The Chelsea Commercial. (Chelsea, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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THE COMMERCIAL
J. W. QUINS. Editor and Publuhsr.
CHELSEA, .... IND. TER.
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FEBRUARY
11903
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SEWS OF THE WEEK
Most Important Happenings of the
Past Seven Days.
bt*rntla« Items Gathered from All Pnrta
of the World Condensed Into Smell
iptN for the Benefit of
On* Header*.
roatrraalnnal.
As a result of a conference between
the president and representatives of
labor organizations, a bill has been
Introduced in congress providing that
in labor disputes an injunction shall
not be issued until the adverse party
has been heard.
The house has adopted a resolution
" | appropriating $40,000 to defray the ex-
You can't imagine why any people penses of the senate in the Swayne im-
should stay In a country like Finland, peachment trial.
when there are whole continents half
empty.
A lieutenant in the Russian army la
paid about $200 a year, a captain about
#300 and a major $450. Kuropatkln is
getting $100,000.
Every man who has worried his hair
out trying to borrow $3 must lift his
hat to Mrs. Chadwick, queen of high
finance, with her $13,000,000.
There are 44.000 hotels in the United
States, representing an invested capi-
tal of over $''>,000,000,000. These estab-
lishments employ 3,500,000 persons.
Russia is wrestling with the prob-
lem of how many soldiers it takes to
deprive 140,000,000 people of a desire
lor constitutional government
Married workmen in Russia are paid
cents a day and single men re-
ceive 12Ms cents. There is every in-
ducement in Russia to get married.
A Canadian minister shared his bed
with a negro who had been refused
hotel accommodations, and so far nol
a check or a gold watch has showed
op.
A third Russian fleet Is to start, or
begin to prepare to start, some time
during the latter part of February.
Admiral Togo will endeavor to attend
personally to its finish.
M*ss Lillian A. Norton, connected
with the superintendence of postal
flnance in Washington, receives a sal-
ary of $2,250, the highest paid to any
woman In the government service.
An Arkansas woman offers a reward
of $20 for the return of her missing
husband, dead or alive. The neighbors
who know the man say the alive pari
of the advertisement is a mere rhetor-
ical flourish.
A scientist figures that the earth-
quakes of seven years exerted a force
of 75,000,000 horse-power. It is
strange that no promoter has started
an earthquake syndicate in the mo-
tor line, capitalized at $1 per horse-
power.
Georgia's entomologist estimates
that the state within a few years will
contain more than 100,000,000 lruit
trees. The peaches and melons of
Georgia are favorites in all markets,
and decidedly promote an era of good
feeling.
A Japanese statistical pamphlet
states that a Japanese may divorce hia
wife for talking too much. The latest
annual figures show that, with fewer
than 300.000 Japanese marriages re-
ported in the year, there were more
than 60,000 divorces.
Democrats in the house will support
the administration in legislating for
the restriction of the railroads In the
matter of freight rates.
The senate was sworn in as a court
of impeachment to try the Judge
Swayne case. The seven managers from
the housewere announced and demand-
ed that a process issue and accordingly
an order was made for the appearance
of the accused before the court.
Secretary Shaw has sent a letter to
both houses of congress recommend-
ing the refund of the duties on im-
ported wheat when used for seed.
The house naval appropriation bill
provides for an expenditure of $103,-
000,000.
Secretary Hay will send to the sen-
ate a treaty to take the place of the
protocal through which the United
States intended to take charge of the
financial affairs of the Dominican re-
public.
The senate as a trial court has
postponed the Swayne case until Feb-
ruary 3.
The house committee on naval af-
fairs has decided upon the naval in-
crease programme to be incorporated
in the naval appropriation bill, pro-
viding for only two battle ships.
The house has passed the agricul-
tural bill without material amend-
ment.
Numerous protests are being sent to
Washington from the Indian territory
against the passage of the Stewart
Indian bill, which makes full pro-
vision for winding up Indian affairs.
Commercial interests are leading the
fight.
Secretary Taft addressed the house
committee on ways and means in fa-
vor of the Curtis bill reducing the duty
on sugar and tobacco from the Phil-
ippines.
Huaao-Jnpn near War.
Kuropat kin's forward movement
was checked by the Japanese and the
Russians were compelled to retire
from Sandepas, which they had cap-
tured.
Gen. Oyama telegraphs that the Rus-
sians were entirely repulsed and re-
treated to the right bank of the Hun
river. He also says he captured 500
officers and men.
It is significant that dispatches
from Russian correspondents at the
front have again suddenly ceased,
which seems to indicate the failure of
Gen. Kuropatkin's forward movement.
Reports from Japanese sources are
to the effect that the railroad Is
blocked east of Lake Baikel with snow
and that Vladivostok Is isolated.
An immense, almost startling in-
crease in Immigration of Russians to
this country Is shown by the figures
for December, when 15.992 landed iu
New York.
W. H. Hunt, who was president of
the I'an-American bank at Chicago,
which reccnlly failed, has been ar-
rested in New York, charged with
embezzlement. W. S. Rector, the
cashier, has disappeared. The bank
seems to have been looted.
Foreign residents of St. Petersburg
Rre removing to Berlin to await de-
velopments In the strike situation
Representatives of the southwestern
cattlemen were before the senate com-
mitte on Interstate commerce as inn
that the commission be given more
power to fix railroad rates and to com-
pel better service by the railroads.
Father Gopon. the priest, a leader
in the St. Petersburg strike riots la
reported to be in Sweden.
The Irish-American National socie-
ty has been organized at Jamesville,
O. The movement Is to be national
in scope and its object is to dcfeit
the pending arbitration treaty between
Great Britain and the United States.
At. St. Louis Mrs. Lotii3e Mull n
and two grand-children died from
breathing the fumes from a hard coal
stove.
The strike disorder at Warsaw is
becoming more serious, the strl erj
having stopped the street railway
service, put out all street lights and
engaged in wholesale pillagin«t.v
A bill has been introduced in the
Nebraska legislature to abolish capital
punishment.
A notice was posted in all factories
of St. Petersburg giving .he strikers
24 hours to resume their employment
and intimating that those who did not |
GOL. BECKWITH SAYS;
" I Take Pleasure in Commending Pe-ru-na
For Coughs and Colds."
? ti its
Witf
^■1
I mm
OL. PAUL E. BECKWITH.
f!rrHi''\!nii'iTh'1J|t those w ho <.id not , Colonel Paul E. Beckwith, Lt. Col., retired, 1st Rep. Minute Men, in a <
comply would be deported to villages. letter from 1508 Vermont avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C., writes:
n 1... ti t f r ' n
" rrom the unqualified endorsement of many of my friends.
Maximilian Gorky, the Russian an
2"™K.r lea<lPr' has(| ! Pleasure In commending your remedies' for coughs and j
, - , , . J colds. — Paul E. Beckwith.
riftecn persons were injured by the j
derailing of a Big Four passenger "
train at Earl Park, Ind.
Arkansas was admitted to member-
ship in the Southwestern Lumbermen's
association at the recent meeting at
Kansas City.
EN FIELD OR BARRACKS
PE-RU-NA IS EFFICACIOUS.
The constant exposure to the elements
Frrezinp weather is reported as far ®*Perienet d in an out-door life is not so
south as Florida, doing a vast amount ^"k'hs and colds as seden-
°'i Those who are brought face to face
Steamers were prevented from get- with the weather every day in active
ting into New York harbor by a fierce life are much less lialiie to catarrhal
diseases than those who lire housed up
in illy ventilated
ALL CUSSES
ARC SUBJECT TO
CATARRH.
rinrai. And yet
both of these classes
are more or less
subject to catarrh
and catarrhal dis-
eases. The soldier as well as the civil-
ian finds it frequently necessary to nse
Peruna on accouut of coughs and colds.
No one is exempt. The strong and
healthy are less liable than the weak
and HI, but none entirely escape.
A feature at the session of the Lan-
caster, Pa., teachers' institute last
week was an address by Representative
H. Burd Cassel on the trials of a mem-
ber of congress. Mr. Cassel said that
in two years he had received and an- !
■wered nearly 120,000 letters.
Mlaeellaneona.
The chief of police of St. Louis,
under orders from Gov Folk, is clos-
ing all gambling houses in that city.
Nine hundred Chicago lumber team-
sters have voted to strike for an ad-
vance of 50 cents a day in their
wages.
A half block of wholesale business
houses was destroyed by fire at Oma-
ha, Neb., entailing a loss of more than
$500,000.
Gen. Kuropatkin telegraphs that ho
has commenced an advance against
the Japanese south of Mukden.
The acting commissioner of pensions
"For two cents I'll shoot the lot of
you," said George Brekner to a party
of children playing in the woods near ha8 issued an order •'«.llshlng1 the ex-
Omaha, Neb. They showed signs of aminlng board of Cooper county. Mo.
being frightened when they saw the The pope expresses satisfaction with
bigger boy carrying a shotgun. As'
he spoke he raised the weapon to hi*
shoulder, pulled the trigger, and Artie I
Kuhn, 13 years old, fell dead.
It has been proven that very damp
corn cribbed early in October will
shrink 30 per cent, by February, while
dry corn crihbed October 21 will shrink
by the last of January 11 per cent.
The loss in an entire year is 20 per
cent, in one case and 9 per cent, in an
other. When first husked fully 25 per the lawflra'of HoweTHummJ have
cent, of the weight lies in the cob. By b„Pn in(UctP(] b/ the Krand . jn
spring less than 20 per cent of the t.onnectlon with the Dodge-Morse case
the policy announced by the new-
French ministry.
The cabinet discussed the lessons
to be learnecj from the present war
between Russia and Japan.
Contractors are on the ground with
men and material to begin work on
the proposed Pathfinder government
dam In Wyoming.
Two of the most prominent lawyer*
In New York, ex-Supreme Court Judge
Fursman and Abraham Hummel of
blizzard which raged along the coast
recently. No attempt was made to run
surface ears on Brooklyn bridge dur-
ing the storm.
It is said that the St. Petersburg
strikers are being supplied with money
by the liberals, who have a fund of
$2,000,000 for that purpose.
Cossacks and police fired on the
crowds of strikers at Helsingfors, Fin-
land. wounding about 30 persons.
Reports from all over Russia in-
dleate that th • strike situation Is flat- Astt for a
tening out.
The break in the cable between Se-
attle. Wash., and Valdez, Alas! a. has
been repaired after three months
work.
Mine owners in Prussia have agreed
to arbitrate the differences with theii
employes.
Two members of a gang of safe rob-
bers who have been operating aloni
the Pennsylvania main line in New
Jersey have been arrested in Philadel-
phia.
A sensttion was caused in Snn Fran-
ciscp by the removal of W. H. Hutton.
a police commissioner for gross immor-
ality.
Zaeh Mulhall, live stock agent for
the St. Louis k San Francisco rail-.
road, was convicted of assault with in-
tent to kill at St. Louis, and his pun- '"inor''y *' ----- —
Ishmrnt fixed at three years in .hc*hl"rlbe maJ'jrity t",lW'"1'uck-
penitentiary. 80 Da. Macaroni Wheat Per Acre,
Prince Eitel-Frledrlch, second son
of Emperor William, is seriously ill
with pneumonia. The crown prince Is
Peruna has altvays been a great,
favorite with the military men, botli in.
the army and navy.
The strongest kind of testimonials-
are received from officers of high rank
concerning the virtues of Peruna for •
all catarrhal ailments.
Only a small per cent, of these can be ■
used for publication for want of space.
Mr. Harrison L. Drain, Hurnside Post.
No. 8, Department of the Potomac,.
Colonel Encampment No. 60, Union«
Veterans Legion, Colonel Green Clay
Smith Regiment No. 17. U. V. U., De-
partment of the Potomac, Military
Order Loyal I.eglon, Department of
Columbia, Major 84th Indiana Veteran
Volunteer Infantry, writes:
••There la no longer any queatlon aa
to the curative qualities of Peruna In
all catarrhal troubles. Ita aucceasful
uae by many of my frlenda entitles If
to confidence and endoracmeat."
QUALITY IS OUR MOTTO!
BEST RFCAITSF You "" XOT «r HU.I. HOARM, FFX«'E F.% IXTIN'O,
w365" and "Agents" 5c Cigars Are Leaders of the World.
WRITE US ABOUT FENCE
We manufacture 26 *tvle« of fenc«, for poultry,
l' t > fl- fa,m- I*'1* s,1<1 "Ihfr Iiurpoart. We sell <fir.il to
jADVANCEm^ftSO Days' FREE Trial
Wm ■ Tf'ttEIUMT fREPAID.'It will par voutow.ite for
. , " ^ 1.1 "CH and our I'KI.'BJ KNCE HOOk. Tel s wtiv
Arlvance h-nce is «tronu. Hurahle and ut>-t..-ilate. Y..11 «.ivr th- .tenler*' in d.-alini
Just re.neml.er lhat when you nee.l fen,--. ADVANCE FENCE CO.. 570IJ St Peoris 111
The maiority should rule, but the
Mould keep right on trying to
also eonfinf d to hl.s room by an attack introduced by the U. S. Dept. of A
of influenza. ' *- • ■ -
William J. Bryan and Alton
Uer held a three hours' conference
New York to talk over party plans
Eight persons lost their lives in
It is a tremendous cropper, yielding in
B. Par- ' Pood "! Wi*-. HI-, !*•. Jlich., Ind.,
„n,.« ... ^ 80 h"- Per ®cre, and on dry,
at , ari(j ]an,lgi uch b are f< und in Mont.,
MOTHER GRAY'S
SWEET PO WDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A Certain L'lira for KrTerllliReM,
< <>d.iI|>i>« |o n . Uaadackt,
Nlunnirk Troublea, Trelhlu*
■*' •"•"Uera, «"d llestray
■OTHlll fclut. j ** "rina. Break up « .Id.
Nur e u> 1 lul-i'n 2* h"ur . Al nil i>rugg;r«, a ct .
<1' " • It «.jr>an,ple nn" l KltKK. Adilraaa.
Sr. Maw YorkOt>.$A. 8. OLMSTED, La Roy, N.V.
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
JEWTK D&C, •c.r«c!° ri'il1 SVRUP cures cou,h and colds.
,u yield from 40 to 80 bu. lifa Wheat and I
New York alone a ; si romilt < f th.. r* ' Jpelu and Hanna Barley and Bromua D A | P MTQ book tops, .
cent storm ^- Inermi. a.Hi Billion Dollar Graa., make. E^JLiTIjUiS
1 3iorni. j ,t possible to grow and fatten hogs, iheep ^ ^ u
President Roosevelt addressed n Ci
grow and fatten hogs, sheep
Roosevelt addre.^ned u cattle wnerever .oil is found,
committee representing; 13 protestant ' ,u,ir *knd 10c a*i> this notice
^ fellow feeling for your p-vketbook i. .
ecclesiastical bodies indorsing their j?.'"0 John A. Sa.zer Seed Co., f.a Cro«e, not apt to make you Hoiidroua kind
position on the question of the uni- ' an!1,lhe? W1". yo,u free " ••mpU Chicago Daily New s.
, ., ,. of this Wheat and other farm seeds, to-
flcation of the divorce lawa of the dif- (tether with their grent catHlog, alo
worth 1100.00 to any wide awuke farmer.
[K. L.J
There are many way* to win a women—
nu; H meeting of demo- but only om way for each woman.--tomart
bet.
reight of the ear Is In the cob.
Japan's population reaches a total of
at least 5,000,0'i0 more than Great Brit-
ain. With Formosa and the other an-
nexations the Japnese people num-
bered 46,500,000 six years ago. and they
were then increasing at the rate of
500,000 a year. Japan has also some
very big towns. Toklo has a popula-
tion of about 1,500,000, Osaka between
800,000 and 900,000, and there are 2<" •
The Italian society of the Mafia is
believed to have caused the murder
at Kansas City of Asostlno Caldroni.
The armored cruiser Maryland, made
on her official trial trip an average
speed of 22.i!00 knots an hour. th"re-
by exceeding her contract require-
ment of 22 knots.
Samuel H. Piles, of Seattle, was
elected nenator from Washington on
the l.'lth Joint ballot.
Three hundred thousand men arc rc-
' ... ., . .ti I hree hundred thousand men arc rc-
others with a population of more than! , ,, u . „ . ' , '
i I*0"*" ,<1 e In Poland. The supply of
' - bread Is exhausted at Warsaw.
ferent states.
Anonymous circulars have been scat-
tered throughout the state of Colora-
do calling
crats at the eapitol on March 21. when
the legislature is to decide the con-
test for gon rnor.
Arthur Milligan, a Brooklyn embez-
zler, eloped from Chicago with Klor-
en"e Groves. At Milwaukee the cou-
ple atr. cd to commit suicide. The sirl
carried o-.it the compact In the pres-
ence of Milligan, who Immediately left
for Racine, where he was arrested.
At a lun heon in Toi.io to Minister
Orlscom and others the emp> ror of Ja-
pan pro^o-ed a toast to President
Roosevelt. He also expressed his
thanks for the cordiality with which
Prince Fushiml was received while in
ilils country.
The interstate commerce commission
has decided that the differential rate
on sugar between Kansas fliy and
Wichita Is unreasonable and ordered
lt reduced from 15 cents to eltbt tints
per 100 counds.
A Guaranteed Cure for Piles.
Itehinfr. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding piles.
Your druggi*'. will refund m n«v if p«zo.
Uintmlnt lull, to cure iu tt to 14 iJuys. buo.
It was the hills that made Port Ailhur
come so high.—l>etroit Free Preaa.
For Infant! and Ciildrea
TM a.NTaua caanuiT, tt ■uaaai
In
Use
For
Over Thirty Years
The Kind You Have Always Bough!
It ITMIT, NCW t«RR «mr.
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Quinn, J. W. The Chelsea Commercial. (Chelsea, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905, newspaper, February 3, 1905; Chelsea, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc175111/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.