Okahoma Times Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 258, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 15, 1894 Page: 1 of 5
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VOL 5 NO. 258
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA TERRITORY, SUNDAY. APRIL 15, 1894-
I WJLKTT
l.very man, noman, boy and
tfiil in town for a customer
1 know how lo keep
THE MODEL.
WHOIX NDMEER 1£C9
WB opened a case of
stockings today warrant-
ed fast black, the best
stocking ever offered in
'this market for
lOc-
Have you hough' a pair
of our "Venus" stock
inga? None better.
o;
JC-
m?m
Do you need a carpet?
l>o you want a short
piece for a hall or a rug?
Remember we cariy the
largest stock in ♦own and
give £ otr of regular
prices on remnants.
Come and sec what we
have. It don't cost any-
thing aud may interest
you.
WINDING UP.
%-
Breckinrldgo-Pollnrd Trial Nouring
the Bad.
WILSON ARRAIGNS THE-BEFESDH\
The Evident-.- Anal.v/. i Credibility of Col.
ltrocklnridt;e Attacked—Wilson Not
Quite Through with Ills
Speech.
OftMMer&Go
kansas democratic editors.
The Annual Merlin;* In s>ydon-Kcw Offi-
cer* of the* As < iM! t.*>n.
I'jTTsm'no, Kan.. April 14.—The an-
n-.-il convention of the U'tnocratic edi-
torial association was h-!.l hero Way.
with all of the concessional districts
represented except the Sixth, it J.
KU-rldan. of the l'anla Spirit, prest-
,1 ,t of the association, was in the
cm, dr. with T. P. Fulton, of the Pitts-
burg Messenger, secretary pro tern.
oiliccrs for the ensuing year wer.
el-ted as follows: President, II. '
Sheridan, of the l'aola Kp.rlts vie,
pr, si lent, Mrs. Frame Lynch, of th;
J ,. ,,-enworth Standard; secretary. 1
V. i'ulton, -f tilt Pittsburg Messenger
treasurer, John E. Watrous, of the
Bmlinprton Independent.
Vn executive committee was a
pointed and Leavenworth was chosen
as the placi for holdin? the eooven
tiou next year on Ap'il IX
A Millionaire Dead.
St. Lous, April 14.-John T. Davis,
nted the richest man in Missouri, db ■
at his home here to-day of Uidnei dis-
ease. lie was 52 years old and was tin
son of Samuel C. Davis, who, coining
lure from lloston. Mass, was lh«
P meer wholesale dry coo ls dealer o
th is city. The firm established by h oi
has, since his death, been
Washington*, April 14.-—Judge Jere
M. Wilson's voice was low and impres-
sive us he told the jury in the llreckin-
ridge-Pollard cum; thu" >t was his duty
to reply to all the defendant hud said
as a witness and through his counsel.
A startling thing hud■ n urged in 1 is
l>ehalf— that this case with all its revo-
lutions should not have been brought.
"lie thinks," he went on, "speaking
through counsel that this ease should
have never been brought; that it is
spreading pollution throughout the ■ TOy, ^ ueaven an
country, and I do not wonder. I am broken that v
sorry that my friend, Hen llutterworth, * • *-- >
is not here, lie has said that v'e
are to blame for spreading this pollu-
tion through the country, ff what
this defendant has confessed on the
stand be true, Is it possible that such
things are to be redressed? Is it pos-
sible that in the sunlight of our civil-
ization there is no redress? You can-
not tie a millstone around his neck ar 1
sink him in the sea for the fishes ,o
feed upon him; you cannot shut W"i in
a cage and double-lock it to keep him
from polluting the women of the coun-
try: you cannot do that, but you can
: ecu re the redress that the laws of the
land h^,ve provided."
Muj. 1 Sutter worth, Mr. Wilson went
on, had spoken of the revulsion of fee -
ing abroad against this cose, but 1
had forgotten that In Great Ih-itain,
when such things became a stench 1n
the Anglo-Saxon nostrils, peers and
nobles had hud their blaok skeletons
dragged from closets and Xad been con-
demned, hud been banished aye,
"bright stars," as ha*) beeu said, had
been dragged from t) o firmament* ^
"Even if this were the first case,
thundered Mr. Wilson, "1 would be
proud of my part in condemning such
conduct My fri i Carlisle and I took
this responsibility and we take it will-
ingly, even proudly. 1 suppose my
friend llutterworth would say that f
the third count in this indictment e
true he would banish the woman and
send the matt to congress, 1 stand here
for higher womanhood. I stand here
to demand the same standard for
woman and man. 1 stand agamstsueU
sentiments us this defendant ha*
uttered, that such kts^e^Jnju^the
^hc 'jury sty that this defendant was
to be aiiiu tted to their parlors and the
outer gates locked and burred against
the woman?"
Mr. Wilson said that the jury had
hoard a most remarkable argument
from one of the defendant's chosen
frier d,s. Col. Phil Thompson. It was
in substance that as ail moj ure bad, I
as tihat man weri laving- I
and Rhodes were discussed next hltd
Mr. Wilson emphasized the fact that
there was no testimony but that of the
defendant to the eilect that the dead
n an, who could uot speak for h'tnself,
ha l sustained improper relations with
the plaintitf. Rhodes, however, was a
man who, uuiikc the defendant, kept
his letters. Those letters had been
raked up, aud throughout them was
V sentence to hint of improper rela-
^•jns between the parties to the corre-
spondence.
se. Wilson went on to speak of the
testimony °f Rankin Itosclle. lie might,
he saty, have passed by that testimony
as did u famous lawyer who handled
"a mos unique liar" by simply dismiss-
al pr him vith "May Ood have mercy on
your soir," He then characterized
Itoselle's testimony as*"black a damna-
ble lie; a lie nailed to the counter to be
written up in letters on deepest black
against this defense."
Thin Mr. Wilson proceeded to attack
the credibility of the defendant fierce-
ly. He has been equally guilty with
my client," declared the lawyer, "even
inofo so, for he had taknn a solemn
voy to Heaven and she had not. He
had broken that vow by his owu con-
fession before he ever met Madeline Pol-
Inn. He admitted he knew Sarah
Gosf know the character of her house
and had been tho e before he went
with Madeline Pollard. I/e had lived
a .Me for ten years;his life .Had boon that
of faithlessness to the m*st sacred ob-
ligations of life. He had lived a life of
duplicity, of hypocrisy, such as you
can't coin words to express the length
and breadth of. He tells you be went
to Mrs. Blackburn Intentionally to de-
ceive her, he tells you he went- to
Moore to tell him a lie
"When he attempts to blacken the
testimony of my client I want to meas-
ure his testimony by the rub s of law.
How do you know he is not tolling1 this
st'- v to deceive you? The probability
is mat he is doing it, for ho is now in
the toils; he is brought to bay, and in
his extremity he asks you to believe
such a story on his unsupported word.
The man is soaked-and steeped in de-
pravity and original sin. I want
tho world to know that whatever of
dime is on her comes from this defend-
ant. It is the trail of the serpent over
her life. I wish all mothers of the
land could see this woman in her true
1 irht. They would open their hearts
to her; their sympathies would swell
for her. She would be, if not ex-
.'ti, understood as not being tJhe
author of this unprotected man's ruin,
it ;is injured by his machinations."
He closed for the day. He will
STATEJSFJRADE. Eagg {„ ^
Western Cities' Reports of Moro
Business *be lSacoojtlon.
PRICKS OF WHEAT ANP COIN LOWER.
Also of rattle. Iron and Cottyn Oat., I'ork
aud Lard Aarunowd-Tho Industrial
Hituatioa Complicated-Flf y-
.11 Str'-.C" In l'rogroaa.
New Yotik. April 14.—Bradstreot's
Trade Review says:
Western cities rep of in r« favorable busi-
ness feat ircb form tu® nxooptlon tbls week At
Cbloago the rush of prln« truao la over, a.-
thourfh ortlors for dry ffooits hold out well,
notaMy for cotton dress boo<1 and light aUka.
Trade In •hot-* and hardware la deorea^ed Un-
favorab e weather hi s restricted sales of mil-
linery. dry goods, do hlng. carpetn, and drugs
at si. I-"Uls, but tnanufaeturors of aboon report
trude : ctl e as previously. Business at Kansas
C<ty appears >iulto Irregular, aud at Duluth
in dlnappointlng. Jobbers *ln nome Instances
refusing to fill orders but linproveJ weather
lkt St P.iul Is reflo ted In bettor and more fre-
quent orders for dry goodn, clothing, millinery
und hardware, and manufacturers of Impie-
monts and twine are increasing their forces,
while Jobbers generallv report collections Un-
pro' - d. At Minneapolis grnator activity Is re-
ported in flour and lumber, and at Omaha busl-
u>*hs Ik on a broador ba*is than during March,
hardware and lumber being conspicuously ac-
t.ve. At San FrancUoo JoDbors report mer-
chandise moving more ireely aud a better feel-
ing i« noticeable Etireme heat with north
winds are reported to have very seriously
damaged growing wheat in southern California
an 1 in the West San Joaquin vailoy.
Prices of wheat, iron steel, eat tie, com and
cotton are lower, the extreme drop In wheat
being occasioned largely by extraordinarily
heavy realizing, based In part on the aovoru
ment report that tho wbeav crop li less dum-
aged by the recent cold weather than reported.
Prices of iron west and east have been further
scaled, duo to cutting of railway rates and com-
petition between furuaces, although there are
ad vie os from Pittsburgh of advances on some
grades. Oats havo advanced one-fourth, pork
BO cents, lard h cent, while sugar and print
cloths remain unchanged Th-t tad us trial site
atlon Is more complicated and lessoncquraifw:
There Is a pros poo t of a widosproftd struts
f-
1
That is wlmt we claim for ur
celebrated Foot Form Shoes made on
Ni laon'a CUSTOM FIT LAST.
Our H6-cent Shoo is a Daisy for
the price Cc Hi pa re it with any
$1.25 shoe in town.
See us for anything in shoes.
M G MILNE.R & GO
117 Main Slret.
DAVID DUDLEY FIELD DEAD.
The JCmloont Lawyer I)I« h Itathor Sudden-
ly at Ills llonie.
New Yoiik, April 14. Havld Dudley
Field, the eminent lawvor.diod very sud-
, deuly at liia home, No. 'i Uraminerey
_ ect of a w.dosproad strike piuCe> ]{0 returned from Italy only
among ooal miners aud others this month, laH Wednesday on the Columbia, hav-
- rther strikes and logouts a • rhl.istina9 din-
iiu i iui- u i- ""j" •*••• ^ble stocks, where a decrease was expeoted.
speak for un indefinite time to-day und ^ wheat exports, both coasts, flour t'"c
Judge Bradley will give the case to the J
UIUUIIH WW a «•- | «« lit ••• " •• •""■J
probability of Vv"'•" '"I-' Ron,, abroad to take Christmas din-
nor with hi. otily child. Lady Mus-
involving about MjOOO people. grave, widow of Sir Anthony ftius-
Gross railway earnings of 121 roads or ng ,rravC| lato governor of Queensland,
M.rch .how ^ro0"0"'nho°'''r„°"''are[1n> An trail,, and to attend the 'Jlst birth-
day celebration of his eldest sou, Dudley
throe months earnings are nearly flM.-iD.W*, a i- lc.ui Musgravo. He then traveled
falling off of 18 * per cent, from last year. about on tho continent and took the
mm r w?euatmpa^iih steamer from Genoa for home He
ojoooa'last week, and with |1,«i\oj-',ooo in tho had been at bis home, since his re
second week of April. 18D8. Available wheat turn ai,(l wug thought to be In good
stocks in the United States and Canada, afloat healtll for a nmn Qf his uge. He was
-Wehen ,vl,l. pneumonia \Veduesday
Gscas, ■
Itoi Bargaiss,
AT THE
HORSE SHOESTORE
We call attention of our coftomcrs that wc now Irnvu our
Spring Stock
Complete, consisting of
Dry Goods, Furnishing Goods, Notions,
Boots; Shoes and Slippers
of *very size and quality, TI s Caps, CM . C >netfl,
Muslin Underwear, Ladies and Gents i imm 'ernear.
Also a large and well selected stock of l> ouths
aud Men's
CLOTK:
defend-
jury when he has finished.
KELLEY*8 A R iviY.
i' ih Being i ashed r.uvtwartf*.at « Rapid
It at p. \
Ciik\ i.N.M Wya, April M.—The in-
dustrial army arrived at p. in. with
biLuuei -s Hying and men cheering. The
traiu was not permitted to stop within
the city limits, but engipes were
changed at Collette station, five miles !
. t of the city, and tho train
of twenty-six cars was
run through to KiM t
where but a brief stop was made
on a supply of provisions,
* and five
_,enough
j ti feed the n en until North Platte,
I Neb., is reached. The railroad officiate
gregato l.B^.OaO bushels this week, against
778,0JO bushels tho woek before, 2,918,000 bush-
els In the week last year, 2,910,000 bushels In
tho week two yarn ago and 2,4^fl,OOJ bushels In
tho second week of April, lt-91.
snares, why should ,w liue ou nuppj
ant .b«- c-ndemn.-.i^ ■ including 1,:«K) loaves of bread and flvi
wors.' th ill the rt-y' j an I eeves, furnished by the city, enougl
David bad been hcUUt) J P===*els of ^ fet.j the n cn until North Platte, , ,mueuuou lu muu<
the defendant,. 1?/ i hat | .g reachctl. The railroad officials jumped from the burning building Into
Dav..l was a n| 'n/ fa] 1 < icidcd to push the army right through | the canal were but slightly hurt. Tho
he may not havtj . o, ' i Nebraska on fast freight schedule, following are missing:
v life, but he \r • Q tue^-i i rc:lt.t ntr Omaha this iifternoon. George lluber. employed on the
th
MANY LIVES LU^V.
It la Thouglit That Frteen or Twenty Men
Were Itiii ued lu the < lueone Flro.
Buffalo, N. Y., April 14.—The full
extent of the loss of the burning of tho
American glucose works is still uncer-
tain. About eighty men were at work
the building when the tire broke
afterward out, hut how many escaped anil who
Mine, among them perished cannot yet be de-
termined. Some, to avoid death in the
burning building, leaped from the
windows only to be buried under fall-
ing walls, or into the canal only to be
imbedded in mud. Two men who
r '^Q fjyat theyl j reaching Omaha this afternoon.
* j Gen. Kelley and his men expected to
y\\ go via Denver, but the 1'nion Pacific
ipol refused to run the train south. ''rC>n.
. —, jvelley said ' I had hoped to call on
ilemned and ti Vov.
defendant ly.e
in the l est t'cry case
he li a f; service
paasion;}j ' 3U stress u
mns ^
V«P
There were no juries tu i ^ "V'" ' oW- . v
Hut since then the I'riai:.- of 1 l rl>
O- a There were methods of rieace ( rAT iV * Meat
and juries provided, u ad those inethods 1 promptly a, fcoon yestei
were being followed by the plalntil ' No 'hern |,loyes st *
Hut when juries failed to do the-r dot'' coulee tr^ vas ^toppi
story had been
ileal re searches f ^ V
Tainar, who wal^_ w c ^
Ammon, who ijp'
That episode bad en ^ ^
There were no juries iu'i
Waite and thank him personally
his expressioa of sympathy. Hut
v- imp ^sible. Wc must hurry on to
Ylun-ton as rapidly as possible
'\v we have the opportunity."
T I'D UP THE ROAD.
violent methods were resorted 1
bv outraged people—the first old bar-
1 rous methods. .
There were some tilings which
rh wed the character of the defendant
in this suit and Mr. Wilson spok *
the high character of Mrs. Black!
The westbuiiA passenger 'rain Is
across the r;er> The mall w..l be al-
lowed to run.uiHno passenger coachc
will run cxeer \V, n passengers can
not be takenof. The railway
citv- The firm estabHaiied 1 v li in «jlc hi-;h cl.ai ar\<. r of Mrs. 1 j 1 ' nu n demand th Uiedule of August,
since his death, been c ntrolled by muX of i,oW Col. Thompr-on had-luvrt- v The lead *\k>elare that they
son. who died to-day. -1 'hi. '1 j„,r He next referred to thi ' will opp • ^ >ny v>I\ice or destruction
is' wealth has been estimated at Col. Thompson at the 1. maie doctors. 0{ proper*}.^
000,000. He leaves a wi low and There had been • time when omen j unowned Fro" trna .«B
i si i_,., r\( thfll crown l.. t1,,, iltMiilt'i • of PI 'TI, I'll' , ti , .
two of them grown
*tn rii«T '
14 —The cos
onal Trade an
comn
tin
Dav
lo.OOO,
ti-.ree childre
sons.
Mine WnHu r<« to ii>\
Coi.uwr.rs. O .
miners attached t«> N
Lahor Assemt ly N
the secret order of the I'mtcd Min.
Workers, met yesterdv m 1 pr.sed c
r, .oiution to investigtte •'r.i re-
1( ,.f..rred by their master workman |
j, i,n McBride, to the eilect that John
\Y Hays general secretery of the
K d*rhts of Labor, is an en • uy, in hit
official capacity, to the nlnera
A * oted Ml *ourl 1/iwvr Dead.
St. Lotus, Ap.il U W. (J. am-
mond. dean of the law of \ ash-
•„ r-r>!i • aivei sity and one of the most
!! ,, ..I of common law exponents, is
tU ,i lie «as TO years of age He had
beon dean of th® St. Louis law school
- ten years nod for fifteen years pre-
nis was dean of tha Iowa law schooL
were merely the drudges of men, 1
they were fast «-o<*Hng to the front
and the higher they came the better
for the world. ,
Mr. Wilson asseited that the col on t
had taken Miss Pollard from the house
of Mrs. Thomas to visit his Kentucky
friends. The defendant did not deny il-
■aih. but di I deny it," spokwnp the
I defendant and his counsel seconded
li'
Released Fro y Du
Chicago, April 1 -ysassln Prender-
past was again rei«*,^ from the jail
dungeon yester iay, rftrg has been
eonl ned since last ''"\iy for attack-
ing a guard. Hf^-liyilv promised
future good l-ehaviorn^.^gp^ for a
j coll by hi. isell
NEWS NClS
John E. Yates has ,Pn appointed
night aud the disease rapidly snupped
his life.
David Dudley Field lived 89 years
and 2 months His family is ono of the
moat noted in all tho United States,
and four such brothers as David Dud-
ley, Cyrue W f Uenry M aud Stephen
J. have rarely been of one family gen-
eration. Each attained distinction in
his own way. Cyrus W. Field passed
away some months ago, and now that
he has beeu followed by the eldest.of
the brothers, Stephen J. Field, of th
United States supreme court
ond son, and .Henry Marty
clergyman, theologian and author,
fourth son, alone remain.
ORDERED WAGES RESTORED.
Judge Dundy Irhiipm an Orrt. r ltogardlng
Union l'aolflr i mploves
Omaiia, Neb, April 14.— Judge Dundy
has ordered the*vagos of Union Pacific
employes restore 1 to the old rate. This
applies to all the employes whoso sal-
aries were cut last September. The
order directs the receivers to restore the
old wage schedule, so far as it relates to
the men represented by the petitioners
and others similarly situated, and In
cases where tho men receive less than
fOO |>or month the increased pay shall
commence on the first day of March
last, and in all cases where the men
receive *00 per month or over the in-
creased pay shall commonce on the
first of the present month.
The opinion rendered in connection
with the order is a very extensive one,
covering* the entire history of the wage
troubles on the Union Pacific road and
the hearing before .fudge CaldwelL
.Judge Dundy declares that Judge Cald-
well in his famous order misstated facts
and took malicious pleasure in passing
^flte ground is i strietur.-s on him. The decision affeott
wet down six Inches." The counties of ! nearly .1,000 men in the employ oi the
Mcdgwlck, Harper, Kingman and Cow- company.
ley ull received good rains, and the in- ; OLD FRAUD UNEARTHED,
dlcatlons ure that every county In the : Kan|ii> K„.nmei*ta ch.rr.it with ' rook,
southwest was visited by a general ,.,i,>i .* in s«-! ool Warrant*,
soaking rain. The people in the v.est Topeka, Kan., April 14. -State Su-
werc almost discouraged, and wheat < perintendent of Public Instruction
was drying up. ! Oalnes ami Attorney-*ieneral Little
iia«-t K !tuau!t . ! called upon County Attornoy Hafford,
Following the principal racing of Shawnee county, this morning
• vents of yesterday—the winners being with three fraudulent warrants]
Wo have bought our stock for spot cash an i wUl s.-.'l :it prices that do.
fy competition. Thanking our customors for pas we aolic\ your
trade iu the future and assure you we will never uiHti\ ou io any way.
Come and see us.
S F C HUMPHREYS
117 ORANi) AVE., OKLAHOMA CITV
following are missing
George lluber, employed
seventh floor.
John Trube. of <iruy street.
Michael Maleski, employed on the
eighth floor.
Henry Stineson.
On Scott street the building was
eight stories high.
The losa, although overestimated in
the early reports, is still larger than
this city has experienced in five years.
It is now estimated that the loss to the
Northern Hallway I glucose proper will not exceed
"r',lr*" ,, i eooo.ooo, fully covered by insurance.
April 14. | - —
yesterday the Great Southwestern KansaB VUltad Hy Rain.
81 ack. A Sand T.m'k.ka, Kan., April 14.-Secretary
roule- r« Tiis stoppod on the rail- t'oburn, of the state hoard of iigricult-
road brldrfoVr tliu Missoe i river. | ure, sn" western Kansas reoel'Od *
Office and Permirient Sanpla Rooms of the
S|C- D. SMITHDRUGC0.
JXJD. W. PRYER. MUSTOKR.
Our salesman will call on you. 1'f ■ our orders, or mall tha n
to Judd W. Pryer, Oklahoma City, wli" i ■ ■ i.' at. i. i ■
Our facilities for fitting out npenlru u, ,.irl. .V i 1111:1.1-
faoturc Droit, Saloon, Bink iirnl .lew ' " ' 1,1 "« •«
us before buying. Hn. Oil wareroom ' --1 '■ street. 1 ure oil at,
market price with less freight - 1 \ - " 'is ' im'i'V'niTV nf
Rooms ID and 20 First National Bank H j. IJ11 •, OICL AlIO#A. OllV, Oiv
J ,iin Thursday night. A tele-
gram irom Ness City said: "We had
heavy rains last night. The ground Is
Stoner's Nurseries,
Most complete in all departments of any Nurseries in the 1\est. Ton
will profit by submitting your list of wants to us for prices, as we are tlis
growers. Don't delay, but write for prices at once. A trial order will con-
vince you. J. E. STONES, I'aov., Sedgwick, Kansas.
Brood Mares
Direct froir Illinois, j Also a few
llm. I • ii.-tin
Judge Bradley rapped with his pon- postmastei aM.an. «
/ing: 'if there la any
ado hero it should be
fo
His
A man named ftoinka waaarrested at
St Joseph. Mo . on tnocha-geof black-
malllnlt mereliants of that city.
b.,iul wa hxed at #1.000.
w6rr«'*arv Lamont at Ov.. >h.
Omaha, N-U. April 11. - ^ retary of
V „r Lamont and party arrived
Omaha Tuesday. Fort Crook and Fort
jn the de
correction to b«
made by counsel."
'•Then 1 withdraw It all: I don ♦ care
a snap about it," said Mr. \Mlson. lie
held that the secret marriage was no
defense asrainst tho promises ma le a -
lerit The secret marriage constituted
in itself a breach of the contract II.i I
the scene in Maj. Moore s "tlicc
' curred In the .late of New Y ork it
would have made the plaintiff the wife
of the defendant.
Mr WilRon commented upon the cir-
cumstances that no witnesses had buea
brought from Kentucky to teatlty r>"
pardiri,' the -,'enoral character of the
defendant,^* a man who kept, hU con-
tracts and was cnaste.
nd everybody from jtentneky
il beftr? aftked
Charles Wlsdoni. col-j tlurderer,
was : anged in St ' ■ i : sth.
Ti i* n t good rain thiprj,y f(,\\
Downs, K%n. Farmers a^ocfelatcd
Gen. Weaver address^ f:ur uudi.
encc at the opera houso Bel\eville,
Kan . on the 13th.
A' o weeks'drought is s much
unei iness among I'.ng. German,
Frei eh and Austrian fcariu,
George U Peek, general 5itor for
the Santa l e, deni . the st that he
has givoii up Topeka as hh Vauoe.
At Russell, Itan, the l^v Ik
"barde<i with dynamite sentp t.lio
1mm
the air
•a i i
uiha Tuesday. Fort trook ami l orv - ha(1 , ,i co
,were visited .. •> .n-l.-ete.l , ■
Ur lunching with Qen. Brooke the jc.mln^l M f. „ T,
tdquarOr*of the department of the, 1- ■ «j reBnament, <' .
.-1.. were visited. The parly loft for t l nn:iirenth ■w >
t Snelllnj last evepinir.
3
i the
st ass
I barlea L. Thompson, a stock specu- Th
1, ■ „• from Chicago, was found dead io ( ^
eli' a room at the Midland ho- ,onn
t .1. Kansas city. Mo It is believed h. ,
i.ed from natural causea
bardu..
by means of kites and
produced.
Co:i res^inan Heard will 1 a clear
ICBV field for tho nomination fihisdls-
:ed eon- trict and will be noinmate. accltt.
oman, from The aceond anniversary oi, Vet-
Naven-
in the order named
At San i "rauolico—Installation, Oasser.liraw
ioott, Uooz • ]{''>! L: jilt
At Madlaon -11 ' « Runeer, Ilcoton. Poatd,
.1, i$ Fn ih!. Jersey lit ule.
Mtmp'il- M ildler. Il.^arre, Filnda,
Wighluiaa, Jltu L e, Hirry L
At Iloby—A'tlooon. Imp Klnpstock, Harry
Smith, King CruK
with Pomp and <'<t. moo jr.
Kansas City, Ma, April 14 —Kansas
City Odd Fellows will celebrate the
seventy-fifth anniversary of the found
ing of the order In America with much
pomp and ceremony. The celebration
wil be an inter-state affair. Invila- j
tionshave been sent to more than f.0.) j
lodges in Missouri and Kansas, and all |
of them are expected to send delega-
tions
An I nlueky Mine.
DmiiNf;. N. M., April 14.—Jack Red*
dlnif and David Harper, owners of the
celebrated Dos Caba/• mine in Old
Mexico, shot and killed each other
yesterday. FiVtt owners of this miuo
have met with violent deaths and only
one survives.
League of th
ranch of tht'dicra'
rated ou the 1
deposition of Motile Shlttfrli- Charles K. Johnson, of l<:| has
v s considered next, and in that brought .uit in tlie Leavonwor;ttn.,
..Ion Mr Wilson charged that district, court airalnst llr. a
, I,ad ri-firted to dellher -e K'.--ley for 1100,'H d.iin. « a<Mifln,
f;""" ' of alleged lajury to hie health •«.
P°T!.e relation* of Madeline 1'oUard ing the Keeloy cure.
drawn upon the stab; school fund
in 181MJ, and risked hint to
prosecute George \V. WiM" us, L. B.
Kellogg and William Higgins, who
were at that time state superintendent
of public instruction, attorney-general
and seeretat-v of state respectively, and
also N I). McGiuley, bond clerk in
Winans' office.
The eharjrc preferred was that tho
three st, te officers in collusion with
McGinley obtain d 4f 1,(150 of tho school
«>ne of tho
warrants was for and purported to
havo been to pay for a school district
i bond of Crawford county, another for
I * 500 purporting to have been to pay for
a school "Ustrict bond of Linn county
and the third for f «o for a school dls-
trict bond of Morris county.
SERIOUS FIGHTING OCCURS.
tied by the Fn.
IMo I
ul Hoi
Whip-
Private Sales every day, aln ) do CoflUalaBlon Selllnj
, jOSIiT TIETJSr CATS.
Broadway, opiWBitc PostolBce,
llordan Koachi'ii Topeka.
Topek a, Kan., April 18.— Berdan. tho
bicyclist en route from Denver to Now
Jersey, passod through Topeka yester-
day.
Serious charges are made against Su-
perintendent Hitchcock of tho state re-
form school at Topeka. I ".VdAe'ct at^'iiio"onriiest"op^rtu"
abZeofThe inmates and that he isnot nity l'orto Allegro is also said to be
AliERNETHY.
ABBNBTHY & MILLER.
immm, 'April ll -Dl.patchea re-
• m1 from Ki" le Janeiro stato some
Bcrlous ti ■'1 "g •• taking place at Rio
linndedo Sul, and that an important
Dllral battle may shortly >>o expected.
J ,at ti e Insurgent warships are bom-
boi ling Uio ! -ande do Sul,and the forts
th re are rep.ylng with but little ef-
fect- The Brazilian government has
dispatched a fleet of ten war ships to
with Instructions to engage ' „ _ .
ho flno9t Qttou ap Hdh m tai
t .1 !«,« •..« and that he isnot | ntt v roric wiegrc ia uimj nuiu w w ■ ad bajber ¥ >rk ^uraiLdii II11 if
U KStf btia shftrgs of the iuati-1 u r cn sly threatened bythe insurgent way and MiJI «tw«;
• ■ furct's land'd bv "dm. tie .Meno. i
tutiou. - I
Barber shop and Bath Rooms
HK AID
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Burke, J. J. & Brown, E. E. Okahoma Times Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 258, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 15, 1894, newspaper, April 15, 1894; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc150462/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.