The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 217, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 13, 1900 Page: 3 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA ST ATT? CAPITAL: SATI'RT) *■ Y MORMM!, «-\rAHY l.i, 1000.
'3 --
GOV. BARNES
IS CONFIDENT
He Will Emerge From Present
moval" All Right
, .. the onJy official news ahlj morn-
| Inp its the list of casualties am ng th •
I British officers In the light at l<adysmlth
j Saturday. J.nniary C, showing thirteen
I killed and twenty'-se. < n w ounded. Among
the latter was Lieutenant Colonel William
j Henry Dick-Cuny Ingham. commanded of
the Second battalion of the Gordon, High-
landers since 1897, who lias sine* suc-
cumbed to his wounds. Ho was Im-
mensely popuJar everywhere and li?n
ffg. death will cau.«e \\ i-lcsprcnd -orrow.
General Buller's movement, obvlousl
STRIKE EXPECTED
STREET C< ■•MPAN
WORKMEN":
* wir.r. iv
DDMANDS.
Next Monda
division of
SLICK OKLAHOMA CITY SCHEME
is of a flanking cliai
II Is Intended to push tho aovanc'
or whether his operations arc only
to cover an attack In force o?i ,!li
hut whether j is
Cleveland, O., Jan. i.'
tho timo set for tho
American Steel und Wire C'jtiipsny, com-
mon'iy known as the wire trust, on 'the
seal© of wages proposed hy the (National
f Rod i>f111 Workers. There
Koohtei-ft in Mishlngiou Irrangiiig
for Capitol Location light
Aieit Winter,
liftio doubt that the company will ro-
hotne . fuse to sign a scale of any kind, espccial
feint i ,y ns is rcccntly announced a General
©oer increase of T i per cent in the pay < l
position at Hlnngwana mountain remains , mployes. fTho rod mill men are appare,,'
to -he seen. Springfield, from whence \y determined to force the
General Builer's dispatch was sent, is six- J ;:enlo If pposslh
teen mllos west of Frere. The last newr.
DENVER AND
OKLfl. CENTRAL
Its Promoters Claim it Has Strong
Backing
xltrnins of :1c | PROPOSED LINE OF
accoiMing to reports j
d from the different mills by Vice
from SprlnKllfId was that It was held by , President Lew n of ihu. rltv. Mr I,oivl
and other national offlceirs '■ t the assool;
ROAD
the Johannesburg corps under General
Ben Viljoen, and that 'the Boors had big
guns In position at Potgieters Drift, ap-
parently six or eight miles north jof
Springfield and across the Big Tugela. The
possession of the drift and the point i?
regarded as of great importance, it is
reported here that General Butler sub-
matters centers la the charges ' mltted his plan of campaign to LorJ
State Capital Bureau. 42 F. St., N. W.
Washington, Jan* 12.—Interest In Okla-
homa
against Governor C. M. Barnes, of that
territory, and the result of the Investi-
gation of the same. -«J\s has been stated,
no new charges have been presented to
the secretary of the interior or the presi-
dent hy the Oklahoma City delegation
now here pushing all tho light against
the governor. The trouble grew out of
local 'political matters and was laid on
the table by the president when the
charges were first investigated but Secre-
tary Hitchcock resurrected ftiem and It
is reported made a report adverse to tho ....... , .
«™..u „ , , i at the battle of 'Magersfonteln
governor which occasioned the present - . .
agitation of the territory's i>olitical wat-!
Roberts Immediately after the latter
landed and that General Roberts sanc-
tioned It. There Is a 'belief In some quar-
ters that General Hester McDonald will
succeed Ix>rd Methuen in command of the
British forco at Madder river.
The war office announces!' that the
British casualties at Ladysmlth January
fi, among the rank and tile were 135 killed
1 and 242 wounded. Lady Methuen has
Issued an absolute contradiction of the
rumors that Lord Methuen Is 111. or that
| he was Injured by the falling of his horse
Hon are opposed to a strike
there will soon bo one.
but fear that
TERRITORY LINES
A BILL TO ALIXDW ItiAJ LROADS TO !
CONSOLIDATE,
HEAVY RAINSTORMS
London, Jan. 13.—The Dally Telegraph
. , ! has the following dispatch dated Jan. 9.
J.l faV.°r"b,e ,n from Fmv fan.,.:
A heavy storm has been rag:
and there is every prospect -that it
Gov. Barnes who Is confident of success,
and the concensus of opinion here Is thai
he will not be disturbed and that tho Sec-
retary's report will not prevail.
PAJNE'S CELERY COMPOUND
STRENGTHENS RACKED NERVES
Adjt. S. W. Groomes, 140 East Jones St., ;:",
Dayton, Ohio, writes
SMOOTH SCHEME
OKLAHOMA CITY rtOOSTKRS WANT
ANOTHER "CAPITAL REMOV-
AL" FIGHT.
"I had ypeat relief from Paine's Celepy Compound last December.
Ulhile livinq in Columbus I took a heavy Cold that resulted in the arip. I
suffered intense pain uiith my head for three months. medicine
seemed to do me any good until I began using Paine's Celery Compound.
All the suffering in my head ujas gone, and I have Celery Compound
p-* >v 4 alone to thank for my eure
Suffering has its first effect upon the nerves.
When the body is not sustainet by nerve energy;
indigestion, slow circulation of the blood, and an
impoverisned system result.
State Capital Bureau, 42 F. St., N. W.
I Washington. Jan. 12.—The Oklahoma
delegation now here, Messrs. C.
Jones, Selwynn Douglas and Henry
Overholzer, are making herculean ef
forts to have ithe provision prohibiting
the territorial legislature from consid-
ering any bill looking to the removal
of the seat of government left out of
the appropriation for territorial ex-
penses.
Since the first legislature, the entire
session was taken up in an attempt by
various cities throughout the territory
to have the capital moved inside their' ^vhie
corporate limits, the congress of the
United States has always attached a
clause to tho appropriation for Okla-
homa prohibiting any further moves
Washington, Jan. 12.—Senator Jones of
Arkansas, Introduced In the senate a bill
conferring an additional power upon rail-
road companies opera tin# in the Indian
territory. Jt authorizes mem to purchase
the property of or to consolidate with any
other railroad company whose lines may
now or hereafter form a continuous line
of railroad, either directly or by means
of an Intervening railroad, with that of
the company so purchasing. The bill also
authorizes the company purchasing from
or consolidating with another company
to increase its stock ami to guarantee the
principal and Interest on tionds ami other
I obligations of lie company w hose proper-
all n'ght | (y |s acquired.
Taps Oneof the Mont Fertile i o
Irles in Oklahoma—Nceurlng
Might of W ay.
ficuit&i Jan. t. -(Special.)—The Beacon
enator A. J Titus of Anthony and
continue. The roads are impassable and
the rivers and spruits are full.
There has been no firing at Ladvsml h
or Colenso. Tho trenches must be filled
with water. The Boers are hildlng Mount
Hlamgwano; but 4hey are .certainly quiet
isolated, as their bride over the Tugela
must have been carried away.
FEARFUL BLIZZARD
IN NEW MEXICO.
FAMOUS MANAGER
I'rufes-or Brockwi
iy <
■ !' Alva, were here
y.'Sterday on busin
connected with the
Denver and Okl.ihr
una
Central railway of
which thev are ti
ie r
>rlnclpa| projectors
and promo'er S- :
r Titus Invng presi-
• • The line pro-
dufWM>utherly
course front Kiow.i
i. 1\
an., at which point
f r the Santa Fe, j
•
in el
Panhandle division
th- i\'v ;;a branch
of the Missouri 1
flc ranv.ay. it iii
proha bl. ihait In K
•i-" from Kiowa tho
line will follow the
> M
odlcltie river valley
for n distance, err
ir the Rock Island
a: Greensburg, an I
the
•nee to Dodge CI y.
Th* line from K!
own
south h now in
course of tanstruc
Hon
. toward the south
line of Woods <
nun
ty, O. T. Froi^t
thence i s project
hope eventimlly io
push the line to
Kir
igflsher, and there
nakii
COLONEL WOOD IS HHOt'GMT TO
DYING TOuJAY.
is, Mo., Jan. 12.—A special to
Dispatch from. Hot Springs,
"f ,h<'
Is bein
built fro
with the pres
id Hock island
Kingfisher to <
ee«t is being consider
the company, "that l?
in a 'due southerly
I fmm the south lino of Woods
j through Blaine county and thfre
il, the lamous tlieatrl- w"h the
cal manager, showman and builder of Woods
Woods museums throughout the country, 'a" 1
who was prostrated last ni^ht with a s"- ; homa. I
vere shock of paralysis is thought to be Sumr
dying today. Hie is one of the bets known i ';'r£° ;i
showmen In the world.
Ark., says:
■Colonel J. P. Wo
. l the
ounty,
id Gulf railw '
and that, it ha
as Sumner eoi
newer, It? tree*
MEMPHIS EXCURSIONISTS
LOYALLY ENTERTAINED AT ]
HE NO A NI) W E1A T UK R FO KD.
Ki Reno, O. T. Jan. 12
pecia 1 with 10 Otmml . i>
MOLINEUX TRIAL
GROWS UNINTERESTING
Information about road buileling they keep
it to themselves.
TO RE-ORGANISE FACULTY.
Cincinnati, Jan. 12—Cons derable anx-
iety was caused by the publication to-
day of a statement that President Ayres
of the Cincinnati university, would
recommend that all the chairs of the
NEARLY A RIOT
ST. LOUIS CITY COI'NCTL HAVE
RACKET OVER LIGHTS.
St. Louis, Jan. 12.-The failure of the
•Ity delegation to contract for ^the light-
Now York, Jan. 12.—The proc<-< lings to-
day in the trial of Roland B. Mollneux,
were comparatively uninteresting. Harry
fi. Cornish and Mrs. Florence E. Ropers
■were recalled for the ptirpi.se of identify-
ing the glass from which Mrs. Adams hut it is hinted that owing to friction
present academic faculty, be declared ,nR °' alleys and parks, culminated in a
vacant at the end of the current school I serious demonstration 'today.
year. There are eleven professorsi in- Alfred Life, a page of tho house, was
volved in the alleged change. President { assaulted. At one time a revolver was
Ayres declines to discuss the matter, j' rawn ,)y tho sorgeant-at-arms of ihe
| house, Henry >L. Weeke, who guarded the
drank the poisoned bromo neltzc-r, and. for fl-nd jealousies in t'he faculty, it Is
Vthe purpose of tee ifying in greater de- thought best to reorganise tho fac-
I
i 4he dearth of tho victim. J —
Herman J. Wltte, a lawyer, was called
to Identify a le ter which he obtained
•from the Van 'Mohl company In Cin<in-
natl. The letter Is what la know:\ as a
bogus Cornish letter and contained a ON A STUM PINO TOUR THROUGH ^,sturhan-
rwiuest for a the dny trliil rem^tv. I THE SOUTH. the different
unchanged.
W. J. B1YA1 sums
door lead ng to tho delegate floor, and
several times, before the arrival of the
could not be averted. The arrival f>f
police sergeant and a squad, together
with a speech to the crowd from Ex-Gov-
ernor Stannard, cautioning them to com-
|mlt no overt act, had the effect of quelling
Tonight 'the situation In
tuations was practically
Tiie witness said tlio romedy asked for
was "Calthos." | Lincoln, Jan. 12.—William J. Bryan ! At tt meeting of tho house of delegates
The witness also id<-n ifl d other bogus was in the city a few hours this even- ',l,s afternoon the three ordinances
letters obtained from the Van M. hl com- ing on h s way to Columbia. Mo., where ''Passed by the city council this week,
pnny. and signed H. C. Barnet. Prof, he speaks tonight. His tour Includes 1 Pro^dlng for ten porary relief in the city
Wltthaus again mado his appearance on speeches in St. Louis. Frankfort, Ky.t ^ffhtln-g situation, had their first reading,
tho wl ness stand and testified itu Krent Cincinnati and the Atlantic and New 1 uml «*suranees were given by leaders jn
State Capital Bureau, 42 F. St., N. W.
Washington, Jan. 12.—Senator Pet-
tigrew's Free Homes bill, which he in-
troduced a few days ago. and which
is a general bill covering all lands of
the character known as "Government
Mortgaged" lands in the United States,
was reported favorably by the senate
public land^ committee itoday without
amendment. Under the terms of the
noiton if , , , lWI1, 5 °mpsteaders pay land office fees
police, it looketl as though bloodshed on]V j
T>enver, Jan. 12.—A special to the News
from Alamo Gordo, N. M.. says:
Details of the blizzard which swept ov-
er southwestern New Mexico Tuesday
and Wednesday are comln-p: in and they
indicate that it was the severest storm
ever experienced in the region. A stretcn
f territory fifty miles in width with
■aks and Noagl for center seem-
ed to suffer the most, although the se- special
verity of the storm was fully felt through phis Merchants and Manufacturers as* j
out the Sacremento mountain reg on. The rociation w hich left Meinoh ., on Janu-
, velocity of the wind was terrible, all roads ary 8, arrled in this city .it 1 la .in.,
n i a < rect on—'the Idea being to hold amj trail.* were obliterated, and the driv- The Memphis crowd was chap-
Ing snow made it Impossible for travel- eroned by the following ti embers f
, ers to see their way In the storm. When the Oklahoma City Commercial Club
an \ er o zer are anxious to have > the storm abated wagons which had been Major Lee Va'n Wink" Hon. Sidney
s c ause left out of the next appro- abandoned were found strewn all over the Clarke. Captain Daniel F. Stiles. I*. s.
section. Several fatalties are reported. A., retired, D. Leach. E.H. Cook, C. H. !
including the driver of the White Oaks- Grlffeth and B. M. Dllley.
Lincoln stape. It Is feared that many Busses and other vehicles, chartered
sheep herders have lost their lives. Hy the El I term club coneyed the vis-
Thousands of head of stock have perished itors to the opera house where an ad-j
and It is believed the loss w.ll aggregate Jdres* of welcome was delivered by Ma-
over half a molllon of dollars. An old J«>r E. J. Simpson. The major did
prospector found dead at the head of Cox himself proud, his speech was not nj
canon. In the Sacremento mountains, long one, but it was a masterpiece. He
had beon Identified as John Voss. Be- told the visitors that the keys of the
tween Carrlzeze and Capitan, on the El gates of the city had been lost Fome
Paso and Northwestern railway, the snow t'me ago, but everything in sight was
was eight feet deep and the down train theirs.
to Alama Gordo was in ihe drifts a day
and a hllf before being liberated.
I orchards
there ha
Woods c
people o
Oklahom;
crop f,,ilu
at thb
ounty ,
Mem- \ ,i:
M :
the legislature to the work of needed
legislation. Messrs. Jones, Douglas.'
priatlon in the Interests of a capital
removal scheme they are nursing.
FREE HOME BILL
PETTIOREW'S MEASURE FAVOR,
ABLY RE-PORTED BY SENATE
COMMITTER .
company .if Philadelphia,
pushing west ward through
portion of Oklahoma, and 1
Albuquerque. N. M . and will
' 'i ans-i on, inental line.
• ■ ' fr. m Memohls, Tenr
Little Rock ard Oklahoma
rap dly
western
ided for
by
Mb
coal fie
City and El
. and Is pro-
f that point.
* and timber
v' ^t, and the projoctors of
1 Oklahoma Central railway
to all i's ad<Mantages to he
inakln ■ a conneotlon wl h
the
ompri=«
i tt li
st prot
ime of final proof.
RIGHT OF WAY APPROVED
SAMOAN CHIEF
REGISTERS A KICK
Judge Green, one of the n
nent in the city of Memphis, responded v
to Major Simpson's address of wel !, v;
■"'no He complimented the citizens of loa,>t j.
El Reno In a very pretty way, telling I |10i<i n
them it gave him and the party he waft jr. jt
with, great pleasure to spend a feu ,
hours with them. "I have heard a <; • ,
great deal about El Reno," said the! rond ,
Judge, "and to tell y,,u the truth, I 1 hut pr
)klahoma
>un'les In the wes
1 line would tap this
Titus says the grade
intles of
ne of tho
, and the
territory.
Is being
t of way
; am greatly surpris
j dence of prosperity on ov-
siness houses and re
? such
hand,
State Capital Bureau, 42 F. St., N. W.
^ ashingtf*n, Jan. 12.—The secretary
of the interior today approved the char-
ter and risht of way of the Oklahoma1 trc.
City and Western railroad. Th s Is the! Samoa t
Iiondon, Jan. 12.-Malietoa Tar
letter to thn l^.rjon Times published to-'compare favorably ivlt'h those In an
day. enclosing copies of the protests he city wo have pawd throucli. Win
Liti s, (treat j you people In Oklahoma want Is stat
hood. Tou ought 1o have It, you d"
Icateit thev will tike
inee J- and complete
of good tin?, heavy
111 be equipped In a
md no existing rall-
•Ol of the new^liw.
ic arrangement will
ually the line will bo
dietall concerning tho amount c
■which he found in <the 'body
Adams.
f pol on England ptates and will not be finlsh-
of Mrs. ed until February 3.
Mr. Bryan left for the south at C
'clock.
RAILROAD HEWS
OAHTTELD CODNT7 SEEMS TO BE
THIE OEO#TER f 'F ACTIVITY.
North En'd, J. i r>. u (Special.)—Our
roundhouse baa been completed, they
built It square I The turntable, too, has
^een finished and 'the dally trains froai
Billings turn 'round hero to ro back to
•that thriving \ lipase. Garber and Billings
nre fine points for business, tho latter
much the larger, but <ts p-lndpa-l draw-
back !s a laclc of pure wat or, which ne ir
•the surface, Is lalVI to be salt, but th©
•town co.mi*any Is drilling a deep well
•which Is to reaeh below the s.ilt depos t
and supply a put« drinking fluidi for tho*
who now live on l>eer.
The Rock Island Is still plMng tip bclld-
dnw material iut 'North Enid, ties, rails and
lumber. One o f tho contrac-om H sa d
1o have orders to make estimates for
material nwded ('or the extension of the
new line thirty mlle.i west.
Aovne rontrnctorn here w«-nt out to view
the road 'that is lulViing from Kiowa to
Augusta. They found plenty of work and
were offered con*~*ocits but declined them
because they could not see where the p.«y
•was coming fmm
That Is a roud v Ithout fa'ber or mother,
a little orphan, hi t If the'Missouri Pacific,
KamtA Fe. or 'lloe't Island should adopt It,
^jtnd nmnor that ono of them.4*111,
th#r« will be a rush' for territory
SmonR rallrmids
VbtWmd* me iiu i par<^' ere gmlntr west
JU> locate, buc4f they ..aAU any <1*(finite
KID M'COY WI)IS
(Continued from ivage one.)
ed at each other und the bell rang while
they were mixing things up in lively fash-
ion. Neither man evidently heard the
gong and McCoy whipped his right over
on the jaw and Choyneki fell. There were
wild
the house that the measures would re-
ceive prompt attention and final action at
the earliest moment imder the law. The
house adjourned at 5 o^clock after one of
the most extraordinary tensions in the
history of the city, until 11 o'clock to-
morrow morning, when the bills are to be
taken up for second reading.
Now York Jan. 1?.—Oliver- IT. P. Bel-
mont today issued invitations to a dinner
he will give in honor of W. J. Bryan, upon
the occasion of the Nebraska leaders
coming t-o this city. The dinner will take
place on Monday evening. Ja \ fn Mr.
Belmont's home. Mr Belmont 1: m In-
rrlcs of "foul," "foul," as Choynskl to meet Mr. Bryan on that oca-ion,
arrled to his corner, and the Callfor- i 'OH<'!nK men In 1 invma^y I all and
line projected from Oklahoma City
northwest through Kingfisher county
■and the strip to Kiowa, Kunsas.
POSTMASTERS APPOINTED
; Sta'e Capita! Bureau, 42 F. St.. N. Y
; Washington, Jan. 12.—F. D. '/.o ff|«
• oday appointed postmaster of !
I '>kln., vlco O. T. Gun, res gned
J. Ti. Campbel! was a'so appoints 1
master of lEuella, Okla., vlco J
j Hllcy resigned.
PENSIONS GRANTED
adilressed to the United
Britain nnd Germany against the Samoa
characterises the partition «
a gross violation of the treath
TOUR OF INSPECTIOM
gainst tho law of
r:j to
<" • I Ih.'ro
■rve it and
^cp hammer!
! you do ge
After Judge
le visitors w
.i: t"
State Capital Burea
Washington, Jan.
I, 42 F. St., N. W.
12.—John T. ft:urge*
ami as a crdhne
lions only equal to the dismemibc
of Poland, 1 enmark a; d Franci
tlilnks that it is for tho great pov.
promote wars and annexations t
tra< t .e minds of the peoples lin n, ''he J ti'
Hague conference v.-as the greateyt farce ti
of the century. The writer also as r s ,i
that the civilization introduced by the merit r i
Kreat powers In their annexations In the • r with
south seas, Africa and elsewhere, is in- Cheyenne
ferlor to the primiuvo estates of tho were one <
countries stolen, leading to war through entortainrm
lireiach of faith on the part of government 7 he objo<
officials to dccimatii g of tho peoples p „ nf OBt
by contageoii3 diseases and spirituous ( jal and cr
liquors, lie continues:
"The missionaries who graced our coun-
try with their holy and unholy presences.
Introduced the same religious differences
you Is
on had made his tall:
HUMAN MA
i: ii.wx v
ION HALL.
ed to
the El H
r- rirging and f
r- until It wa
depart. W. S
chief steward
the club
bono
ono club where !
ettlng .if whls-
< time for the
orey Sherman, 1
In the refresh-!
id covered him i
ind Jo
id Unit
•ont ituto th-
republican
ity tonight.
Invented by himself,
oat features of the
t f the trip Is for
abllshing interests
jmmereial, with the
itorium
exposltio
nfan was unable to respond when tho bell
called him for the fourth round.
Choynski's seconds threw tip the sponge
as McCoy rushed from his comer for the
opening of the fourth round and McCoy
was declared the winner.
SIX ROUND DRAW.
Chicago. Jan. 12.—Perry Queenan and
iOtto Selloff. fought a six round draw at
the Fort Dearborn athletic club to-
night.
ALASKA CONDITIONS
INVESTIGATED BY S EN ATE < OM-
M ITT EE ON TERRITORIES.
democratic club. Richard Croker. will be'
the onfiy one of he nnt&'fls Tammany |
leaders who will not be able to attend. I
NOTED iPROFESiSGf.t DEAD.
T^ordon, Jan. 12—Prof. Jamo Martlneati, i
the eminent Fnl arlan theologian, died I
today, lie was In his 9T>th year. ' ,
of eight dollars per month.
today granted a pension an'1 hatreds agair
GEN. 8ULIER MOVING
on tho lino of the Choctaw, Ol
and Gulf railroad, and Ireiden'
Induce merchants rf the tn\vi
pass through to patronize the
saio houses of Memphis.
The special left at 11:4". for
ford where It remained until
then proceeded to South M«
HIGH PEIStO STAMPS
Vhole
Wmt hi
(<1onlUnued f: <
pase
Buffalo, N Y„ Jan. 12 Major John B.
Guthrie, aged y« irs, died suddenly In
this city tonight. At tho battle of San
Juan Hill, Captain Guthrie, of the 13th In-
t&try, n • woundod while hading his
regiment up the hill after the command-
ing officer, Colonel Worth, had been
wounded. He was Invalided home, ap-
] polntesd major In the 1." h Infantry and ibt
assigned to special duty representing the t0
| ceptel by the war office for service In the
> yeomanry. H
! Mr. Chamberlain has received iMrifram*
j f.v m Ceylon showing that the legblatlvo
h other S3 per-
tained at th" hour In civilized states. The
m sslonarles live In palatial houses
with all tho luxuries the.'r country can
afford nnd charge us for biblen and pr iN -
or 'books which we understand ore sent
as freo offerlnffi."
Malletot Tanu further charges the mis-
sionaries with extracting all the money —
possible from them, In return for which'GIVEN THE LATE MEXICAN WA!
ECTOR PAY:-
FOR RARE
FANCV PRICK
IPECIMEN,
MILITARY FUNERAL
the:
the
only recelvetl a bible,
"I'lltrrlms Progress."
Weslev an missionaries
i pr
He It-
er book
ar department on the board of i
of the T'nltM States government
bit nt tho Pan-American exposl.lon
will be buried at Peterson, N. J.
f the c olony haa voted to senl |
125 mounted men lo South Afr.■• i.
An apparently we 1 Inform- 1 correspond-
ent of the Mornl u I'oat 8ays:
The Boer strength, originally 83,000, Is
now heavily augmented by 'ape colon*1
nd the enemy's lighting forces mu
Una ted fairly at 100,000 men and 2
Ing 27.000 pounds sterling at n
ing at Tonga, adding:
"The missionaries aroused a j
of emulation, tcting the nat vr
ln*^«st givers would bo the mo
ble in the sight of (loJ, thus re
•cat spirit
that the
MINISTER.
(Mexico City, Jan 1 ?. —A millt,
• ral wa saccord-1 tho remain!
(late General Felipe Bert i :;ab,
tcr of war today, attended b
nt Diaz an-1 his cabinet, th
diplomatic member* of th
Jan. 1 -Ono postage
it $1,710 ton!-lit at the sale
ion of F. W. Hunter, of
■'s 1.- the largest en ri, i
th«*se lays had to
r V| I
svldo
i 1 mi
n n r
Washington, Jan. 12.—The senate com-
mittee on territories today continued its
investigations of conditions In Alnska.
Mr, Price advocated a law allowing taxes
collected in the territory to be expended
there instead of being paid into the treua- I promise ca*e *h -uld b-
ury, cuui'ttioujii.
■ if-ra guns. The Be
■xhl- ruard their con
J le Is good, t he ( : oj
are
It is but natural thut the breach-of-
lieard a
i compelh4 t->
:a*i"iis. Their jrrass
growing, vegetabl ,
plenty and game l.i
abund:
Lond
Jan. 12.—Apart from the defir
ws that Generul 'Huller hag coram, n
oeomd aliempt Ao croan Uiy
dian
i ColumhIn
ncludi s:
O Isratl "
"MAUETOA,
aalogoi.tl, Soma."
ti. 12.—hTe Cant
accepted British
ompany
{Immense crowds watt hod the depart-
I ure of the dignitaries for the cemetery.
General Powell Clayton, the Arneii
I can ambassador, w as given the pis >
c.f honor at President Diaz's right dur-
ing the ceremonies.
nght this spot
of other sta
brought good pi
Kailfajc,
regiment ha:
Jan. 12 The Leln-
Tu«'.Ujiuvume. utioyra iff Souili Airier , umbaik m vncq tot Souta Mm** |
OLD SOI. DIED UK AD.
Athens '' I hi 12 Charlew Townsem
formerly secretary of ntate and mwrnN1
f the legislature, tiWl today agad <50 II
iatl been commu;ider of tho G. A XL
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 217, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 13, 1900, newspaper, January 13, 1900; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124012/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.