have it per-
formed first before hie royal mo'lier-
in-law. He will be able to mako a
fortune out of it in New York by label-
ing it properly.
commenced before the 1st of the year,
when 200 men will be given eniploy-
ment. ,
William J. Stevenson, president of
the Metropolitan City Railway of
^Vu! hington, D. C., and one of the
htst known business men of that city
is dead, lie was taken ill a week ago
iji Chicago, where he went to investi-
gate systems of underground {electric
motors for use on his road. He was
S3 years of age. During the GO's he
served as Chief Quartermaster to lien.
Rucker, of the army.
Fiva workmen on the new St. Paul
Catholic church, now being built at
Washington, D. C., were injured by
the falling of the scaffold on which
they were at work. The inen whose
injuries are serious are: Chris Jarett
who may die; Frank Jarett, Richard
Haines, a negro hodcarrier, and an-
other hodcarrier, also an unknown
negro. The injuries to the fifth man
who fell were not found to be serious.
Miss Alice Sanger, the only woman
ever employed at the White House,
the same being done by President
Harrison, was transfererd Friday to
the postoftice department.
Near Boonesborougli, Ky.f Thurs-
day. a min named Cook said that an}
woman who would go to hear Breck-
inridge was no better than a courte-
san. John King, whose wife attended
% Breckinridge meeting, dismounted
from Jpis horse and fought with Cook
R AVemarkable gold iedg. has beer
discovered in the uillow Creek dis
trict, in the foot-hill country, fifteen
miles from Boise. Prospectors have
been at work thcl'e for a year or more,
with some encouraging results,though
the district has not received much at-
tention because, as it was expressed,
it "is a sheep pasture." A number oi
gold ledges have been found, however,
and now comes the discovery of one
that is very rich. The discovery was
made by 1). B. Leaven. The pay
streak is two feet six inches wide and
has been stripped for a distance of 30C
feet. The ore is very rich, though uc
tests have been made to satisfactorily
determine its value. A man working
with a hand mortar has taken out SI
an hour. It is believed the ore is
worth §1,000 a ton. and some place tin
figure as high as §2,000. *
At Kovona, Poland Wednesday, there-
was a severe hailstorm. Eight child- j
ren were killed by hail stones.
Charles Luscoinb of the League oi
American Wheelman says that the
league will enter politics in the inter
est of good roads.
The motion of Rosalie Walbaum to
open the default on which Gottliel
Walbaum. president of the Saratog;
racing association obtained a decree
of absolute divorce against her in 1887 j
as denied by Justice Stover, of tin
once. •
A negro has been nominated for
Justice of the Peace in Oklahoma
County.
A new office is to be created at Nor-
man. The council will appoint a cot-
ton weigh master,
As the Indian war story is thr^igh,
it is now the Wichita mountain gold
discovery's turn.
The Probate Judge of Kingfisher
county uses only 37.50 worth of pos-
tage stamps a year.
The Experimental station has dis-
covered that potatoes grow better on
new ground than old.
Judge Scott has given it out that befl
ginning September 31, he will clear
up the deft-la t at Tecumseh.
Heavy rains visited the central part
of the Strip the first part of the week,
doing much good.
It is a wonder that the Cherokee In-
dians with all their money do not es-
tablish a Fanner's i'rust and Loan
company.
The Leavenworth society girl who
is immitating Tom King proves that
Women do sometimes sin erely flatter
each other.
The Osage council has passed a law-
enabling the parents of < sages to send
their children t > school tl^is fall at
the expense of the tribe.
The residence of T. J. J. Wiggins,
of Norman, was burned Sunday even-
ing. The origin of the lir<- is un-
known. jftLoss to house 'and furniture
$2,000.
The following appointments were
made for Oklahoma last week: Ante-
lope, Day county, Medora, J. Mangold,
postmaster: Vienna. >! ::itv l.<'u]s
Kucera, postmaster.
An Edmund youn^ man recently
started out in search for a wife and a
letter was receivedjfrom liim last week,
lie was in England and he said he had
found the woman.
E. F. Fisher, bookkeeper for the An-
heuser-Busch Brewing company, of
Oklahomo ( ity, committed suicide
Monday morning by taking a large
dose of laudanum.
Oklahoma's gas and oil well is still
going down and Oklaliom City intends
to keep putting it down till it strikes
something, if it is nothing more than
some fresh Chinese war news.
The farmers who can should not be
to anxious to sell wheat or corn at
present prices. The crop in both
cereals is short all over the country
and prices are bound to go up.
A number of heavy feeders from the
north have an interesting eye upon
the Indian Nation and aro making ar-
rangements to ship stock in that "sec-
tion of plenty" for winter keeping.
The annual conference of the Sev-
enth Day Adventists' of Oklahoma and
the Indian Territory#have been in ses
.-.ion in a grove near Oklahoma City,
for the past ten days. Large delega-
tions from the two territories attend-
ed the meetings. It took over 100
tents and 80 covered wagons to accom-
modate the delegates. The denomi-
nation is growing rapidly in Oklaho-
ma.
The following new postofliees have
been established in the Indian Terri-
'oYv and Oklahoma: Onie. Chickasaw
N>i-tion. Ebinezer, R. Johnson, post-
iraster:. Flowcrville, Choctaw Nation,
Nathaniel Flower, postmaster; Dyke,
blaine county, John li. Dyke, post-
master*/, Filson, Q county, * Chas. E.
Jlelplirey, .postmaster; Roy, Beaver
county, Clara Westmoreland, postmas-
ter.
News was received at Guthrie Mon-
day that a band of outlaws aided the
ranch of Stearns in the western part
of the territory, killed a man and
looted stores. Deputy United States
marshals and a posse give chase ai.d
had a battle with the outlaws during
which on each Bide was bounded.
The outlaws escaped a second time
and are being followed by a stronger
posse than the first one. ,
Postoflice Inspector Bebee of St.
Louis, arrested Rev. 11. McKinney last
week on the charge of raffling regis-
tered letters. McKinney is postmas-
ter in the town bearing his name, a
prominent preacher, justice of the
peace, and is announced candidate for
tl*j territorial legislature. Of la.•
several registered letters were found
to have been tampered with and each county has been calle
charge is laid at McKinnev's door. after the sufferers.
During the storm last Tuesday
night Michael Shellar, of Payne coun-
ty was struck by l'ghtning and in-
, stantly killed as he was sitting at the
supper table.
, There is a man in K county who
claims that it rains a good deal in Ok
lahoma but the sun is ;so hot that it
dries up the rain drops before they
can reach the earth.
This time last year there was a
good many people hanging over the
i side of the Strip and debating with
themselves as to whether they could
be sooners with safety.
The eleventh annual conference of
the Colored M. E. Church of America
convened at Outhrie la*V. week, with
BUiiop I>«'hce presiding A large*
number of ministers from Oklahoma,
Arkansas and Texas were present.
General disappointment is felt
among the Kickapoo boomers over the
news received Friday that the Kicka-
poo country would probably not be
opened until next spring. The pros-
pective settlers had concluded that ,
they would be able to make the run
by October, but it was reported that
Thursday Commissioner Lamareaux,
of the general land oflice, said in
Washington; "l doubt if the Kicka-
poo reservation will be open-
ed before nc.\t spring." It
is said the commissioner explained
that the question had not been fully
determined, and hence nothing could
be announced of an official character,
but he had the firm iinmpression that
the reservation would not be open to
settlement until congress be given a
chance to act on the bill fathered by
McRae of Arkansas, which provides
for disposing of all public lands to the
highest bidder. It apperrs to be the
policy of the department to hold up
the opening of the reservation, and
for so doing offers this as an excuse.
A waterspout coming up suddenly
Monday evening swelled Skeleton
creek out of its banks and flooding the
surrounding country for quite a dis-
tance. While attempting to cross a
stream at a point near Guthrie in a
buggy, the occupants, Mrs, Jack Mc-
Perk, her two children, and idiss Ma-
bel Hill, were tliro vn into the water
and drowned. In-the vicinity where!
the cloudburst occurred it has beeu
very dry for weeks. In the afternoon
the skj' became overcast and the set- !
tiers became frightened at the omni-
ous clouds ~nd took to their cellars, i
The wind lad been blowing a gale,
but later it alined down and every-
body e ipectec a cyclone. Instead,
however, a tremendous downpour of
rain came, falling, not in drops, but
by the buc. ctful. The dry prairie
could not fcbsorb the moisture and
everything wis flooded in a few min-
utes. Skeleton creek became a roar-
ing torrent. The persons who were
^drowned tri.'d to cross the stream and
get home, out the buggy wheel struck
a stone and tilted the buggy, throw-
i ng them out.
The dro ith which has been so gen-
eral throughout O county for the past
month w. s suddenly broken up the
early part of last week by a water
spout on the border of the state and
in the northern part. The Salt Fork
of the Cimmaron, which crosses the
county from the west to the east about
twelve miles from the Kansas line was
c ear out <>f its banks and sweeping a
raging torrent across the bottoms.
It carried wi'h it ricks of hay. cords of
wood and th. out buildings of the set-
tlers, upon its banks. Not less than
fifty families w re washed out of all
they had and ai • now camping along
the stream on ti • highlands back of
channel. The smaller creek called
the Driftwood, which runs into the
Salt Fork on the north side, with a
channel not over thirty feet wide,
stretched out over lie country until
it was a mile across i\ There was a
report according to the . t,tiers on the
bank, a rise of about ten i ?et in an
hour. All the crops have bis3n swept
away and distress is sure io follow
Among the families who lost their
house and were swept out, are those
of Rader and Hyde who are incarcer-
ate 1 in the county jail on t*. • charge
of burglary and house-break'.* s .What
makes it worse is that the children
are all sick with the s -arlet fever. Tho
people who are more fortuna* and
living on higher ground are di
in their power to alleviate the
diate needs of the ones without
but they themselves are poor a
d upon i
III rmMtoet Hoar Uernory J&oca]!*,
The question naturally msgresU itself.
I Which U "the fomiest hoar memory rocalUV •
Has the reader, who*# attention we hope to en-
icage. ever had a contiov r^y With his momach
>n th* tabled of dynpcp-iia After ronuneitu
firoof that the <llg«bti\e or?nn bun 4:01 the
upper hand, bM a wi « resurf bm-n made to
Ho*t 'ttT' Stomach Hitter* If to. the "fond-
est hour" has been recalled by memory in the
shape of n lasting resumption of tb - pow -r to
.lltrtst. assimilate thoroughly nbii cut heartily
without fear of being uncomfortable after-
war 1 When the dinner bell that tocsin of
the soul.'' strikes agreeably npon the -.ir, the
auditor then greets it us a welcome ho;:n i and
hastens to obey its summons The Haters, so
renowned as a stomachic overcome, too. ma-
larial. bilious and kidney troun -.-. an I remedy
nervousness, rheumatism and ti*, kheaduche.
A Waste of Time.
"Parson I)odd,.' said a parishioner,
with consternation in his voice,
• there's an infidel goin* to speak in the
town hall tonight. He's agin religion,
and he spys there isn't any Ood."
"Well," replied the parson, with a
placid twinkle in his eye. "I guess (Joel
can stand it."—Detroit Advertiser.
Ilia Threat.
"What do you mean by threatening
me as you have? I hear that you
swore if I cut across your fie In auain
you would shoot me as you would a
dog" ,
"Oh. that's all right. 1 never shoot
dogs."—lloston Transcript.
Kindly Consideration.
Miss Verdant—What is the object of
that board fastened over the cow's
head, Mr. Flippe?
Mr. Flippe -That. Miss Verdant, is.
to hide the poor thing's blushes when
the milkman works the pump handle.
—Town Topics.
A liuppy Death.
A negro living on Onion creek e|tne
to Austin recently, and the following
conversation oecured between him and
a city frieud:
"How is Pete Jackson?"
"He is done dead."
—"Yer dou't tole me so. How did it
come about?"
"He died wid digestion oh de lungs,
but surrounded wid de bes' wishes ob
de hull neighborhood."Alex Sweet, in
Texas Siftiugs.
Had an Uurneat Purpose.
"Do you believe in the novel with a
purpose?" said Squildig to an author
friend.
"Certainly," the latter replied. "All
the novels 1 ever wrote have the %same
purpose."
"What is it?"
"To imp. ove my bank account."—
Answers.
A Valuable Collection of Hooks.
Cumso—Taddels has a very valuable
library.
Fangle—I didn't know that he had
any books to speak of.
Cumso -0, yes. He has dfx bank-
books which show an aggregate credit
of $35,000.—Detroit Free Press.
Is due to un impoveri?hed condition of tho blo<
It should be overcome without delay, and the
best way to accomplish this result is to take
Hood's
Jk H parilla
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
which will purify and
vitalize tho blood, givt
strength and appetite
andpro4ucesweet, ai.d n f.
«o get flood's Sarsaparilla, and only II x d's.
'* TtnnwanndhWo
(M&RRIAHF PAPER ini i,«w>' i^onti"«iZ
IHAIiniMUC llslsnfrui I.S. ... |(|.- , . |r . Dialled
free. CUNNEL'S MONTHLY, Toledo. Ohio.
f Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal 1 xurnlnt r I S. Pension Bureau.
Syraiu liMtwar, 15 mljudieatiiif, claims, utty hkice!
lys cream BALM cures
jPRICE 50CENTS, ALL DRUGGISTS
fdlsSWIFE "iimViffK".00
&|A fur draw, r walnut or oak In:-
pr«, ed High Arm fiioprrsen in^ mac lima
I-
lull.anl in FluliHn Wt, - IT-iilrVi
hkj'Ul'.-.ir.S,iu„, ' I.
m S.,'.i1.""!;""'yr ~
U.WMJ. I.M., W M. J.I Mm ... I .tuch.'
menu. Buy from factory and aave dealor'a m,,i aeer.t'a nrotita
TDCC "" • 1 1 1 I illx . .. (IS
OXFORD MF6. CO. :12 Wikuk An. CHICAGO,ILL.
1889
llaven, Conn., U.s.A.Sa
Thl*Cn ii •' Full ure
all over Hi" West and not
up lo iiii average any
whrp' Wheat is now at
lowest price of -10 years,
opp' . u:iiii.\s io spocu-
11 ere are two ii:'e-tir
late. You can buy 1,000 bushels oil Jlu' marB...
and the 1)1)m>lit of K|l a<lvaiu-«*- saiiif as
If bought outright. Send for Oiir free boo);let
Hon to Trade."
C. K. VAN WINKLE & CO..
Room 45, 234 La Salle St., Chicago.
all.
the
look
MAILED
until lie aveutfed the insult by killing Supreme court of New Vorlc, las;
him
J week.
charge
The Indian department have their
builtUii£, on the river, south of Wa-
tonga, just about completed, and
from this time on all Indian supplies
and rations will be issued to the In-
dians at that place.
o The matter of contests and contest-
ants have been dragged into the cam-
paign in Cleveland county.
Madsen, the deputy marshal, wears
trousers which ure buttoned up the
side below the knees.
The Ponea City Indian base ball
club seems to have beeu swallowed up
somewhere in the east.
" Cjp to Date Dairying
containing full Instruction liowtfl
Higher Hmde Products, in
Jo. Young, a Keeley graduate, of
Okla noma City, took his own life Mon-
day night, by taking morphine. For
some month " he hi:> been drinking
heavily, and a few weeks ago his wife
•secured a divorce. This with financial
ti> r . > ti iscr 1^1:^1 hiui. llr was a
well-known barber, and the 'owner of
.lo Young, the pacer, which has been
making the rounds of the Kansas cir-
cuit this season.
Hurglars raided John Ilutset's store
and residence in Outline the other
night, securing nearly SI.000 cash
and $340 in countv \\ i: :ints.
PIOBE BOTTEB BETTER FlilGE
tnj with Less Labor cc Here .Money
Reviewing*nd explain i ,; in a ; rarticcl i ,.r. . .
the Normandy ^frcncm) System,
Danish Dairy System ann
Elgin Separator System
**.Lh have brought prosperity and ea- e to the i ury farmer.
hluable Information. Mailed FRFFon
• -id - n- ' • .... Junior*
r. lespinasse,
2CS Ml. Lamt St.
CHicir.a
in tuna
• ,
h
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Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1894, newspaper, September 14, 1894; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116520/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.