The Perkins Bee (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
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nol ur pipm-i 1I1* ind'an «<• a> >
Ihpm ia ruiiiiini ib*mMl«**|u Unwu*
buwrl««>, waadirriny pa upem.
Wf lapf
IllVtluf
OiiR of tho Midwinter fair ^uardi,
having behaved in a disorderly man-
ner down town, was arrosted and
fainted from the tkoolc; The tender-
hearted guard soem* to have mis-
taken his calling. There Is some-
thing painfully incongruous in tho
apeotaole of such a gentlo naturo
harnessod to a sword. Ho should bo
a flower girl.
In a region cliiofly famous for hav-
ing supplied a rhyme for ••hymn
book, too," a French flying column
|has suffered the fate of ccrtain un-
fortunate Englishmen in Matabolo
land, The French havo beon play-
ing jlnco in various parts of tho
Eastern world of latn, and must ox-
peet an occasional reminder even at
.Tlmbuotoo that that sort of conduct
has possible drawbacks.
ProfessorCadiot,a French veterin-
arian, Is authority for tho statoment
that dogs often spread tho discaso
of consumption, that ho had held
many post-mortem examinations of
dogB supposed to have died of cancer
and In every case found that tuber-
culosis was the cause of death. Dr.
Cadiot insists that pooplo who have
infectod dogs about them are almost
aure to sooner or later contract the
disease.
The Chicago police are evidently
wrong in saying that Mullaney. the
man who robbed the poor box in St
Patrick's cathedral, is one of the
cleverest "crooks" in the town. No
self-respecting "crook" would bo
guilty of such potty moanriess; it is
a depth to which he would not de-
scend. The soul of a poor "box thiof
would rattle around in a mustard
seed like a parched pea in a t.adder,
and his intellect would be lost on the
yoint of a cambric needle.
Siberian atrocity writers havo
Mover given to the world stories half
ao horrible as the official report' of
the czar's investigators of the Rus-
sian convict settlement on the island
of Saghalien. The very fact that the
Russian authorities have allowed
,VOrtions of the report to become
public shows that but a small pro-
portion of the horrors have been de-
scribed. But such facta as have come
out have added yei more blackness
to the already frightful record of tbe
of the White czar.
tatyli Mil «•«-( fuitoainj i« * 11*1 el
lit |n«»iMt|iii«vi it A9wfki
la l*il !•:«. -*«• Mlalal -
i« ' vami »■**! ivnonii • i*:t *wM *i
U<i 1 :« ihroatl ito Ifctrk " l*W "aa
I>imi Will" i-a ll«..i Kirk ihm. "a
K>-«l « km*».I l«ai. IMboUr " IH. In
»|..i« a i " i*' "tb* 1114111, •>! 1 i«ih<«
Him in -llirnii •• rp.->a«i> *ail r*
artitoa lar l«arr«M llirroil 1**". * An
*r<hv." |.n»i<i««->l «Mia 10 *am» »»»r a*
• l'..ul I. iuur M'. -A Ni.l.l- Ko/iw " IM.
• An Ar -Mil Kaa»a." IWI. UiloMl Tom '
I**-**, Muwr Mail "
Tho inr«>«r«l ••twrailoa of !!»•• double *iw«
Wllh *hlc| lha Ma !l»mi S.|i«r- ih"jl»r *u
ecjul|>ril a** Ma. <■ >>•'• (lr-1 n i"<iium«n<tallon
m r lli nl»i> ln».-ii. 1 iim ofrh«.
Ira cuiuia »n l Ifolii u.-ch ir iiUatperl-
1110 In I'lorlrlrlly ott-nluallv |>ul Mnckajre nn
new >«'trm ol *.'eiile ie:>r -M-nialloii Thta
*v*lein i» lli.i 1 now rslilhllrtl ui ibo Hrenllor-
lum li> Cblea.o. ami in» III liiiisj Speclsinrlum
mx» <]c*!|tnoU lo mivomnmilate II
FATAL lll.t'MIKII »>' IHICTORA.
I'nhlUhcr Munro IMrn from the KITrcl*
ut *n l'nn«>rr*aarjr llprrallon.
Xr.W Yiikk, Feb. 27. —Norman L.
Munro. thv publisher of the Family
Story l'aper. Fireside ('.oiupanion and
other story papars, died Saturday
night. Mr. Munro had undergone an
operation for appendicitis, but it was
afterward fountl that tho patient was
not suffering from the disease, and
that the operation was not necessary.
Heart failure is given as the immedi-
ate cause of death.
hi Strait Dead.
El. Paso, Tex.. Feb. 27.—Just as the
Mexican Central train arrived here
yesterday morning at 8 o'clock a pas-
senger, ex-Congressman Major 11. II.
Strait, who for twelve years repre-
sented Minnesota in the lower house
at Washington, breathed his last, lie
was a pioneer of Minnesota.
SATOLLI'S MISSION.
Cau*tl<i ComnipntH of Itrv. MariUon C.
1'etcrn 011 tlio School Question.
New York, Feb. 20.—Kev. Madison
C. Peters, in his sermon last night at
the Bloomingdale Reformed church,
said: "Sato ll's cautious concessions
on the school question, made when he
first arrived here, won hiin the good
will of the American people. Hut he
has shown himself to be a man of
man3r masks. If Americans need any
outside aid in settling her educational
problem they would prefer an ambas-
sador from a land, if it can be
found, where the standard of educa-
tion is higher than it is in the United
States. It is an insult to American in-
telligence to have a man sent here to
dietate in reference to our schools who
can not speak our language and who
comes from a nation where at least
seventy out of 100 persons cannot
neither read nor write. If Americans
still cherish the spirit of 177ft, Satolli
would be placed in a pneumatic gun
of solid American sentiment and tired
to Italy forthwith."
nVdiitolaf night three robber*. They
are Tom Wynn. Tom Jeffrrwta and
I'rarce Jelfpraon. Thursday n'ghl the
Klore and poet oltlee at l.umbea, femt-
. noli* nation, of wlileh John Mirk* wa*
|ue*t ion of hi* right to draw salary J proprietor, was robltcd. The robber*
1 aa a member of eongrea* and a* soured about f|.\o In money ami a
;uantlty of tobacco and cigar*. After
TWO tALARICft ron SICKLES.
iMttotor Miaaar ll-Ma Tlal Ha l aw
Ito Mb «.*«ar*l aa4 «'«**|ri<**n*aa.
W'AaniKttToM, Feb. M. —Second Comp-
troller Man»ur ut the treaaury depart-
ment t.-day decided lo favor of
tieneril IX K. Sickle* of New York
the <|
both aa a member of eongreas
a retired officer.
The effect of the declalon la that
congrea-. by awearing In tieneral
Sirklea when it knew by the common
report that he waa an armv officer on
the retired liat. has decided that he
can be a member of congrcss at tho
same time that he ia • retired army of-
(leer and hence he can draw two sal*
«*!<*• .4—
THE QUEEN NERVOUS.
Thr Course of Lord HalUbtujr Causing Ml»-
glvlnfi* to the Bojal Family.
loxdo:;, Feb. 20.—The Chronicle
aays that lioth tho queen and prince
of Wales are strongly and even nerv-
ously opposed to Lord Salisbury's at-
titude both in regard to the local gov-
ernment and the employers' liability
bills. *
Tho Chronicle adds that tho reign-
ing family has always had a keen and
pertinent scnce of its own interests
and it is not the first time that it has
exerted its influence to prevent peers
from entering into a conflict which
might end in a total readjustment of
the constitution.
SWEPT BY A CYCLONE.
Ifrlhr
I he | **r* indwr thr r»a«4Ml of T
Lilly, aad irw ia aearvb uf ib« lb*l-
loa* Tha {letitia* wrrv *w#a wllh>a
tobl
kwvra mllra of l urt Mtytply a 'r« *im
»lf». and were trtimni •'ard U<
vieielty. Idlly lid hi* poaw atartrd
moralog
them. They are l.iealed
rreek twelve mllea from bwre. and
tbr> bird* are not flown there la liable
to bo • battle. Hill Halton and l>yua-
mite were the onea *een.
Marshal Elliott took
of lh>
»»*•»» caring «
reasily- ll la milt MlijfwlfJ ai th
dcparimaal Ibii ii teaal !»,«»*' «**»«
f l.'ajri.uuu r»a Ito kMHfwl fl»T thr («»
rrnuirni ibla wijr lak'Og ll frum ib
lo lo»k" for | ho^eareadera, who *11 b*al will .rc
relv* tbe land rut ere I by a m »rl,'j;
to the gotrrnmrni «>' ll»e ai»orl |mj
•neill var-wly. ll l» aimpiy a «<
selling out lb« pub'le il<itn >l'i t»» th
I hi {{heat bidder instead of girimr tfr
! Iinmea or lurnln^ the land o*.-r i«» lb
lo Eufaula ! srtllera at a nominal price It i> n
Cblmary
The Island of Maarlttu* Laid Waste—
Fifty People Killed on a Train.
London, Feb. 86.—A dispatch from
Port Louis, Mauritius, reports that a
cyclone swept the island yesterday,
doing almost incalcuable damage to
property and killing many persons.
A crowded railway train was blown
from the track and rolled down an
embankment killing fifty persons and
injuring many, others.
SENATOR VANCE VERY ILL.
The Korth Carolina Statesman Growing
Worse—No Hope of Recovery.
Raleigh, N. C., Feb. 36.—Private ad-
vices received here from Florida,
where Senator Vance has been for
several weeks for his health, are to
the effect that the senator grows
worse daily and that small hopes are
entertained of his recovery.
BEATEN BY A POLICEMAN.
Ir true that the City of Para was
prevented by the greed and rancor of
Pacific Mail from sailing to tlTe res-
cue of tbe crew of the Kear*arge
.there will bo a general desire to with-
dray all disparaging remarks that
have been made concerning tbi* cor-
poration. They will seen §0 far too
mild to he appropriate aa to be little
■pliatontar/ compared
Mt
Cleveland on a Dnrk Hunt.
WA8H1.vc.ton, Feb. 27.—The snow
was falling thick and fast, the White
house grounds were under a mantle of
about six inches, and the wind was
driving the flakes under the umbrellas
and down the necks of the few persons
who were compelled to traverse the
streets last evening, when the White
house carriage drove up to the Kxecn-
tive mansion and President Cleveland
and two associates started on their
second pli saure trip down the I'ntomae
river.
The president's companions are
Secretary tiresham and Captain Rob-
lav D. Kvanv secretary of the light-
house boar. I.
l:nM» T rsfr^i
Ottawa. Kan.. FcK
little Iona of |*rine«
sooth of here, was thr.
of excitement laat nigi
ate attenpt at a <i<n
which one Harrv 11*11.
the Nathi 111 Kansas
will he aahsti- I «o**<M Mrs. I^edv *i4n
Hon ought to j tat* pwtanvr «f that pise
Iaaevtiatolr aewt a lotlrt
through h» bra.a aad M
In Kansas.
IT. —The quiet
town ten miles
« n into a fewer
it by a despi r-
hle tragedy, ia
a aeetioo hand
railway.
» r4 the
. and in*-
'—pbiar
Councilman Drake of Perry, Ok., FataUy
Injured by Asstatant Chief Thomas.
Pkrkt, Ok., Feb. 86.—Lauren Drake,
member of the city council, attacked
the police in the council meeting last
night and made i^tne reflections on
Assistant Chief Heck Thomas. The
council met again this morning and
Drake made more charges.
About noon Drake and Thomas met
and Thomas beat Drake fatally with
his club.
Gave the Baby .Morphine by Mistake.
Chiixk-othb, Mo.. Feb. 26.—Mrs.
fticbard Whitesides. a farmer's wife,
gave her infant child morphine
through mistake last night and killed
it.
NEWS NOTES.
Attorney General Ellia. State Secre
tary Joachim. State Treasurer Ham-
hitzer. land Commissioner Berry and
three clerks of the canvassing board
have been indicted as a resnlt of m
investigation of the Michigan salary
grab frauds.
Six of the twelTe prisoners charred
with conspiracy against the life of
Eaprmr Francis J•'— i>h were sen-
tenced to loog terms of iaap riaa ntent.
A broken axle no the Math-hovad
local (olcnibM*. Hocking Valley aad
Toled**. ditched six ear* atar V]
ajor-d
es*arv to havw some tegialatlou b fore
till* can be done.
ll ia ln»i»icd by the commissioner of
the general laud oflfol and by the IM»
retary of the Interior that they will
l>e able to put 1 bill through congress
that will empower them to do just
what they have determined they
»f t n«p4 a ft- . |*to«^
•kaiwum.
ll M W
sai km -*i T**"- '"■* f" * *"
»11 a mwmhv * a*to I "** nam*i to a a**e
IM|M,ltoK«a"a« LhdlpitoWM
|Xto> «aiato l»Ml
m aa 1 uiM*wwab«li atIfy.tp
ftwU. aad imo11* to ba|«w' * m ***** f
Afia# the f»eel Ooeo.
I i#*a aaal Btoaa I n«* am h«ase *a wa®
MIM^MllWMllMd IMilkUtotwb
Hood's^Cures
to d wkMh to •%*<»» '"WitkU M
CSUkiJnTi* mwR •*•. aM I
mn ibjota* *1 n*ab*l*aj. L MPJJJji
fZtolU^to UtoaimlwA
Mood'i Mi *«i Mod?* »d m<
!|| (aaltjl. sill III 1* -T *1»-^
00000
securing the booty they went through ' would llko to do In opening this res<-r-
the old form of marching the proprie- ration to settlement Very soon tho
tor and clerk about a mile (uto the I bill giving tbeiu the power to curry
timber and tilling them to return. He- ; out this plan will be introduced in tho
fore letting them go the robbers told i house by McKee. chairman of tho
I I* a* m ft l« as »• tvoma t It** u» iiia friinrr iKnl 1 ... 2 * * .... ...a I.I Im I,.** I..
them they wore the same gung that
robbed llrown llros. some months ago.
Klliott organized a |>osse and started
lu pursuit. They were tracked sev-
eral miles and finally captured with-
out any shooting, l'he officers think
they have the leaders of a gang of
rogues that have been terrorizing that
part of the country for some time.
They will be taken to Fort Smith and
lodged in jail.
I. N. Terrell, the speaker of the first
Oklahoma legislature, who killed
(ieorge Kmbrec at the door of the land
office in tiuthrie, is again at liberty.
Terrell was indicted at Guthrie, but
taken to Payne county for trial. The
first trial resulted in a disagreement
of the jury, one juror being after-
wards arrested lor being bribed. A
second trial resulted in a conviction
with a sentence to the penitentiary
for life, and Terrell has been in the
penitentiary a number of months,
when a decision of the supreme court
that a term of court where the judge
was not present the first day was ille-
gal, gave hiin another chance and he
was brought back to jail at Stillwater.
Another change of venue was given
him to Chandler, and there the judge
has just decided that he has never
been legally tried, and the case goes
back to * le beginning and he must be
reindicted by a Logan coxmty jury. He
is noW ovit with his attorney hunting
bail. This case has already cost the
people of Logan county over $7,000.
The city of Perry has established a
city cemetery and appropriated a suf-
ficient amount to provide therefor.
This was done by a special election
held Tuesday last.
The rejection by the representatives
of the five tribes of the Indian Terri-
t >ry, of the propositions submitted by
the Dawes commission looking to
statehood for the whole territory
makes necessary s change of program
on the statehood question. Either sin-
gle statehood will have to be aban-
doned and Oklahoma proceed on its
own account, or else congress will
have to ignore the claims of tho Indi-
ans, which they assert under alleged
treaty rights, and force them into
terms—allotment of lands in severalty
and full citizenship under the general
government. If the latter, it will un-
avoidably delay final action, both on
the part of congress and of the terri-
tory for at least another year. As for
Oklahoma, if the citizens of that ter-
ritory desire statehood without delay
and on their own account, this last ac-
tion of the Indians may serve to facil-
itate the matter, if promptly and ju-
diciously used by the- representatives
of the territory at Washington, in pre- I
congi
I'nless prompt action is taken the
cl an -es are that Oklahoma will re-
main a territory indefinitely.
Orer 900 applications for school
leases were received by (tovcrnor Ren-
frow on Monday.
The contract for furnishing postage
house committee on public lull Is, und
this will be the beginning of the
effort on the part of the dcpa/tuicnt
to carry out this scheme.
There Is little doui>t but that there
will be u grand kick from those who
havo been expecting to get homes in
that reservation. Those who havo
been apprised of the strange scheme,
and who are members of the house do
not seem to think favorably of it; but
for the most part the Democrats who
are not opposing tho administration,
will it is belteved, fail to light it, -;n I
in this way the chances are that tho
bill will pass.
Sam Lando, the alleged converted
Jew who worked so many of the min-
isters of Wichita, has been heard from
again. The Guthrie News has the
following concerning him: Samuel
Lando, a wayfarer, came to Rev. llo-
gess for help. He proved to be a
smart, good natured fraud, a little bit
cracked. He is an Austrian Jew, born
in Bruit, Austria, some thirty years
ago. On July 3, 1893, he renounced
the Jewish faith and was baptised by
Rev. William Thompson of the Latter
Day Saints, of Des Moines, since
which time he has been doing fake
preaching and peddling cakes and
pans. At Newkirk he drank wh.slty
and smoked cigarettes. Here he made
a date to baptise a converted Jew in
the United States jail and t > deliver a
sermon on the side. Rev. liogess paid
his bill of 50 cents at the hotel, and
then found that the fellow had gone
back and gotten the 25 cents that was
overpaid. The reverend gontlwnan
wrote and investigated, and had him
taken before Judge Goodrich and
searched. Nothing, however, but pa-
pers showing him to have worked Vir-
ginia, California and Louisiana were
found, and they were kept, some of
them containing exposes of him. Dep-
uty Sevcrns took him to the e lge of
town and started him down the track.
At dusk he appeared to bid Rev. Bo-
gess goodby. Even then the reverend
paid for his last night's lodging at the
English Kitchen and bade him a kind
farewell, being assured by Lando
that a great lesson had been taught
him. Th'is Lando was really a rabbi
for eight years in Detroit, Mich. Dis-
honest, urbane, intelligent rnd
cheeky.
The postoffice department has just
established a ne— postoffice in the
eastern part of the Chdrokee strip
called McKinnev. after Rev. G. R. Mc-
Kiuney, the cowboy evangelist,
knowu all over the west an 1 south-
west. At tho opening of the strip he
made the run ar.d secured a fine claiir
f*lt*)il
O'.af of •»*>. i A
r • light IfUH MfU,
lot01 Mill «ia4 <mm
AairiMf C.tf «ic I
lo pay M «!»»•*••
• > Mill
im m
trruirl 4cwn Mlliftlal
which
each foot ol
UH trtrlwi lo •»*rt
them In older lo hv «
king *.lh winch
lo com pa ii tho Aovmo
In prnctica
This tbojr wouM no« U
for t».« r«Mon that the
1 teal gaiia.J
linn A«rraoturft
hibition wrr»»*|«orl
mental an.I It «ri«vtc!l
kilowrn that lh« 12 fl
Aermotor *rotild
lhan any
16-ft. wooden wheel.
Aa it waa, tho outftt
that th« toll re
of lb« lower waa tram*
nutted through lha
put on a_ light
MMi CttHed I'jr them
Tho ihaft in the Towor
ia supported bjr
tho only Do'
for
public
and It neTer got
out of otdor in tho
ilightaat particular
though oporatad hy
irhybuw .
Potw tf*ith uhfch
to mpptjf horn* pow-
er when fur tho
unfamiliar hand*.
If haying tools
idg4
0/barn
1 upon
! a.I aa
the corner of which he has start-
* tamps to the government foe the "permeations ior
four rear* beginning July 1. next. work"
wa« awarded to the l ureau of cngmv procecd at oner to
keeper, justice of the peace, notary
public and preacher, as well as a far-
mer on the claim.
Richard Kevins. Jr., county survey-
or of P county, has been awarded the
contract for preparing the plans and
peeifieations for tbe new city water-
-* Norman. He will
ing and firinting. All hida received
ere rejected
Th* ChlhaaVia Towaaite roukpuny
and the Blackwell Towa«il« company
have ioocladcd to consolidate, the for-
nter hayiag 791 acre* adjaiain* Ktack-
aad both companies
ry drawing* an<
Charles Marst
phan coaaty. hi
Mearn«a. a mill
for tM.eee for
prepare the nc
jnres for the \
MODEL POWER OUTFIT AT WORLD J
The third advertisement in thU dories will thov
etilar Saw and Frame, f«>r farm and sawyers' ti
Porfect Polo Saw, with Perfort Safety Guirdi, and runs with
very much loss power than ordinary buzz saws and has a bettor
saw. This $40 Saw and Frame will be g^ren for $lft aad tro
eopira or this advertisement, (which la No. 9 In Iho aeries,)If
sent immediately after tho appcarancoin this paper of the /Saw
adv., (No. 3,) but only one saw will bo furnished to any one per-
son. For the extra four copies call on neighboring subscribers
to this paper, or induce others to subscribo, because we will not
accept these advertisements unless taken from papers mailed to
regular subscribers whoso names and addresses must be given,
together with the date of tlio paper from which they are clipped.
Our Irrigation Pump may be substituted for tbe Saw. Either
f.o.b. Chicago.
Where we can, \ro shall make liberal offers to accept copies
of these advertisements iu part payment for Windmills. If yon
have any thought of using a windmill this year write us «t$
once, stating what you will need, whether Pumping or Geared,
and if possible we will make you a liberal offer.
The Aermotor Co. proposes to distribute 9500* CASH, II
PRIZES for the be*t essays written by the wife, aon or daughter
of a farmer or u«er of a windmill, answering the question,
"WHY SHOULD II SE AN AEIUIOTOR I" For conditions at
competition and amounts and numbers of prizes send for par-
ticulars to the Aermotor Co., Chicago, or to iu branches, at Sum
Francisco, Kansas City, Lincoln, Neb., Sioux City, Iowa, Min-
neapolis, Buffalo, or 65 Park Place. New York City. AennotovSfe
Pumping and Geared same price, AU Steel, all Oalvanised-Affesv*
Completion, delivered free on cars at Chicago and shipped in
any one, anvwhere, at the following prises: _
8-ft. $25. 12-ft. 850. 16-ft. S129.
Cm*
|f|
Tie Best
Waterpof
Cot*
la thi
WORLD 1
SLICKER
Tlx FISH RKAXD KUCKSI H w*m*t*4 Wkr
pr at, tnd w-»l k«n» dry la 1** >*f<**l*W. Tlx
WW W1IJIEL Rt.« KEJ<t« a perfect rMt*ceoaL*a4
CT*r»ifc«*»i**—M1*. IV-w,-»Mtilka*. Daat
•wv a c*t tf Om " riak B:«id" I* "*t oo tu Italia-
A. J- WS" K. Banna, H***u
>n of Higf
a been m
ner of the
breach «
Ely's Cream Balm
t trsavr* Mi" Va«al
Pa««a*c«. Mlav* I'aln
and Inflamatlon.
R**t«m I be of
Tn!' aid »mf!l.
Ue*tl« tike «orw.
1 T I '
. I.T.
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The Perkins Bee (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1894, newspaper, March 9, 1894; Perkins, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305265/m1/2/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.