The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1896 Page: 2 of 4
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l.ER PUBLICIST.
* 1 FHENi If r A Min'fnt
Mils. c c riitM H, Anotir,
CHANDLER,
SENATOR COCKRELL REVIEWS
OUR FINANCIAL SYSTEM.
firunai ■
/b anld to have
In 1800. Now
the earth.
<>, in. Hjinachildq
scarcely owned a penny
they pretij nearly own
How the Ciolu I tn ea Am En.hl.d to
Raid the Treasury Without Warrant
of l^w-Frou. Hi, hpftmvh |h-
Senate.
f Hon.
in tho
; The following Is a part
ine woman «vho Is attempting to I Franc|s M. Cockrell's speech
5™** eari> m«rrla*e with lason *">•«• a few weeks ago:
fleece lr} l"g a goldei' „ "We ow* over «.000.000 of United
. | States bonds. Over 125,000,000 of the-e
As every other ~~ I Pa5ab'e " 0ur ">
of mon«r «, fstiow>. ..p, .. .
want no teserve fun,I to redeem th£ '
money— „o redemptlo,
benefit of sto. k brokers and bank n,
,yndlcatos. We believe gove"m ?
ska awfcr Tney ihan mM ' •«
"ink z::zK:zn"r T-
; 18 88 good a the natlon'sTi^'lt-
money that needs no redeemer; 2ney
as good In the hands of the p„0r as in
he t lis of the rich; money wo (h I
!"1 l".„th-8 ""V «' '-bar; money
lhat will not slink away when'trouble
comes; money that speculators cannit
corner; money that will pay debts and
raxes, money based on ih? peonies
fhaTThe "nd 1h° ""bl,C "ed"^ney
that the government will recelvn nt
< e hot months"is'*ithout^reredent I ^^KTinTw .nTbeaT" ™ 71^7 X" *">
or co"pirao7hoCrl T,','",,'inn- °r h""'. ot these j Public ^endure.."
tn p.,11. liatever you choose bonds are redeemable In 1904 an*<l h. u Thoro i« ^ •
X«w yU ,w.m '.^."ki.0?h uteres,. pri,, ln „« T
The price In | are redeemable in 1925 and .bear 4 per. walking-out of" " the
WBBt
. . commodity Is lower daJ' and bear only 2-per cent Interest
he advance In the price coa| during 1 w 569,00(1,000 of these bonds are
international press association.
CHAPTER II.
York Herald
New York for stove
Senator Pettigiew or
'gfgar-*fty~g <*- «.
«ko Is there n# redress or protection '
the people from such extortion?
JIurrah for the trusts:
1 per cent Interest. In time of pro-
aSTmnT/'w"have ovcr
800.000 of boa d( since January 1 1*91
"' have |;J4.. •W.oifi
notes, greenbacks and about 1136 000 -
000 treasury notes.
wi t was our llnanclal condiiion on
the third day of the present month?
We had over J123.000,OIK) of golll coin
nd bear f,le quiet, eommonplaee, 1
and biilllun in the treasury aud
f-4,000,000 of standard silver dol
The Rev. Ronard I). Worth, a Uap-
JrinfT "r "f N>W V°rk- '"as been
granted a divorce in Oklahoma It ,Tn
Pears his wife objected to his leaving
-■™?t°r■s 10 h ,""1 -vii
spoiled hlH Sunday coat mid filled I1I3
Sunday shoes with water." These nrp
somewhat novel rca.-ong for divorce
Mjt they are also novel methods of an-
noyance f'jr a woman to emplov it |s
fv dent lhat Mr Worn, be,„g „
• preacher was forced to preach, and It
Is also evident that he conh
with satisfactory
Sunday coat and wim u ih no< 8 run cf I over SlOfi ooo non •
r- II is a unitjue matrimonial or "lle<1 8late notes
complication and Mr. Worlh must be ! 000 JT" ,n<j over *30 0 .- j
commended for his* r^o",. ^..^ I g °f !* treasury noTes
gainst Perfalttlnp « wet blAiket to bt h ,S90 "?er V" law of Julv
thrown ovcr his religion . ■ and *'• coined from 187s
greTTm 7— «" —
lie on the great American Installment J «ie treaeurv notes of July 14 fjo h
^"t. 15 ootea or greenbacks
Ut.. A."..„:.5*ca.wrUln« * ch«p«" are presented*,,! the treaaury and
every day clti-
tom" of'Th republ11'' who at the bot-
revolutlon. The
j P«ople arc getting ready to take charg^
not 1°*" s°v-rnment. and they arc
gohig to ask the consent of Europe
or any other power on earth '
lite rotten-egg argument has.been
<mh>
i
.ml „ t , er dollars; ,*as tll"H Insulted at Klias'vllle reeent-
,J1 aVe.,"Ve'.bu_Ll,on of the coin- j !L . .".'I.' Jnik,n* a ' l'"'H t speech.
age value of over Il77.00i,000« having
coat only aboui WM.000.000, the seig-
niorage, the profit that would belong To
«« h. .otll.l not preach W e'haTI'n'tl, V,X
' results In a spoiled i over $H,000 000 IT '" ' i bt"i,le8 these'
wtlh bin Kho«'8 full i 1 over ,M„, ,,no ','',!ary co,n' I
texas"^ r'™","'"" "°"'t la8t long in
7 ; Populists there have hern
brought up in an atmosphere 4hat In-
"ngTn U? dt'f,' "" lhe®«-lveB. 1)1,nv-
l^slfer , m""'° °f WOtlld
fexa. throwing rotten eggs in
T was not until
late in the after
noon of the next.
day that I could
bring myself
meet again the
man whom I had
always believed to
be my father. Dur-
ing the time while
I held myself aloof
from him I passed
through manj; stages of sorrow, but I
believe my anger was greater th.fn my
Rrief. I waitbut nineteen years of age,
but I fancy that my thoughts and Ideas back to college"'by all means
weie in advance of my years. Th&j a flame,
curious, almost solitary, life which I
had led for so
In return, I have a right to demand
something."
"Demand! All right! Never mind.
Go on."
itructlons concerning the funeral. Hi
did this at my request. Knowing that
shortly I would be an alien In the
house, I would assume no responsi-
bility. The only order I gave was 1
that everything should be done quiet- I
Iv and simply. I knew the dead man's i
Ideas about conventional obsequies.
The funeral over we looked for the ,
will. I would not have a paper moved I
until then. We soon found It.
"Not that it makes much difference., j
I suspect," said the solicitor, "you be- 1
ing his only son."
He was opening the envelope as he I
spoke. I said nothing.
"Shortest will I ever read," said the !
solicitor; "made by him'self, too, but ,
all quite right and legal."
He handed the paper to me. I read:
"I bequeath all my real and personal
estate to my adopted son Julian, com- j
monly known as Julian Loraine."
This, duly signed and witnessed, !
was Mr. Loraine's will.
chair, feeling dizzy and confused. Mr.
prod ti cm]
In ISO.") the T'nltod States
407,103,0J0 bushels of wheat.
The Canadian Government has i
troduced an eight-hour system into all
offices and works that are under it
control. 8
The wool clip of Robert Taylor, nf
Casper, Wyo., for the present year j*
560,000 pounds. Mr. Taylor is belief
to .o the largest individual wool grow
sriu the I'm ted States.
Apropos of the
.1 ., benefits of "protec-
ion as extolled in the re
'lean platform
which occurred
Miss Atkinson s chantsr"win"7117« al°e ,n>a8Ur>r and gold
5«J -A.; -re. i rda,r;d,d'a * =■ •
"B." and the
paid and the uptes rome into the
f luiiiisu me lext
0 *or the other twenty-four letters. This
extraordinary alphabetical array of Ut-
•^7et?er D LWmTh,,Urllb' rC°,er lboKl
Io Jk .m . The reporI "lent as
•O who Will |„. . pr„kab|v >us?
•be Information would be uperfluoui
In the serried rank, of Kansas women
*hos names begin with L ln itir-h n
y&r'-SZS "Vdt !>" t (•"n"°,0,on'y-o"d
Lease'*'" Mary Elizabeth
,, , notes in payment
th« i° ""*■ of tba government, as
the law require, him to'do, because
en the note, are redeemed in gold
and n,o rq'fr"e ,h"m 'o be reissued
and put in circulation. They are a le
fnd 'MaMlVr tbe p ,,ment of ali debts
«d I th 0,herwl e met**;
they were not reissued the vol-
be contracted by
i A congress of the chambera of com-
merce of the Ilritteh empire has Just
been held In London, England. On
tne last dny of the session a resolution
w ad°p,ed that we hope to see put
Into operation both so far as It applies
to England and to the United States.
It was for the doing away of the pres
ent cumbersome standard of weights
and measures, atfl In England the
abolition of the present system of
money notation, such as pounds, shill-
ings, etc.* The resolution says that
j la!1''"1 |l0unila> "hillings, pence
and Imthlngs Is very cumbersome, es-
pecially wnon applied to the foreign
trade, and lhat the dccllnafcayatem ,,f
dollars and cents, In vogue not only
In the United States, but also In tho
domlnlou of Canada, Is far to be pre-
ferred. It Is suggested that tf>< olir.ngf
might be easily made by making tho
pound equal to five dollars and tho
shilling equal to 25 cents, about what
they are now worth in actual transac-
tions, As to weights and measures
the decllnal system. In use in all coun
tries, but In the United Slates and Brit-
ish emplre,«H the perfect system and
should supplant the present arbitrary
amount. Then they
™,h!b:"V° ,h" ' ''^ury snd gold
and that ,M "" R°'d agaln P"1'1
nd that this process has bee,, kept
r« ' endless chain, and the gold
Sn-rr?""1- 0f ""O^OOO has
been depleted time after time."
CURRtNj COMMENT.
«„W'a".B"Tt 1,88 ^"«ht the Republic.
mSTruUt " ha" bought tb*
I on!e. It may buy the Democratic
n.«ona convention, but thepoHUelan
win flud themselves unable to del ve 1
-tior^h^'eT Z Jh^'"d'-
-"oparty'wi';:;^^ r^ ^
rS:
bo further proof of se, ret bargain Jo
hold the party in line and thus divide
he Independent and Democrats ,"'
KlnleyCef\vh ^ 'he M "
finley. When all tbe gold-bugs get
Into one party then thgre will l,e a bot-
"cent Repub-
note an instance
ut short time ago at
Voice nays' T"°
• Gus Hamel. vardmaster at the santi
""" thinking of buying n wh" I
He has a brother In Hamburg G(r-
an>. and In wii.ing to him lnddenl-
ll> asked him to see what they eould
be bought for there. He
etter Tuesday from bis brother
that tho Columbia and
Wheels mero selling
marks. Four marks
cents of our money. .
tho wheels sell for $.15
over the United States for Jioo.
sajs he llki-s <o lie protect
Cretty expensive."
.farm machinery, nails and various
other things that are "protected in
America sell |„ Kuropo (or ha,; ^
,Ph'vM at lh">' are sold h-re, where
they are manufactured.
protection protects.
' saying
Cleveian it
Uww for I'.-i
are equal to 05
..This would make
>•*>1. They sell all
Gua
but it 13
ma®y years at Herstal
Abbey no doubt conduced to make me
older than I really was. Till the time
came for me to go to Oxford, I saw little
of any one save my supposed father,
mY tutor, and tbe servants of the house.
But latterly all had chrfnged for the
better. I had been two terms at the
university. I had#made many friends.
Life was just opening to me; a new,
fresh life, full of pleasure and*exclte-
ment. I found myself fairly popular
with m.v fellows. 1 was well supplied
with money. 1 was looked ufon as an
only son, and heir to tine property. In
short my lot seemed to be*one in ten
thousand.
And that moment Mr. Loraine had
chosen to reveal to me th® secret of my
lowly birth. To dash me frotn the
pedestal upon which he had placed me.
To show me that I had no .claim upon
That Is how
A considerable number of researches
have been going on in the psychological
Uboratdry of th^Universlty of Wlscon
sin during the current year, Mr
Quantz, fellow ln psychology, has been
Investigating the psychology 0f the
reading process. His main attempts
have been to ascertain what processes
help to make one a rapid reader and
how far tbe ease of comprehension Is
related to the qulckuess of reading. The
research has not gone far enough to
yield very definite results vet ai,.|
. will be continued another ye*- but a
number of jery slgnlflcanPsuKgeitlons
have been reached. Mr. Bolton, a gradu-
ate student, has been investigating the
relation between sensation^liid sugges-
tion, or, In other words, how far what
we see Is determined by what there Is
there to sec or by what we suppose |4
present. A number of Ingenious
methods of studying this influence havo
been devised and i papur Is in prepara-
tion on the subiect. Another Investiga-
tion relates tothe question of how fi
we mean the same thing by the same
words. The Investigation boglift with
the color-names aud attempts to ascer-
tain bow far w"iat we associate with
the name "red" or blue" 1, the same
for different individual.. .Similar in-
Ind utter"" r,'KarU""! and shape
eh, i , ™ o notions are also in-
eluded in the study.
ter .how for thejdlverVn ,0 unite.
tlo^rT,1*""-'"8 ln ,al® ronven-
Poouli,7f„ t" pla,f"rm "> < has mai*
Popu'tat features. It 1, w a„
««aWe !avor bimetallism, and to that
fled we1lnBlsl uP°h Ihj free and unlim
■t «TrZZT,„7"an"
«na, redemption, with equa" ™°al tend^
tnre^,"iare,°I>P<*"''1 '° 'h"^ < of in-
,or "">• wrpo*
shanVnn!*'rr:" ihat ih0 ^-rnm.nt
Ita ^'IgatlonlTin e,th^go]r"°or sMvcr
moal convenlenV
I. ''lemaml the repeal of the present
""HK 'he silver money of
the nation and legating private con
facta pay,ble ln g0|d a*oPt v«'« <on-
h„ 1,° "r" "PP°"d to tho Natfonal
banking system and favnr ™„ .,"
A press dispatch says that a bill has
,h0 readlriV';';
m m w ,so "f Parliament which
forTh D""!iciPa,itipa lo loan monev
ceed *7Ko"t ^ °' houscs- not ^ ex-
ceed J750 to each man. The party de-
siring to borrow must have one-fourth
the rn P11lr.c'""w mo ey, and then give
Prodtrt'v , M' i,'' K " morlKaKe 0,1 < lie
t thli-tv ' 1 ' ls be repaid ln
I hitt> years. Ii„t |„ America the sub-
r,ry, "''""rd non-
wh ; f y is- ^id to havo
wheels in his head.
■o'l 'V1"' lawful for «h8 government
to end money to bankers In America.
would i>0 "paternalism" to loan
money direct to the common peop.o
without the intervention of rich biuik,
ing corporations.
i , '"'.' ■"iiu Hpuil
m that Instead of being young Mr
Loraine of Herstal *bbey. I was no one'
I remember how, shortly before be
told me the tale of tho shipwreck
had been discoursing in a somewhat
arrogant, self-satisfled and glib man-
,0 llu,les incumbent on old
milles and landed gentry; asserting
that the existence of the aristocracy
was an unmitigated blessing to the
nn^H !1 WiJs Klvln« sup-
posed father, a hash-up of a speech
which I had heard at the Union. I
thought my sentiments gave him satis-
faction. He smiled and looked amused
No doubt he
was amused, so amused
Tn WhV "Ulnrr I'rorei.
To those of our reader, who believe
that the republican party did a great
men, art 1 Pal,ming specie pay.
menu we submit the following bit of
history taken from Sir Archibald Alii-
«ons History of Europe"
byT,he Tri™ """"" Payment.
y the Bank of England In 1797 led to
the use of an enormous amount of Ir-
redeemable paper money *
The result was magical.
It terminated in a blaze of glory and
a flood of prosperity which lias never
8ilu,° the beginning of th0
p1* descended upon any nation.
1 rosperuy universal and unheard nf
pcrvgdfti every department of.ihe em-
that the demon of sarcasm rose within
bl™'.and hurried on the revelation
w hich he may or may. not have intended
should be made. The lemptation to
Prick the bladder Inflated by my youth-
ful arrogance must have been irr*
slstible to Mr. Loraine. From a child
I had noted this cruel trait In his char-
acter. I had noticed it with servants
such acquaintances as he had, and with
myself. She way of listening, of even
leading one en lo talk, and then sud-
denly by a biting piece of sarcasm,
crushing tho unlucky speaker. It wa
from this and kindred actions that
even while I thought him my father I
did not love the man.
Nor did he love me. Had he loved me
ever so little, he would have kept the
secret and spared me my present hu-
miliation So. in spite of all fie had
Hone for me, my anger rose and burned
against Julian Loraine.
I may have been wrong; but, as w*ll
soon discovered. I wasVull of faults*
I trhaps the very association, more or
less, during twelv
I had expected an outburt of rage.
His calm encouraged me.
Yes, sir; I ask that I may be al-
lowed to finish my course* at Oxford
Thon, when 1 have taken my degree, I
will go and para my own living as best
can. I shall, obcourse, now call my-
self by some othej* name. Can you sug-
gest one?"
^ Mr. Loraine laughed a curious laugh.
I like fellows who demand, better
than those who oeg," he said. "Go
As. to
not Julian Loraine good
enough for youfr You are perfectly
welcome to use it."
"But it is not mine."
"Never mind; use it I choose that
you shall use it so long as juu are de-
pendent on me. I also ch*oose you to
be thought my son. No"-he saw me
about to sneak—"I wllll give no rea-
son*; perhaps I have none. You may
be sure that it will be no hinderance to
your future, being thought a rich man's
son. Besides. I hate changes. Now,
'on ' tall* any more. You have de-
manded; I have acceded. Oo away."
Puzzled and dissatisfied, I left him
I had fully persuaded myself that I had
a right to claim what I had claimed
from him. It was also not hard for
me to learn to think that if it was Mr
Loraine s wish that I should still pass
as his son and bear his name, it was
my duty to do so. Brides-remember
was but a boy, and so need not be
asliirtiied of the truth—with all my as-
sumed independence, the thought of
proclaiming my bumble and unknown
parentage to my friends was *all and
wormwood to me.. To sink from the '
position which I held aa Mr. Loraine's
son to that of no one at all was a
change greater than I could picture to
myself with equanimity. So I objected
no more; and as Mr. I,o ,ino sternly
forbade the subjects.being reopenetf
my life,, in spite of Its clouded future'
went on ln Its accustomed woove.
Here, to avoid any mlsleadlnir I m«„ „ j -■ -
say that all I. ever learned abcut nit f gr('e' Afler this I went abroad
,ru™. abBut my I for niady months. I left Herstal AbbSy
The total length of the Manchester
ship canal is 3:,miles." The average
width at water level is 172 feet, and
the minimum depth is 2fi feet.
It is said theve are fcnly two words
in the English language that cont*i„
all the vowels in their order. They
arc "abstemious" and "facetious."
On the body of a notorious brigand
I sunk on a I recently killed in Turkey, was found'
nftised. Mr. I 120,000 and a note hnoh ,
Loraino dead was a greater puzzle to ' that lie had murdered iu" ed
me than Mr. Loraine living. By a few j "ad munlered 1DJ men.
words—dashed ofT, it might be, on the Hir William Turner has compiled a
spur of the moment—he had left me table which chows that a whale nf
all his wealth. Was It f rom affection, j llfty tons weight exerts 145 horse-now
I dld nofl!06' CynlCl8m' °r What? ,r ' summing twelve miles an hour
I did not know you were an adopted [ ,
son, Mr. Julian," said the lawyer in ! ^'ie l'nnRna 's the most prolific of
tones of surprise. • H" the fruits of the earth, being fortv-
"Yes," I said, collecting myself. "Do four times more productive than oot'a
Tbta be right in atcepuns | ,i""s «ve'
"tVhy not?" •
Are there no. close relatives? Al-
though I passed*as his son, I know so
little about them." .
"1 suspect I Ifliow loo. But I never
heard Mr. Loraine speak of any rela-
tives. His adoption of you proves you
entitled to the money."
.1 sat in deep thought.* It was all bo
strange, so sudden.
"Bye the bye, Mr. Julian," said ihe
solicitor, "without wishing to Intrude
my advice. I should, If I were in your
Place, say nothing to let people know
I was not «Mr. Loraine's son. He evi-
dently wished it to be thought you
were. 1 fancy that by-saying nothing I
you will best carry out his wishes. I j
myself shall keep silencc on the mat-
ter" ~
vegetable
per annum for
The geatest potato eaters are the
people of Germany and Bflg|um.
Their consumption of this
I averages 100 pounds
I each person.
•So heavy«s the mass of silver com'
posing the Indian marriage present to
the duke and duchess of York that it
loOk four men to lift it into a convey-
Jerusalem is now competing witl*
Spain, Mexico and California for the
orange trade of th. world.. The fr„it
is grown in the district between Jeru-
salem and Jaffa.
I weighed his counsel, and at last
rightly or wrongly, decided to follow' j oflicials was to close
t. No one qpuld be harmed by my con-
tinuing to pass as the dead man's son
The fact of his having left to me all
his wealth showed, or, 1 fancied it
showed. hat he looked upon me a« a
son; so I burned the story of the ship-
wreck in my own breast, and was still
Mr. Loraine of Herstal Abbey.
I stayed my time at Oxford; I took
During the recent troubles in Johan.
ncsburg, one of the first acts of the
officials was to do.eev®, v saloon com,
pen sate the owners for theirstock, an,|
tiieii destroy the liquor by pouring it
on the ground.
true Parentage was what Mr. Loraine
me. Who and*what was my m
fated mother, I know no more than I
know for what reason my reputed
father allowed me to bo brought
his son
The terms and the
up as
vacations went by.
pire.
Agrieu'ture.'inaiiufacturea and com-
men,, increased In unparalleled ratio,
cnre Proprietors were ln afflu-
cre^.'e !"' *" "nht rc' "tent m
created among the farmers
Our exports, imports and tonnago
more than doubled, and the condition
the people wr~
nr at, r , . k'Vears with a man
/ Mr. Loraine s stamp must develop
faults *
1 here! Let me write no more to his
detriment, lie worked me evil, and
he worked me good. He is dead. As I
raise my eyes from my paper and
glance through my window, I can ai-
most see his grave.
I did not, during the latter, see a great
deal of *r. Loraine: nor did he press
me to spend the time at Herstal Abbey
But-a certain feeling, if not of gr.ti-
fl"le, of what seemed right and proper,
induced me to stay there on several oc-
casions. There was really little an-
parent change in the relations between
Mr. Loraine and myself. What change
there might be was perhaps fr the bet-
tor. I was accepting his benefits, but
accepting them because I considered I
had a right to them. Moreover I was
determined that, when the time came.
w-ould be quite independent 0f his
favor. I endeavored now and again lo
show him my feelings on this point-
Hm' i\fiPlte °^the.mocking smile with
which he received my hints, I do not
think he liked me tho less. 1 am not
TI. ut# time a 8incere friendship
might have sprung up between us- for
whatever may have been J„|la„' I
Lorain.e s inner nature, when he chose
to meet any one on terms of equality
and companionship, he could make
himself one of the most charming men
in the world. His talk, although dan-
as I had no need of such a largo place
When I returned to England, I led the
usual life, no Wetter nor no worse, of a
young man of fortune.
Thic* years after the death of Julian
Loraine I fell in love.
(TO B8 CONTINUED.)
LOW RENTS IN LONDON.
!apnr In thw I.ngllali Metropolis Than
•n New Yorlc.
A pound of phosphorous heads 1.000 .
Ooo ftiatches.
*"■«. Dakota can rah* wheat mora
cheaply than any other part of the .
United States.
An examination of the eyes of white
and colored children in the Washing-
ton schools show that the latter are
much less liable to ahorUightednes.
and astigmatism.
Polo on tricycles is tho latest Paris
noveltj' in sporting circles. •
i0 t?e.after.n0.0n 1 ^"t "> search of i ant°U3 "H" WaS Wl"y and brllM-
money of the Conatlt' ,[avor only t^ | pros^ °ne "'raordinary
X°^.th!„r-,,a " ^of6,bbe barrasr—',M9 «-a>
Prhate corporation.
"We favor the collection of an In
7 " P8rt °f the r"v""ue ,.f
the genernl government, anff we de
y,n'L the adoption «■( such Constitu
ary to authorize the same."
\v«k! Ir oan(,,(Iato f°r Governor, Hnn
«uS°n|n' T ov*rwh"m'n*ly i-oml- , _hl., -M,- .
"t^eifg,h n, !,r, "Tr>; 'ler,lon8 °n the w '.H ^scmbled, demanded blood
th. CWc.al declaration that in c.so J™'' "nf many of the people wera
tBe_Chlcag° convention declared f i
gold .tandard be would not vote i
HJiients of any moment were ex-
pcrlenced, and in vain Napoleon waited
for tho stoppage of England's financial
resources.
But the resumetlr n of specie pay-
fimX'o, "h''inK" of 'ho
ntmnclal system from legal
piper i • metal monor-
ail the Industries of
distress became
tender
-was ruinous to
Kngland. The
u u insufferable, and in
Manchester 80,000 men
women and
were wounded by
him; I found him reading in . the
library. He nodded as I entered, then
returned to his book and finished the
paragraph.
.,,"^'eU' Julian?" he said, as a signal
that he was at my service.
"I have been thinning over what you
told me last night, Mr. Loraine."
He raised his dark eyebrows as he
heard me address him tills wise Till 1
now I had generally used the old-1
fashioned "sir." sometimes, not often
father."
"I hate changes, Julian," he said
As you know, the old landed gentry
are rooted to old customs."
■£ that moment ho eould not
forego hi, sarcasm. My e|,eek.flushed.
m„. e*T ,y,0U have cha"gPd life for
me! I said hotly.
"Ah! yes; greatly, no doubt. •
wonder what
now?"
But time would not allow this In-
cipient feeling to grow up. just after
my twenty-first birthday I was sum-
moned in hot haste fren Oxford Mr
Loralae was dying.
I reached Herstal Abbey Just ln time
My benefactor-yes, I must call him
so-was just sensible, but sprechlesr,
I bent over him and took his hand. His
Angers gave in life a faint pressure.
Lven at that moment 1 wondered at
this show of feeling. And I wondered
at the strange look in his dark eyes.
They mej mine yearningly, and I knew
that the dying man had much to say to
me; yet, somehow, I knew it was not
about myself he wished to speak
stooped dow
.. close to him. His dry
lips move.d, but could not articulate
He gave a faint sigh; his eyelids fiicker-
you would have been I HU "" i"" over' Whatever were
n I those last words he wished to speak,
The London Daily Graphic, in com-
menting upon a paragraph which ap-
peared in this column some time ago
concerning the pay of. literary workers
smiles at the idea of *5,000 a vear being
regarded as a small income. I never
said that it was a small income. What
I did say was that it was small in pro-
portion to the demands upon It It
would be good pay tr,r a bachelor, but
not for a gentleman of family.
The Graphic cl s its remarks by
saying: "We know of scores of llterarv
workers In London who, in the historic
phrase of the cabman, 'wish that they
had half the complaint' of the new
paupers of New York." From the
Graphic's point of view, ?5,000 a year I
s a good dral of money, for the Graphic
is a London paper, and 12,500 a year in ^
London is equal to $5,000 in New York i
A family man with *5,000* a year in this
city cannot afford to live in a house, as I
I have said before; In London he could
afford a very good house.
I know of one man of letters in Lon-
don, for example, who has a house that*
I would be proud to live In, and ail he
pays Is f50 a year. This may not In-
clude rates and taxes-I hope for the
sake of thf landlord that it ifces not - *
but even with those expenses added the I
rent would be pretty |ow. Where In
«W. .°rk C0Uld he Ket a house or ever
a flat for such a price?—Critic.
Results prove Hood's Sarsapartlla the best
blood purifier, appetizer and nerve tonic. In fact
Hood's
.Sarsaparilla
r.ivn,,, Tteo 1,1.^ Al, n
j ^od'sPill,, M.er a cpn-
Drink HIRES Root beer'
when you're hotwhen
you're thirty; when callers
come. At any and all times
. t!"l///RES Ro('tl><~er.
* "L k M Tm« f'lV giilon'1'' e 11 *1CI p h I a. #
Our Native Herb
^agents.^
Thorp h « been no inrronon in k_
•'•ove median,. We k1,«T« J,. . ,h«,Pr««o of tb«
price. >>e fcliail "eli to ail at tho old
h"""'
<><1 Wlih itiiy 0r who ar®
« «l,,r"« "The
THEAL0NZ0 a. BUSS CO '
fi'ii'ml Westrrn lifflrp. 9 9
Principal Ofli,
ORUOS.
HIO III! Main Slittl, Kantai City. lo.
'"'hingtaa, I . C,
•""k ot DRt oa f0,
for selling.
The practically unanimous election
Utthi Hi'" ""ti Pre"l,J"U'y "f Mexico Is
little more than deserve f< r
distinguished patrlfftlsm and the
ders which he has worked for i*a
country. Forty volumes containing
f,;or ™'"'on ■Ignatures in favo.-
ia\or of his reuominaton were
•ented to the convention that
ceded the election, o
General Wey'er'a order to newsnanur
preteli" "u "n* W"r" "'t^.
cr gH o,,!;.'*' "S y°U ar lold *or Spain
national tl -ket.
iZTITIT ",on,oor•':,|■ paper, of the
da"y ' to says
ITi1^"^r?,,on relating to Na-
pre-
pre*
tiona! affaus. ih.fe is not a Populist
Arkansas who doe, '
them; there |8 not
not endorse
Populist In Ar-
kllled and many
British troops.
Cannot the reader who is 35 year*
t! vl°!!i"!",r,d" tllrD 10 Am°rican his- I 1 'te a credit to the county"
torj.a„,i recalU^parallel to the above? "
" 1 " o .n .ml Tabareo,
Smoking has reached such i
"Tell me what I am now " j ""f5, roma'ncd forever unspoken.
"So far as I know, a young man of 19 room°wM 'eft hln1, 1 Walkei1 ,0 the
thoroughly well educated, good-look- r"°™ , ' was known as Mr. Julian
Ing, full of church and state principles I i n am ,hankful lo Bay, wept.
^'!y' th" "ctor "opped me yesterday, j But fo! h,i\man. 1'a<1 givcn me much,
and assured mo you were one of the ^ a . J 1 mlght havc been con-
flnest young fellows he ever knew j,o "nth ° worChouse; might now
.y." 'I "0tl^ ng moro th n a «tone-mason'«
, banter seemed to stab mo J t'„^ 1™, " Jullan Loraine had at
Tell me, sir," I said, "ought 1 to than J !l .,.glve_n. me the means to start fairly
you for what
In life.
1 es, he had been my bene-
e Oxford and other English „m
versifies are busy conferring a.
upon home and foreie,, hi ? gr"es
*h«t's the mateer with Pa„? t
Surely. If sucecTs In 'tl.^?' ^0'"'
♦ I l r.A , Will HI
•tatnmao<Mands°at^hVbT H°"'
class,nd IS p^em'in'c'nV wort0:.
the present favorite degree of n
an extenf I " *" "'««i you have done for mo'" i #
■among the ladles at the H„s«i.,n court "Personally, i hate'expressions of m"1" , ,
irhtH . en"'r0SS h"8 iu'erfered and L bUt " 11 Klv,,, any satis- I have h ' n0t "S dePp 88 !t hould
forbidden any lady to come Into her fai'tlon' ,hank me by all means " I bein' was really sincere. It was
presence as long as there Is the slight- , 'N°: 1 'l0 no' thank you. Had you ! fTfs b<,fore 1 began t0 reflect as
.."U snow ttiat I aroma of tobacco about her. She ?,"\ mo ln Bome humble position l,nmod|ate consequences his
C. L.
At last
itolen all oPiL !>"*
those Who framed them were In c m m
™ '«bere is not a Populist who 1™. thc of a woman Is
^,;;;,',h"?hpy - sen" , ,u n"an oa,h in ,h"« «"«°f.
ments of the Democracy of the suit,.
de°c!aratlmillh|,h'.B r , The, ™rk-.-, re and" ,no "scarlet
Rood road ii U ?vor (,f fr9€ schools. ^t0.r 8hou,d have been adopted as the
supervise I" R romfn,8S!«n to °fflcJal ba,^e of republican delegate
JSSTirtS ,h" " • i A "hamel,,feu!
this platform".? ? ' 13 "'"hmg ln '""I8 '""k "lnro ''Ve, In llomo
not end, " 1 .V.V p0P«""«« does ,l,,l|er rule of Nero the murderer of hta
not endorse In addition, wo liavrth, l own motl>er,
ur^"0" °f ,iPn' Jon" that he wHl I •
order ;i,"a:,rr strlngout' U Th' most 'hat can be said of the dem-
■olutely ?alr U h' ma'V ^ ab- I «ratlc pari, is that the only thing™
" Jev^y' ^rhmen;r,' £ r°',,,nUed
FitANK Bt SHKY,
WiehitR, Kan.
educational.
I |,h"kndaT0" B,,t ,or to let me
I ,|r" led >our «on; why did you do it,
| "I had some reason at the tlmo. I
nlmo8t forget It."
^vf*tr' ^QTlne. I have thought it all
;;8o you told me, Julian. Go on."
.i i °!'u maT l8,lgh at mc- but I eon-
yojf, ^ have a great claim upon
made me by Mr. Loraine had always
been an ample one-so large, indeed,
knn™ .eB tb° trUth of my blnb wa Bi .
o me, I had asked him to re- I often achieved bv hnmnn
dure It. The right I nraaumed tn I Harold fn, ,„i.Z-h°r80S 0VGr ]>urdlea.
nor«e Jumped Thlrty-Ooe Feet.
"The most tremendous leap I eve '
knew a horse to take," says Sir Claude '
de Creapigny in his memoirs, "was out
in Ix-n" (:*e8hire hounds at Marl,ury
" i 70. A line niaje I was riding
cleared a five foot ft nee with a bound
that overed over thirty-fine feet W.
measured it directly afterward and it
was staled at the time to be the iecond
the heTh ? P°"lt °f Ieng,h 0,1 record
the best being thirty-three feet. This :
latter jump, however, which was per-
formed by Chandler at Warwick is
open to much doubt. After tho horse
had made It its rider had to finish the
race, weigh In and dross before taking I
any measurements. Meanwhile Z
eral spectators on horseback had rid- I '
den over the course
s?srx'&'ag
.« iti, ?•a THE s«#eo heart
• iiCl aregZSXZX.
"••■rptj Hvart, ctnbracea i h«
PcManrjr to con tltute a k.>1 itj
the un|«rsiirwiofiirmmr
rwir«irw.*0,P"
"'ir"* Uw>
I I mmerrlai i i, '? l'r paral«ra
i,., , • i,- i
' IHitb Term w|H
course. There Is this different nf
course -that a horse usually takes' off
swrsttatwal
In the same Jump. Good jumps are
4 « io Uollrft ,11
f'.v fH , By f,,t
wheels",r"n°"r That being,rue
! lu'ro are now three republican par-
lea -thc McKlnleyltes. the bolters nnd
tbe gold-bug democrats.
The democratic party has an unbrok-
en record for broken promises
He simply raised his eyebrows, but
did not deny my assertion.
I ,,„.™ ,have kept m® ln l(tnoranc for i We™ hi.h, ' """
par- "V 1 C?U""ed. speaking quickly. 1 " or ,0 'h m his wealth
,,,„i , ave brought me up, and let me J . . !ert: WPre matters about which
go out in the world under false colors.
, ,," ,'wt a' 1 enter upon manhood you
tell me who I am, or rather who I
inot. Why
fell fn he rlght 1 prP91, "?d t0 elaim Harold, for Instance chool.n^' i'6"'
fe 1 far short of this. Mr. Loraine told hurdles „,e other day m '°W
me seomfuny not to bother him about cleared twenty-seven tZ eT™'
follnw ™: 80 1 bad been unable to jumps of twenty-four and twent o"™
follow out tho plan which I had laid feet ro .. .. andJ enty-nve
down, of taking from him only sufflci-
ent for my needs. Nevertheless. I had
u'.r wmliuvli j
Academy Sacred Heart.
H. poumca fn French, Uerinan
y •nil Phv-i, ii,„ , ^ Kor r„r.
I'll K MI'PKHfuM.
SI. iaseph, ISfo.
not spent the surplus, and It would now
serve me In completing my education
I rom him I expected nothing. Who
I troubled
k v l°U did thl8, you alone
you had some raaaon for It.
little. Now. that Julian
Loraine was dead. I could with a full
hea* thank him for all he had done
for me. Then I could resign his name
and force my own way in the world.
His solicitor came down and gate In-
tel are fr.„uent. -New Yo^k World'
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
• Manhood.
Christianity has resisted manhood
°T,r,rk the orlgln"1 eondl- i
his decay" Th ,nfluence• of «"> caused
i 8 ,a> The man restored, he will
look for others who are lost that he
may bring them back to the highest
manhood.—Rev. Ostrom.
ctM tha't'"' °' Pn>,C"n Plr's ba« de-
yla™ "* ? unoJarr|ed woman 30
yeara of age is an old maid.
liability of In-
r How to u«ta
iffton, IP. ex
Sir. TA'Xrirf™'"«i-i"
"AHHM.L A WOW. Waabln
PATENTS. "TT ' l rlf n.~e. semi ,ketch ror 7.
i'-1 "m'"1 a'w««s. «"di!i'ii*;."wui[u.o:
OPIUMwh,skv sm ....
Sr. H. a. WOOLLSV, ATLANTA, fii.
Thoiiipson's Eye Water.
In tlmo.
"I'< by druMMletfu
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
French, W. H. The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1896, newspaper, July 24, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc147245/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.