The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 67, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 8, 1900 Page: 2 of 8
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Trra OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL: SUNDAY MORNING, JTT77 3, 1900.
BRAOSTREET AND
DUN REVIEWS.
The Failures in Business tlio Small-
est in Eighteen Years.
RAIN IN NORTHWEST BRING RELIEF
Winter Wlinn All Harvested A Halt
Crop la Kxpested In the ttpriiitf
Wheal licit.
f HEW TORu JULY 7 Brad
savst
, BusIik-.n:. ia usually dull at tlhls
iuid this year no exception to 1 hi
•rul rul« in remarked. A review •
t>a*t six months, however, gl\<i
fcomfort to pessimal.;. Hank cl«\
It la true, art smaller by about «>iev>
rent than they woro in the ilr.st luilf
but railway earnings u>.-. about
g>nc cent larger and huslm-K * failure*
fcvpppud to Bradstrc&ts, oro ihe f« v
toportexi for ••IgJiteen years buck, wltih 1
^labilities of falling traders t li- t m
.WMLli ono exvvpiUm, and that l i .w ..r,
^lncs 18D1.
{ (Winter wheat has about all boon har-
vested in tho tfouthWest ami tho yield
(hare has been very large. Copious reilna
In tho northwest, too, have apparently
Worked soma Improvement, Judging from
tho more cheerful tone of advices re-
ceived ihencO this we*k scents lo have
ferought back many largo financial In-
terest^ but on tiho other hand money is
•toasiy «um tho enormous disbursement of.
the fctceme mn July first brought a largo,
pupply of fund* into tho stock market. |
Co* ftInvestment. Although sonHon-d.
Sugden.
Philadelphia
visitors had played their full five inning-s.
! Score R.H.E.
]Kansas City 0 0 2 1 0-3 5 0
Minneapolis . 0 2 0 0 0—2 B 1
Bait fries—Fatten and Wilson; Harvey
and Jacklltsch.
AT MILWAUKEE.
MILWAUKEE, JULY 7. Sparks had
go at his mofcy but poor Holding
the visitors the four runs and the
R.H.E.
0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0—3 11 6
0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 2—G 9 0
-Sparks and Smith; Fisher and
AT ST. LOUIS.
| ST. LOUIS. JULY 7 —St. Louis won the
today by slaughtering Bernhardt
McLaughlin, who took his place
R.H.E
..2 4001300
..0 2200020
•rh's—Jones and frlgor; Bernhard,
ghlin nnd McFarland.
AT PITTSnURO.
PITTSBURG, JULY 7—Pittsburg won a
sleepy game by a luck hit.
Score: R.H.E.
Pittsburg 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1—4 10 5
New York 00000300 0—3 9 3
Batterlefc—Phllllppl and Zlmmer; Haw-
ley and W
WPIERCE'S
Favorite
Prescription
CONGREGATIONAL
COLLEGE.
Omaha..
AT SIOUX CITY.
CITY, JULY 7.-
R.H.E
0 1 2 0 0 3 1 1 0-* 11
2 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1-6 11
so grateful to you for your ad-
vice," says Mrs. Sidney B. Oaks*, of
Whitmell, Pittsylvania Co., Va. " When
I commenced y<>ur mediciues I hfltl been
treated by different doctors for three
months or more, hut would only receive
partial relief for a short while and then
would be worse than before. Was cou-
fined to my bed most of the time. At
the time I commenced your treatment
my left side was completely paralyzeu.
Had no desire to eat anything; bowels
•1012 4 I costive all the time. Nerves were all
unstrung, so I could not bear the least
noise. I also suffered from diseased
ovaries and female weakness. But thanks
to my Maker and you, after following
yotir advice, I am able to do ull my wash-
ing, sewing and house work in general.
I uaven't nud a spasm in two months.
Left off medicines about one month
ago. Didn't think it necessary to con-
tinue them longer. I have taken about
| seven bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite
I Prescription, seven of the 'Golden
I Medical Discovery,' and two vials of
'Pleasant Pellets.' I heartily recommend
those medicines to all suffering as I was."
Kingfisher College Enlarged and
Improved.
Convention Hall as it Appeared Three Days Before the Assemblage of tnc National Democratic Conventioi
' ago, 16 in 1S98; 14 in
In tbin week a yei
1®Z, and 3a In 1R96.
DUN'S REVIEW OF TRADE
_ NKXV YU11K, Jl'I.Y 7—R. U Hun &
'Company'* weokly review of trade says:
Failures In (h<> first half of 1!h 0 were
r>.3«2 with liabilities of I100.R70.184. There
were thirty fnilur. * of Imnks, ami finan-
cial corporations for t25.H22.Sfi2, leaving
6.832 commerebU failures with liabilities
174.—
Had !t iMTn predicted that tho vast
Wirt fsijrlng of dividend paylng stocks has' lr"" ,n''"Mfrv would be thrown from
|>e«u largo ami persistent, nn<l .-omnr , " • • -l.-n'. •! activity i t,, great dep
Slon f|ouces report a considerable demand ,v1,h n,;mV works e'ose.l and prices
pf that kind, whldh, of courset n-duees: " ,lui ,"'1 fully a iiuarter. ■with failures
MM floating supply. Tho fart that. rains l,,n"un,,nK ' > all to J.i m h , h woud have
tsws Improved-the Wh«-fl.t situation in the '' "" Ul^' impossible Yet tho fix
Jwrthfwevt and have caused <-xi>- nt .mj 1" thai department for tho last
pt lial# a crop to replaco <ht 1 ^tlmnto «>f
• total failure of th.i spring Win at yield
la thfrwa Imporfunt states also helped th>
•naHrv^, and rauwed covering of "shorts'*
thuntighiout the list
. ^h ,tellag that a chaniro for tho lx t-
tnr if . at hnnd in tho iron trndo also
ft ««ff-v(*t n th« imfURtriai*. I ,
Ka railroada the amluueMe pr..Up v-lHJ
s Setlvo future of tho week, with
IflStrp advanc4'n in sm-eral or lt« mem-
bers, giving rise to tho idea that some
Important deal, Involving trunk lino in,
tsrnrts, i in psoepect.
Raw cotton has been Irregular this
We^k. Some Improvements In crop
lee« Is to be noted, but the main inw
t*re*t centers upon tho efforts , f tho ov,-r
grown short a go to cover on tho early
Drop deOiverles.
Wool ! dull and manufacturers nre
tRipplrtng only actual wants. Prior.* ar«
at the le«Mt point reached th4«* w-ieon.
ht sympathy with to lower o^enln* , f
July wixil ,nl„ „t LM^l.mjwh^ro dnrr
sradva «rn relatively w«\ikost
In manufacturing line* dullnras end
Weaknee* are most marke.1 U\ pro^lnctH
of fron and ateol. Talk of an. effort hv
1Kb great Oombtnatlon* to eontr | ,,rl. ee
In tho lajtor IrUluetn- 1* hvnr,, bllt
Mie ahnoef total IseVof new buslne«R th >
material, pig inon. weaken*
lly, wMli simn authorltten prcillotlnr a
IS per ow t reduction frorn prew.r t prl. • \
Which ero not ntlraHnir buyer*
l Inrturtfl. . . , ,
1W new The m-itlenient f
labor troubles k> reflerted lt> the l.-tter
d«*nand for building mater4a 1* nt nfr,> .
•d points S<Mithorn pi no prloes n-, vv«wlc
and ths market for that material i; v, v
dull.
flugsir lui? been marked tip
We.>k. le Wwhor while
the full advance scored on tho outhn ,k
tof the fVilnreo tronble«
Wheat. Indudlnir f >ur sh pm.>nta f, r
fho w,-vk mrgresr itc 3.1«,«> !;.• ■. k. ... .
1*4,144 buelmln laet we k: s.:s< \
ht t.t e eorreepondlns ew^k of
hushelf In 1898: 5.M*B0« tntuhcls I H'>r"
ami tw.on bushels i<n Ifw
Com exports for the week ak-r'-'cnt*
I.IH.2M buehela ajralnsf 4 «n> ^.4 I n h -!«
fast week. S.7M,fT2 buah«<l* In this we«>kj
■ yanr ago 17* *42 bushels In !' •- 2
IW bushels In 1S97. and 2.117.bus! .■
lO ISM.
Ruslnew failures In *he TTnlted Si
Tor the w^ek number li*. «« >■ >rt •
Srtth 1S5 last wwk. 1M in tth'« w
rx ajro. 241 in 18SW; 213 In 1«*7. mi l
1 6
Bus4m~<H fitlures In Canada numb ■
SB oompar«*l with eighteen |t >t w. .
$28.9%. though
declined Just 2fV
10. Bom efurther
'•1 before tilings
otherr
' this
• UMirter were in nil
l "scmer pig has fallen
plate from 3.1 to 15 cents,
nd ale* | produete h;
r cent since January
lec'lne |>« now expect'
tilings are adjusted for a v
« aaon aiul • (Torts to arrange
•ages nre progressing.
The Fall river oommlttne has decided
t > close their cotton mills for a time
nnd *ome of tho Hirg«ft woolm w„rk*
have been olosed or muoh reduced In
' ■roe. ** ' WtiHivn- ■
A large share of the boot and ah.
foroe Is Inactive nnd no change in prless
t-'i* resulted since those of pome week*
ago. which. a.c. rdlng to later accounts,
were made by fewer of the manufactur-
ers than was at the time hef,>re
Gotten has rearhed 10 1-8 cents with
widely prevailing fcling that thJc sufTl-
olenry of the next yield cannot be deter-
mined so earl yas this. Thore Is mort
ootton than the world will want. In idl
probability, if the crop matures falrl
nnd the shrinkage f,>r demaivl for good#
horo nn,^ abroed h-lns. especially 'the
uncertainty as to Chinese den
The oren year for grain Is over, and
the outward movement of wheat. h«
not he«n stopped, although somewhat di-
minished by the vagaries In places; While
exact figures for ihe year will not be
known for somo davs to come they, thev
differ very little from 4on.oro.ooo bushels
of wheat and corn together, which
almost exactly the quantity exported
last year, while In 181*8 It was elightly
larger It Is now asked by th- mo*«
servatlvs whether -Indian corn has
at la«t crept Into sueh favor In pla<-
other grain tliat a larger quantity
will be required hereafter, lessening the
strain on this country when wheat is In
short supplv, and without curtailing fhe
mipplv to the world's n^ vis or the mim
lue t.> this country on balanoes A sin-
gle moderate > -*t on,p might
al calculations in this revpect fer
the i
Strengthen the d'rest
Iv.t and purtf>" ihe | n
> regxilate the
is If you would
theae organs
healthy and vlgoroait t
vinco of Prickly Ash Rift
I* any derangement It aot dlrctly on the
nffectetl on: in. irving right to the seat
of trouble and driving all impurtrlea and
.lls-ase germs from the system Prickly
A h Hitters Is a thorough system tonic,
{ lira's the kidneys, strengthens and regu-
lates the llvi r ntomach and t>oweVs and
so fortifies the body that it can eucoewa-
d other diseases
GREEK INDIANS
HIT THE TRAIL
Four Full Blood Creek Indians Strand-
ed in Washington.
PROTEST HOUSE BILL 11,821.
BASE BALL.
Trie.
ti 0
4 ncTook Muiall i'ox All Meat to In-
tention Hospital Appeala for Aid
Brought \o ICeiiel'.
WASHINGTON. JULY 7.-tSpeolal).—
There are four full blooded Creek Indiana
In1 town who nre In trouble. Their names
are Hotulkee Yahola (Wind-without-
heart), second ehelflaln of tho tribe; Ho-
tulkee Flxlco, (W.nd-wlth-a-moan), tribe-
man: Sandy Johnson, Interpreter, and
Wilson Jones, tribesman. They left
Brush Hill, Indian -territory, April 23.
duly oommlsloned to protest against the
pasage of house bill 11,821 to make tha
C'reeke cltisena. and to abolish their trib-
al relation. The unfortunate red man
landed In the smallpox detention camp.
Now they want to get back horn eagaln,
but they don't know how t«> do it. They
are not only strapped, they ar.- hopelessly
Irrevocably stranded, and they don't un-
derstand it a bit.
"We talk, wo go around, we sit, we
think," said poor, hopflewa Ri
Interpreter "but It will n« t co
what we think. We have dot
thing we know. We been m.i
to the commie
him ten time* but he do noth
He talk good: he 4s willing, b
others who la not. We send '
our people, but the cannot ran
They think
ley tak<
take earn
go home: we been aw
so we going to start
have to walk home. It
a year to walk home.
of tho M!ss4Wpp|."
Bo they
walk to t
PALLED
Having I
a meeting
Johnson
hi charge c
ready to a
had never b
Wind-wit ho
and It took
steam cars Being
triumphal process
•hat
Territory on the cuehloT
ing that thev would ha'
n the ties.
Once In Washington,
their way to the White
Ing without as much as a counterfeit [
penny, paddled along up tho avenue In
true Creek fashion. Wlnd-wlth-a-moan
Is a picturesque individual, with long hair)
writhing like black snakee under a sun-( —
parch™, tat with rim bred . a T.x- BUFFALO, JULY 7.-Sl,ortstop Buflow
as prairie, so the unique delegation held .„ - . ,
all ,yo a, .hey hit ,h. Mall .or th.!"""" " "erCe b'""e b""c,?n thr
" >."W lioufhs where lived Father MeKln- °n<1 Clcvf'and .oday when In Ihe
ley." Buffalo half of the eleventh Inning life
"We met man there," said Sandy. "I threw the ba'l wildly at Crlshain and the
don't know name for he did not say to sphere bounded to the blcacher- and was
me. but I guess he was the reporter for lost. Pitcher Hastings made the circuit
Father McKlnley, and I told him what 0f the buses and won the game.
AT INDIANAPOLIS.
INDIANAPOLIS. JULY 7-Detroit won
today by taking advantage of the home
team's errors. Both aBrnes and Guese
were batte dh'ird.
Score; R.H.E.
Indianapolis 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1—5 6 7 i
Detroit 0 15 0 10 11 0-9 II 7 |
Batteries—Harms, Guese and Powers;
Yeager and Shaw.
makes
weak women
STRONG,
sick women
WELL.
TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 11TH.
Three \ew Professors Added to tlio
Corps or Instructors • uture
Prospects Fluttering
KINGFISHER, O. T., JULY 7 -(Spa*
clal).—Kingfisher college will open Its
doors Sfjitember 11 Parker Hull, tho
muin building, wil lx* complete. Work
will begin a^ once on a commodious struc-
, ..re f..r the accommodation of young
I'rof. O. O.
*" rslty and
of large ex-
i aiid
each French,
Gordon, of Harvard, has
Pickett, of Smith College
l!.«h literature and act aa
Pr
ord
^ III
rk
Score:
Buffalo
me for, and he told us we could
ee otir father, but to go and see
r man first, and he would give ®u"a'° 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
mte to the other man, so he wrote Cleveland 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0
and gave us a note, and we went| Batterled—Hustings and Bpi*
the commlfr and Spies.
R.H.E.
to the other ma
sioner, and he m
house f.x)led us.
signed to the no
Id the r
for 'there wo
e. and note
NATIONAL BANK AFFAIRS, ALLOTMENT DECISION.
WASHINGTON, JULY 7.-The follow- PERMITS SALE OF LOT3 AND BUILD-
Ing nproval of reserve agents for Okla- j G0F TOWNS ON INDIAN
homa banks are announced: LANDS.
Vc.ern National, New York Cl.y, for: ARDMORK, T.-jn.T 7.-,BwelaU-
Ihe Ftr.t National. Itlnrltwell. O. T. |Judg, T «-n.,.,l h.-ard Ihe appll-
Western NaU.mal. New York City, for 0„„on boh!1|, ,, SUIP, ..
the Lexington National bank, Lexington.
O. T.
American Natonal bank. Kansas City,
Mo., for the Lexington National bank,
! Lexington. O. T.
tlnuc lit that
President House
the feasibility of >
department of pedi
He holds that the h
Ject can be do
and universltli
> fa
s long believed In
ibllshlng a vrrung
igy In the collego.
i best work in that sub-
and Is done in colleges
Carke university has
i a school for specialists
In child stud
reason why
shall not be
of learning.
th. i
ufflcl
cha
ortlo
of
and
i building :
"hocta*
INTERPRETER SANDY TALKS.
Sandy s descriptive powers are u
Bj AT CINCINNATI.
I CINCINNATI. JULY 7 Hro kl>
It three straight today. Great flel
•cd Ilowell.
13 TO 3 Of! M'KINLEY.
"What
tho
at the White
he
"He—he had red coat, dark red coat,
maybe he hud very dark red ooat."
"Was he tall?"
* He was good sized; he wore red coat."
"Did he have a beard?"
"He had good-slsed face: he was good-
sired man: he woro red coat."
Sec
Cincinnati
Brooklyn..
Batterler—Scott. Brl.
H .well and Farrtll.
.0 0 0 1 3 0 (
tnsteln and Pietz,
AT KANSAS CITY.
KANSAS CITY, JULY 7.-Today's gam •
was called on account of rain In the fifth
inning. The locals were at but with two
and Chiekasanl
ir town at Madill, and
also from selling town lots along the
line of th Frisco extension from Sapulpa
to Dennlson. Attorneys for the plalntlfTa
took the position that In building a new
town .that It owuld Interefere with the
equtable allotment of land among the
Chick ieaw and t'hoot iw tribes, and also
'TING AT NEW that under tho Curtis act the Indian had
AMPAIGN. no legal right to build a town on his pros-
pective allotment Judge Townsend held-
NEW YORK. JULY 7.—Offers to bet at adversely to the Indian nations, and as
the rate of ten to thre^ <>n McKinley were a result of his decision the promoters oan
made In Wall stree<t today. One offer to build the town and st.ll town lots. The
bet *1,000 at this rate was r p >rted. A decision gives the Indian the ri ht lo
few bets of smal maounts were concluded do what he pleases with his allotm nt.
the work of esl
this department
SPECIAL
The prospect
flattering. It sh
scholarship for
tabling the chair of
hool In Okla-
i'l of his class
s: Wm. Crow,
ung Shaw, in
last Saturday,
ly before Jus-
of the
Kinley by T
by G.
The price paid for
money
cradle Is h jsh bound
grand Jury
t the act!
Llug< .h
tribe, bund)
whom they oould send
They all dead,-' responded Sandy pa-
theticallv.
id day arter tne-.r arrival the
l. legation went out lawyer hunting. As
ity hall Is but a at on -s throw from
their abiding place, they had no difficu lty
■ aww ■ ■
* fill., f: • i'i
ware.,
mm
btalnlng
h-a-
lelegat!
imp
t he j
ago.
ngross ndjotirn when
ly with
packed
BUppopod
B
1 until
1
'I
'APAN ANXIOUS
pressn
•rift This b. like the mis
which delude ne.M>i, 1ntr>
d^odne
Interi
lens In the bitters Mes t
It Is worth Its welg
Indlg-'et , ..
malaria, fever n..< I
11
brown from j rtj
'ity nnd so I T
e back j dangerously Injured on the morning I
of the 4th dtirlng the parade Is con- ®
paired J alderably Improved and hopes are now T
ml bo-U'iiteitaln.'.l for his ultimate MOOVirf.lv'
Senator James K
s of Arkansas, Chairman Dimocratic Niti Committee, in Conference .vith Mr. Bryan Prior
to the Kansas City Convention, and Who Will Conduct the Campaign for the Democrats.
Democratic Vice-Presidential Possibilities Who Failed to Materialize at the Great Kansas City Convention.
iffniiii
K.V-UON
TI
; m
V
PENNSYLVANIA.
ijilillilliiiliii
r
i
BENJ F SHIVELY
IN DIANA.
liULIOTT F. DAN FORTH,
NEW YORK.
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 67, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 8, 1900, newspaper, July 8, 1900; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc124162/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.