Kildare Journal. (Kildare, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, December 2, 1898 Page: 2 of 8
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The Kildare Journal
BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO
KILDARE
OKLAHOMA
CURRENT COMMENT
Eightkks thousand men women
and children are said to be studying
English in Santiago de Cuba
A Dknvkb paper saya that Colorado
thia year will produce gold to the ex
tent of 830000000 and perhaps 830
000000
At Hamburg and Bremen lapt year
the imports of corn from the United
States amounted to 818800000 an in
crease of nearly 60 per cent
' Ah international congress to devise
neans for combating anarchy con
vened in Botne on the 84th and will
probably be in session for some weeks
Oklahoma is looming np as a very
successful pesnntraising region and
threatens to cut into a market of which
Virginia formerly enjoyed almoat
monopoly
SXCBETABT OF TBB TREASURY GAOS
baa decided to have billa of the same
denomination look alike That is be
wishes the 85 silver certificate the 85
United States note and the 85 Sherman
treasury note to bear a close likeness
to one another
The treasurer of the United States
ays in his report that the Increase in
the circulation of the subsidiary silver
coins has drawn down the treasury
holdings from 839000000 to 89000000
and that it will be necessary soon to
provide a further supply of this class
ef currency
Ihstbcctioxt in sewing has been
added to the curriculum of the Chicago
pnblic schools In over 70 grammar
schools the g-lrls of the seventh and
eighth grades were given lessons in
simple sewing and it will hereafter
be part of the regular school work
Cooking lessons were started some time
go ’
Poor E Stonk Wiggins of Ottawa
OnL who among other things re'
cently solved the problem of squaring
the circle and claims- to have discov-
ered a dark moon aa another satellite
of the earth suggested an explana
tlon of the meteoric showers' which
frequently fall at this season of' the
pear that the people of Mars are send-
ing huge stones to us aa a means of
planetary intercommunication
Union labor in the manufacturing
Industries of Kansas City Mn has
eombined to protect the output of
legitimate factories against competi-
tion with penitentiary-made goods
The Anti Prison Labor association was
organised whose purpose is to secure
by legislation the abolition of compe-
tition between prison and free labor
and to abolish the present system of
letting prison labor by contract
Tax annual report of the commis-
sioner of internal revenue ahows that
Kansas paid In internal revenue last
pear 843343019 while Missouri £ald
19040 7308L Kansas has 63 registered
tobacco manufacturers and Missouri
88 Missouri leads the Hat of states in
the amount of tobacco manufactured
leading off with 63010010 pounds
Kansas manufactured 30139501 cigars
while Missouri put up 63615991 cigars
and 434434100 cigarettes Kansu pro
duced 5589303 pounds of oleomargar-
ine while Missouri produced only 944-
731 pounds
The circuit court at Norwalk O
has affirmed the verdict rendered In
the common pleas court against the
Niekle Plato railway awarding 85000
damages to frank Schaffer a brake-
man Schaffer claimed that be was
blacklisted by the company In conse-
quence of the latter refusing to give
him a certificate of good character u
an employe so that he was unable to
obtain employment on any other rail-
road He brought suit against the
company s short time ago in the Huron
county common pleas court and was
awarded a verdict of 85000
The Federation of Labor will make
a determined effort at the approach-
ing session of congress to secure action
by the senate upon a bill which passed
the house last summer It provides for
the amendment of the eight-hour law
so as to Include all contractors doing
work for the government and all em-
ployes manufacturing material used
by the govern menu if this bill should
go into effect it would be a long step
toward a general eight-hour working
day It would prohibit the govern-
ment from buying from apybody whose
employes worked moro than eight
hours '
The doings of the weather bureau
during the psast fiscal year are aet forth
In some detail In a report recently sub-
mitted by Chief Willis L Moore to Sec-
retary Wilaon of the departinentof ag-
riculture The most prominent event
chronicled in Mr Moore's report is the
extension of the bureau’s field of
operation) to include all of tbs Went
Indies and the shores of the Oulf of
Mexico Prof Moore remarks that It
Is too earljr to tell tho value of the ob-
servations secured by kites Over 28-
000000 forecasts were distributed dur-
ing the year exclusive of those printed
in the daily papers
Thebb see sns to be good reason the
Chicago fiesord says for the lamenta-
tions uttered by an eaatern publica-
tion because there are more c nmarrled
men than unmarried women In the
country The trouble is evidently Ir-
remediable for while there re 5437
757 bachelors in the Unit d States
there are only 8834494 n imarried
ladies Many of the men may have re-
mained alngle because of the rejection
of their advances In ttmei past hut
even supposing that all tl 8334494
maidens should consent t wed there
till must remain a turpi un of 9308378
cases of bachelorhood
NEWS OF THE WEEK
4
EHeaned By Telegraph and
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL
Sbxatob Cock bell does not look for
any sweeping legislation in congress
this winter He does not think that
any special financial or tariff legisla-
tion will be attempted The senator
from Missouri thinks we ought to as-
sist the Filipinos to establish a repub-
lic and help them to maintain 1L
The annual report of the secretary
of the navy was made public on the
95th It says that our navy Is unex-
celled tells the story of Dewey's vic-
tory at Manila and the blockade of
Santiago de Cuba awards high praise
to the marines and makes many rec-
ommendations for bettering the serv-
ice -
Gen Shaftkb was the principal guest
at a banquet given by the Sons of the
Revolution at New York on the 25th
Gen Shafter In his speech defended
bis line of aetion at Santiago
A compliment abt dinner was ten-
dered to Rear Admiral Schley in the
Brooklyn club at New York on the 85th
Thebe was a report in circulation in
Elavana that Gen Maximo Gomes had
died but it was not credited in Cnban
circles
Gen Castellanos succeeded Gen
Blanco as captain general of Cuba
The Boston Anti-Imperialist league
has begun the preparation joI a signed
protest against the extension of Amer-
ican sovereignty " er the Philippine
islands to be presented to the presl
dent and the congress of the United
Staten The “antis” said they expect'
ed to secure 10000000 names to the
protest A sort of endless chain ar-
rangement was to be the method of
work
Advices were received bv President
McKinley on the 87th from Judge Day
president of the American peace com-
mission at Paris stating positively
that the Spanish commissioners would
accept the United States terms of
peace and that a treaty would be
signed in a few days
C W Coul dock the actor died at
New York on the 37th of indigestion
complicated by dropsy of the heart
aged 84 years
Admibal Dewet is being boomed in
the east for the democratic nomination
for the presidency in 1900 according to
a New York dispatch
Spain on the 38th accepted the
United States offer of 820000000 at the
joint session of the peace commissions
at Paris and ' consented to relinquish
Cuba and to cede Porto Rico Guam
and the Philippine islands
MIKIUANEOIIS
Tn U jilted States supreme court on
the 38th announced the new bank-
ruptcy rules which It was authorized
to frame and promulgate under the
national bankruptcy act of July 1
1898
Fibk at the Robert Keith Furniture
and Carpet company’s store at Kansas
City Mo on the 38th burned out the
sixth and seventh stories of the enor-
mous building and the remaining five
stories and basement were drenched
with water Loss estimated at 8150900
Crossed eleetrlo wires were thought to
have been the cause of the fire
A movement is on foot in Chicago to
form a milk trust
More than 30 skaters narrowly es-
caped death In the Semple avenue
pond SL Louis the other afternoon
Two modest heroes risked their lives
to save their fellowmen One a boy
Joseph H Lang paid the hazard with
bla life and the companion whom he
died to save survived The other a
man of 80 dragged two drowning
strangers from imminent death and
lives Both deeds followed the break-
ing of thin lee beneath skating parties
A fbbbtboat full of workmen was
capsized while crossing the Volga at
Klnessma Russia drowning 39 of the
passengers
G allow at college located at
Searcy Ark was destroyed by fire
yesterday The fire originated in the
fourth story and in less than one hour
the building and contents were a total
loss Two hundred people of which
number 175 were young lady students
were asleep at the time but not one
person was injured
A box of dynamite exploded the
other morning near the Reina battery
at Havana killing and injuring S3 per-
sons Mobb than 70 lives were lost in the
wrecks of tugs schooners and barges
along the New England coast In the
recent storm and over 100 vessels were
driven ashore or sunk beneath the
waves
New Yobk and the New England
coast had one of the severest blizzards
ever experienced on the 37th Thirty-
five vessels were driven ashore in
Boston harbor and nearly all trains
were stalled
Business failures in the United
States for the week ended the 85th
numbered 178 according to Brad-
street’s commercial report against 333
for the corresponding week last year
The first assistant postmaster gen-
eral in his annual report aaya that the
business of the department showa an
Increase of 86000000 during the fiscal
year There were 87798078 domestic
money orders issued for the year
amounting to 8191854 12L Mr Heath
recommends that post office clerks be
classified and placed upon a fixed scale
of salaries that small post offices be
consolidated that clerk hire appro-
priation be made to apply to third
class post offices that another form of
money order be Issued and that 8300-
000 be set aside for extending rural
free delivery
Sbchktaby Buss of the Interior de-
partment made public on the 34tb his
annual report reviewing in detail pen-
sion Indian land patept eduoatlonal
and territorial affairs The Indians
are deolared to have made substantial
progress during tho past year The
workings of the Curtis aet in the In-
dian territory are praised The secre-
tary reports 637000 pension claims
pending and recommends a commis-
sion to revise pension laws Early
legislative enactment for taking th
twelfth census is urged i
It was feared that thousands of
sheep woulcjbe lost In the mountains
near Pendleton Ora through the
heavy mows
Tbb grievances of glass-workers qf
Millville N J have been settled 1
The engineer end fireman of n But
ton A Maine locomotive driving a anqtir
plow were killed by the engine plung-
ing over an embankment near South
Berwyek Ma
The Franklin stamp mill at Hancock
Mich was destroyed by fire the loss
being 8150000 Six hundred men were
thrown out of employment for six
months $
A severe earthquake ahodffreoently
occurred at Patras Greece causing the
Inhabitants to become psnlitrlekn
Soon after a second shock Whs expe-
rienced No fatalities were reported
The battleship Wisconsin ' was
launched on the Sflth at 8an Franeiaea
Miss Elisabeth Stephenson of Wiscon-
sin christened the vesseL r
The steamer T CL Walker running
between San Francisco and Stockton
Cal had one of her boilers blown up
and six persons were killed 11 dan
gerously Injured and 15 othera more
or less badly hurL The majority of
the passengers were In bed 1 when the
explosion occurred and they rushed on
deck in their night clothes The elec-
tric lights had been put out which
added to the awful confusion u
A street fight occurred at Hughes
Springs on the line between Marrs
and Cass counties in Texas in which
Constable Driver and bia son were
killed and Ben Boone a prominent
resident was mortally wounded The
affair resulted from a trivial matter
The vault of the Wrentham (Mass)
national bank was blown open by
burglars and robbed of 83600 in cash
and notes valued at 865000
At Weatherford Ok on the 88th
there were two banks ready for busi-
ness two newspapers 40 or more busi-
ness houses and 3000 people where
four months ago there was a cornfield
The Hutchinson A Southern railroad
will be extended from Blackwell Ok
to Ponca
John B Shaw was hsngod at Cle-
burne Tex on the 35th for murder
The corner-stone of the confederate
monument that Is to mark the final
resting place of the 440 unknown con-
federate dead burled in the cemetery
at Van Buren Ark was laid on the
84th Arkansas Missouri Texas Lou-
isiana and the Indian territory were
represented Fully 60 per cent of
those interred at the place are Missou-
rians ’
A Washington dispatch stated that
17 of the principal peanut coneerna tu
the country have agreed to a combine
or consolidation There are about 80
cleaning houses for peanuts These
handle a crop which Is valued at about
86000000 a year They represent ’ an
investment of 83000000 It is through
the combination of the cleaning houses
that the attempt will be made to handle
the crop hereafter maintain prices and
prevent ruinous competition
EJvebt soldier in the Seventh corps
at Savannah Ga was made to feel
that the 84th was Thanksgiving dhy
All drills were abandoned for the day
and at two o’clock each man received
a ration of turkey fruit and caks
Over 1000 turkeys and several wagon'
loads of fruit and cake were sent to
samp in the morning The feast for
Gen Lee’a men waa provided by the
ladies of Charleston
A train was derailed on the Bur-
lington Cedar Rapids ' A Northern
road while rounding a carve near Bur-
lington Is The day coach contain
ing 80 passengers rolled over twice
and landed right aide up in a ditch 60
feet sway Two persons were fatally
injured and several others received
bruises
Simon Guggenheim who was married
on the 34th in New York city to Miss
Olga Hirsh commemorated the event
by giving a Thanksglvingdlnner to 4
900 children in Denver Col where he
lives The tickets were distributed by
Parson "Tom” Uzzell of the People’s
tabernacle to whom Mr Guggenheim
entrusted the management of the feast
A dispatch from Perry Ok said
that prairie fires had played havoc In
Oklahoma and the Indian territory
One farmer had lost hay cotton and
live stock to the amount of 830000
tn the Kiowa Indian reservation a
itrip of land 30 by 75 miles wide was
burned over causing great damage
Mbs William Santenlo wife of a
farmer in Paine county Ok after a
quarrel with her husband killed her
ten-months-old baby and threw it into
a well and then committed suicide by
umplng into the well head first
The crown sheet of the boiler of a
Denver A Rio Grande locomotive blew
sut at Swallows Col The fireman
waa killed and the engineer and brake-
men seriously injured Eighteen load-
d freight ears were burned
Mbs Thomas Stephens waa burned
to deatn and Alex Robs was fatally
burned during a fire lu the woman’s
bouse at Elkton Mich caused by the
sx plosion of an oil stove -The
postmaster general makes an
Interesting report on hts department
in establishing post offices in our new
territorial acqulsltiona and calls at-
tention to the amazing growth of the
postal business in all its branches
According to oriental advlcea the
number of houses destroyed by the re-
lent fire at Hankow China waa more
than 18000 and 8500 persons were
burned to death
Chief Deputt Wabnock in trying
to arrest an escaped negro convict in
Birmingham Als waa shot and in-
itantly killed The town turned out
to hunt the murderer and his capture
meant certain lynching '
Reports reached Meridian Miss on
the 37tb that three negroea bad been
lynched in Newton county Miss sod
the farmers of that aeetlon were on
the trail of othera Implicated in an as-
sault on a white man The trouble
arose over the ownership of a hog
A stobt was brought to Port Town
tend Wash that the passengers and
erew of the steamer Jessie were not
drowned at the month of the Kusko-
tvlm river in Alaska but were murdered
by Indians— who had rescued them
after their vessel stranded— because
the whites would not give the reds the
supplies that were saved from the vessel
TERRITORIAL NEWS
Lnto
Happenlngfl of Morn
Ordinary Interest
Than
BRIEFLY told for hurried reader
Cattlemen Protest against I ha Bale for
Dipping— Letter From Dr Lewie—
family ‘ Trouble Lauds In
- M order aad Snlelde
Meal lag of tho llvo Stock Sealturp Boord
The Live Stock Sanitary board will
meet to consider the protests of cattle-
men against the continuation of the
cattle dipping system Their chief
complaint is that the dipping causes
serious injury to the cattle especially
to the eyes and lungs aad frequently
results fn death' Tbe interests of the
farmer are also made to appear to suf-
fer by reason of the fuel that if tbe
cattle were not excluded tliey would
consume ttie surplus feed of the farmer
but iiKspite of this altruistic solicitude
of the cattlemen the farmers are seem-
ingly not enough iuteres'ed in their
own welfare to file a solitary com-
nlaiut against the rigid precautions to
prevent their domestic stock from be-
coming tick-infested Moreover the
dipping process is only compulsory
where tbe cattle arc shown to be in
fested and as many as 30000 head hsve
been admitted into the teiritory since
the 15lli of tbe month ufler passing an
examination of ihe inspectors Re
gat-ding the complaint that dipping
cansea the deatb of the cattle the fol-
lowing letter from Dr Lewis tbe v-y
erinury surgeon connected with the
sgricultuTal college at Stillwater wilt
be of iulerest:
‘‘1 returned last night from Norman
One hundred and sixty-three head of
cattle belonging to Jr T May and S
M Wlnuingham have been dipped at
Wewolca on November 16th shipped to
Oklahoma City and driven 13 miles to
the feeding lots The cattle were of
all ages from ealvee to mature cattle
and a number of them poor in flesh
Mr May stated that (bo day following
the dipping the cattle wee stiff and
moved with difficulty They gradually
became stiffer and less inclined to
move until on the seventh day after
dipping they began dying I looked
over most of the entile cirefnlly and
saw a number of dead calves probably
ten or 13 I examined tno that had
died Ihe night previous found in one
considerable evidence of iuflaination of
internal organs in the 'second this
was couflncd more especially to tbe
lungs Tiie skin showed the effects of
the oil the outer skin or epidermis
peeling off in Ihe form of dandruff
The cattle I saw moving around were
quite stiff wuicli was due to the con
ditioa of the skin Mr May reported
the eyes budiy injured after the dip-
ping but those I saw uppeared to have
no permanent injury done tbe eyes' as
they were clear and bright The cold
weather following so closely after the
dippieg with the age of ' the cattle
(nearly all that have died are calves)
combined to give the bad results But
all the cattle showed that the oil is
quite severe on the skin I wrote to
Mr Benson asking him to Lave some
of the oil examined as I did not know
who owned the vat The cold weather
will probably increase the had effect
of the oil and poor cattle especially
calves are apt to suffer from the pro-
cess Tbe last cattle dipped by tbe
station were seen at Cimarron City on
Thursday In a number of Instances
the skin waa considerably irritated
hut at the time I saw them tbe cattle
showed no bad effects eiiher to the
eyes or lo the si-iu"
Murder wud suicide
A special from Stillwater to the
Guthrie Free Press says
“A sad accident is chronicled here in
the suicide of Mrs Win Saiurlee aged
83 years four miles southwest of this
city and her killing of her two-year
old baby Irene The tragedy occurred
Wednesday morning and is supposed
lo have growu out of trouble between
Mrs Saturlee and her husband
“The details of the suicide and death
us near as can be gathered are about
as follows:
Mr Saturlee and liis wife had been
quarreling for two or three days and
that moi'niug Mr Sulurlee went to a
neighho-’s Shortly after he had gone
Mrs Saturlee kissed her two children
a little hoy and girl aged 5 and 7 took
her two-year-old babe In her arms
and In answer lo an inquiry from her
little boy said she was just going out
doors She went to the well which is
near the house deliberately threw the
baby Into it and then plunged in her-
self head first The children became
frightened and finally went to n
neighbor’s Tho husband was sent for
and other neighbors summoned and
they came to this city after tbe sheriff
The bodies were not removed from tbe
well until after the sheriff add deputy
arrived
“The bodies were uot disfigured ex-
cept some bruisea on Mrs' Sutur lee’s
head caused from btrUiny aguinst tho
well curbing
“The verdict of tbe coroner’s jury is
that the baby met its death at the
bunds of ita mother' and that Mrs
8alurlee committed suicide by throw-
ing herself into tbe well and that the
set was premeditated The husband
ia much affected and la also the subject
of bitter criticism” s '
That Unn Again
Newkirk Republican: A very sad ac-
cident occurred Saturday at Kildare
Arthur McCray und family stopped at
stable in - Kildare and about eight
o'clock In the morning a Utile boy of
four years got hold of a S3 target rifle
and by sorao means shot liis little sister
of nine years She lived till five
o’clock in the evening dying at the
house of G W Hover The remains
were sent ou to Stillwater where the
family were moving
I
Iftmms are Marie TreeWe
Ponca City Courier: The sportsmen
who nre hunting in jhe Indian reser-
vations near here are finding out that
the law means something Two differ-
ent hunting expeditions from Win
field Kun have been arrested end
their guna end other hunting para-
phernalia taken away within the past
week in the Osuge country The Pon
ca reset ration is likewise policed
again t hunters and poachers Tbe
gume luwa will be strictly enforced
and no game will be allowed tobe
shipped from ibis point or others along
i ho Santa Fe Several liuntiog parties
from Kansas City St Louis and Den-
ver have sougnt permission to bunt in
these reservations but have In all
coses been refused If they were not
game would soon be exterminated
The Indian agents desire to permit
quail to become more numerous in
stead of exterminated as it would be
If hunting were allowed os It hoe been
in the past
Charter (Tiled
Secretary Jenkins has granted
charter In the First Baptist church at
Geary The trustees are J-W Bis-
well Whilom Nichols and J R Hen
dersoo
The Weatherford Milling company
directors Henry Lassen Charles Jack-
man nod John A Bookwaller all of
El Rena '
Tbe Slate Exchange bank of Weath
eiford lias been chartered and will
soon begin business
The Royal Tribe of Joseph n fra
terual beneficial order with list of
grand officers constitution and by
lawa attached
Hngo’a Body is Exhumed'
The body of W T Hugo a leading
business man of Ringo I T who died
in a hotel in St Joseph Mo Septem-
ber 28 under auspicious circumstances
has been exhumed and will be held
pending investigation Hugo carried
heavy life insnrance in tbe Woodmen
of the World and that organization la
conduct'ng the investigation Detec-
tives have been working on the case
for some weeks and it is said that ar-
rests will follow the autopsy Hugo
went to St Joseph alone and when his
wife wss notified of his death she re-
plied Unit she was aiek and could not
come ' It is said that be died of slow
poisoning ’
Miser Territorial Hew- '
Four prisoners broke jail at El Reno
on tbe 83d '
In Pottawatomie county the pecan
crop is yery large
A number of Iowa families have lo-
cated near Watonga
The Choctaw road is making exten-
sive Improvements at El Reno
The Cross depot has been torn down
and removed to some other station
Ther books of Woods qouniy will be
examined by an expert accountant
The first snow storm in Oklahoma
this year caught people in the cotton
fields
Erwin Sanders one of the first set-
tlers of Cross died last week He was
an old soldier
B F Dunn Frisco traveling agent
has been transferred from Fort Smith
to Oklahoma City
El Mahaffa who killed McDonald of
D county will be tried at Taloga but
not till next spring
It is reported that Ihe ministers of
El Reno are about to begin a crusade
gainst tbe saloons
Cameron brothers big sheep raisers
in the southwest will go into the cat-
tle business exclusively
A very prosperous Indian by tbe
name of Bob Tailed Deer Is now known
os Bob Doer He is u Shawnee
An Arkansas City party of hunters
in the Osage reaervation bad all their
guns 'end amunilion confiscated by
Agent Freemau 7
At a recent Bitting at Pawnee Judge
Ualner sentenced 15 men to prison
nearly ' alt of them for introducing
liquor to the Indiana ! "'
Chief of Police Payne chased a party
of hunters of Sedan Kansas ont of
the Osage country last week It took
him three days to do it
From tho way the Oklahoma foot
baii'team wiped up tbe Texas crowd
there is lots of rough rider material in
Oklahoma which didn’t get to go to
war ' i
Henry Sheplor of Oklahoma county
lost Ills barn by fire recently with hay
690 bushels of wheat and implements
It was the largest barn In tbe county
end only 8200 tnsuranoe on it -
The government has succeeded in in-
ducing eight young Kickapoos to at-
tend Carlisle school It was a hard
oh as a Kickspoo - bates school like n
squaw does eot-aets -Hon
F D Coburn secretary of the
Kansas slate board of agriculture
wifi address tbe Oklahoma Live Stock i
association at tbe annual convention
on the evening of February 14 His
subject will' be “Borne Possibilities”
Mr Coburn is a writer of great ability
J E Clarke manager of tho Nor-
man oil mill while trying to kick a
belt from one pulley tp another
caught bis foot in a wheel and had his
leg torn off on the 83d Clarke was
the Cleveland ooanty republican can-
didate for shnrlff '
5
CafarriiCurcd
Blood Purified by Mood's reepe-
- rill and Health (a Good
“I was o sufferer from catarrh One ef
my neighbors advised me to take Heed’s
8arsapariUa and I did so A few bottler
purified my Mood and cured me 1 have
remained In good health ever since" Jas
T Adkins Athens vllle Illinois
Ilood’o Ocrccpcrilla
Is Amertos't Greatest Medicine - 81: els for IS
Mood'Q Pllle sure ell Uver Ills ts cents
essseeeeesMiM)eesM)(iisseesieeee
I -5
DIIOGOLATE
Celebrated for more than a
century aa a delicious nutri-
tious and flesh-forming bev-
' stage Has our well-known
YELLOW LABEL
on the front of every package
and our trade-mark
“La Bella Chocolatlere"
on the back
NONE OTH8R OBNUtNB
Made ealy by
WALTER BAKER & CO Ltd
DORCHESTER HASS
savaeusase tree
AeesisMss)seseeeeesesssssisMM
Mary Was a Mineralogist
A teacher in one of the local schools wss
instructing a class of small children in min-
eralogy the other day endeavoring to make
clear to their young mindfewhat a mineral
really ie Standing before them she began -in
her clear voice: “A mineral is an inor- '
ganic homogeneous substance of definite
or approximately definite chemical compo-
sition found in nature Do you understand
me? Come now you have all eeen minerals
And your mothers and fathers have told
you the names of them haven’t they! Of
course they have Now can any one of
you tell me the names of three mineral a?”
There was no response and she continued:
“Have not tome of you been out and seen
minerals on exhibition?” One little girl
raised her hand “I thought so Mary will
r-ame three minerals" Mary arose and
putting her hand behind her lisped:
'Apollinaria Vichy and seltzer"— Ch ica-
Chronicle - -Why Ho Did It ' 1
Aa yodng Hankinson looked furtively at
the girl in tbe pale blue dress talking in an
animated manner to young Spoonamore in
the cozy corner beyond tbe piano he bit bia
ut it was an accident ' ' ‘ 1
He waa trying to bite his mustache and it
wasn’t long enough — Chicago Tribune
Confused
"You went fishing with Miss Keedick yes-
terday didn’t you?”
"Yea”
“Catch anything?’’
“Well we came back engaged but I didn't
know whether I caught her or she caught
me" — Illustrated American
Worth Cenalderln
She— Humph 1 What has any member of
your family ever done to make your name
go ringing down the corridors of time?
He — Well my Unde John had 13 chil-
dren mostly boy — Cleveland Leader
Very cold very bad Neuralgia St Ja-
Very
bs Oil
co
very suro to cure
—————————— L
Of all the letters in the alphabet only t'
are O K — Golden Days
fiJASYGOING
PEOPLE
Tkoit who disregard
tarty indication t ef disease
The program of
catarrh In frequent-
ly gradual Chronic
catarrh' secures
ri pomc—lonwith-
ut out the knowl-
v edge of tte vie-1
tim
Ithu beoome
e Ico oommon to
NlTW’say “Bvery-
r A ' w body hue little -catarrh”thatmsay
jliieiy going people
fpayslightattention
to It Yet no elaae
f C of dlseasals so diffi-
a cult to shake off
I £ V' Many people well '
advanoed In years find themselves in
the toila ef catarrh Mr and Mrs
OollumofGlddinga Tex found help In
Pe-ru-nn Mr Collum’a letter follows:
Pt-m-na Mcdtcint CoH Columiut O
Dhah Sim: — “I think your Pe-ru-nn
ia the best medicine I ever tried for ca-
tarrh I have tried all the catarrh
medicines that I oould hear of and naan
of them did any good until I tried your
I and ny wife have both need the Pe-ru-nn
and Man-n-lln and we are abonft
well I am 70 years old and my wife
la 66 When we oonuneneed to take
your medicines we were not able to gee
after our work but now site eon tend
to her work and Z sea after my farm
Yon eon tut this publicly If you want
to”— A P Oolltun Giddlngs Tas
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Johnson, Jeremiah. Kildare Journal. (Kildare, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, December 2, 1898, newspaper, December 2, 1898; Kildare, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1817187/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.