Garfield County Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1902 Page: 2 of 8
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Garfield Co. Democrat
E. r MOORE. Editor.
ENID,
OKLA.
> have
, bank with
: cattle
fine
OKLAHOMA AM) INDIAN TKttltlTOKY
The town of Apache in preparing to
Incorporate.
There Is a smelter in the Wichita
mountains at last.
The Catholics of Stroud hare dedica-
ted their new church.
The Wood* County press association
was called to meet at Alva on July 21.
Judge Beau champ opened court at
Cheyenne, Iloger Mills county, on
July 19.
There is salt 'n abundance in Wood-
ward, Woods, Blaine and Roger Mills
counties.
The Methodists of Cherokee, 0. T.,
propose to erect a church which will
cost $25,000.
I'rof. Conway, of the Alva normal,
will tour the territory iu the interests
of the school.
More than 100 applications for posi-
tions in the university at Norman arc
being considered.
Logan county officials believe they
have llossie Francis, wanted for as-
sault and murder in Missouri.
Clerks in the Shawnee stores have
formed a union and will insist on
shorter hours and a wage scale.
Cleo citizens arc trying to convince
the "Orient" people that it will be an
advantage for them to build into their
town.
C. A. McBryan, recently the private
secretary of Governor Ferguson, has
been made president of a new bank at
Waurika.
The new woolen mill at Oklahoma
City is having machinery put in place
and the mill will be in operation about
August 1.
The meeting of police chiefs of the
two territories at Oklahoma City
brought together about 30 of the city
guardians.
Kingfisher and Canadian counties
propose to build an 80-foot steel bridge
across the creek near Okarche, on the
county line.
W. II. Coyle, having sold his Guthrie
mill to I. K. Underwood, will give his
attention to his ten elevators in as
many towns.
The force of clerks who came from
Washington to assist in the opening of
the new country had a banquet in
Washington recently.
The territorial missionary convention
of the Christian church will be held at
Norman on September 2-4. Over 200
delegates are expected.
The Kingfisher light and water ser-
vice put in and operated by the city,
claims to be giving a service superior
*x> any other city in the territory.
There have been several warrants is-
sued in Kingfisher county for violations
of the game laws. The prosecutions
are brought by Game Warden Ambrose.
In an Okarchc saloon Dr. II. (J.
Greenfield was killed by Hen Bcarman
and the lotter was shot but not fatally.
The men were quarreling while
drunk.
Colonel
Boswell City is t
$50,000 capital.
Texas fever is taking off soin
around Bristow.
It is proposed to develop the
marble quarries near Sulislaw.
Work will begin soon on the munici-
pal waterworks at Paul's Valley.
The town of Davis has bought school
buildings and will have free schools.
A warm fight for the postoffiee is go-
ing on at Tulsa. There are ten candi-
dates.
The Choctaw-Chickasaw supplement-
al treaty has been sent to Washington
for the signature of President Roose-
velt.
The people of Muskogee are making
preparations for the visit of President
Roosevelt The exact date is not fixed
as yet.
('bessie McIntosh, a full blood Creek
Indian,has been admitted to the bar
of the United States courts for Indian
Territory.
Lewis Wilkins, of Enid, who is said
to be the largest man in the world,
died in Chicago, where he had gone
for medical treatment.
There are none of the old time range
cattle in Oklahoma now. There are
cattle, plenty of them, wljich will rank
with the l>est herds in the states.
The annual green corn dance of the
Creek Indians was held west of Eu-
faula. Before this dance none of the
tribe arc allowed to taste green corn.
The Chickasha school bonds have
been sold to Fulton & Co., of Chicago,
for $65,000 with accrued interest, and
a bonus of $3,275, in other words, at a
little over 105,
Mrs. Daniel Grant, her daughter
Mrs. Jack Reeves, and a Mr. Nuckles
were waylaid near Stenislaw, I. T.,
and killed, while coming from church,
by an unknown man.
Two hundred Choctaw claimants
from Mississippi have sent agents to
the Indian Territory to find land be-
longing to that nation on which they
can locate. The agents have decided
on lands around Sterrett.
Cotton experts have estimated that
the crop in the Creek nation is twenty-
five per cent greater than that of last
year. It is two weeks earlier at least
and nothing but the boll worm can in-
jure it. No danger from this source
is expected.
C. N. Hollingworth and family were
driving from Harrison to Chickasha
when their teams and a dog were in-
stantly killed by lightning. None of
the family were hurt excepting Mrs.
llollingsworth who was shocked and
almost blinded.
E. Eunlap went into a well that was
being sunk at Chickasha after a blast
that had been fired. The well was 20
feet deep. He. immediately called to
be drawn up, and when six or eight
feet from the bottom, fell out of the
bucket, breaking his neck.
The first new corn came into Clare-
more the other day. It was planted
April 12th and was thoroughly matured
July 4, and is believed to be tlieearlicst
corn ever raised in that section. The
seed came from northern Michigan.
The grower says he has 2,500 bushels
of it.
The division of Wood
FORCING AN ISSUE
REPUBLICANS ATTEMPT TO DE-
CEIVE THE PEOPLE.
Would Divert Public Attention from
Matter* that Are Injuring the Party
—Democrats Will Demand that In-
vestigations Shall Be Thorough.
The Republicans are in a mess, they
are unable to agree among them-
selves on the most important legisla-
tion. The exposure of the looting of
the Cuban treasury to aid the Sugar
trust, the bribing of Gomez and the
ruelties in the Philippines have put
them on the defensive.
With admirable audaciousness they
attempt to divert public opinion from I
their own sins of omission and com-
mission by charging the Democrats
with attacking the army. The Presi-
dent sets the pace by making a
stump spcech at Arlington, and the
great trust-controlled daily newspa-
pers take up the refrain. The little
organs edited by the postmasters give
tongue In unison.
This effort to put the Democrats in
the attitude of assailing the army
will prove abortive; the common sol-
dier is all right, and most of the of-
ficers, from Gen. Miles down. They
obey orders; that is the duty of the
soldier.
The Democrats do protest and will
forever protest against the issuing
and carrying out of orders to make
"a howling wilderness" of any terri-
tory under the American flag.
They protest that to "kill all over
ten," to kill prisoners, to torture by
water cure or other Spanish method,
is not war. it is vandalism; It is not
American, it is barbarous. If not or-
dered by the highest authority it
would never have been perpetrated
by American soldiers, except perhaps
in isolated cases.
The Democrats believe in keeping
the military authority subordinate to
the civil power. No republic can exist
that does not do so. The Democrats
intend to investigate these cruelties
when they have the power, and pun-
ish the guilty, however high in com-
mand. They will Investigate the ex-
pense accounts, both at home, in the
Philippines and in Cuba. The trans-
port service and the purchase of sup-
plies will be investigated. They will
And out who received the large sums
that have been raised by extreme
taxation and if the money was squan-
dered on high living in Cuba and
elsewhere. Who was "fixed" to stay
out of politics and who was aided to
stay in. What secret intrigue set
free the Hanna pets, Rathbone and
Neely? Why Buencamino was or-
dered by the administration to come
to this country to testify, when the
request of the Democrats for other
witnesses was refused. A page might
be filled with other details that will
be investigated, and from the amount
of evidence that has been forced to
the surface there is a vast amount
behind.
To do this the Democrats must
elect a majority of the next house of
representatives, and this they will
do, if the people agree with them that
the curtain should be raised and the
truth known.
No wonder the Republicans are on
the defensive and are endeavoring 13
switch the thoughts of the people
from their misdoings by claiming that
county comes ! the army is being attacked. They
flclent administration of the govern-
ment, has been superseded by the col-
lection of vast sums not required by
the government which can be stored
up in the treasury vaults or Is loaned
to favored banks for which not one
cent of Interest has been or is being
paid, unless it be the donation by the
bankers to the Hanna campaign fund
of 1896, 1898, 1900; and probably
another liberal advance to the same
corruption fund this year.
What statesmen and patriots these
Republicans be!
THE PRESIDENT DEFEATED.
The Senate Refuses to Act on His
Recommendation for Cuba.
The defeat of the Cuban reciprocity
legislation is a great blow to the ad-
ministration of President Roosevelt.
His attempt to coerce congress to do
his bidding, which he emphasized In
two messages to that body, has been
spurned by a large faction of the Re-
publican party in the interest of the
Beet Sugar trust, it is now stated
that the President will call an extra
session of congress. The members
of the Beet Sugar faction in the house
of representatives, joining with the
Democrats, passed the bill reducin
the duty 20 per cent on Cuban prod-
uces, with another section added
which was insisted on by the Demo-
crats, repealing the differential duty
on refined sugar. The Republican
members of the Senate found them
selves in the same dilemna as the
members of their party in the house
of representatives. They were com
pelled to take the bill as it came
from the house, with the Democratic
anti-trust section, or take the
sponsibility of no legislation.
The Democratic position is unique;
the members of that party voted in
the house and are ready to vote in
the senate, for the President's recom-
mendation for reciprocity with Cuba.
But knowing that this 20 per cent re-
duction on Cuban products would in
the case of sugar, inure in a great
measure to the benefit of the trust,
they compel at the same time the
repeal of the differential duty, under
which the trust is allowed to collect
about 56,000,000 additional tax from
the American consumer, and if the
countervailing duties are added that
sum can be multiplied fourfold. This
legislation, if enacted, would probably
aid the Cuban renter somewhat and
would reduce the price of refined
sugar in the United States as much
or more, as the Sugar trust would
gain on the 20 per cent decrease of
duty it would have to pay on import
ed raw sugar from Cuba.
This double reduction did not suit
the Sugar trust, nor did it suit its
allies, the administration senators.
If President Roosevelt had really
wanted to aid the Cubans and strike
a blow at one of the great trust
monQpoIies, why did he not recom-
mend the reduction of the tariff on
refined sugar equal to the advantage
the Sugar trust would gain by the 20
per cent reduction on Cuban raw
sugar?
Havemeyer would not, of course,
under these circumstances, give a
large check to the Republican cam-
paign fund, but the consumer of
sugar in the United States would be
benefited, even if the collector for the
campaign fund had to hunt from other
trust quarters the necessary cash to
make up the deficiency.
up again in connection with the divi-
sion of the county into two legislative
I districts. Woods county lias a popula-
Ilaldvvin, former agent at [ tion of 40,302, the largest in the terri-
tory, being 7,'.MS greater than that of
Pottawatomie county, the second in
Anadarko, has been nominated l y tin-
president as brigadier general. The
Colonel is now doing service in the
Philippines. It, 31. Moorehead, of Payne county,
T. C. Bozemnn, known as "Uncle j has a patch of 7CO acres of cotton this
Sam," a well known character in Olcla- year, and lias seventy people at work
lioma, is under arrest at Leavenworth, ; making the crop. Mr. Moorehead says
Kansas. A warrant is out for him 011 j that cotton prospects were never bct-
a charge of forgery of township bonds . ter, and that if presei
in Logan county. Bozeman isTOyears , tinue, this will bo ti 1
old. ! year for the territory.
There is an abundance of thrifty ; Hugo ha
timber along the Choctaw almost to ! kened the people to the
the west line of Oklahoma. j department.
know, however, that it is the orders
issued to the army that is the main
point and the officers of the army,
for their own honor and reputation,
and the honor of the United States
will welcome the change.
COFFINS FOLLOW THE FLAG.
•d of
tire
A Kingfisher county fisherman lias
been mulcted S28, and must pay his !
lawyers too. He used a seine contrary
to law.
Ben F. Davis, formerly traveling
freight agcut of the Choctaw route,
with headquarters at Little Hock, has
been appointed general livestock agent
of til* company, with headquarters at
Oklahoma City. He will have his office
with General Western Agent Hart,
The salaries which have been paid to
the county officers in the new country
were on estimated populations. The
assessors' returns show tliat the estima-
tion was higher than it should have
been. The officers will get their sal-
aries cut down and also will be re-
quired to return part of the salary al-
ready received.
The assessed valuation of real and
personal property in Oklahoma in 1901
was StiO,404,696. In 1902 it is T2,677,-
423; an increase of more than twelve
and one-fifth million dollars.
Prof. Marshall, musical director at
the first Presbyterian church of Wic 1-
ita, takes a like position at the Alva
normal on August 22.
Capitalists of Carthage, Mo., with
others of Oklahoma, have taken a char-
ter for mining and refining salt in
Western Oklahoma. The capital stock
is $200,000.
The Anadarko agency force is paying
all the Indians in Kiowa, Caddo and
Comanche counties 862 each. Jim Mite
will draw (fsoo on eleven children, two
wives and himself.
Facts Which Should Cause Voters to
Do Some Thinking.
Forty-one new cases of cholera In
Manila in one day, with more than
conditions eon- j GO per cent of deaths, is the sad news
banner cottou j from the Philippines on June 1. This
accounts for the immense shipment
had a Ore which has awa- °,ol""s *hic>1 ls ,fotCl1 bf J'he New
York World, when it says: ' The army
transport Kilpatriek will carry on
her next trip to Manila 4,000 coffins
for use in burying American soldiers
who have died or are dying of fevers,
cholera and other diseases incident
to tropical warfare.
"Assuming the low average cost of
$8 for each coffin, this shipment of
$32,000 of merchandise exceeds In
value our total exports in nine great
classifications during the month of
May, the last for which figures are
at hand: Agricultural Implements,
$1,100; sewing machines, $2,274; flour,
$5,250; clocks and watches, $5,302;
petroleum, $780;lumber, $1,700; build-
ers' hardware, $5,192; carriages, $5,-
371; furniture, $1,359—Total, $27,328.
"In the trade which 'follows the flag'
to our new Pacific possessions the
Wyatt, near Marlow, is said to be re- I mimber of coffins is to the quantity
A site lias been secured for a federal
jail at Muskogee and plans have been
sent to Washington.
The Indian appropriation bill pro-
vides that no pel's in shall be removed
from the Indian Territory when in
possession of any lot or parcel of land
in any town in the territory designated
by the government as atownsite. It is
claimed that this will make the luer-
chant tax law invalid.
I'armers around Atoka want better
roads and ask the Atoka Commercial
club to join in the work.
Arthur Briscoe, wha was shot
through the head by a man named
covering. llis case is pronounced by
physicians as being an exceptional one.
Although the bullet entered just above
his left eye and passed through his
head and some of his brains protruded
through the bullet hole, the young
man is iu his right senses. The right
side of llis head, however, is paralyzed.
The name of the postoflico at New-
trill, Chickasaw nation, been
changed to Francis, with William T.
Meadora as postmaster.
Andre Yalcht. of Coalgate, dd his
gun under the house an 1 when he
pulled it out the hammer caught ami
he received the charge in his stomach
and died.
The latest alleged graft is the fellow
who vaccinates cattle at so much per
as a prevention of Texas fever. The
experiment station at Stillwater de-
nounces tiie sell*, me as a frau 1.
of ordinary merchandise in pathetic
proportion."
Difference in the Two Parties.
Secretary of the Navy Moody and
Congressman Boutell, speaking at the
banquet given by the Republican club
at Detroit, glorified the deeds of their
party, especially the large surplus in
the Treasury and that the public debt
was less now than in 1898. One would
think, to hear these ardent Repub-
licans talk, that they alone paid all
the taxes. It is well to remember
that every dollar that goes into the
United States treasury is wrung from
the people through the tariff or inter-
nal revenue taxes. If the collection
of the most taxes is the great credit
mark of statesmanship, then the Re-
publicans have achieved it. The good
old Democratic plan of the least taxes
possible, with due regard to th^ ef-
Roosevelt's Judgment Warped.
President Roosevelt has certified, in
his late speech to the Harvard grad-
uates, that Senator Lodge is his hign-
est ideal of what a Republican should
be. There is no doubt that the Presi-
dent is right from his own standpoint,
for I>odge is known in Massachusetts
as the machine politician—the boss of
the Republican party of that common-
wealth, as Quay is in Pennsylvania
and Hanna is of the Republican party
at large.
His personal friendship for Ixidg"?
has warped the judgment of the Presi-
dent. The Massachusetts senator is
quite an ordinary individual with the
assurance and egotism that often goes
with it. Lodge, if sold at his own
price would be expensive, but if got
rid of at his actual value, it would
not ruin a poor man to buy him. There
are lots of small but strenuous states-
men at the helm these days.
!J1 Some Cake 'n
;t; Recipes j;
Gingerbread is amongst the most
ancient species of cake known
throughout England and the north of
Europe. A recipe for hard ginger-
bread is: Rub half a pound of butter
into one pound of flour; then rub in
half a pound of sugar, two tablespoon-
fuls of ginger and a spoonful of flaw
oring; work it well; roll out and bake
in flat pans in a moderate oven for
about half an hour. This will keep
for some time.
Cider cake is good and is baked
in small loaves. One pound and a
half of flour, half a pound of sugar,
quarter of a pound of butter, half a
pint of cider, one teaspoonful of pear-
lash; spice to taste. Bake till it turns
easily in the pans, about half an hour.
Molasses Fruit Cake—One teacup
of butter, one teacup of brown sugar,
worked well together; next two tea-
cupfuls of cooking molasses, one cup-
ful of milk with a teaspoon of soda
dissolved in it; one tablespoon of gin-
ger, one tablespoon of cinnamon, and
one teaspoon of cloves; a little grated
nutmeg. Now add four eggs well
beaten and five cups of sifted flour,
or enough to make a stiff batter.
Flour a cup of raisins and one of cur-
rants; add last. Bake in a very mod-
erate oven one hour. If well covered
will keep several months.
Snow Cake—This is a Scotch reci-
pe. One pound of arrowroot, quarter
of a pound of powdered white sugar,
half a pound of butter, the whites of
six eggs, flavoring to taste; beat the
butter to a cream; stir in the sugar
and arrowroot gradually, at the same
time beating the mixture, whisk the
whites of the eggs to a stift froth;
add them to the other ingredients and
beat well for twenty minutes; put in
the flavoring; pour the cake into a
buttered mold or tin, and bake in a
moderate oven from one to one and a
half hours.
French Chocolate Cake—The whites
of seven eggs, two cups of sugar, two-
thirds of a cup of butter, one cup of
milk and three of flour, and three tea-
spoonfuls of baking powder. The
chocolate part of the cake is made
just the same, only use the yolks of
the eggs with a cup of grated choco-
late stirred into it. Bake it in layers,
the layers being light and dark; then
spread a custard between them, made
of two eggs, one pint of milk, half
cup of sugar, one tablespoonful of
flour or com starch; when cool, flavor
with vanilla, two teaspoonfuls.
Dominoes—Bake a plain cake in
rather thin sheets and cut into small
oblong pieces the size and shape of a
domino, a trifle larger. Frost the top
and sides. When the frosting is hard
draw the black lines and mane the
dots, with a small brush dipped in
melted chocolate.
Fruit Cookies—One and a half cups
of sugar, one cup of butter, halt cup of
sweet milk, one egg, two teaspoonfuls
baking powder, one teaspoon grated
nutmeg, three tablespoons of currants
or chopped raisins. Mix soft and roll
out, using just enough flour to stiffen
sufficiently. Cut out with a large cut-
ter, wet the tops with milk and sprin-
kle sugar over them. Bake on but-
tered tins in a quick oven.
Golden Frosting—A pretty frosting
can be made by using the yolks of
Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounce*
in a package, 10 cents. One-third more
starch for same money.
When a cicrgvman goes into politics
does he become a divine heeler?
Stops the Cough and
Works off the Cold
I,axative Broi*" 0 Quinine Tablets. Price 2Tjc.
Slavery In the Philippines.
An amendment to the Philippine
bill prohibiting slavery in the island^
was offered by the Democrats, but*
was promptly voted down by the Re-
publicans. The author of the amend-
ment was Mr. Patterson of Tennessee,
who stated: "That Gov. Taft before
the Insular committee testified that
the treaty made by Gen. Bates and
the Sultan of Jolo was still in force.
There were to-day 300,000 slaves in
the Jolo group. Children were sold
from their parents. Girls were sub-
ject to the desires of their masters.''
Do the Taxpayers Like This?
The fondness for military display of
our strenuous administration will cost
the taxpayers of the nation a pretty
It's too bad that some things seem
too good to be true.
A man can always square himself
without resorting to cube root.
nail's Catarrh Care
Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75a
The sculptor is obliged to carve out
his own future.
Seashore engagements never amount
to much because of the breakers.
Clear white clothes are a sign that the
housekeeper uses lted < 'ross Bail Blue.
Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents.
IJKIIANI'K STARCH
should be in every household, none so
good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents
than any other brand of cold water
starch.
We will all find an opening some
day—in the cemetery.
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,
Notre Dame, Indiana.
We call the attention of our readers
to the advertisement of Notre Dame
University, one of the great educa-
tional Institutions of the West, which
appears in another column of this pa-
per. Those of our readers who may
have occasion to look up a college for
their Bons during the coming year
would do well to correspond with the
President, who will send them a cata-
logue free of charge, at, well as all
particulars regarding terms, courses
of studies, etc.
There is a thorough preparatory
school in connection with the Univer-
sity, in which students of all grades
will have every opportunity of pre-
paring themselves for higher studies.
The Commercial Course intended for
young men preparing for business,
may be finished in one or two years,
according to the ability of the student.
ST. EDWARD'S HALL, for boys un-
der thirteen, Is an unique department
of the institution. The higher courses
are thorough In every respect, and
students will find every opportunity
of perfecting themselves in any line
of work they may choose to select.
Thoroughness in class work, exact-
ness in the care of students, and de-
votion to the best interests of all, are
the distinguishing characteristics of
Notre Dame University.
Fifty-eight years of active work in
the cause of education have made this
Institution famous all over the coun-
-ry.
About the time we have perfected
our plans of how to live we have to be-
gin to plan how to die.
IRONIJiG A SHIltT WAIST.
Not infrequently a young woman
finds It nceessary to launder a shirt
waist at home for some emergency
when the laundryman or the home ser-
vant cannot do It. Hence these direc-
tions for ironing the waist: To iron
summer shirt waists so that they will
look like new it is needful to have
them starched evenly with Defiance
starch, then made perfectly smooth
and rolled tight in a damp cloth, to be
laid away two or three hours. When
Ironing have a bowl of water aud a
clean piece of muslin beside the iron-
ing board. Have your iron hot, but
not sufficiently so to scot ch, and abso-
lutely clean. Begin by ironing the
back, then the front, sides and the
eggs instead of the whites. Proceed j sleeves, followed by the neckband and
exactly as for ordinary frosting. I the cuffs. When w rinkles appear ap-
Frosting Without Eggs—One cup of P'y the damp cloth and remove them,
granulated sugar, one-quarter cup of j Always iron from the top of the waist
milk. Stir untiMt boils; then let it j to the bottom. If there are plaits in
boil five minutes without stirring. Re- the f-ont iron them downward, after
move from fire and set in a dish of first raising each cne with a blunt
cold water; add flavoring. While knife, and with the edge of the iron
cooling stir or beat constantly, and it | follow every line of stitching to give it
will become a thick, creamy frosting. ; distinctness. After the shirt waist is
| Ironed it should be well aired by the
Warm Welcome For Wrong Man. j fire or in the sun before it is folded
Here is a story which the late Con- , "nd Put way. £aya the Philadelphia
gressman Amos J. Cummings was fond j ln(lulrer-
of telling: A member of congress was J The only way to profit by advice is
going home late one night, when he ^ to be a doctor or a lawyer and sell it.
met a young man who was satlsfac- | _ _ I
torily "loaded." The congressman
happened to know where the young
man lived, and kindly guided him
home. The congressman had no soon-
er pulled the bell than the door was
thrown wide open and a tall, husky
woman appeared. She never said a
word, but grabbed the young man by
the collar and shook him till she fair-
ly loosened his teeth; then into the
hall she took him and slammed the
door.
The congressman was descending
the steps when the door was thrown
open a second time, and his friend
flew out of it as if thrown by a cata-
pult At the foot of the stairs he
landed, and the congressman picked
him up. Much frightened and consid-
erably sobered, the young man gasped:
"We don't live here—we moved last
week."
EDUCATIONAL.
Mrs. McKinley Understood.
Dr. Rixey, who for some years had
been the physician of the. McKinley
household, told a story concerning the
penny. Not only are great military i president's mother when she first went
maneuvers to be inaugurated which t0 the white House, which has been
will cost a large sum for transporta- published in the Philadelphia Times.
tion and thus be a bonanza for the
favored railroads, but a barrel of
money is to be spent fitting out all the
available ships, which the Navy de-
partment says: "Will participate i,i
the most extensive fleet maneuvers
ever attempted by the navy in the
West Indies."
Has Not Hurt Gen. Miles.
The attempt of the junior senator
from Indiana to besmirch the char-
acter of Oen. VUes has, like most of
the political moves of this exuberant
young man, proved a boomerang to
his own party.
\
The abundance of fresh, rich cream
served at the meals surprised her;
and one day she commented on the
prodigal supply, adding: "Well, Wil-
liagj, at last I know what Is meant by
the 'cream of society.' " "I admit," re-
plied the president, "there seems to be
some extravagance In that direction;
but you know, mother, we now can af-
ford to keep a cow."
Swell (to small boy)—What are you
crying for, my little man? "Because
you are sitting ou my tart."—London
TltBlts.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE CAME,
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
FULL COURSES IN Classics. Letters, Eco-
nomics and History, Journalism, Art, Science,
Pharmacy, Law. Civil. Mechanical and Biec-
trlcal Engineering, Architecture.
Thorough Preparatory aud Commercial
Courses?
Rooms Free to all students who have com-
pleted the studies required for admission Into
the Junior or Senior Year of any of the Collegi-
ate Courses.
Roums to Rent, moderate charge to students
over seventeen preparing forCollegiateCourses
A limited Dumber of Candidates for the Eccle-
siastical state will be received at special rates.
St. Edward's hall, for boys under 13 years. Is
unique In the completeness of Its equipment.
The 50th Year will open September 9, 1002.
Catalogues free Address
REV. A. MORRISSEY, C. S. C., President.
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY,
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
(One milo woat of tho University of Notre Tame.)
Thorough English and Cla«nleal Education,
Including ir' ek. Latin. French and German On
completing the full course of studies, studeute
receive the ltcgular Colleglnto Degrees.
The Conservatory of .Mnalo Is conducted on
the plan of tho best Classical Conservatories of
Europe.
The Art Department is modolled after the
best Art Schools of Europe.
Preparatory and Minim Departments. Pu-
Slls are here carefully prepared for the Aea-
ctnloand Advanced Courses Gymnasium un-
der direction of Graduate of Boston Normal
School of Gymnastics. Bookkeeping, Phonog-
raphy and Typewriting extra. Every va.iety of
Fancy Needlowork taught. For catalogue ad-
dress
DIRECTRESS OP THE ACADEMY,
Mary's Academy. Notre Damo P. O., Indiana#
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Moore, E. P. Garfield County Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1902, newspaper, July 24, 1902; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc166445/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.