The Advocate. (Woodward, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
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I
TIIE ADVOCATE.
fablUhrd KrMnjr of rnrli Mcfk *t WihmJw.M
« ounty N. okUl own
•y Tb Farm*;* find Hio«k (.rowers rilntlug
Alloc mion, rioj-riHoih
I c. rmcr. - T . rditor
THE TWO TERRITORIES.
CONGRESSIONAL AND
SUMMARY.
LOCAL
Vow in lirnrral of Oklnlioinn unci
lhe Indlnn 'I>rrll i7 pcrinlnlnar to
llir rule I'nvr an«l I la e llnl .Muii.
•I. \V. Wallccr, John ( rlsley unit
limopli Cowdcr, of Tecumsolt, were
liroujrlit to (iullirlo Tiietiilny mul lodg-
ed In jail, eharged with being loader*
■ >f a gaiiir <>f counterfeiters that have
'I'wo Outline Mercantile liuih( went
to lh« nail Mouilay. ,
llenrv littinuior of Seward left last
week iu> a missionary to Moroeco.
Four babies were birn in one town
•luring a storm lust week In Oklaho-
ma.
It Is said that the Choctaw road w ])
adopt the old survey east froiu Ok la
homu City.
The sulc of the reservation ut Okla-
homa City comes off on September ?ij
and continues three ti ays.
A new postoilice has lieen establish-
ed at Sofku, Creek Nation, and Win.
I', Hurton appointed postmaster.
r.The fair at Stillwater closed last
week. It was a success unil showed
evidences of Oklahoma's prosperity, gg
There is an urtielc about shooting
WILD EXCITEMENT IN UOTH
THE ARMY AND NAVY.
VICEROY LI HUNG CHANG BLAMED.
Hi" Kmysror llua .tnumait I'rraou.i)
« "UiiiMiiit of thr Army Mini tlx* or-
•la-riMt 1'renli Coii«rrl|iiiuu« Tlic
Fall f .Mrukilni Mitjr I i n««
a Itevulnllun - Tiie i.rnii
Inlu KiigHB<*iii«i«t.
lieen flooding tlio territory with spur- C"""' «l«ted Kingfisher going tho
iuiis coin. This makes ten members roum' of all the eastern news papers,
of the same gung now under arrest The man supposed to lie the mur-
und It is believed that in their ini- ilerer of Inkinish was captured by
prisoninent a dangerous gang is brok- Deputy Marshal Madsen, Thursday
cn entirely up. near Kingliahcr.
A rumor is current to the effect .lack Mosler, of Cleveland countv. at-
that a lynching took place at a small i tempted to break a mule to ride and
town about loo miles from tGuthrie was thrown twenty feet and killed at
called Lincoln. The 'supposed victim ; the tirst trial.
was I'erry Cook, leader of a band of .... . , , ,
horscthloves. He had aided in several u, X . "^temcnt of the rain-
raids of late and a posse came upon him " "kul,ouul N,!,,us lUat
in a cave, lie had in his ,Znfc,iu *onora'
London. Sept. — Iteport* from
China are that the defeats of the
Chinese army at I'ing Vang and tlio
navy in the N alii river have euused
trciHcnilous excitement In China, and
there
navy. Viceroy Li Hung Chang is
blamed by the emperor for the de-
feats, and Admiral Ting is likely to
bo disgraced. The emperor has de-
cided to ussumc personal com maud of
the army an 1 has ordered fresh con-
scriptions.
| gressive and flu di sleele. TI|.« Chi-
nese live too much in tho pa-d They
do not kuow their own power. China
is rich an I powerful, but she makes
| no use of her resources. I, for one,
! "Hi glad China does not rely oil her
i power, for she might cuune our West-
ern nations a great ileal of troublo
with her IO(),imii,ikiii people. I uut not
j surprised at tho iiuval victory. The
, .Inpaneaj h ive b_>en studying the art
of war for tho pa*t twenty years.
! China hrs simply been building ships,
•lust see what progress the .Inpanose
have made iu forty yean. I remem-
ber a story told uio by an o'.d naval
ofMcor, now dead, who visited the .lap-
I anese coast in an Aincri.-ati man-of-
war about forty years ago. At that
j time the .lapnrcsc were allowed to
I trade only with tho Dutch and to hold
communication with any one else
i meant death. The American ship foil
in with a licet of Japanese fishing
\ nud tho American oilicor triutl
to purchase one of tin .la pa no se hats
as a curiosity to take home, lie was
1 dually successful in persuading the
Japanese to part with his hat, but tlu
lish >rinan drew his Hn^cr across his
THE SANTA FE NOT AFTER
ANY MORE CORIN BANDITS,
CHIEF DETECTIYE KINNEY'S STORY.
lie Nrtyi Overfish! ittttl Ahrnn.
'July I'vriuiu Wnntcd for tli I
l'| IIi iiIim Tint Iiiforii rr
Hr;(«iil/.' l Hit* Vini
Not ImmUrd Any lirwHril
by tliu C'omp my.
\ r •
the last two'weeks " " " ",0 ri'lw,rt!4 of the Jupancso ad-
several stolen horses when found, and vancc on H'ljn and Meukden have
this so enraged the farmers that they A whole family by the name of ' aroused intense feeling. Tho capture
bung him without giving him a word "'ffc'inbothain was arrested a few of the latter place would be accepted
days ago. eli urged with conspiracy, throughout the empire as au omen
1 hey having tried to intimidate a man tlial the emperor is unworthy of
by the name of Cutwright and force
hint to leave the country.
About ten o'clock last Sunday night
to say.
The farmers of L and O counties
will Ik* supplied with all the seed
wheat they want to sow this season
by the Rock Island railroad company,
and the business men of I'erry and a murder was committed at .Waukom-
thc Santa I'c railroad are making ar- 's* Robert Powell, a recent arrival
raugcmenls to furnish every farmer in f''°m Texas, better known as "seven-
I'. 0 and Kcounties with all the wheat MP> shot and killed Win. Ividd. a car-
they ean sow at the closest cash prices, penter. They met on the streets and
The wheat will be delivered free of ',ru' some words. Powell drew his
freight and the money need not be 1 "if'shooter and shot Kidd three times
paid till nest September at sis per ,n t,ie abdomen.
cent per annum. A .,ueer circumstance has come to
News received at Outline from Stone- light in Oklahoma, where a father and
wall iu the Chickasaw nation, brings mother traded their daughter to a
information to the effect that Kin* voung farmer, who lived adjoining
lllue, the leader of the negro-Indian*, them, for two cows, with the nnder-
is in open rebellion. Last Saturday standing that lie should keep her two
the band, In'adcd by King lllue, swept years and if he did not like her at
down on the farm ofOeorge II. Traus, the etd of that time ho could return
l>ostmaster at Stonewall. Traus, a her to her parents. Siuee then the
white man and his squaw, were lead girl has given birth to a child, and it
froin the house and bound with rope |'s reported that he is going to return
and held prisoners. Neighbors found the girl to her parents.
Traus and his wife and rcleasd them.
is a wad panic iu both aruiy uml ! throat to signify that If it wore found
out ashore that he had trailed with an
Auicricau his head would bo cut off.
The Chinese, with all their power,
are bound to bo whipped. They arc
highly imitative anil i|iiitoIntelligent,
but their ship*, are no use to tlioui.
They are llk«j workingmeii who do
not know how to use their tools. In
this great naval victory education and
persistence on tlio part of on.' rati"
have told agniust the wealth nud
numbers on the part of the other."
BRICE AND FREE SILVER.
Tlii* Ohio Senator lltrlnrn III* I'arty
riHlfnriii M«mih Virtually Nothing;,
Piirsiii Kn., I'll.. Sspt. Senator
Calvin S. I trice, who passed through
last night on the way to New York
from the Ohio convention, said: '-The
insertion of t he free silver plank in tlio
platform of the Ohio state convention
does not tie my hands. I do not wish
_ to be construed as saying that the
day, says that the naval department j platform does not commit lawmakers
has received a dispatch from the ad- >f the state who may be elected under
InO,oCrHiUf'.-V" V'e;l1a|,.1x.,!SO,M,'"t 'Is provisions. I am only speaking for
xSn^'iwt.*"Joifi.":r',x 7~":<• '«•«• ••**•« «
warships and two fast transports ,jf'^'utions one of which favored
armed and converted into cruisers! free .silver. A majority of the people
sent in search of the enemy's fleet ""Ifht iiiiannuonsly say they favored
sighted it at noon thirty miles cast of . 11:1'Ifbut that expression might
divine protect ion and that such omens
inda;,sof distress are loo often ful-
filled with remarkable celerity. As
the politicians about the court are
perfectly aware of the couscipienees
that would follow tho fall of Meukden
it may be assumed that they would j
yield to almost any demands rather
than run the serious risk of such a
catastrophe.
dispatch from Tok o, dated t<
Other Indian citizens havo teen siiui-
liaj-ly dealt with und the eastern part
of the Chickasaw nation is in a state
of terror. King lllue, while an old
man, is strong physically and it natur-
al leader of surprising tact. He was
chosen king of the negro-Indians
shortly after the war and be exercises
an absolute tyranny over bis folloerws.
War seems to be again on in Cedar
county. In the past ten days four
Indians have been killed. It appears
that several Indians got too much tire
water aboard and started out to have
a good time. They went all through
the settlement, but from what could w'") was reported in the press of the
lie learned, no serious harm was done, country Sunday a having visited the
However, a great many were angered ' "°h outlaws, under the guidance of
• lluffalo Jones, who is working up
interest in the I'opulittt railroad,
which is projected to run from Port
Bolivar, near Oalveston. >to Chicago
and Manatoba. was in Perry last week,
j Vhe road is called the Otilf and Inter-
state, and Mr. Jones says that the
grading is done out of Port ISuIivar
seventy miles, and steel rails will be
put down within the nest sixty days.
Orading will begin iu Kansas in a few
days. Mr. Jones is president of a con-
struction com pa n v building the road,
and he is also a director.
Deputy Mar-dial Smith, of Ft. Smith
I In- island of llai Yiiug Pao. Tli.
Japanese pursued til.' enemy at full
speed. I'lie Chinese showed no dis-
position to ulter their course or to
give battle. The chase lasted a little
over an hour, the Japanese gaining.
Shortly after 1 o'clock the cruiser
Chi Yota got within range of the
Chinese flagship and opened tire upon
her and a running Hjrlit ensued. Sev-
eral ships on both sides were ipiieUlv
engaged. This lasted for two hoiir-i.
The i 'liinese transports entered I lie
N alu river safely during the
main engagement. which was
fought in the estuary ami
which lasted until nightfall. Three
Chinese warships were disabled and
sunk and another was set on Hre and
destroyed. Several others of tho
enem\ a waraiiipa were fterionaty tfatu-
nged In Hi.- hmvy lire. The Japan-
ese warships were s.. well handled
that not one was lost. Only two. tlie
Matsusima and the Ili Yoi. were dam-
aged to any great extent, but one of
commit one man «to Maliomadanism,
I while another mi^ht have a tendency
toward being a ltaptist. So it is with
j the free silver plank of the conven-
I lion. The vote by which it was
passed, a proportion of about five to
three, shows how the people over
there feel about it. When we say
I free silver we may mean a variety of
things.
" I'lie resolution will in noway alter
or affect my attitude in the senate. I
candidly believe tint if two-thirds of
the house and senate were elected on
silver platforms, so called, it would
not affect the country at nil. save to
create an apprehension on the part of
the people as to what would lie the
result of their legislation. I am in
favor of free silver under certain con-
ditions, but there is a kind of free sil-
ver which if continued iu operation
will bankrupta nation in time."
Toi'kka, Kan., Sept —J. J. Kin-
ney, chief of the secret service of the
Atchison, Topcka A Sant i I'c railroad
company, returned this morning from
Scotland county, Missouri, where ho
litis been operating with tu • locul
authorities in the Oorin train robbery
case, lie says Lincoln Ovcrtiuhl and
Charles A brains were indicted by a
spcciul grand jury Wednesday for
assault with intent to kill ICngiueer
Presentt and for train robbery. The
foreman of the grand jury failed to
sign the bill for train robbery, but the
I error was corrected by a proceeding
! before a justice of the peae •.
Kinney says OvcrHeld and Abrams
arc tlio only persons wanted for the
j holdup. There were two other per-
( sous in the conspiracy, but ono gave
I it up because he became suspicious of
McDaniels, the informant, an.I the
j other, a simple-minded and harmless
! sort of a fellow, was persuaded by J
McDaniels to abandon the enterprise.
Kinney denies that McDaniclsiorig-
inatc.l the plot. Ho say.-. Abrams and
, Overflcld approached McDaniels who i
at once sought the advice of A. J.
Daggs, a lawyer of Memphis. Daggs
1 advised McDaniels to inform the 1
, railroad and express authorities, and
1 the two went to Chicago and told the
story. Then Oeneral Manager Frey
was informed, and the case was
: placed in Kinney's hands. After the
1 plans of the conspirators had been
formed they elected McDaniels leader, j
Mc Danich. notified Kinney of tills, and !
I in a letter dated September 10, Kinney
instructed MeDanieli that lie must
not lie the leader, that It was not the
1 desire of the railroad or cxpre ■ , < ..u-
pany to lead men into the ciiii.'n >u
of crime, and he must |> i< cue of the
others forward. Aecor.l in vrU' Mc-
Daniels declined to act as leader an I
Abrams was chosen.
Kinney sa.s McDaniels was not
proi.ie"d s-,.ihk> or any other sum for j
exposiif/ 11 nspiracy. He will re- |
eeivc ii-ih . xpenses actually incurred, i
He dc-o i' - t McDaniels as "an all
round" m ill i.e has been a saloon
keeper, a deputy sheriff and a school ;
teacher.
THE COMMANDER A FICHTER.
caches
I
■Hull In I In- Chief!"
Till* It ti'ilf III* title <>r sn ol t konir Th# hsl-
rnirr m 1 ho in TiIiiiii|>Ii stlvaucM." The
I I'Ulillr, the ptvmi ami iIn* iiK'dlral
i > hiiiu thin rrlriiiu si riiici'lnlly a|>i>llcal>lr lo
11,i > 11 i'^'h stomni-h ll|||i-i , chief Hiiionf
\mcrh .iu ifiiusllri wud |>ivvental 1 Inr ma-
Uris, (MiiiUpsllon, dy«|ic|>«l , llvrr roniplr.lat,
tier <>u«ni'!i. 11 n<i ii I el h l<-t* |>, tlii'iimstit' twliiKi> ,
mill i lie IrollliH'* uioldi-nt lo ttdvnnrrd iik* u
in iil.xi unlvrrsnlly tcr-fiitiiiicil** a rrllubto touto
slid ii|<|iriliu r. Anslanitly inodtcine psrilou-
tinly k ii 11 ii tile to onii'rifeurlii* II bs* uo cipist.
'l he nervous, tbs IW"' t« seek its aid, sml tlio
lis|>|ilc>l. remit Is follow. 'I lie euiivstescenl,
lhe Iiifed und (lift liillrni derive iufliille lienrlll
from lit urn. Agidnsl Ills indilcnret nriinpuie
sir, bnd walrr. unaceuitoinod foud, overwork
mid rMiomiro It it s cemniie rotative.
A liuotl HUKKStllon.
j A Ocrmun oflieer who was over head"
and cars in debt said to a friend:
j "I owe so much money that I havo
got to do one or two dcspcruto tilings"
' "What arc they?"
I "I must either marry a woman with
! money or commit suicide. Which do
i you recommend'.'"
"Merry, by ull means. You will
i have plenty of time uml justification
for committing suicide afterward," rc-
' plied the friend.—Taminnny Times.
A Maan Trl«k.~*
| Friend—Well, Lliza, how do you like
I your husband'.'
Klixa -lie is a villan.
"All men arc; but what has ho
done.'-'
"Yon know he was a widower. Well,
I found out tliut all his love letters to
me wore copied verbatim from the ones
he wrote to his first wife when tlic.v
were courting."
"Well, I would'nt mind it. He will
never send you any more."—Tesas
Sift lugs.
Ti'iiiiiurary < litiiKe of l.otljcliiffi.
At Monte Carlo a gambler had won
the maximum at "rouge ct noir" three
times in succession.
"There's ti fellow running off with a
splendid haul of bank notes!" said a
spec tutor.
"Oh!" carelessly interjected the
coupler, "that makes no difference to
the bank. It is merely u bit of out
money sleeping out for the night!" -
Lo Petit Xicois
At The Uinciter's.
"Why did you put up that large mir-
ror near the door'.'"
"To prevent 'servaut girls from
watching the scales." Flicgeude Itla.t-
• lo— 11 us your father been vaccinated
yet'.'"
She— No: hcisgoiug to be tomorrow,
lie—Tell him to have it done on tho
foot.—N. Y. Sun.
The Testimonials
I opullHl Orator In Trouble.
Wichita, Kan., Sept. -j.'.—W.
S.
the armed transports was bad I v crip- ! Hebron, ex-postmaster of Kinsley,
at the wiy they did and organized
party to hunt them up. Albert Jack-
son was one of the victims, lie was
sick in bed when they came to his
house, dragged hiin out of the bed and
into his yard, and shot him about tiftv
the sweetheart of one of the band, to
persuade Cook to ijuit his outlawry,
, passed through Muskogee, cn route
west, again Tuesday, lie procured a
license from the clerk of the court
at Muskogee for the marriage of the
times. This promiscuous bushwhack- ''andit chief, liill Cook, to Miss Mur-
ing and killing all over this nation is | tha Pullman, of Sapulpa. Their ages
vi hat is giving it a bad name abroad. were registered in the clerk's otJice as
and is a thing that will eventually !,ml 1 ('ook is a Cherokee, but
break up the tribal government. It is his sweetheart is a white girl, as is
sheer nonsense for the Indians to ask j evidenced by a I'nited States marriage
to be allowed to retain their present ,IC4;I1M: being required.
autonomy and then to continue tlii
lawlessness "iriong themselves
News received at Minco of a terrible
murder by outlaws of an Indian nam-
ed In-ki-oish. Dr. T. J. Strum, who
lives among the Caddos on Cobb creek,
tel!s the story. There is a formidable
band of outlaws whose rendezvous is
in the Wichita mountains ami who
prey upon the settlers almost nightly.
The agent sent a youug Caddo Indian
Quite a sensation was caused at policeman, In-ki-nish, without uni-
1 crry last week when Mrs Annie Mc- form, to ferret out the hilling place of
P,?t,Uon l°her these outlaws. They discovered that
they hail been tracked and decided t<<
Men are shot down without
any provocation at all, sometimes: and
again, with the slightest provocation,
they are dragged from their homes '
and shot to pieces. They seem to
have had their old savage nature re-
vived, and have lost all their civiliza-
tion.
husband's petition for divorce. Dnn-
can C. McKinnon filed suit against his
wife on July SI, and personal service
was obtained on Mrs. McKinnon in
Chicago, where McKinnon had taken
his wife to enter their daughter
in college. Mrs.
not aware that
had any intentions to aban- j became separated from his compan-
donher till she received service. Mo- 'ons ar,<l rot'B into a canyon, following
Kinuon took his wife and daughter tD some deer tracks. He was seized by irrij u4 jiui)
Chicago a year ago last August and tllc outlaws who were laying for him, own preparation for the use of the
revenge themselves on the In-ki-nish
family. Wednesday, the father of
this young man, the elder Iu-ki nish,
and some companions were out hunt-
McKinnon was '"g deer in his pasture on a little
lies husband stream called Lake creek. In-ki-nish
pled and put out .if action. The ad-
miral does not mention the number
of killed or wounded, but a private
telegram suvs that twenty-two Jap-
anese officers and men were killed
anil forty-six wounded, and another
| private dispatch states that the total
casualties on the Japanese side did
not exceed 100. The news of the
Japanese victory caused great re-
joicing in Tokio. and a war loan has
been subscribed for to three times
, tiie amount desired.
ADVICES AT WASHINGTON.
The .Japanese Minister Receive* Official
Mesnage* from HIk Government.
Washington-, Sept. 2:.' —Tho Japan-
ese minlater here received an oflicial
cable message froin the Tokio govern-
ment to-day confirming the reports
that the Japanese had lost no ships
ut the naval battle off Yalu and brief-
ly relating the circumstanc >s of the
battle as given in the earlier unofli-
cial reports. It was added tnat the
empress of Japan, as chief patroness
of the Red Cro.^s society in that coun-
try. was personally engage 1 daily
with her court ladies in preparing
bandages, lints etc., for the wounded
ill the recent battles of Ping Yang I
and Yalu. The dispatch places tho
< hi nose loss at Yalu at four vessels
sunk and one burned.
'1 he Japanese officials here say that
the empress secured the introduction 1
of the lied Cross in Japan about
twelve years ago. When the Kago-
slnina war broke out in isrr she sent
an immense quantity of lint of her
then came immediately to the open- iln<' was to il tree and shot. Six
ing of the Cherokee Strip and obtain- ■'•hots were fired into him, and then he
ed a claim nest to his wife's niecc. wah taken to a swamp an 1 thrown in
When Mrs. McKinnon got news that In this condition was he found a day
her husband was suing for divorce : or two !lftcr thc tragedy by the ln-
she came here at once and took posses- dians and whites of that section who ^
sion of her husband s farm and resi- kncw not what had happened to In-ki- ! charitable and
deuce, and asked the district court for I nis1' "ntil his body was found. A
$10,000 alimony. She also filed a I po^e was organized and gave pursuit.
crosspetition charging her husband 'hey followed the trail across the
' river, around in the bottoms ou the
north side, and discovered that the
gang had simply doubled on theii
track, rccrosscd the Canadian and
were again back in the reservation. It
is evident that the outlaws were mak-
with an infidelity at different places
in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and
especially with her niece, a well-
known belle from Wichita, Kansas.
McKinnon is worth several thousand
dollars, anil is the general western
agent for the New York Life Insur- i f°' some hiding place in the Wicli-
unco company, lie i.s well-known iu 'ta mountains, in the Kiowa or Coin-
Kansas und Texas. manclie country
wounded soldiers. Ilcr work during
the war is in line with that with
which she has been identified in
peaceful times. She practice.-, silk
culture iu her house in order to share
in the labors of the poor silk workers
of Japan. She is also the head of the
charitable and educational move-
ments. the liirls' Normal school, the
Cirls] High school and the Tokio
Charitable hospital.
Secretary Herbert to-day ivceived a
brief cablegram from I'nited States
Minister Dun at Tokio. Japan, con-
firming tho reports of the naval en-
gagement at the mouth of the Yalu
river. Tiie message gives no details
of the engagement, but says gener-
ally that tiie Japanese forces were
victorious.
Secretary Herbert has decided to
' send no naval attache t<> Japan <>r
was to-day sentenced in the I'nited
States court to eighteen months in
tli.' penitentiary au I fined S'i(i: for
embczzl ng government funis. His
sentence had bicn suspended to givn
him a chance to reimburse the gov-
ernment, and he told the court that
he hail been trying to do this by
making speeches for the Populi-t- -in
the silver question. .1 tidge WilIi;iins
told him that making political
1 speeches was a poor way to cam
money.
Old Kuiployees to He Removed.
; WAsiiiNiiTox, Sept. "0. — It was ru-
mored at the treasury department to-
day that Secretary Carlisle would
shortly call for the resignations of
t.eorge If. 1'artlctt ami Thomas J.
Ilobbs. disbursing agents N.> com-
plaints have been made so far as can
be learned against them in their
ottleial capacity. Mr. Ilobbs has been
in the department thirty, and Mr.
liartlctt twenty years. They are
I both Republicans.
Hill Fight Tax Mincers.
Pkinckton, Ky.. Sept. A fresh
j shipment of firearms has been made
, to I'nion county to arm the tax-
payers of Lindell and Caseyvillo i
precincts who are resisting the eol-
! lection of tho railroad tax. About
i 700 are now armed with Winchesters
i and dynamite, and are awaiting the
arrival of Collector Blackwell and
: his 100 armed deputies.
Assasilnnted by Moonshiners.
IltttsToi,. Tenn., Sept. - James
! Darey, a general merchandise dealer
I of White Top mountain, was assassin-
l atcd last night by unknown men who
called him to his door and riddled him
with bullets. It is stated that lie was
killed by moonshiners whose distiller-
ies had been raided by revenue otlicers
on his information.
Dismissed I- Disgrace.
CiiK'.uio, Sept. -I rivate cable- 1
grams received here from Vienna an-
nounced that Dr. Anton von I'alits-
ehek. late consul general to the j
I nit ,'d States, lias been dismissed iu i
disgrace from the consular service of
the Austro-llungarian empire for I
gross frauds.
Mel'alts of llie Vnllejo .\ vy V^r.l
a I'ontriii'tor a I.cimuji.
\ m.i.k.io, Cal,,Scpt. Commander
McCalla, naval eqiiipiueut oliieer at
Mare island navy yard, an I Kolu-rt
Core, a eontrncior, quarreled over the
contract for supplying hay, the price
named iu the bill being s;i. 10 a ton,
while McCalla claimed that Core was
supplying civilians of Vuiiejo with
hay at ss a ton. Core informed Mc-
• alia thai lie was no gentleman and
also said some tli ing about the ejui-
inander's uniform being a shield
against personal chastisement.
The commander took off his coat
and castinir it upon the floor, locked
the door and secreted the key. (lore j
pounded on the door and cried for
help anil as no assistance catn*, be-
gan to run around the room, over-
turning* chairs and furniture, while
the commander gave chase. Core
finally put his shoulder to the door
and burst it open and ran for his life.
Official attention will bj drawn to
(lore's narrative.
mil purchased, lior aro they written up In our
..tlire, nor are th««y from our omploves. Tliev «r>
facts from truthful people, proving, as surely us
roil by * ' '
Mood's «««•
1 £ parilla
Cures
, Hood's Pills euro n.'insca, sick headache,
ladijjoslicu, btliousiic-s. Sold by all druggists.
COOK BOOK
]>e Sure to Get
Hood's
^FREE !-%-
rnots ILLU&TPflTBD.
Onci>f t! f LnrtfO.Ht find Bo?t C <iok-
ItotiKS |uiblUlip.l. Mailed in fxchange
for 20 Larg« Lion head* cut frr>m I.Ion
("«ifTno wrnpiHT-, and a 2-fvnt ^(Hinp.
NVrlio 'ttr list of our other fine Pre-
mitiiu-. woolson Spics Co.
t •' Huron St.. Tol*j>o Ohio.
PAPER "Hh UMK) ad«.t
m Mili:iHU!a l! l. ef rirf IhhiIi*. aoteill**. < ic , ncllrtj
tree. CUNNiL'S MONTHLY, Toledo. Ohio.
F|Ef4SiOS««S^
"Succossfuiiy Prosecutes Claims.
t^aro PrliiClpnl Examiner u.s. Pension Bureau.
'J yr.i i u >a<«t wmi1, ]•'< atljudicatiiixclaiiua, attj siucc.
THANKFUL FOR A SENTENCE.
uiaijctjc' eountrv. , secretary Ji( rucrt lias to * MiMourl raciflc Kmpioyc* Fired.
sii-ikI uo naval attache to Japan or \ l.irri.n Uock, Ark., Sept. Sineo
se thieves, Johnny i ''as' Monday uig'lit North Knid was ' • bina as was fir~t contemplated, be- i Saturday the Missouri Pacific is said
n, were arrested ! visited by a very destructive Hre which a V1"^' that the risk would be too to have diseharired fourteen firemen
r. The boys arc caused a f^reat loss to the business j a ^c,:l11, althouirh and six engineers at tips end of tho
•s old. and have a portion of the city, and left a cooil t|lc n.,v!|] officers' "" CClS aill0no I line and eijfht or t.-n fiieui ti at Van
in their possession. , 'nany business men without a dollar, i : Hnren on the charge of being i in pi i-
Two youthful horse
and Jackson liaston,
east of I'erry Sunday.
nine and eleven >ears
dozen stolen horses in their possession.
The boys confessed their crime and About 500 Cheyenne Indians are in
-a, Ley money W lo |
pay their annual visit to the Otoe I c,u„Kir or ti.,- n«r i„ the
(ieorge Ward, n Tecumseh printer. ^ervation. '1 hey held a powpow, and \,.,v Vo„Ki Sept .... _|£ear Admiral
who married a compositor named .Miss bl" fun iln'1 ^'ar dance. Anion# Klchard W. Meade, who is a great ail-
admiral meade's views.
eated in the recent stri
f sympathy with it.
i uipli-
:e or express-
Taplcv. has been
charge of bigamy.
Secretary I.owe, of
years old last Wednes
arrested on the
(oithrie, was au
day.
their numbers are the celebrated old
warriors, Yellow Dog. White Hear and
lied Moon, who have participated in
all the numerous Indian outbreaks
iu the early 70s.
mircr of the Japanese as a race, said
last ni^ht: "In the contcst ill the
hast the Japanese appear to have the
upper hand. The Japanese aro the
most skillful people. They arc pro-
Tiie ilitilro Monumant He-Krccfe<l.
Nl;w Viiiik, Sept. After havinif
been blown up with dynamite on two
occasions the monument erected to
the memory of Major John Andre by
| Cyrus W. Meld in 1.80", at Tnppan, N.
V, on Andre hill, has been voluutu-
| rily replaced on its base by the people
j of the village.
l ire ISilif l.osrsrilii l.eli l iVf Vein's in
I rUon mi l Is i.id of It.
Kansas t'n v, Mo., Sept. -Francis
M. Loggsin. the solf-confesse.i fire
bug, who during the last thirty years
has destroyed hundreds of thousands
of dollars worth of property all over
the Tinted States, pleaded guilty in
the criminal court to-day to setting
tire to the yard i of the Kansas I'ity
I,umber company on the night of Au-
gust 11">. lie was sentenced to five
year.-, iu the penitentiary at Jefferson
City, the full limit of the law. and
when Judge Wofford passed sentence
he replied solemnly and with evident
sincerity: "Thank you, sir. I am
very much obliged to* you."
< IttimA Of liHIimil 1'opill f* t4,
Topkka, Kan., Sept. -Xotwith-
standing the growing confidence of
the Itcpnblicans, the l'opulists eantin-
iie to claim that they havo made gains
since the election of 1 s;r,'. To-day
Treasurer of State lliddle said that
every poll received from the county
: central committees showed a y'ain. in
i his county (I In tier) which the llepub-
i licans carried in IS'.HI, the poll showed
' a gain of UK) from the Republicans
I since IS'i:t and a loss of six l'opulists.
! Of the 100 Democrats in the county,
. '.'7.'. would vote the I'opulist ticket.
1 lie estimates that of the ICepublican
| vote in the state in,imo will be Demo-
crats.
More llleyrlo llocorils llroken.
Wai.tiiam, Mass.. Sept. —Three
world's bicycles records were lowered l
on the Waltham track this morning, j
John S. Johnson making a half mile I
in I '.'-."i seconds, Mavo and Sanders
lowering the world's quarter tanilem |
record to :.'ii t-.", seconds and llarvy
Ilavidsoii of Toronto milking a quar- !
ter unpaced in -is seconds.
Ortoroon« I'ielit to the Dentil.
Swift, Ala, Sept. Kdinonia
Anderson and Irene Washington, two
octoroons, fought to the death last
night with knives about a white man,
Hen Olson. The Washington woman
died from twenty-one stab wounds
The Anderson woman then stabbed
herself to the heart.
RLY'S CREAM BALM CURES
PRICE 50CENTS, ALL DRUGGISTS
SPECULATE
W lu iit now ut Ihrt l.nweat I*rice of the con-
tiny. (V rn crop nearly ruinoil. l.fKV) bushels
run h# mi ti" murjrln. trivlne you lhe
/♦ ! « Jit «>f Mil I lie Advance, s;uw asifboutrht
i' >i t Soinl for our frn? 1-ooklct "How to
Ti-smII- t . I VAN WINKI.i; & CO..
I % oo in 43, !i.'H La Salle St., Chicago.
mysr~r?wtff cawnot see how you oc
^ ,3 «ire it amd pay FREIGHT-
<">r 2 drawer walnut or oak !■•
^ ^lnfrr«#«viaf marine .
TTWw fitidy lioiahrd, nli kel |>Ui«d,adap(#d to llirbl
nn^ 1 '*rv worlli C"«rant«c.l for 10 Toarti with
< fc/ jn Anlenallf B«l l/la M lndrr,^-lf Tkp*adlaf Tylin
/ •" Sbiii Hi*, Scir.Srlllnp Nrnllr ind a cmmlili
_ 4 I'M of Ai iarbarnlfti iii|if>rd auf wh rr on
HO Day'a Trial, No m«>ii#r rnjnirtd in advance.
": • 0 now World'a Fair Medal awarded tnachloa arid atlaih-
inrnts. U'lr f" m fart ury ord a«v« d«al«r'a and afent'a or eft la.
f^npp C ul (hit Out nn-l nd In-day for inarlunf or larye frra
• flr.C « r.taloffce, .h and Ollmrara of Ih* U'orld'a Fair.
oxfybo mfs. co. 312 wrtwh Av . chicago,!!!,
Mock! 1B31
.22
Tlio < Ailbi*e rlile n-"« rii« JCJ Riiort und i«riui
flr". nna .SQshort antl loug Coil's cnnt*T lire.
IN rite formtaloffue* to
Ms Hsrlia Fire Arms r«., l?||ailK|
_ Kew 11. Cu, ii lltfflnlinvyi|||
mailed; "FREE
^ to any btrmrr or Farmer'. Wife
' Cjp to Date Dairying•
containing f„1l in>m,< tlon liow to secure
Higher Cirude Products, mako
i wnl'uW BETTER PRICE
HIHIIE HOTTER ■
' ",,h Less Labor ert Hore Money
Reviewing .ind < i-.injr in aprictlealm"!.',.. r'. .
T« NORMtNDY !r«ncH) SYSTEM.
Danism dairy system
Elgin Separator System
ii have hrr::j ht prosperity and ease to tiie dairy farmer.
i-'ritc f-r i!«is A'.iluabto Infnrmatlon. >failcrl FRnHon
KIiHI) kik! of nrii.-Ii'..,r,n1{ Ijiuicii
■ r. lespinasse.
1 ;... \ r.,1,,,,,1 ,n ,v 24aW.Ur.tST.
Illmoit luiry Ai. u|,on«, CMICAftO
i^siva
. wills wrttst AliTLSb VAILS. .
| uaat l uug'j byrup. Ta.-ni (Ih.kJ. Uae V
la tloi'*. 8«>id by nruggian
—■
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Price, I. C. The Advocate. (Woodward, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1894, newspaper, September 28, 1894; Woodward, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184048/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.