Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1895 Page: 3 of 4
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FAIttI AND (iARPKN.
matters of interest to
agriculturists.
Son,. Cp-to-Dat. Hint. Aboat Cultiva-
tion of the Noll unci Yield. Thereof—
Hortleulture, Viticulture mi>l Klorl-
culture.
HE EARLIER IN
life a weed is de-
stroyed the easier,
and the smaller the
damage it will have
done. This is al-
most self-evident.
A weed is a thief
In the cultivated
ground, intent on
making a vigorous
growth and robbing
the rightful plants of their nour-
ishment, says Prof. 13. D. Halstead,
who has made a study of weeds
and their treatment. This work
does not begin until the young
plant establishes its roots in the soil
and has spread its leaves in the air and
sunshine. If the weed is killed before
this point is reached, a double work is
done, the theft has been prevented, and
the weed is killed. The germination of
the seed has provided the condition for
easy destruction that would not have
obtained had the plantlet remained
snugly enveloped by the seed-coats.
t)ne of the best methods of ridding a
soil of weeds is to arrange for rapid
wholesale germination of the weed
seeds, after which the young plants
should be promptly killed.
But all weeds are not annuals;*and
if the soil is filled with those that live
from year to year, other methods of ex-
termination must be followed. Weeds
get their living in the same way as
other plants—they need to have room in
the soil for their roots, and space in
the air and sunlight for the stems and
leaves. Cut them off from these sources
of food, and the means of performing
the vital functions, and death sooner
or later must follow. It is evident that
repeated removals of the portion above
ground will continually weaken the
plant, and if to this Is added an occa-
sional upturning of the roots, the weeds
must die. Some of them will stand a
great deal of torture, but it Is the only
general way.
There is no panacea for weeds, noth-
ing that can be put on a field to kill
* them, unless it be a full and proper ap-
plication of that which, for the lack of
a better and neater name, is called "el-
bow-grease." This will not only kill
the weeds, but also improve the culti-
vated crops.
It is beyond reasonable expectation
thftt all annual weeds will be either
kWled in the seed or soon after germi-
nation; some dodge the hoe, while
others will be missed by the rake. The
next best thing is to keep them from
seeding. The perfection of a crop of
seeds is the end and aim of the whole
existence of a weed. If one, for ex-
ample, removes the large cup-like
flower cluster of the carrot, there will
soon be a half dozen to take its placo
and hurry matters, in seeming fear that
they may Bhare the same fate before
the seeds are matured. ' If a weed gets
a late start, it spends very little time
on stem building, but blossoms almost
from the soil, and puts all its energies
into the perfection of its seeds and the
' continuation of its species. A "pusley"
plant will, if left to itselC for a few
• days, ripen a million seeds, and do it
without ostentation.
Much depends upon the destruction of
the last weed. If 999 are killed and the
thousandth one left to enjoy the.su-
perior advantages which the destruc-
tion of the others has given, It may be
worse, than if all had lived and
struggled with each other through an
imperfect growth. One well-grown
and heavily-seeded weed will leave a
large legacy for evil in a rich field. It
is the few weeds that are left in the
cornfields that, having had the best op-
portunities, do the mischief and con-
tinue the pests.
Weed seeds have a remarkable way
of disseminating themselves. One
farmer, by every means in his power,
roots out the cursed Canada thistle,
while an adjoining field may be largely
devoted to the propagation pf this
prickly pest. The thistle seeds are
provided with miniature balloons, by
means of which they are carried by
the lightest winds and will find a fa-
' vorable place to grow in the well-tilled
field of the thrifty farmer. Therefore,
in the extermination of these pests
there must be an earnest and concerted
action.
>
l'runlni; Flowering; Shrnhn.
One of the first requisites to success-
ful pruning is to be able to correctly
distinguish between shrubs which
ought to be pruned in winter
and those which ought to be pruned in
summer. If a mistake be made in this
connection, effects diametrically the re-
verse of thoso we wish to bring about
will be the Inevitable result. Another
important requisite to insure complete
success is that the various kinds of
shrubs be pruned in the proper season.
Owing, no doubt, to the pressure of
work in the summer time, the pruning
of flowering shrubs is too often neg-
lected. and when ultimately attended
to it is, as stated above, generally left
to persons who, from lack of knowledge
or through carelessness, cut away a
quantity of wood, which, if left to the
following spring, would produce a pro-
fusion of blossom.
Let us take, for instance, such
shrubs as forsythias, viburnums, ex-
ochorda grandifiora, primuses, many
spiraeas, weigelas, etc., which flower In
the spring or early summer. The
proper time to prune such shrubs la Im-
mediately after they have done flower-
ing. If the plant to be operated upon
be young and expected to grow larger
in order to fill its place In a bed or else-
where, all that will be found necessary
will be to cut away part of the previous
year's growth. Special attention will,
of course, have to be paid to the bal-
ance of the plant, and the operator
must, as far as circumstances will per-
mit, strive to give it a natural and
graceful form. If the plant has at-
tained the desired size, the old shoots
can bo thinned out and cut back to
suit the situation and taste of the par-
ties immediately concerned, and it will
be found that young shoots will at
once develop and be in the proper con-
dition to yield an abundance of flowers
the ensuing year. A specimen can thus
be kept in good shape and form for
many years without any apparent
change in Its size. In a mixed shrub-
bery this method Is of great advantage,
aa it limits each plant to Its allotted
space and prevents it from encroaching
on its neighbor, or obscuring from
view many of the finer but less robust
growing shrubs.
Many people are under the Impres-
sion that such shrubs as hardy azaleas,
rhododendrons, etc., cannot be success-
fully pruned, but such is by no means
the case. I have myself found it quite
practicable, by Judicious and careful
pruning, to transform, in a few years,
tall, gaunt, unshapely plants of the
kinds just named into beautiful and de-
sirable specimens. The pruning of this
class of shrubs should also be executed
immediately after they have done flow-
ering, and it will be found, as stated
above, that young shoots will at once
develop and be in the proper condition
to yield an abundance of flowers when
the appropriate time arrives.
Later flowering shrubs, such as al-
theas, hydrangeas, Roginia hispida,
clerodendron, serotinum, etc., should
be pruned in the winter time. Summer
pruning would indeed be highly injuri-
ous in this case, for the simple reason
that by cutting away any of the young
growths we would, in most instances,
be mutilating that part of the shrub on
which the flowers are produced. Win-
ter pruning is a comparatively more
simple operation than summer pruning,
from the fact that at this season plants
can be cut back to almost any part, and
In the spring young shoots will break
away and produce a profusion of blos-
soms at the proper time.
For shrubs having an effect from
their fruit or foliage, such as berberry,
eunonymus, callicarpa, mahonia, etc.. I
would recommend winter pruning. If
trimmed in the summer time it gives
them a stunted appearance, which
mars the beauty of their foliage at a
time when it shows to the best advan-
tage and is most appreciated.
It will be observed that in the fore-
going remarks the pruning of flowering
shrubs i3 simply treated In a general
manner. Of course, it goes without
saying that it would be almost impossi-
ble, and especially in a short article like
the present, to lay down a hard and
fast rule that would apply in all cases,
for the fact is that in order to obtain
the best results, each species requires
special treatment, a thorough knowl-
edge of which can only bo acquired by
practice and training. If, however, the
hints given above be attended to, blun-
dering in pruning, and the failure and
disappointment consequent thereon,
can, to a very great extent, be averted,
and many a shrubbery can be trans-
formed from a chaotic mass into a
thing of beauty—at once pleasing to the
eye. and an ornament in the landscape.
—American Gardening.
Dp*troyln(j tlio IIpmIhii Fly.
W. C. Latta of Purdue University
gives the following advice: Owing to
the prevalence and destructlveness of
tho Hessian fly this year, concerted ef-
forts should be put forth to prevent a
recurrence of its ravages upon the next
wheat crop. In order to prevent a se-
rious attack of "the fly" the following
measures should be adopted:
1. Thoroughly burn all fly-infested
wheat stubble in which there is not a
stand of young clover or grass.
2. Prepare very early a border, one
of two rods wide, around each field of
wheat,* and sow the same to wheat in
August.
3. Turn this border under very late,
using a jointer, following with roll
and harrow, and then sow the entire
field.
By taking this course many of the
insects which escape the fire will be
buried when the early-sown border Is
tiyned* under, and the late sowing of
tho general crop will avoid the earlier
attacks of any remaining "fly."
if these precautions are carefully and
generally observed by the farmers the
Hessian fly will not seriously damage
the next wheat crop. United effort is
necessary to be effective.
Thin is Interesting;.
The arrival in New York recently of
a steamer from the Argentine Republic
with a cargo of 120,000 bushels of flax-
seed has brought to light some Inter-
esting facts. It seems that quite a
trade has been going on in seed from
that far-away country for some time,
about 600,000 bushels of the Argentine
seed having already been sold there.
Another vessel with a cargo similar
lo the one received, is due there soon.
The flaxseed, although dirty, is report-
ed to be of good quality, and the price
is equal to $1.28 per bushel, duty paid,
the latter amounting to 20 cents per
bushel. Crushers get a rebate on oil
cake exported, which makes the net
price about $1.20 paid for the South
American article. It is interesting to
note that two years ago America ex-
ported large quantities of flaxseed—
now she is importing.
Few Suggestions.—The long-suffer-
ing mother will find this list of inesti-
mable benefit during the whole trying
season: To remove fresh fruit stains
stretch the stained portion of the goods
over a basin and pour boiling water
through it until the mark disappears.
To remove old fruit Btains, wash tho
stained portion of the goods in oxalic
acid until clear. Rinse thoroughly In
clear rain water, wet with ammonia,
rinse again and dry. Grass stains
should be rubbed in either molasses or
alcohol until they disappear, and should
be washed as usual. Pink stains should
bo soaked In lemon juice, covered with
salt and bleached In the sun. If they
are on colored material they should be
treated with oxalic acid in the same
way ao old fruit stains. A mixture of
one-third of powdered alum to two-
thirda of tartar is also good for obsti-
I nate ink stains and others. Ink stains
on carpets are removed most easily
with lemon Juice or oxalic acid. Wagon
grease, tar or pitch stains should bo
rubbed well with lard and then washed
in the usual way. Colors which have
faded under the influence of acid may
be restored by treating them with am-
monia and chloroform. Colors changed
by alkalleB may be restored by acid
treatment.
FOURTEEN MEN DROWNED.
Two Colorado Mine* Engulfed by a
KuRliing Torrent.
Crhtbai* City, C'ol.. Aug. 81.—'The
accidental flooding of the AmeHcus
and Sleepy Hollow mines yesterday
afternoon caused the death, by
drowning of fourteen miners. A
little after 3 o'clock the water
in the lower workings of Fisk
mine, east of the main shaft, broke
through the old workings of a vein
that has not been worked for a num-
ber of years.
Coursing eastward it struck the
Americus, where two Italian miners,
whose names have not been learned,
were at work in the lower part of the
shaft. They were both drowned. In
its course the water diverted to the
Sleepy Hollow mine, the easterly por-
tion of the Fisk vein. Fourteeu men
were working in the Sleepy Hollow,
two of whom escaped.
STOPPED THE DEBATE.
Kliulucien* Conduct of n Kentucky Audi-
ence Toward Mr. Bradley.
Eminknce, Ky., Aug. 31.—Tho sixth
joint debate in tho series of twelve,
which was to have taken place be-
tween Colonel W. O. Bradley and Gen-
eral P. \V. Hardin, at Eminence, yes-
terday, was called of? on account of
the noisy demonstration of the crowd.
Colonel Bradley was to have opened
and closed the debate. When he at-
tempted to begin the noise and dis-
turbance of the crowd was so great
that he was compelled to sit down. j
DISASTROUS WRECK.
Two People Killed and Fifty Injured on
au Excursion Train In Cieorffla.
Macon, Ga., Aug. 31.—Two passen-
ger coaches and the combination bag-
gage and smoking ear of an excursion
train left the track on the Southern
railwn \ between Ilolton and Popes,
yostr.day morning, and fifty people
wen i.urt and two killed. It is im-
po. . :l>ie to explain the cause of the
wretii, as the track is said to have
been in good condition. There were
over 400 people on board the train.
TRAIN ROBBERS SENT UP.
Oulck •lufltice Meted Out lo the Nebraska
Bandits— Given Ten Yearn.
North Platte, Neb., Aug. 30.—Hans
and Knutc Knuteson, the two young
Nebraska farmers who held up the
overland express on the Union Pacific
at Brady Island one week ago, were
taken to the penitentiary last evening,,
with a sentence of ten years eacti for
the crime. They pleaded guilty. The
proof of guilt was absolute.
Other Distillers Fop Cp.
New York, Aug. 31.—The Inde-
pendent Distillers, after a conference
lasting several days, have reached an
understanding and formed au alliance
for mutual protection. The object of
the association is claimed to lit- not to
raise prices, but to furnish the trade
at the lowest cost of production.' The
companies represented were the Atlas
of Pennsylvania, the Globe and Amer-
ican Distributing company of Pckin,
111., and the distributing company of
New York.
County OUlcers Indicted.
Guthrie, Ok., Aug. 30.—Tho grand
jury of Kay county lias indicted the
county commissioners and other of-
ficials for fraudulent and illegal print-
ing contracts and other illegal acta
There will be a general investigation
of printing steals all over the terri-
tory. Some counties have been loaded
dewn with blank books and blanks
enough to last twenty years at exorbi-
tant prices.
Cuban Sympathizers in Oklahoma. '
Gutiirik, Ok., Aug. 31.—A Cuban
.meeting was held at the court room
last night, addressed by General
Twambley and Hon. O P. Cassiday.
Resolutions of sympathy with Cuba
were adopted and a Cuban Sympathy
and Kncouragemeut League organized
to help Cubans in their struggle for
independence and to ereate sentiment
in favor of Cuban annexation.
CAUSED BY VACCINATION,
(From the Journal. Detroit, Mich.)
Every one In the vicinity of Meldrum
avenue and Champlaln street. Detroit,
knows Mrs. McDonald, and many a
neighbor has reason to feel grateful to
lier for the kind ami friendly interest
she has manifested in cases of Illness.
She is a kind-hearted friend, a natural
nurse, and an Intelligent and refined
lady.
To a reporter she recently talked at
some length about Dr. William's Pink
Pills, giving some very interesting in-
stances In her own Immediate knowl-
edge of marvelous cures, und the uni-
versal beneficence of the remedy to
those who had used It.
" I have reason to know." said Mrs.
McDonald, "something of the worth of
this medicine, for it lias been demon-
strated in my own immediate family.
My daughter Kittle Is attornling high
school, and has never been very strong
since she began. I suppose she studies
hard, and she has quite a distance to go
every day. When the small-pox broke
out all of the school children had to be
vaccinated. I took her over to Dr. Jame-
son and he vaccinated her. I never saw
such nn arm in my life and the doctor
said he never did. She was broken out
on her shoulders and back and was just
as sick as she could be. To add to It
all neuralgia set In and the poor child
was In misery. She Is naturally of u
nervous temperament and she suffered
most awfully. Kven after she recovered
the neuralgia did not leave her. Stormy
days or days that were damp or pre-
ceded a storm, she could not go out at
all. She was pale and thin and had no
appetite.
"I have forgotten Just who told me
about the Pink Pills, but I got some for
hep and they cured her rlffl)t up. She
has a nice color in her face, eats and
sleeps well, goes to school every day,
and Is well and strong In every partic-
ular. I have never heard of anything to
build up the blood to compare with
Pink Pills. 1 shall always keep them In
the house and recommend them to my
neighbors."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo-
ple are considered an unfailing specific
In such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sci-
atica. neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
headache, the after-effects < f la grippe,
palpitation of the heart, pale and sal-
low complexions, that tired feeling re-
sulting from nervous prostration; all
diseases resulting from vitiated humors
In the blood, such as scrofula, chronic
erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific
for troubles peculiar to females, such
as suppressions, irregularities and all
forms of weakness. In men they effect
a radical cure In all cases arising from
mbatal worry, dv.oj n oi u. or m
whatever nature. Dr Williams' Pint
Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be
sent post paid on receipt of price (,'.0
cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50--they
are never sold in bjulk or by the 100) by
addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Schenectady, N. Y.
LATE NEWS NOTES.
Hawaiian Soil.—Recent investiga-
tions and experiments go to prove that
the soil and climate of the Hawaiian
Islands are equally as suitable for tho
production of coffee as they are of
sugar and it is predicted that within a
few years much of the land now en-
tirely devoted to sugar raising will be
| given over to the production of coffee.
HOW TC BECOME A RUNNER.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Great MhkopIc I niveridty.
Boston, Aug. 31.—Knights Templars
are said to be planning the establish-
ment of a great national university for
both sexes, to be controlled by and in
the interest of all Masons, with a per-
manent endowment of $50,000,000. The
scheme contemplates the erection of a
sufficient number of fireproof build-
ings to accommodate 10.000 students.
A Western House Dues the HiihIiichh.
Mr. Ulmstead. of Hently «fc Olmsted,
has just returned from Chicago, where
he went to meet a buyer of a large
western concern, and in spite of the
strongest competition Mr. Olmsted
brought back the order, amounting to
over 88,000, of shoes and rubber goods.
—The Des Moines Leader.
Ilnge Crowd at Itaxter Spring*.
Haxter Springs, Kan., Aug. 30.—
Mayor Webster Davis of Kansas City
was unahlo to l e present at the great
interstate reunion of veterans yester-
day. but has promised to speak to-day.
I'niled States Senator Lucien Baker
and Mrs. Mary E. Lease were the
principal speakers of the afternoon
It is estimated that 30,000 people were
present
The CertlflrafccH Ciood.
Pkhry, Ok.. Aug. 30.—The commis-
sioner of the general land office has
decided that the booth certificates is-
sued at Arkansas City before the open-
ing of the Cherokee strip were good.
Three thousand of these were issued
the day before the opening of tho
•trip.
Micycle Klopers Married in llloomcm.
Mh.waukkk, Wis., Aug. 30.—.lames
Crill and Miss Regina Benson, who had
ridden here on bicycles from Chicago,
went to the home of the Kev. Mr.
Huntley, Methodist, yesterday and
were married. The bride wore blue
bloomers while the groom had on gray
knickerbockers.
Indemnity for Mlniilonit.
Pahib, Aug. 31.—Official advices re-
ceived here are to the effect that tho
Chinese government has granted the
French missions in the province of S/.e
Chuon an indemnity of 8800,>>00.
Will Fight Hop Ale.
Ottawa, Kan.. Aug. 31 —A mass
meeting at the court hou&e last nighl
called to remonstrate against the
proposed opening of a hop ale sales
room by a St. Louis brewery was
largely attended. Ex-Mayor H. K.
Sheldon was elected chairman and
later was appointed chairman of a
i committee of one hundred.
Thirty TliouHand Keotehtncn Idle.
i London, Aug. 30.—Four thoiuand
| additional laborer* have joined the
Dundee mill workers' strike. I* is
i estimated that fully 30,000 pt r ons aru
I now idle because of this htrike.
One of the Most Healthful Kxerelsei A
lloy Can Take Up.
Running is one of tho beat of exer-
cises for the whole body. It rounds out
a hollow chest, drives the oxygen Into
the farthest air-cells of the lungs, won-
derfully increases their capacity, and
develops the leg, thigh, stomach, and
waist muscles. But It must be learned
Just as skating, swimming, and bicy-
cling have to be learned, and there are
two things that must bo kept in mind
by the learner. Tho first Is—whether
in sprinting, distance, or cross-country
running—to rua entirely on the ball of
the foot, or, as they say on the track,
"Get up on your toesf" By striking on
the ball of tho foot, which Is a sort of
natural spring-board, the runner takes
a longer stride, and the spring that ha
gets enables him to lift his foot more
rapidly and repeat the stride mor'j
quickly than the runner who goes flat-
footed. As length and rapidity of
stride are what give speed In running,
It follows that a flat-footed runner can
never be a fast' one. Another reason
against pounding away 'flat-footed ilJ
that the delicate mechanism of tho aiS
kle, knee, and hip Is jarred and may
in time be injured. The second poitft
for a runner to observe is his method
of breathing. Breathe through both tho
noso and mouth. Nearly every boy
when he first begins to run has the in-
sane Idea that all the breathing must
be done through the nose. There was
never a greater mistake. When a boy
runs his heart beats much faster than
it does ordinarily, and pumps out just
so much more blood. All this must
be aerated or purified by air from the
lungs. The oppression that one feels
when beginning to run is due to tho
lungs demanding more air for the ex-
tra quantity of blood which the heart Is
sending out. Nature has looked out
for this and provided a way by which
air can be furnished to the lungs very
rapidly. It is a very simple way, and
consists of merely opening the mouth.
Breathe, then, through the nose in or-
dinary life as much as possible, but
when you are running or exercising
violently open the mouth and take in
clr In deep, rapid breaths, not gulping
it in through the mouth alone, but let-
ting the mouth and nose have each
their share.
Take as long a stride as possible, but
without overbalancing the body. Bend
the body slightly from the hips; for
if it be held too erect the stride will be
shortened. Let the bent arms swing
easily and naturally a little above the
level of tho hips, swinging out and back
with every stride. This keeps the mus-
cles loose, prevents them from becom-
ing tired so easily as they .would if
held rigid, and balances the body bet-
ter. Take especial pains to keep the
body from being stiff; let It swing
as easily and lithely as possible. In
sprinting the strido is shorter and
more rapid than in long-distance run-
ning, and a sprinter usually runs with
body thrown farther back, In quite dif-
ferent form from the long, easy lope
of tho distance runner.—St. Nicholas.
An ICany Solution.
Gotham Girl—What difficult prob-
lems is Boston culture struggling with
at present?
Miss Tremont—A recent subject of
■oclui discussion is the proposition to
tax bachelors.
Gotham—What nonsense! If they
don't see any one In Boston they want
to marry, tell them to come to New
tork.
The devil in some shape is being
made welcome in every home where
, the Bible is not read.
I The man who can take hold of God
1 for others, has to be one who known
him well for himself.
Hamlet Hud One.
Workhardd (after the play)—If an
impractical dreamer, like Hamlet, had
had to make his own living, what
would he have done?
Friend (a poet)—Done as the rest of
us do—borrowed of his uncle.
Tho steamer Bawnmore, ashore in
Oregou, is a total loss.
llain deluged the Johnson county,
Kan., fair exhibits at Olathe.
The beer war in Chicago has been
settled and prices have been advanced.
Charles Kay shot Mr. Williams dead
on the street in Middlesboro, Ky.
The mutilated body of a murdered
man was found near South McAlester,
I ml. Tcr.
Mississippi's first bale of cotton was
sold at Greenville bringing ten ceqts
a pound.
John Wrenwick of Shelbyville, Ind.,
who had been drinking, shot and
killed his mother.
Hippolyte Unmman, the playwright,
committed suicide in Paris.
A cloudburst destroyed an Arab
village in Algeria, killing sixteen per-
sons.
The report that the Prince and Prin-
cess Colonna have reached a final
settlement is d« nied.
Tho British government has pro-
hibited seal catching in certain parts
of llussian waters.
The Kentucky Democratic state com-
mittee issued uu address to the party,
pleading for harmony.
It is said that the administration is
going to turn down General Miles ir
selecting a successor to General Scho-
Held.
Four prisoners escaped from tho
Stoddard county, Missouri, jail by saw-
ing the bars in two.
Secretary Carlisle is said to be will-
ing to make speeches for the Demo-
cratic party in Kentucky.
The only (laughter of General Long-
street was married at Atlanta to Pro-
fessor J. Kstin Whelchel.
Ex-Police Justice Patrick Gavan
Duffy of New York is dead, lie was a
famous Tammany leader.
The Brazillian senate has passed a
bill granting general amnesty to polit-
ical offenders.
Bud Hay, who killed ex-Sheriff'Crain
of Christan county, Missouri, was
lodged in jail at Ozark, great excite-
ment prevailing.
A German torpedo boat capsized in
the North sea. Thirteen persons are
reported drowned.
The agricultural department has de-
creed that all horse meat shipped
ubroad must be so labeled.
The stat.e department will take no
further steps in the Waller case until
the ex-consul's statement is received.
It is believed that the freight ter-
minals of the Santa Fe at Chicago will
be sold. They are valued at some-
thing like &11',000,000.
Western roads will make lower
rates for the Atlanta exposition than
those heretofore announced. It is not
expected that there will bo a heavy
imminent from the West.
. At Sullivan. Mo., three children
died of a rattlesnake bite and auothcr
was drowned, all of one family.
< olouel William Proctor Smith, a
distinguished West Point graduate
and ex-Confederate soldier, is dead,
aged tiO years.
James F. Hawley, a Boston banker,
committed suicide. Despondency wfts
the cause.
At Butler, Ky., H^ckiah Roberts
cut bis own and wife's throat. Jeal-
ousy.
Superintendent French of the Uni-
ted States penitentiary at Fort Leav-
enworth, has recommended for assis-
tant superintendent, 'Captain Allen,
who for years has held that position.
In an interview at Hartford, Conn.,
Governor Altgeld of Illinois declared
that President Cleveland was t\ie
greatest ffana that was ever foisted
on the public and that he was tho
Standard oil company's candidate for
a^third term.
Thomas Taggert, chairman of tho
Indiana Democratic state committee,
has been nominated for mayor of Indi-
anapolis by the Democrats.
The National letter carriers' conven-
tion will vigorously handle the "spot-
ting" .system inaugurated by Postmas-
ter-General Wilson.
Nihilists in* Russia are said to be
uiore active now than at any time
since the death of Czar Alexander.
Prince Bismarck received only four
of the German-American veterans and
accepted the present which they
brought over from America for him.
Three women ami a man, members
of a picnic party from Port Huron,
Mich., were drowned by the capsizing
of their boat during a storm.
The Democratic silver editors of Ar-
kansas will hold a convention in Little
Uock Sept j in her 7.
Three men were killed at the
Thomas Iron company works at Allen-
town. Pa., by the premature explosion
of dynamite.
The Indiana glaqs manufacturers
have organized a new eombine and
will raise prices.
At Topeka Mrs. George McDonald
shot at her husband, hut missed him,
and then sent a bullut through laei*
right temple, dying instantly. Tficy
had beeu traveling with an electric
belt show and quarreled.
Claude Payne, colored, aged ll years,
was awarded |h,000 in the circuit court
f Lafayette county, Missouri, for the
Absqeajtely PURE
Powder
(J-rouimrs Coming l .ut.
The lower class of Mexicans,
"greasers" they are called out west,
are Immigrating east in large numbers.
In the past five yearn such Inducements
were offered them In southern Texas
as cheap farm hands that they
brought all thalr friends on, and uow
there are largo "greaser" colonics all
over Southwest Texas. But Immigra-
tion Is so great that even Texas hasn't
room for thorn, and they aro now flock-
ing to tho North and East. A few
years ago Mexican labor was totally
unknown In tfie Southern states. Now
it la plentiful. They are so successful
as cheap farm workers In tho southern
statos that they are steadily coming
this way, having already reached as
far as Central Ohio. A large number
of them are now In Chicago, where
they introduced Mexican dishes at the
World's Fair Bati
DnylM Vol l.inlr Things.
There aro little duties that aro t/ie
greatest duties, becauso God has
chosen them for us. They must not. bo
neglected, no matter how much things
men call great may seem to bo pre jaing
upon us. Planting a irraln of m'jatard
seed may t)o more far-reaching in Its
results, than doing something that will
be published In all tho new*.papers,
and taking a clilld on the lap r,nd toll-
ing it of Jesus, may bo a greater work
than building a church steeple. The
man who talks to the biggest crowd Is
not always being watched the closest
by tho angels. Are there not "next
towns" that wo aro all neglecting?—
Ram's Horn.
Little sticks kindle a fire, but great
ones put it out.
Lot the preacher leavo Christ out of
his preaching, and the devil will helji
him to fill his church.
The more happy I am the more I
pity kings.
The mortal who expects bad luck
will get it.
One cannot
the milk, too.
ell the cow and have
Few t: keK wives for God's sake or
for fair looks.
Suspicion shall be all stuck full of
Abo,ut the hardest thing to reform
Is a, reform* r.
A detective association has for its
motto: "Wo never sleep." It would lie
a good one for a church.
The preacher misses it who tries to
substitute for the bread of life some-
thing of his own make.
Throtigh green ej'cglasses everything
Hooks ;£reen.
lis ppy is the man who sees his folly
in Ik is youth.
A kifcd voice is to tho heart what
light is to the eyes. _____
"Hanson's Magic Corn BalT*."
Warranted to cum or money refunded. A k youf
Ol-UtfglKt for It. 1'rlco 15 cents.
lie who is racked by superstition can
never lind peace of mind.
_ , f'nfi Cough HKlMm
Ta the oldwft anil lm*t, It will liruak up a Cold qulcket
Uian an>thing clho. It Id always roiJable. Try it.
If a sick man did not die, it's the
physician who cured him.
Conquer a vice today and you save
your descendants untold misery.
ltestorer. WBKL—
Miu-vi'liiuacuren. Troatlaennd S'itrlal bottlefreett
CUluiwm. iiomltubr. Kliue.UUl Aixli St., 1'lula., l'a.
There are people in every commuity
who want to bo religious without
Christ.
Splitting Shneklea Attuuler
By merely fluxing tho inusctoa of hi* arm* Is
an onny tank for HnndoW, that nuporlaUvoly
ftrong man. You will nover bo ablq to do
thin, but you may acquire that degree of vigor.
hich prooeeda from complete digestion and
sound repose, if you will ontor on a course of
lloste tier's Stomach Hitters, and persist in it.
The Hitters will invariably afford relief to tho
malnrious. rheumatic and nouralgio, and avert
rious kidney trouble. i
Lend ot hers, not by violence, but by
law and equity.
After six years' suffering, I was cured
by l'iso's Cure.—Maky Thomson, 20^
Ohio Ave., Allegheny, Pa.. March 10, '04.
In temperance there is ever cleanli-
ness and elegance.
M. L. THOMPSON CO.. Druggists,
Condersport, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure
is the best and only sure cure for catarrh
they ever sold. Druggists sell it. 75q.
loss of both legs under
a Chicago and
This was the
A man must be born from above to
know for himself that God is above all
else.
Tho Nickel Plate road has authorized
its agents to sell tickets at greatly re-
duced rates to Albany, N. V., on oc-
casion of the meeting of the German
Catholic Societies of the United States
in that city, Sept., 15th to 18th. For
particulars address J. Y. Calahan, Gen'l
Agent, 111, Adams St., Chicago.
Nothing makes us rich that does not
also make us grateful.
Wallet Baku S Co. Limileil.
The Largeit Mtnufacturtrs of
PURE, HICH CRADE
. Cocoas ami Chocolates
On thU Continent, have received
HIGHE8T awards
from the (treat
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
, IN EUROPE AND AMERICA.
Caution: wSJ'.
ofths UbeUand wrappers «n our
' roods, consunirra should mske Wt
|q U ma
Is pri
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER A CO. LTO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
The Onward March
of Consumption is
stopped short by Dr.
I'ierce's Golden Med-
ical Discovery. If
you haven't waited
beyond reason,
there's complete re-
covery and cure.
Although by many
believed to be incur-
able, there is the
evidence of hundreds
of living witnesses to
the fact that, in all
^ its earlier stages, con-
sumption is a curable
disease. Not every
case, but a large per-
centage of cases, and
we believe, tully 08
per cent, are cured
by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,
even after the disease has progressed so
far as to induce repeated bleedings from
the lungs, severe lingering cougn with
copious expectoration (including tubercu-
lar matter), great loss of flesh aud extreme
emaciation and weakness.
Metal
Wheel
for your
Wagons'
Coat nt
times In a
son to harn cat
of low wheels
to flt your wago
forhaiillnK
Crain.fwilder,
ure, hojjs, Ac. No.
netting of tire*
Catl'ir/rM. Aclilre?1*
kmplrehlfk. i'o,
r. O. Dox 3, Qulncjr 1U,
educational.
ftGftDEMy Of THE SftCRED HEART
Th« course of Insti action In this Academy, ooadQ"**d
the Itellglous of tlio Han ad Ileait, embraoM tha
• hole range of aubjeota necea ary to constitute a soUi
Slid refined education. Propriety of deportment, per-
tonal neatness and the principles of morality are ob.
.•ects of uni eixtni; attention. Kitenslve rounds ef-
fort! the pui lit every facility for useful Willy eier-
elsei their health Is an object < f oonstant solicitude,
sn l In slckne«s tbey aro attendad with maternal car*
Kail term opens Tuesday, Kept. Id. For further pef
Oculars, artdras- THK Hl FKitlON,
Arsdeauy Hin rrd Heart. At. Jeseph, Is.
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME.
THE FIFTY-SECOND VI«R WILL OPEN
TUESDAY. SEPT. 3d. IB®5.
Fullcourse-un 4 la-aica l.ftlers trlenre.liiw.
Civil si d Mes-liitiilral Riigliieerlnf.l h"ror*U
l'loiisratory and Commercial Course* St. Kdwaid'e
Hall f r boys under 13 is unique In U>ecompletenessoC
IV* equip uent. Catalogue!)
ItlV AM'IIKW MoBHIMKV, (
W. N. U.,-WICHITA—VOL. 8, NO. 30.
When AimwsTinic Advertisements I'leaee
Mention Thle l'aper.
Alton train in
tiiird trial.
Hurglars tried to break into the
hardware store of Cable A Co., at Nel-
son ville, Ohio, but were met >y sever-
al men. In the fight which followed,
'ames Knight, a clerk, was fatally
wounded.
Marion Fetters was arrested at Lex-
ington, Mo., charged with a brutal as-
sault on Caltha McKinney,a 1-'-year-
old girl, for whose father he had been
working. Tho child was alono in the
house with two younger sisters.
At Twinsburg, Ohio, Rev. Samuel
Rissell died aged US years. Ho was
the oldest living graduate of Yale col-
lege. and for years had an acadcmy at
Twinsburg.
The board of I'nited States engi-
neers, who cxamiued it, recommend
that the United States take charge of
the Chicago drrinage canal as a navi-
gable stream when it is finished.
The sultan has ent u dispatch to
the Turkish ambassadors at Paris and
St. Petersburg bitterly complaining in
regard to Orcat Britain's attitude re-
garding Armenia, which is described
as discourteous and derogatory to the
sultan's prestige.
John W. Smith, for fourteen years
clerk of the circuit court of Atchison
county, Mo., ami for one term a mem-
ber of tho legislature, died at Hock-
port.
The barn of Foxhall Keene of Now
York, near lexington, Ky., was de-
stroyed by tire, and his imported stal-
lions, Kallacrate*, bv Hermit, and tho
American stallion Hyderabad, by 11 y-
derali, were burned.
A number of f rominent Kansas Pop-
ulists are at the head of a big coloni-
zation scheme to establish a co-opera-
tive colony in Montrose county, Colo-
rado, on the lines set in lid 1 amy's
'Looking liackward."
Cab
ed Fie
Hog Fence,
d and Ca>llel'Poul!r|'' 6ar|lMaft<l Rabbit Ftnu,
Steel Web Picket Lawn Fence, etc. Cuallty
— - roil.
first class. i'Klt-fcIS LOW. Catalogue t
De Kalb fence Co., 121 High St.. DeKalb, 111.
CROC
"SAY BOSS! Them People
Won't Take This
>ap-They\Vant
CLA1RETTE
SOAP"
Everybody wants Clairette
Soap who knows the good-
n«ss of it; Try it once and
you will refuse all other
kinds, too. Sold everywhere.
Made only by
IE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY,
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Whorton, Lon. Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1895, newspaper, September 5, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc162016/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.