The Payne County Populist. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 1900 Page: 2 of 8
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.litef
COMPLETE MARKET REPORTS
CONGRESSIONAL NEWS
TO UTILIZE SUN'S HEAT
AUO lo Stor. Hour ll«t IB Reservoir!
and Apply " to K"*lnM'
Washington. .Tan. 11.— Dr. William
Calver. a scientist of Washington,
claims to have solved a problem that
has been puzzling the wise men of the
y\9ATISFACT0RY.- , , tl, for 3.000 years, and says that ho j
..... I has devised a method to utilize the
London, .W. )1.-The Daily Graphic heat of the sun as
makes the following statement regard- and power. HisjIikc 0\ thc lmrn
iugthe seizures of German vessels by j upon ttadmp ^ of
British warships: int, M _ • t(> n fo(,us „f a
Salisbury and Von Buelow Can Not
Come to Terms.
DEEMED
Within the Power of the State to
Exclude Deceitful Imitations.
FIT MATTER FOR STATE LAW,
Germany has addressed two notes to mirrors lie can gather
the British foreign office, challenging few inches all the rays of the sun that
Great Britain's right to detain any """" ,ln 'Lre " L"
ships traveling between two neutru
ports. The notes have been fully an
s we red thus: The queens governmen t
find themselves wholly unable to ac-
qliiesce in Germany's contention.
Germany cited a ease in support of her may be
fall upon an acre of gr
melt iron and steel as if it were ice.
and obtain a heat of several thousanc
He also has de
St. Louis. .Ian. ll.-Judge Adams, in
the United States circuit court, in
Wbat Is Being lli n« 1° T,l# I""!'*!'
Gi.n<-r.il Assembly.
J4N1IABY rollBTH.
i s.Wh%To{fow!SS^"TornTd Zi
; lH'lonjrinR tf°t^e1Vun1itt^ statS to retain them as
intention of - maintain such govern-
i SJ.rcon.mUh^'-""; ,th« archlpeluRO -
ti nance bill.
mf^tan^fin^f^'v^rtingX | J. Uie , house
Missouri statutes
margarine, sustained the state w SrfSS uf thu
t i . u,.. Knli of oleomargarine 1 und men under them for tne ut
prohibiting thc salt Spanish fleet ut Santiago.
colored as butter. Scheitl.n contended | ,
Hid the state law i • «' MMfffe-JS. TSi
anuaky rirni
degrees Fahrenheit.
vised a method by which the natural
heat of the sun. gathered in that way,
stored in reservoirs and ap-
that the law was unconstitutionel so j ^
far as it affected him. in that thc oleo-
Mild was procu
Before The House Committee On
Insular Affairs.
SEVENTY PER CENT WHITE.
Washington, .lan. 10.-General Davis,
governor general of Puerto Rico, ap-
peared before the insular affairs com-
mittee of the house and made a genm -
al statement regarding the sit.latum
of affairs in that island. W hen he as-
sumed charge, there was a cabinet of
secretaries in charge of the severs de- ( ^
nartments. The people of Puerto Rico,
he said, were accustomed to arbitrary ,
| control, control of the king through
Mixed boards had evefy-
KaniM City.
CATTLE—Common to heavy
HOOS—Choice to heavy
WHEAT No. Shard
CORN -No.
OATS-No. -
It YE -No. 2
HAY—rholoe timothy
Choice prairie
I BUTTE It
EGOS
Chicago.
WHEAT—No. 3 red
COKN No.
i OATS-No.
St. Lou la Ciraln.
ft
4«tt
9 00 <b 0 .V)
7 OH <& 7 50
22 id 'I ft
1«
84 (&
<2)2
WHEAT—No.
COKN No. 2 ...
OATS No. i
UYK—No. t
i,. onUV leRes and .>leo- ministers.
dip somite committee on pn\ ittK , ...
HIGHLANDERS STAMPEDE,
contention, but on examination this pUed both to stationary-^
so-called precedent proved to be quite ,ive engines. ' alver as a ^
inapplicable to the seizures under de- , tory on the outskirts of J ■
cision The correspondence between j lias a number of inventions to
the two governments rests, pending a j it in the patent office.
deeision by the prize court.
Berlin. Jan. 11.—The seizure of Ger-
man vessels by British warships are They Broke and Kan and No OIBeei
still uppermost in the public opinion | could stop them,
of Germany, Emperor William eon-j Xew York. .Ian. 11.—A dispatch tc
fers daily, sometimes twice with the . World from London says: 1h<
foreign secretary, Count Non Buelow. . most appauing battle yet. from a Brit
regarding the situation, which was de- j uh of yiew as depicted by a cor
respondent in the field, comes from •!
margarine which lie
The vote
Cotton.
Liverpool.
New York.
tinlveaton.
Wichita Grain.
Cluie.. CIoh
Open. High. I-n" todsir YJ
itliin the power of the state to ex I QUfty'of Pi
elude from its markets any compound 3.
manufactured in another state which
has
had repre- May.
JANUARY EIGHTH.
C.) gave notlre of an
nas been artificially colored or adulter- 'ti"' tinai.ee bill repealing tus
Med. so as to cause it to look Ilk. an ,ircuU.ioa, v, noilee of ,,,
article of food in general use and the
ate
of food ii w
sale of which may, by reason of color- ^-wjr 0( lhe country
ation or adulteration, cheat the gener
knciniT that which in ine n
resolution for an
public into purchasing that which la the house I
It. Whigham, with Lord Methucn's col
umn. It shows the collapse of till
Highland brigade at Magersfontein
scribed by a well informed official as
••most serious." Thc first British offi-
cial reply to Germany's request for an
explanation from I.ord Salisbury is
deemed unsatisfactory. The main dif-
ference between the British and Ger-
many's conceptions regarding the justi-
flableness of thc seizures is in the in-
terpretation placed upon contraband
and the right of search, and it seems , Th(i niKillanciers brolte and ran—then
impossible that an agreement will soon 1
be reached between the two govern-
•altrntlon la to be
isto[floes und post road-
Mr I.ant* (Ohio) Introduced n
n investigation of the charges
they may not intend to buy. A state
enactment forbidding the sale of de- , ,,„.ii«,iioii 1 to be ramie bj
ceitful imitatious of articles of food in
general use among the people does not;
nriviWo secured to citi-
trl iirea U hereby re iuest
ir.i<n '■ ....nihinsi
in all of which the natives
sentation. The customs were collect- wheat: M r
ed by army officers, assisted by na- Corn: May
tives. Natives were everywhere the
prtneipai employes.
The industrial situation
6M !
tJs',!
8Vi
SS
23 \ 24
23
Calls.
1'ul.
6>
.. .. .Mk
33
An !
M>ro
I M S ^ a 1
:f«t
_ Tiird 1
nstea
finger,
age o
linger
end oi
trudes
able t
end ei
with
ine w
|lng t
Ostr
ting
peed
n Cul
istricl
lorse.
Coui
if cou
Wheat: May.
nn the is- |K>QS
abridge any privilege secured to citi- ,bc
7.i ns of the 1 nited
land was not satisfactory, lie sketch
ed the discouragement which had re- |)KKVKS
silted from the trade and taritT dis- jllJKK.il.-
criminations against the products of
the island, both in the United States
and Cuba, before the great hurricane
devastated the island last August, in
that awful desolation, coffee planta-
Cltlraffo I.lve Stork.
.ASNKKS
TK\AS KKK BK.KA
SliKKI* -Fair to choice
Ii no <a (1 v
I IS ><9 * ^
IW 4
: '-6 -
4 00 HI ft
I X U 4
Information
inents.
That Vice Admiral Matter.
Washington. .Ian. 11.—The grade of
vice admiral will be revived.
The president, on the passage of a
bill for this purpose, will nominate
Rear Admiral W. T. Sampson to fill the
place.
It is proposed to introduce two Mills,
one of which will provide for two vice
admirals and another creating one
vice, and naming Rear Admiral Schley
as the man for the place. The admin-
istration must, therefore, make its
choice between the two vice admirals
or one vice admiral, w ho shall be |
Schley.
is no other word for it. In a few min.
utes the brigade had been decimated,
and the issue decided. They did nol
run far, only a few hundred yards, but
when they rallied they were shaken
and confused for hours. They lay flat
on the ground between the
guns and the Boer trenches.
o'clock the Boer rifle fire greatly in
creased, simultaneously the brigade
was seen in full retreat Back they
came in a wave, no officer could stop it.
Manila In Crowded.
States, nor in any tall lib'rtv o( irwie imM i I win.
its lowers to prevent . Hons had been ruined and every ban
ina plant on the island had been de-
stroyed. For five years preceding 18'.n.
the average exports had reached about
lfl,000,tMR> pesos. In l l>$, they were
■ut in half, and this year they will
hardly exceed 3,500,000.
were discouraged.
British
About ti
territory
t It la the
W. Produce Mor. CI Th.n England.
Washington. Jan. 11. The sta,,-i-
department announces that the 1 n.ted h„ hlKr^,,
States has. at last produced more coal ,.r;.,
than Great Britain, the totai of which im^ai:",JL^I,Jr.'lo"rsenntor B-v. r-
in 18(. (.l was no less than 244,581t8i.> and said he could pr<
tons, the largest quantity ever mined
The people
Thev lacked the
THE LATEST NEWS IN BRIEI
St. Joseph, Mo., i to have a tin n
factory.
General Joe Wheeler is very mi
put out because he is given no cliai
to fight the Filipinos.
There are thirty Hie eases of stm
*ey that there a
i a year and putting the I nited States ^ Stephen*
from Otis and
FiUpluo government.
,.i lntro<luced a bill which
lineral lands in the terrl-
..... ..' ..Ai<r«e f he lll.i -i
1 ;;;rgyto ^^ —
outlook school located at Dixon.
|JUln answer to a direct question from Kxplollion 0f acctyiene gas burn*
Representative Henry, of Texas. Gen- ehoroh nt Kd..„ Nebraska. whlU
cral Davis stated that he 'ii'i nnt 1 un^ t.'li meetimf was in session
wgtcli meeting
A large carriage repository in i'
territorial form of government, such
jhead of Great Britain as a coal-pro- i, bl'll 11H wa8 proposed for Hawaii, would be
ducer The pig iron was 13,649,453 ,t thc Wlclilu moimt.ln Jlstrlct. (or the best interests of the island, but lr<id Me a four story brick boil
tons, or 1,878,610 tons more than in sr«t Ttvm. | thmt the people of I'uerto Rico were as burned, with a Joss of «lou,uoo.
l«i$. Copper production j v^'.^',^{*aff"h.^^V\«r!d sIT-eel." bv : much entitled to trade privileges as |(cv j K Peck, the oldest mm
pounds, a gain of 11 per cent over 189'. .. nlUors ice,..« of I the people of Hawaii. If trade privt-. ^ ^ W vomin|{, 1VaI1.. Methodist C
Other important items were -11-™111 .,„.i r.-fetr.-l S'-aator i ,e „erc granted they would go f.ir fcrt.nce fcU del,d in his pulpit
tons of lead. 135,796 tons of *ioe, 54,- ,11 *a U^r | toward industrial regeneration, hut
addition, some responsible b
must have the power of h
H* in
and quarantine. Great numbers of
I provincial natives are coming to Ma-
Ral«lnE « Regiment InSebrnka. i ni]a. with the result that the city is
Omaha, Neb., Jan. 11.—John G. Ma-1 overcrowded. the increase in the ac-
hcr. of Chadron. is raising a regiment ■ commodations being inadequate, and
to go to the Transvaal in aid of the ; .in*
lie has already the names of
Manila, Jan. 10.—The bubonic plagm>
is vet sporadic. There have been si^ 048,100 barrels of petroleum. -
cases and four deaths. l'reparations M,.^7,.r„ "vhl... I l« n. CSr. I Pwrt
being made to establish hospitals| York. Jw 11 —TarryMcOoyrn V • ^ V rawing money until thc taxes
municipal, insular an
Boers.
1,000 men. The plan is to embark
them as citizens emigrating to the
Transvaal to go into farming min
ing. It will take about S.'Ou per man
to take the fort e to Africa, and steps
are now under way in New \ irk, Chi-
cago, Omaha and other cities to raise
this amount. Several young women
have applied for positions as nurses.
For Better Highway*
Washington, .lan. 11.—Among the
bills introduced in the senate was one
by Mr. Penrose, appropriating 85,000,-
;e necessary for foodstuffs is
xpensive than at any time dur-
insuiar and eight > «
3 world from George Dixon. «; I pur The Miss..uri
efendtil it nearly nine years. « " T ' ^ V
iv>n from a knock-out Tom H,£n Su«HJ 0~«« ,UirU' ; trade, the pe<.ple of 1'uert.. .ng the f..r„,at,..n of ..
.1 son and New lands. i ..limiito and resources oi ,.nnositi'Hi to tlu'twi «
more
ing the last twelve years. The plague
is dangerous to the overcrowded, un-
derfed and unwashed natives and
Chinamen. Americans avoiding direct
contact with the disease are safe.
Governor Itarnen' Ca e.
Washington, .lan. 11.—Of a multi-
plicity of alleged authentic stories in
regard to the immediate change in the
office of governor of Oklahoma, it ii
difficult, if not impossible to select the
! correct one.
I The common story is that Governor
000 for the construction of public roads n,irneb is to be removed at once and a
in the United States, the money to be j man appointed in his place who i> en*
distributed among the several states in tjrejy free and independent of all fac-
proport'on to the mileage of their roads tions in oklahoma.
Jeffries and Corbett. j statehood Comes l.a*t.
New York, .Ian. 11.—Jim Jeffries and j Washington, .lan. 11.—The houso
MeC
New York, .Ian
wrested the
ship of the
who had d
To save Dixon from a kn<
O'Rourke, his manager, threw up the
sponge in the eighth round, win 11 the
negro was staggering helplessly, l.lced-
ing and weak, but as game as the dy-
ing gladiator. The tight took place
before a crowd that packed thc licoail-
I way Athletic club, and the victory de-
cided the ownership of a PI'' "00 purs,'.
WOULD GIVE A NEW START.
and resources of
able to work out
In
• >|M
ldfH
T«
bret
the
,lim
Cor> ett will meet in a twenty-five , ,.0minitte
territories decided to
round bout March 15 for the champion- 1 take Up tjie Hawaiian bill next Mon
ship of the world. Billy Brady, man- I ^ay, when General Ilartwell of Ilawai
agerof Jeffries, and • orbett have had j ftn'(| Mr ||lttofthe Hawaiian eoramis
a talk and agreed ui>oii the tight on tion, will be heard. Alaskan legisla-
that date. tion will he thc next heard and aftei
A F llurnham, an American scout | that dates will be fixed for hearing th«
member 1 claims of Oklahoma, New Mexico anc
Arizona for admission to the I nion.
has gone to South Afri
of Lord Huberts' staff.^
l'r 7j Conductor Bl.it
Denver, Col., Jan. ti.—The coroner's
... . * .... 1 iurv that investigated the death of
pelier tin plate m emp ""m I Winfleld l'andleman, the express mes-
is closed and it is believed that it will ,
not resume. It is said that the tin
oOdRinentAgalnut the I nlon
BnAUo, N. v.. .lan. v Edwai "
nieh, a linotype machinist, formerly
employed in the composing room of the
Evening New*, bTOttght -'lit WSf'
eral months ago against David Shank-
land. as president of Typographical
union No. 9 of this city to recover dam-
ages for alleged conspiracy in forcing
him out of his position because he re-
fused to take out a card in the Typo-
graphical union, got a verdict of
in the supreme court.
Itrltlah l.oiiNe* Nearly H.OOO.
London, .Ian. 11.—Britain's loss since
the war began is fast approaching H.ooo.
A war office compilation of cas ialties
just issued shows a total of ..'J13 •
killed. 3,r 7"i wounded and'.'.."ill missing.
These do not include 140 who have
succumbed to disease nor the last cas-
ualties at Ladysmith.
peka. .Ian. 11.—The Kansas Swine
tiers' Association is considering
idvisability of a mutual insurance
•iation to proteet the menil
, loss on ac
rs
cholera,
breeders
conven-
i f statf
mUmm
and among
A Tin Combine
Hartford City, Jan H.—Thc
ut of he
There are a number of swir
attending the stock breede
tion and the insurance scheme was
sprung. The only thing t" hinder the
carrying out of such a flan, in the
opinion of those present, is the danger,
of dishonest breeders becoming mem-
bers. Mellnire. of Heno. suggested a
way to avoid this. • Hon t insure the
entire bunch of hogs belonging to a
ineml er," said he. • Simply agree to
start him in business again, in the
event his bunch dies. 1 his would not
work a hardship to anybody. I am
willing to give from five to ten hogs a
i year for that kind of insurance. "
Several other members present fell
in with the idea and within the next
month an association of that kind if
almost certain to lie chartered.
Cltoat*. And Salisbury.
Washington. Jan. « Secretary Hay
,idering the climat
the island, would I
'heir own salvation.
• tjuite able to support themselves.
-eplied l.eneral Havis, "and. lieside-..
•ontribute much wealth to the I nited
states whenever the island is put upon
a sound basis."
He said that alsiut 70 per cent of the
population of the island were white.
There were 70,000 negroes and r.O.OOil
muiattoe-. The native Spaniards were
in the iiest condition. '1 hey were
faithful industrious and temperate
They were thrifty. Every I'uerti
Riean was either actively or passive!}
a Catholic. A large portion of tin
population is of illegitimate birth
Americans in I'uerto Kico like tin
cn'Tee grown there, and llenerai iiavi
I believed all that can 1* produced Direct llai. for
! can lie disposed of in New York city l.ly the largest
alone at prices equal to that paid for I
I 'he best Java and Mocha. The Ixindon correspondent "I
llerlin Tageblat learns that the II
I Money orders can be sent to Cuba consuls at llamherg Antwerp. I
nnd I'uerto Rico cheaper tliau thev can and Marseilles denounce certain
Ik. sent from one United States post- l-mnd for South Africa as ear
| aflice to another. / The reason for this
| is that these orders escape the war tax.
All lalK.r unions of St. Joseph
are demanding from 1" to - • per
increase of wages an 1 recognition
j the eight hour law
Federation
. solution f
laln r part
pposition to ine two uld parti*
The British residents of Mexico
contributed fooo.noo gold to the
ish Soldiers' relief fund. Many Km
men have gone home to enter the ■
The abuse of the war office and
Lansdowne. the seen'tary
war. and I/ortl Wolseley,
abated in the pr
public of Ixmdon.
Retail butchers of Minneapol
the northwest have advaneetl tin
on veal and pork one cent a pound
is difficult for the packing bouses
cure enough for the increased den
< .1. Hamlin, of New York,
ttought from his trainer. K. V. <
the blaik four-year-old pacing
You
tter
adin
>rd
me
ers
vert
The
the
This is pr
r paid f
■ without a record
Mcii-
plate trust Intends to move the ma-
chinery to either Elmwood or Ander-
son and consolidate with the others
owned by the company at those places.
The city of Montpelier gave a l onus of
$2.1,000 for this plant, and injunction
proceedings are contemplated.
The I'ulln
Chicago. «lan. 8.-
i KaiMte.
—Robert T. Lincoln
and Norman B. Ream, executors of the
estate of George M. Pullman, were
allotted as compensation for their ser-
vices. the sum of $4'.'5,000. This is said
4o be thc largest amount of fees ever
allowed executors of any estate handled
by the probate court here. The final
accounting of the executors in the
Pullman estate is expected to be made
next week. It is said that the estate,
which was listed at about Sh,000,1)00
when the will was probated, will row
nearly figure up to $11,000,000.
IIlk Demand Vmt Mmatl Holes.
Washington, .lan. 10.—United States
Treasurer Roberts said that ths de-
maud for small notes still continues
beyond all precedent and has resulted
in reducing tne supply on hand to a
point where an Increase was absolutely
necessary. To meet this increased de-
mand the bureau of engraving and
printing will print IMO,000 additional
In new fives and tens, and this increase
vrlll be kept up ns long as the needs
of the eountrv require it, sty* Treas-
urer Roberts.
pr who was killed in the wreck on
the Union Pacific railroad at Brighton,
has found that the collision was caused
by the criminal carelessness of Conduc-
tor K. W. McAllister. This man lost
his reason at the scene of the accident,
but is slowly recovering his mental
balance.
Foraker'* Puerto Rico Bill.
Washington, .lan. #.—Senntor For-
aker in speaking of his bill for govern
mental provisions for Puerto Rico,
said it did not create a territory out ol
the island, nor undertake to give thf
island a territorial form of government
in the ordinary understanding of that
phrase adding that it merely provided
a simple form of government, which it
was believed would answer the purpose
until a more matured form could be de-
vised, The senator also said that the
bill was intended only as a basis foi
the committee on Puerto Rico to act
upon
New In Hanking lllntorj.
Washington, .lan 10.—1The comptrol-
ler of the currency has declared a final
dividend of 0.55 per cent in favor ol
the creditors of the National Hank ol
Kansas City, Mo., making in all 100
per cent of principal and 55.81 per cent
of interest of claims proved amounting
to $807,'J81.6§. This is regarded as thu
most remarkable showing ever mado
by the receiver of a Kansas City bank.
The payment of the principal in full
and any interest at all, is toinething
new in financial history.
Indluii Famine In llorrlMs.
London. Jan. 10. — Latest mail ad-,
ccsfrom India avertiiat the situation | ha received a tcleirram from m •
grows darker every week. Hirce mil-
lions were working on government re-
lief. Families were breaking np. each | vie
'inber for himself in search of food, t'.ic
Abandoned children are found with 1 ish warslnj
quency H is famine of water as ! intently to the representations on this
11 as food, rattle are dying off by subject, made by Mr. < hoate by di-
ted un I rectlon of the state department and
lor Choate at London, stating that he
had an eminently satisfactory inter-
view with I .ord Nalisbury relative to
izure of American goods by Hrit-
l.o.'iI Salisbury listened
FIll'iR
Lorenzo, Mn
Diggers News
mor to th<
f*
The
Kroner'* < n
rquez, .lan
vs at Pretoria prints a ru-
ffect that Umgwood, Na
residence on the island of St.
HeK-na, is being renovated for the re-
L-eption of President Kruger after the
war. It adds that the report has cre-
ated the bitterest feeling in Hoer offi-
cial circles.
thousands and no rain is expei
til June.
An Mueh Hanger hh Fver.
London. Jan. 10.—(Seneral White
still holds out or did w hen thc Hoers,
ousted from their foothold inside thc
works, suspended their assault at
nightfall. Kngland has taken heart
Thc situation, however.
enter-
A I rniii* of ClirUtlnnft.
I took them under consideration, prom- j Philadelphia, Jan. 10. A big
ising voluntarily to (five thc matter . pr;w was formally launched when
I iiiiinediutc attention and to return a representatives of all the 1 liristian dc-
speedy decision. ! nominations and organizations In this
| city met and announced a religious
census of the city for February
Amerlean Steel far* For Franee.
Pittsburg. I'a.. Jan. II.—Lucien Mart-
hai, chief engineer of the I'aris. Lyons
I'he ; and Mediterranean railroad, or France,
beleagured force must have expi-nded who is in this country on a tour of in-
large amounts of ammunition, which j speetion. placed an order with the
cannot he replenished, and must have Pressed Steel tar company of this city
lost a number of officers and men, ! for .VKI steel gondola cars of u special
which is counterbalanced, so far ns thc 1 design. This order marks the tirst in-
garrlson is concerned, by the greater! troduction of American steel carson
loss of the Hoers (ieneral White needs! the European continent and maybe
relief but the difficulties confronting J considered a new epoch of railway
'ieneral liiiller are as great as lie fore equipment In the old world.
s|.1,i. Man ' SII,. I. *t.m run<l SUM l.nmlng.
Washington, Jan. ill.—The I.'a!ted I Washington, Jan. in. -The Lawton
States minister to Siam writes to the home fund is attaining noble propor-
state department that the Siamese gov-1 tions, and (ieneral t.orbin is of tho
eminent has given another evidence opinion thai there is now in night
of its friendliness to the United States j al out #h:.,ooo The contributions turn-
by offering to present to this eoqntry ed in since noon Saturday, or reported,
a part or the whole of the Temple amount to |18,tt7fl, making tho grand
grounds on which the United States ' total •<,.7,4on. (ieneral Cor bin says that
legation is located at llangkok. The in addition to this It Is reported to
property is worth fifty-seven thousand him that there is a fund of 810,000 in
dollars. The gift, if accepted, Involves! San Franojsco, and another of 10,000 in
an outlay of alsmt l'i,000 for Improve- turned In and other
lucnt the premises. 1 ported,
The census will be a complete one.
covering the million ami a quarter
people of Philadelphia and the work
will be done in one day. An army of
workers, representing all denomina-
tions, will lie employed on February
22, in gathering statistics. This Is the
first time a religious census has been
undertaken in this city in which all cured an advance of
Christian denominations have joined In 1 wages and nine hours.
contraband of war and as a result
are captured by Knglish warship
Col lector llliss. at Havana, is
cuting a local merchant for Intro
ing tobacco )«>nf through the
house disguised a#* "potatoes.** 11
the time has arrived when an ex.
must 1h- made of somebody.
Owing to the withdrawal of the ti
Atlantic liners for use as tram
and t e consequent non-arrivi
\merlcan meat, the butchers of
don have the utmost difficulty in
curing supplies and are adval
prices 4 to • cents per pound.
The re-timbering of the main
of the Kansas penitentiary coal in
finished and 300 convicts are a
digging coal to supply the urg
maud for fuel on the part of the |
institutions.
The br« om manufacturers
tion has fixed as lowest prl
brooms 81 per doxen to jobbers]
93.35 to retailers.
Journeymen painters, of St.
Mo., who threatened to strike.
'JO per
instead
the movement.
I'lsffiir
as a days' work.
In Honolulu. | T1" ■" « ' meeting of the
Honolulu. Jan. I, via San Francisco, ,1 on federate Veterans is to I"'
Jan. i . Seven additional cases of I Louisville, Ky., from May SO
plague have developed since last ad- n *t.
vices, making thirteen nases all told The Hird Canning company. ^
to date. Three cases were discovered has plants nt Topeka. St. Jnr
on the night of thc 3Sth ult. and four I several other points, will put
cases have la-en reported during the I Ola thc.
past forty-eight hours. The board of
health as decided to take radical steps
to atnmp out the scourge. A portion
of the Infected district was condemned
and burned to the ground the other
day.
President Horace (j I1 in
Union Pacific, has pre n(>
University of Wyornlu
Laramie, sis blocks oi y
lying just north of theSJ (lni
embracing about I wei^^tv
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Wright Bros. The Payne County Populist. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 1900, newspaper, January 18, 1900; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117134/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.