The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 285, Ed. 1 Friday, March 31, 1899 Page: 1 of 8
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M,8TO*"-^ .Oc,8r,
THE ONLY ASSOCIATED PRESS PAPE8 IN OKLAHOMA-
I
1 ML FIRST PAPFR PUBLISHED IN OKLAHOM*
VOLUME 10.
Fill HAY .MOWNIN*
MALOLOS
TAKEN.
Insurgents Deserted And Bur-
ned the Ci'.y.
In many impor 9. tar.t particulars,
Hood 8 tiaraa fA 4 P*rilla i- IVculiw
to Itself. It is
a medicine up
far ahe ad of the
ual preparation
as the /electric light is
ahead of /the tallow dip. The
CTgredientt oied/io making it art
selected with the / E1 • an •
i and are gathei/ed f<-r us
time tht j p - X ' m the
great cst^r remedial
v a 1 ue./ The pecuk^'
iar
I at the
Democrats Conspire at a Ban-
quet at Topeka.
MADE A DESPERATE FIGHT.
Their Loss was Very Heavy and
Ours Light.
sho I
ARE STILL BEING PERSUED
General Hall Had a Serious Engage-
ment but Won
MARCH TCWARDS MALOLOS
It wan Contented Kvery Inch of the
Way hy Nlinrp Shooter*--linn-
nnn and Xebranka Regiment*
Itrilliunt 4 amp and
Fighting.
port
I cess
Hood's
■^arilla, are unknown
other, thus making Hood'i
eaparilla peculiar to itsel f.
value of this peculiarity is t
by actual results. AndHood's Sa/rsa-
parilla has a record of cures un^/equal-
ed in medical history. Has^^noro of
them, greater fiuccosses^^iu serious
cases, better gcn^^^^iiinc, unsolicited
tcstimonial^^than.
| wedicine^^iin existf
cures
BRYAN'S FORMAL DICTUM
Does not Want the Indianopolis Plat-
form Democrats.
fi
Manila, March 31 Noon—Major C;/r al
MarArthus enter 'i Maloloa. the seat of
the so-called Insurgent government, at
half past 9 o'clock this morn np. thr>
rebels burning the city and simultaneously
wvscuatlng It. They are now In full r -
<tiv.at toward the north where Agulna'do
and the cabinet have been for two days.
Washington, Marc 81.—Th war de-
partment at 1:30 'this morning ma do public
the following dispatch from General Otis.
Manila, ->iarc. 31.
Adjutant General. "Washington.
MacArthur captured Maio.ua at 10:13
this morning. Enemy r. tired af.er sight
resistance and firing city.
Particulars later Hall had quite sever-
engagement b> yond Mariquina; casual ti •
twenty. Enemy driven
OTId.
Washington, March 30 —m - ollowlng
dispatch from < eneral Otis was reeelv
ed at 'the war department ton-'.uht:
Manila, March 31.
Adjutant General. Washington.
MacArthur made dispositions yesj'er-
day for -attack on Malolos today. Enga-
gement opened at 7 o'clock this morning
and Ls now progressing. Casualties yes-
terday four killed and 23 wounued, a. 1
brought to Manila last night. Hall movi <1
out from camping station at day! ht
this morning with' three battalions north
nast, attacked and has taken Mariquina
and Is pursuing en my; ordered to return
mis afternoon. OTIS.
Manila. March 31—10:53 a. m.—Major
Geeral MacArthur advanced to attack
Malolos. the seat of the Insurgent govern-
ment at 7 o'clock this morning.
He was melt with strong opposition the.
rebels resisting desperately but *o s'"g
heavily. General Hills brigade has been
advancing north from the water w>rks
and driving the left wing of the enemy
across.
MARCH ON THE WAY.
OUR TROOPS UNDER FIRE ALL TIIPJ
WAY.
(Manila, iMardh 31—(7:33 p■ m.1—The Un-
ited States 'troops rested last night In tri*
Jungle aibout a mile and a quarter from
Malolos. The day's advance began a.t *
o'clock and covered a distance of two
and a half miles beyond the GiUsnlnn
river, along 'the railroad. Thp brunt of
t'he ■bat'tle was on the right of the track
whore the enemy was apparently concen-
trated.
The first Nebrtarka, first fVnrth IYaWntA
and the tenth Pennsylvania regiments en-
countered them cm trenched on the bor-
der of tjhe woods and the Americans ad
vanolns across the opening suffered a t ci-
tato firo tfor 'half an hour. Four men of
the iN«<braska regiment were killed and
thirty were wounded amd one o-f the
pekTWisydvanla wa^ killed.
The AanTlinann finally drove the Fili-
pinos hack. Although 'there were three
lines of strorag entrenchments along the
track, the enemy mad • scarfccly and de-
fanso there. General Ma< Arthur and Ma
f taff were iwalkink on the track nJhreast
of the line, with everything quiet, when
suddenly they received a shower of bul-
lets from sharpshooters In trees and on
housetops, (but these were speedily dis-
lodged.
The nenmy's loss was apparently small,
the Jungle afford ng them such protection
tha!t the Americans were unable to see
them and in firing wore guided only by
the sound of t'he Filipino shots, The Am-
erisun artillery was handicapped for the
same reason.
T^ast night's long line of oanrp fire>
) made a beawrtfu-1 sight with the 2"th Kan
\ mi cans artillery -was handicapped for the
i liver. .
Tho provision train was delayed by .>r->k
*n bridges but the stores of grain and
fldeks of ducks In the locality furnished
Bfrvpie forsc^-
fTfce boapltal work ia TemarkaWy effl-
eases, hu
'ula, salt vM.cutn, rhou
F mat Ism, cata^^fli, and al! other
trmfliles traeoable/to impure or vi-
I tiatcil blood, ^^oiwring greatitom-
j ach-toning qu I alitios,
gestion, dyspep'^
j of the stomach,etc
! up the, nerves
and reviving brain, nerve
strength and curing
j prostration. As a natural/tonic
it strengthens the/whole
system and cures
that tired feeling.
It has done all
this for others and
what it does f "■> I lAoth «^rs it
j will do for you \~J Ail we ask for
Hood's SarsaparTITa. is a necessity, an
opportunity and a fair trial. Tit1 sure
to get Hood's. Sold by druggists.
Prepared only hv t . I- Hood k Co.,
Lowell, Mass. It tuver disappoints.
SACK--CL0TH AND ASHES FOR THEM
i'liainp « lark Believe* Ilrjnii « ill
Ite the .\e.\t Xomince Wlieu
There will be the First
I>cuioeiatle President
For Years.
dent, as it has been throughout tt:e
whole campaign.
The tel' grafhers keep abreast *)f the
iin-e and maintain a constant conn^eden
with t'he city.
SOUND M3HEY JGViCE,
RESOLUTIONS DRAWN UP 1'Y A
COMMITTEE OF THE LEAGUE.
New York, .Maren 3).— The ccmmlltee
appointed by tn-i natl-ina*. sound money
league to draw up rcsoluv.'Mi.? seiling
forth the purposes of the '.cagim and to
report later has drawn up the following:
That the National Soun 1 Money League
demand that a derli!\i:orv act of con-
gress be passed making all bonds, no.es,
or other obli^aiio is of the United Slates
payable in the lawful unit of value, which
is by statute a dollar made of gold: also
an act of legislation giving the r. >Mer ef
any note or co n of the United States
the right to demand redemption under
suitable provision In respent :o subsi-
diary coins of lesa than one dollar cach.
in said unit of value or dollar made, of
gold or Its multiples in other gold con'.s.
That so long as the government contin-
ues to re-isue It note to circulate a money
the league favors legislation establishing
a separate bureau of Issue and redemption j
in the treasury department, in w.tich shall
be held a separate reserve in uold coin in
sufficient amount to assure the prompt
redemption of all the demand oo"dga:loas
oC the government.
Washington. March 30.—T1ie president
has pardoned Oscar Dawson who wascan-
vlcted and sentenced to five years impris-
onment for robbing the postofflce at S Jem
W. Va. The prisoner is in the last stagrs
of consumption.
Topeka, Kan., March 30.—The demo-
ratlc conference and banquet under the
the auspices of the democratic state cen-
tral committee was held In this city this
evening.
jminent speakers, Including Col. W.
J. Hryan, and Champ Clark of Mo.; Al en
O. Myers of Ohio, and Slndney C'.ark of
O-.ahoma, were present.
Covtrs were laid for more than a thous-
and guests, i.io new library hall where
the banquet was held, presented a bril-
liant scene wt.h thousands of incandes-
cent lights and decorations of natural
roses, flags and bright colored bunting.
The meeting was in the nature of a con-
ference of th© democratic leaders, th<
policy of the party in th campaign of
19<HJ being touched upon. Mr. Bryan wa*
given the mos. prominent place, his sub-
ject being "Democracy."
Mr. Bryan stood out square y for the
Chicago platform and sa'd that there h<> 1
been no retreat from tho positions taken
in im.
"We are not only ho'dlng our own. he
declared, "but we are gaining back those
democrats who loft us without fully un-
derstanding the na> ure of th • struggl".
"Sometimes we henr pleas for harmony
from those who opposed the party In 18T6"
continued Mr. Bryan, "but harmony In-
stead of being a thing hoped for. Is at
last, a thing realised; not a pretended har-
mony between those entertaining antagon-
istic principles, but an actual harmony"
between those who are united in a com-
mon purpose against a common cn my.
The democratic party was mver more ar-
monious. and its harmony can only be dis-
turbed by admitting within the fdd -those
who was at variance with its principles
and aspirations.
"Th ^ democratic platform of IMO will
be written by those who stood upon the
plait form of 1*96, not by those who tried
to overthrow the democratic party in that
campaign.
"The failure which attended those who
organized the gold party and wrote I71"
dlanapolls platform. ought <to restrain
them from proffering their services as
platform makers for some y ars to come."
CHAMP CLARK'S SPECII.
Champ Clark of Bowling Green. Mo.,
had for his rub.'e.t "Pro p r'.ty—pist P" «-
ent and future."
He raid in part:
"This Is a Democratic dertrine as old as
tn«e - emocratlc party itself— a Demo
craitic doctrine on which Democrats stand
and must carry the country, economy in
public expenditures lies at th - root of al.
enduring prosperity. There may be now ,
what the doctors would denominate spora-1
die cas of prosperity in this country. I j
have no doubt that the distinguished
statesman who recently had their rende-
vous in Jekyl's Island, otherwise known
as th-e recreation ground of multi-million-
(lUTHlJli;. OKLAHOMA. M AltCH -O. 1S! !
aires, are prosperous; but th*t
ur« of geiural prosperity hai
the great body of ihf people is
tlon that cannot be maintained.
"IYin.ttng flaming advertisement*'' In
metropolitaJn papers, even In th e.ulse of
euAorials, announcing that pro-p ritv I.as
arrived, fal s prove the truth t>f the
stat tment <0 the men who, though t il-
ing industriously In summer's heat and
winter's cold and economising to th.* ut-
most, still find themselves s nki. * deeper
and deeper into dobt an the y* ar* go by.
"I wish to lleav n prosperity un ver- |
eol and abiding would come. 1 care n t
who brings it, so It comes. 1 would a
claim it as cheerfully, lustily and grate-
fully if brought about by Wl llam MeKln-
b y and a Republican Congress, as I
would if produced by William Jennings
Bryan and a Democratic Congress.
"From the bottom of my heart I wish
President MelKnley well. He i« a mos:
gracious, tactful ana pleasant geiu.c-
man; but unless h« and the 50th Con-
gress do more to fulfill the mil arious
and gorgeous promise of 1896 ulan he and
:h<> It Congress have dona It Will bo-
come the agreeable and patriotic d#tv «>f
1 resident Bryan and the 57th and 5irth
I Congresses to induct the country into an
era of general and lasting prosperity.With
Bryan in the chair of Washington. Jeffer-
son nnd Jacks n and with a t'ongre s In
sympathy w th him. the people will coir.e
Into thoir own again and government of
•rusts, by trusts, nnd for trusts will van-
ish like an ugly dream from the Ameri-
can continent forever.
"William J. Bryan, fo 1 wing the exam
pie of his Illustrious predecessors, will
lie elected In 1900, re-elected in 1904. ami
be followed by a long line of see censors
of his faith, my faith, your faith, -the pe -
pies' faith; for I have an abiding confi-
dence that if the American people* ever get
again a taste of a genuine democratic ad-
ministration. 1 hey will «-«<e it so well that
like Oliver Twist they will cry for more*
for It must be remembered tn-- a mar
be at least thirty-nine years old 'to have
been born during a Democratic adminis-
tration ana at least sixty u> remember
from his own experience what was done
then. An en,.re generation have grown
up in this country which has known noth-
ing el.se of government than as It Is ad-
ministered by Republican and mugwamps
A change from that to a genuine D 'mo-
erotic administration would bo like go-
ing out of midnlkht darkness' into th"
glory of the noon-day sunshine.
••Republicans will not practh economv
In the public expense, for they caret not
how heavily labor is burdened.
"No people upon the face of the earth
can long stand the awful drain upon thv'r
resources, their energies and their toil,
and as sure as grass grows and water runs
they will, when they clearly realise tho
situation, drive from power the j-arty
which so shameless y suandered their sub-
stance and abuses their confidence.
"The voters of the land might as wed
make, up their minds of the stubborn faet
that there can b> no reform In this
prodigality so long as the Republicans
i hold possession of the government. Al<
history demonstrates that proposition to
be true
"Later day Republicans may be not in-
appropriately and incorrectly denifd as ar
'Abnormal, unappeasable, all d#vorlng ^P
petite for public pap'; and this appstlU
grows with what it feeds on.
"To show how woeful habit ol 1 xtrava-
gance has grown, it is only necessary to
state that In the second year of Thomas
Jeffersons administration, the appropria-
tions of Congress amounted to only f>0
cents per capita for the Americ.in peo.d
while in th« second year of William Mc-
Kinley's administration, counting our pop-
ulation at 70,000.000, the approprltions of
Congress amount to $12.97 per capita, "or
to nearly 26 times as much f'-r ovry mm,
woman and child within the broad con-
fines of the Republic as when Jefferson
was at th®: helm.
"Not only Is It 'true that ' labor should
v.- ]|gM)y burdened' but R 1? also trtr
rUllVVY MOIINlMi.
Nr.Mnr.it 2s.->.
prop
stru
Nevertheless the Situation
Samoa is Troublesome.
KRAUTZ TO BE SUPPORTED.
Cruiser Raleigh's Long Voyane
from Manila.
i
OUT SINCE DECEMBER 15.
t'fv himself
lenuitlvcs of tbr
His Act ot Bombardment was Within
His Instructions.
GERMAN JC0NSUL ACTED BAD
There is
•have ujhii
Statos tm
remains t
iin no wn
•his unties,
joint a<tti'«
the
the
efT.
furiority In 4V
e out break w
Its Crew Feted at Every Port
Touched
i Grrtot Britain but
at the final sittleim
changed by the •>
'but must bo orr am
1 of tho three oaUm
nt will be
itbr- K i of |
SPAIN HOISTED ITS FLAG
Th
There was a tieneral t oiiKultatlon |
llrld Before llostlllticH were
lleguii In which lie Was
Ahkotl to Join with Other
I'oweis Tor Peace.
•mi-officii
upon the new
many will n
al Poe
ffltUHl
WASHINGTON >GT INFORMS,
KFX'KtVKD NO NEWS ( •' TIIR BOM-
IIARMIKNT OF SAMOA.
30—'Tlio
\ n ill be I* of II ei
He I'M llliu IVer
on the «M\uipia
the 11 mil la Hay
Fight.
are lt« Fa**ei
U 1th bowi-y
Washington, March 30—The Bamonn
crisis di'.ided attention v.ith the fighting
about Manila all official circles today, j ^
At the for'igu <vn.baasy's office t. here It | 1
has been a subjvet of oonslderatl
Washington, March 30-The s srious -
ditiion of the affairs at Samoa en^ag *d '
the aUent+un of Officials throughout the
day and there were no confer nccs at th"
Whit«- house between the presidnt and ,
ry Bay and at ill state departm nt
en the secretary and tho British I
r,f ambassador and Baron Von Stei-k Stern- |
(Copyrighteti 18!'0 by A"
l'a
Aso
, Ma:
tTn
d
late, considerable anxiety was shown lest j 4""ri- Sl ' '• ,r> '
the offalr sihould assume a grave Inter- 'I
national aspect. .Sir Julian Pauncoiote. "bi t. twtl w
th<- British ambassador w nt to th.- state' '' "ni -inv " 11 ^ |'|'
dopariment at 11 o'cltxk acoompanletl by: 1 " oi,
Ms secret ury nn.l ecnffrroj will. Seoro- payment ^ivlnp brVt
,.,ry Hay. A. tbto VII the rrgulsr dlpln- A. m,r«l Kuit*. PW. tht
matlc Dir. little •Icrtflaano* wouM bavtl
attached to th . call urub-r ordinary < >-
cum stances, but with British and Amerl-
•n.n "warships eo-o.pera.tlng in a bombard-
ment, more than usual interest attached
to t'he call. There Is no doubt that th«
s« rlous dfvebwpm'nts in Samoa were dls-
ciwsed. While there may be a dearth of
official Information, nt the same time. th«
actual events carry out wtnit Bias been
anticipated nnd glv
Oorman m-
ot a word f
.s iv)ntrlbuted
uithor-
onlv
t'he navy de- I
!spatoh from
no light on ,
Ing to a t.in-
,1 only to fur'ihor * |
gle of dates, it e
volve tho mystery. In ^i-w of t:he f.i
t'ha' it he fighting was wld' -S[>re«i I a
long e* ntinued and that the foreign i I-
flcers ^it Tvondion and Berlin 'ha*l Iwen o'- |
flo'laJly ad\ised <if the affair, it was r'-i
garded ns «om"what strang ■ that ihe
ft ait e* and navy d partments should ne j
entirely without Information on a bom- i
I rudiment by an Amertoa-n admiral, l'p |
States cruiser Rabdgh, ('aptaiin Joseph
B. I'oghhut f:>'m Muni, i, on D<'.'ember 1"*,
Is Coaling here. W i.l c*v l .it B-rmuda oa
April s and experts to reach New York
on April l.i
The Raleigh has been hiving stormy
w <uher in the Atlantic but has l een be-
l.iv.ng splendidly and proves to t o a
good ««a twivt. All ar,> well on board.
This Is the tlrst . f Admiral Dewey's
squadron of warships to be bound f<ir
home. Sh,. h.is < n board a number of
of t'he
„ -ntly considering the furtfher j dnt action
of the two governments in the complete
settlement of the entire Samoan trouble.
Bofh nations are actllng In complete rec-
,.„,h .-ti.,* in j Sir .ml
">rd. not only as to the general solution! moiinij for n o .
... the close of office hours lit was stated
that nothing had come from any of our
reprwen tat Ives In Samoa dealing with
t'hf outbreak of host 11.Wes. The vails of
,t I men who .belonged to the
| flagship < Hympla.
( | Many fhanges In the personnel of the
, I Rale -th hn\'« l e* n necessitate! since liif*
battle of Manila. She partlcP| nted In all
the movements a.l¥ ut t'h* Philippine is-
lamds, either in the battle «'f Manila btoy,
the eaptur.' "« f tin- <'orrlgdo'r forts, the
capture of the gur.t.oat Callao, the lnnn-
bard-ment and capture <>f Sublg and the
iK^mbardment Malate fort, forcing the
surren«ler of Mtinlla.
After leaving Manila, on De^embei
of t'he Samoan problem but tn particular i 111
In referenc > to rne f ree >xert«d by the
British and American naval commanders.
As to the German attitude It Is stated
In a quarter thorougnly fa miliar with
German official sentiment, that the out-
break now reported con under n circum-
stances be construed as an overt a't
•against Germany in* r as a casus bell!.
This is from such a source that It large-
ly removc> the iposfbilJty of Inl mat! inai
complicat'ons.. As an evldem- of th con-
c'.'.::i.tor>' sentiment of t'he Geoman gov-
ernment. i*t was sa'd tod iy M at the note
1«• ivwed to t.ie department last week
urged In behalf c-f Hie German govern-
ment that the «M*od relations existing be-
tween two such nations as .the 1 n t-'d
States and Germany would -next be inter-
rupted by HtfCh a matter of such < m*
parative un mportance as an official dis-
pute In Samoa. Ti is said th it the German
government proHxibly W' u!d have accept-
ed Admiral Kautz as a sort of umpire
taking his decision as final, but that the
oibjfCtPon: quite forcibly ex-pressed to the
t-fate deportment was the m
mbassh's >had the
uranee. or instruct
occuranee or Instri
nt Ions
CAUGHT AT KIOWA,
NIC*110IJAS ROPFI
DKR I'HAIIGE CM
New V >rk. March 30 -Frederick Berg-
uinn, consul general from I'eru, wn
Hich dkturbtll today wh. n shown a rtls-
ipatch
the C4
of K <
a'b:
iting t'ha.t >
-sted at Kv
on a clwirge
gmann fhov
of a lette
Kan., <
! the Ru'eigh stopped at Elngap* re. Bom-
^epi^f _wareI ^ Ai,. „ ^ a md-iMAlta,
'r ',f 1 ' Algiers, nmd <"l1br iltar. In a.ll the Brttis.h
■ Iv en a ipoi o i %|kmJf,u> 0fflCials of the British army
and navy and the civilian population
gavp th American warship an enthus-
ioAtie welcome, showing her officers and
,-reiw ev rv form of courtesy. (Dinners
wJth American deoomttoi and AtraertoSJt
muMc xrara given to C*(rttln OofMan .m l
his offlrors everywhere, In marked dir-
ferenco to the re<"ptlon of the Raleigh
on hr outward passage, two yeruu ago.
Governors, generals and a.lmirals and
ot her high ofn. ials, all wished t-o visit
i pect the ship. At 84hga/pore, she
inet a Spanish transport having on bo ird
:in,i ;,i111rs from Manila. Although
( K PFJRIT, IS T'N
KM BKZZLl . M ENT.
m Rossi had
Kansas, at his
inbezzleiment.
i his copy hook
to th" chief of police
;king tbiit ( fflcinl to
i R -sI
larg
had
fl\*tr.ig a
i ship low
I was gra<r.
' Raleigh.
nd
kno
to 1>
■wSth his wife, a gnwr
brother Andrea. The
Rossi he watched until papers should ar
r4v„ 'nv,« (1.msuI gem ral n"d that Ross
irshlp pennant, the Sipanlsh
• ii her colors and permission
1 to the fipandards to visit the
•here they fraterniz d with th"
soldiers, who gave them much
at Kiowa | ner"d«1fo«l rlothtnir. Many o< !t.n
m and hto 9pat lards showed the Am'r: • ~*U*•
:i«kf I that 1 Inflicted upon them hy the Shells of
American fleet.
The quarantine from Bombay
( waJv-
vhlle fr <
rdlv
chang
lhat Hh, laborer is worthy or h' D,h ^ I notice to O....V
and th, ■*. .f .1.0 Amerl an p on. polngjm ^ f ^ ,
growing very w.nry of the J'u | advlpra and no tnetructlom r.-Iatlve Po
■yatem of law, which enables
C'
to mor.opo.lze the wealth created bj t'e]
■toll and .-went o.t the mnny. It Is wr i-
tf,n 'Thou sholt not muzzle tho ox tha
treadeth out the corn.
Mien O. Mvers. of Columbus followed
whos - toast was "The East and t e W.st'1
The toast responded to by Sidn \ ( <a-r i
of Oklahoma City, was "Oklahoma, the
Next Star in the Flan of the ' nlon.
Ch«
poT t -' 1 lyombardme nt
-> evidence thus far that Germai
rot est or assume a 1 Vlgerant
Fr m the German «■• .und'point th
il there is
aspect
cite pi
is t'hfl
blic fe
chargetl by ain Italian banking hous •
In Peru of having embezzled 9,000 solas,
or alx.ut $4,600. The consulate h*l a«""l
.,! the reqitiMt of a N< w York commission
; jio.isi. •which had as et produc-ml no |W-
■ 101 g uT>on which an orre—t v-mld i e baaed,
i TI .. consul (r.-nen.l cou.'l uot nnd .stand
j Wl'.v the Kiowa chtof Olf |Kj!lce Ihoviflu it
I rf,rpafnr>- ■..., arrest a mar he had merely
i askod him to wat< h.
,-d nt Ad..
I At Ih. 'sland of Malln. the Ral.lirh met
the Brl'l-h fleet. •• .nsletlnE «f ten ftnittle-
Slipa an I a number «f eruis.-rs. The nrlu
I Uk aallora ^*t.ifl«l a n xt cordial wl-
I f. the American* and the sailors of
' ••.„ fleet and l he soldiers of t'he pnrrle-n
.■nN rtaln -l the eiw of t.he Raleigh
l „|. ,r the best «t feeling prevaMlnc.
I During hor etay nt Malta, the lUWdt
Iwm orowded w'-Ch British red c<its and
■nf 'the
ibtwsts
secure
ending
will
t -.in
HOLY THURSDAY KBP'
Santiago. March ifl.—In former v
der Spanish rule, the interval fr'
morning on Holy Thursday, was lnv.-i
ably a government holiday. 'I >'r
there is as ..sua. a general *<i"i -nj««i
business nnd the railroad lines w I n
he nl operation. Tomorrow the cable' •
fleo will close at r.oo:., not to reopen t
the next day.
ovene
settlement.
One of the latest pr
a settlmment is t'h'at th
apT or.nted, one fron
et in
a met a
lg on IX)th s d"s
to popular out-
rme the efforts to
positions t."/wards
re eomm ssloners
cadh c intrv to
m a court In set-
tlement of the* Hff
Th
and
PICKANINNY SlfiliVKI) IN A PI12.
Mme Eamea-Story, the famoua American prima donna, cave n tfirrer at the
IlotVl M arie Antoinette, New Yorlt. tht other d y, et which the de Aetikee end other
noi bii:iie« were present. Indulging ti, a pleasant .unc .t, me prima donna sur-
prised her guests by serving what s.-eio-J to be a gigantic rate, but out ..f «n«i. crept
a chocolate-co. red child. And thereat, savs the Sew York Journal, which lllustrat-
td the event, Jean, the iamoua tenor, muic to It a French lullaby.
Children deprived of fats
mineral foods have
weak bones, flabby flesh and
thin watery blood.
The milk of nursing
mothers, enfeebled by chron-
ic diseases, or long contin-
ued nursing, produces the
same results.
Scott's Emulsion is cod-
liver oil partly digested and i
with the hypophosphites,
forms a fat food which acts
on the infant through the <
mother's milk, giving rich
blood, ; trong nerves and
sound flesh and bones to both. ,
5 <_. and #i.oo, all druggists.
SCOTT & JJOWNL, Chemists, New York.
j ce.lved offlc'al advices T
I regret ted but the opin
"hat Admiral Kautr. act!
nls best Judgment and I
state department aekne'1
penmanent agree-tmcn't <-ai
I der the tr'a-ty 1n w'a'ch
•do rot agree and
■nt has not yot re-
T'ie d m ms rat on
,pinion is expressed
i I on what wis
formation. Tin
edges th.lt f
I Ar '~ei R'o,csi, the brother of the ah- j blue ta"k«*t «
I nc imler 1s well known all over Oklahoma "
i fsp'Cially In Oklahoma City. He !*
j the Italian harp player, lie was for a
I seasom, two years ago, -in Guthrie. While
| lie was dissipated he was a man of fine
musical talent awl there was an air of
mystery about him that made Oklahoma
City soei.tv forgive Ms bad faults, and dent
he ma for a tin..- quite the thing at fash. |X*tte.
tonnble pcw'nns and dancfc.g parties. At "
Seated beMnd a screen, emong flowers, I s w «ia Spanleh I
I t.e played bis dreamy waltzes that lent mtral fatnare.
i ,r of roman-'o and poetry to t'he
,yrrir.^r n rtftVf-rs were ^nlertain^t
t Cairo hv United State* ooneol Uarr's
r.1 all the British -.ml BgrnOan offlcers
r.^rp present.
Th.. I'rench ot Algiers show,.- e ttui.V-
d deference. There was no reception ex-
ml from the Brltfgll sr.d American ces ■
although tbe Frendh wer.
| scene.
of
brought .nbc-
vhen it 1
faulty i
e-omfs aprarent
,>ns cannot exist
1 Baltimore. March .10 T.i
' V,ase bal team today vanquls
Hopkins university represei
score nf 12 to i.
* Princeton,
led the Johns
tatlvea by a
a SUSC crapc cut'm Of TARTAP FOWOCa
It'h Captain Bturdee (
senior I'.ritiish naval «
td Stat s nnd lirit- j
•DR.'
I c.
GERMANY IS SKEPTICAL
CANNOT UNDERSTAND HOW ITS
CONSl'I.. ItllSK lNFItlN'lED ON
1I1S INSTRUCTIONS.
1 l. rl'in, Jlltr.h : The Herman gov.rn.
m,nt was taken v.rtolly by eurprise w ti.
the news fr .ti. Sart TI. imperial
chancellor, Print-.; Ho'.lenioe, is spending j
CREAM
,,pW the Raleigh
commanded by Ad*
insisted of six *hip^
red across Algrocirae hay.
T^ OpetlWh fleet wnd th. BaJeWH «41-d
at the ro me ttTtie a d proceeded oloee tt
, Vi other. The Raioiih boleUB the
ll>r nnd saluted U. The eeJute
,.™.'ly r«".n.ed by
.1 fe.m his flagship, the Impere
' rt li^Ieigh in tm roars tin crn^ei
36,000 knots.
CANADIAN TELEGRAPH.
IcONNWmoN "uirOVKKS BR1TI8I
COI.UMBIA ANT THE Yt'NTvON.
washington March SO -Consul Brush al
CT«"n inform, the state department that
construct a teiegraj > i --
n. nnett rind Dawson City at or.ee ana t. .
> -co decided tn establish telegraph-
lo c" necttor-s between Brlllh ColumhlJ
nnd the Tunkon territory. Heeaytl^ttrt
the dominion author', s r^g-r*
hlse of this of -his telegrnph line as loo
important from the slan loomt of the tm-
tional safety to permit it to go outside r.r
government cou.iol
Awarded
nighesl Honors, World's F air
Gold Medal. Midwinter Fair
Washington. March 30.—D. J. Tnient ot
foreat Fate, MOtlt., has been appointed an
j Immigration inspecte- .ervice at Oo'Jp
11 ts, Canadla
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 285, Ed. 1 Friday, March 31, 1899, newspaper, March 31, 1899; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc123764/m1/1/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.