The Enid Echo. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 18, 1900 Page: 2 of 4
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.e ENID ECHO.
. R. IJtTWII.KK, Ed. and Prop.
VllO.MA AND INDIAN TKRKITOKV
Ponca City proposes to build a city
building.
Steel is being laid between Guthrie
and Kingfisher.
O. W. I'osten of lilaine county has a
250 acre wheat field.
Garfield county has a finely furnished
district court room.
Calumet, in Canadian county, does
toot permit any saloons.
Thieves took 4,200 pounds of flour
from a warehouse near Perkins.
E. R. McCarthy has become agent at j perfected arrangements for the erection
Wheat is reported as being a foot
high in Oklahoma.
Chickasha requires five days work on
the roads as a poll tax.
Contract wi!l l>e let for the Baptist
college at Blackwell on April 17.
It is reported that rich specimens of
lead have been found near Duncan.
Mail service will soon be established
on the new Eastern Oklahoma railroad.
Guthrie has two negro aldermen and
two more negroes on the school board.
Oklahoma City punishes charivar
hoodlums by fining them f- for each
offense.
Anthracite coal has l een found and
of excellent quality, in the Wichita
mountains.
The Otoe Indians will be supplied
with 85,000 pounds of flour from the
mill at Pawnee.
The Episcopal church af Purcell ha<i
the new Santa Fe station at Stillwater.
James Foster, of Lexington, O. T..
fell from a stable loft and broke his
neck.
A well dug on a lot in Oklahoma City
showed the existence of crude petro-
leum.
J. H. llavighout claims to have lo-
cated a fine bed of the best of coal near
Guthrie.
.'Oklahoma City proposes to build a
belt line to connect the yards of all the
railroads.
The number cf constables on the
Osage reservation has been increased
from t to 10.
There is one school district in Okla-
homa county, that has a board exclu-
sively of women.
A good many of the Oklahoma
farmers who sell their farms move into
the nearest town.
A Guthrie saloon keeper has been
fined SIM) and costs for keeping his
place open on Sunday.
The half moon brand of horses and
mules is to be removed from the Caddo
•xjuntry to near El Keno.
C. C. White, a carpenter at Enid, had
a scaffold collapse beneath him and
was very seriously hurt.
A count shows that one hundred and
sixty young ladies are employed in
office and store in Guthrie.
An elaborate map of Oklahoma is
heing prepared a** an advertisement for
the Rough Riders' reunion.
Four burglars were found cracking
a crib at Medford. Two of them were
caught and two got away.
•liin Johnson, a man in the Watonga
jail for murder, claims that he will
pray himself out, as Paul did.
A son of Mr. Hulling, 9 years old,
living near Orlando, had his skull
crushed by the kick of a mule.
Oklahoma City aud Perry both made
an even break at the city elections,
electing one half of each ticket.
llappv reports come from Mountain
View. The crops look fine and the
merchants are doing a good business.
It is said that S. S. Findly, president
of the First National bank of Peabody,
Kan., is going to move to Oklahoma
City.
Tho April term of the I'nited States
court is in session at Tahlequah, Judge
Gill presiding. There is a heavy dock-
et and the term will last about three
weeks.
The Santa Fe track bctweon Guthrie
and Oklahoma City has been straight-
ened out and the running time reduced
several minutes. The cut formerly at
Deep Fork has been graded down.
Exception is taken to a published*
statement of the output of broom corn
in Oklahoma. It in now said one firm
at Enid paid out 8100,000 for broom
corn raised in the section of country
covered by their trade.
Sol Bedford was digging a well near
Stroud. A charge of dynamite was
slow to go off and he went down to in-
vestigate. <)ne hand was torn off, a leg
broken and both eyes destroyed. Ho
may live.
Seventeen new cases of smallpox, it
is reported, have developed on the
Osage reservation and the annuity pay-
ment has again been postponed.
The business men of Enid want an
extension of the Frisco line from Black-
well so much as to induce a pledge of
a bonus of 8000.
It is claimed that the First National
bank of Newkirk was the first in the
I'nited States to nationalize under the
new law.
Fire destroyed a solid block in the
business heart of Ponca City on April
11. entailing a loss of over $50,000 with
only 817,000 insurance.
James Shaffer, the farmer who was
accused of raising a check he received
for some cotton, was arraigned, at Ok-
lahoma City, and pleaded guilty and
was sentenced to two years at Lausing
penitentiary.
Joel G. McGure. of Pawhuska, and
William B. Jackson, of Gray Horse, O.
T., have been appointed constables at
Osage Indian agency. O. T.
The promised summer term of the
Oklahoma University has been aban-
doned. During vacation a new heating
system will be put in the university
building.
A. P. Glendenning. formerly Santa
Fe agent at Blackwell, has been trans-
ferred to Woodward. Mr. Hughes,
formerly 11. A S. agent at Blackwell,
will take Glendenning's place.
The Women's Federation of Clubs is
planning for annual l bautauqua as-
semblies. They have asked for the use
of one of the parks at Guthrie.
a little l oy with deformed legs came
to school at Shawnee recently and the
little tots are taking up a collection to
send the boy East to have his legs
straightened.
Mrs T. G. Dewej, of Oklahoma City,
is making preparations to join her hus-
band, Dr. T. (J. Dewey, in the Philip-
pines. She was formerly Mits Grace
Williams, of Edmond.
of a $2,000 church.
The first consignment of southern
cattle for pasturage has been unloaded
at Dawson I. T.
Butter made by the Guthrie creamery
is sold in Baltimore Md., and commands
the highest price there.
The Mulhall brass band will give a
grand concert on April 20th and has
invited Perry musicians to assist.
An adjourned meeting of the I'nited
States court is in session at Purcell,
Judge Hosea Townsend presiding.
The I. O. 0. F. grand encampment
convened in annual session at Vinita,
with 14 encampments represented.
The Indian Territory census super-
visor has orders to change his head-
quarters from Muskogee to Vinita.
The Sequoyah presbytery had a four
days' session at Tnlsa last week. Its
next meeting will be at Claremore.
The finest church building in Indian
Territory is said to be the new Presby-
terian church just dedicated at Tulsa.
By damming Grand river at Fort Gib-
son 50,000 horse-power can be generated
the year round for manufacturing pur-
poses.
Nothing has been done to bring .1 ames
Welchar, the slayer of Colonel Stone,
back from Mexico, that the public
knows of.
The Oklahoma University has been
elected to membership in the North
Central association of colleges and sec-
ondary schools.
The captain of the new militia at
Oklahoma City was with Roosevelt in
the siege of Santiago. His name is
Albert Sydney Johnson.
An oratorical contest to be partici-
pated in by all the territorial schools
and the principal high schools, is to be
held in Guthrie on May 4.
A Kay county farmer who has lived
there for six years was at Newkirk, the
county seat, for the first time last week,
but he was dragged in as a petit juror.
Chief Buttington of the Cherokees has
returned from Washington, having
completed the details of the terms of
the treaty.with the Dawes commission
The best strawberries sold in Chicago
two years ago were raised in the neigh-
borhood of Salislaw. I. T. The crop
is in fine condition this year, but the
acreage is only about half that of 1899.
Texas cattle are corning in for pas-
ture around Bartlesville. W. O. Wood-
ley has 5,000 west of there and Wallace
and Collins have 7,000 south, at Ocha-
iata. At least .'10,000 head will come
in from Texas.
Old Spanish mines have been dis-
covered in the Choctaw country near
the Arkansas border. A lease has been
taken on one claim and then sold to
other parties for 85,500 cash. An as-
say of samples of ore taken from six
feet under the surface are said to assay
844 in lead, $30 in silver and 84 in gold.
Baily Waggoner and W. T. Bland,
the former general solicitor for the
Gould system, recently visited the
Johnsonville platinum mines twenty
miles southeast of Purcell, in which
they are interested.
The permission of the interior de-
partment allowing F. M. Smith to re-
main in the Indian country has been
revoked and Mr. Smith was again or-
dered out of the territory. Smith was
ejected from the territory last fall for
the non-payment of royalty on hay
shipped from the Cherokee nation.
The St. Louis and Southern railroad
now being built in the Creek nation
will, it is said, become a part of the
Frisco line when completed and will be
their main line from St. Louis to Texas.
It is expected to be running to Henry-
etta. a new town, by the first of June.
The amount of fruit trees aud shrubs
being taken home from the delivery
grounds of the dealers is astonishing.
Dray loads are nearly all the time in
sight, on the streets of the railroad
towns, in transit to the places of de-
livery.
A New York paper contains a picture
of Wilkins, the Enid giant. It is said
that there is on record only one man
larger than Wilkins.
A fellow, calling himself P. F. Lilly,
has been buying produce from farmers
about Perry, paying for his purchases
with checks on a Wichita produce com-
pany and the checks came back un-
paid.
The aggregate deposits in the two
banks of the town of Ripley is over
810.ooo. A woman. Mattie U. Oldham,
is the cashier of one of the banks.
The house passed, under a suspension
of rules, a bill ratifying the agreement
with the Comanche* ami Apaches t
open their lands to settlement.
The townsite commission for the
Choctaw nation has selected May 2 as
the date of the public sale of town lots
in the town of Sterrett, I. T., for de-
faulted payments. Notice of sale will
soon 1h officially published, together
with a rule requiring all bidders to de-
posit 10 per cent of the amouut of their
bid as forfeit in case they do not com
plete their purchase
General Otis Believes He has Been
There Since January,
WHY NO REWARD IS OFFERED.
Washington. April 11.—In the mail
from Maniia to the war department
there were at least two communications
expressing conviction that Aguinaldo
is hiding in that city. One of thes*
letters is from a United States secret
service official who had found conclu-
sive evidence that the Tagal leader had
been in Manila since the rebel armies
in Luzon were dispersed, and who wa-
satisfied that, as he had not escaped by
water, he was probably still concealed
in the native part of the town. The
other letter was from an army officer
attached to headquarters, who voiced
the opinion of all the higher military !
authorities that Aguinaldo was certain-
ly not in any of the outlying districts
on the island of Luzon, for American
troops had too thoroughly overrun the ,
entire country for the rebel chief toes- ,
cape detection especially as in every
province there were enough enemies of
Aguinaldo to have betrayed him to the
soldiers had his presence made it pos-
sible.
General Otis is said to have no doubt
that Aguinaldo has not been out of
Manila 6inee the first of this year but
he had refused to offer any reward for
his apprehension though the secret
service men had every assurance that
betrayal by natives would speedily fol-
low the offer. Every army officer who
has been in the Philippines frankly de-
clares that it has always been the am-
bition of every American in the service
to capture Aguinaldo. The best work
of officers and men has always been
with the main end in view of bringing
in the elusive little leader. It is well
known that General Otis expected his
capture last fall in Northern Luzon,
and had arranged to send him to the
United States. It is said that General
Otis has since changed his mind about
the desirability of sending him away
from the island, and believes it best
not to be embarrassed by having him on
his hands, as some elements would be
dissatisfied if he were not executed,
and others would revolt if he should
not have the fullest liberty.
To Chanicu Inspection I.aw.
Topeka, April 12.—Governor Stanley
will endeavor to have the next legisla-
ture pass a new law regarding live
stock inspection. He claims that a
state live stock veterinarian can attend
to the work just as well as a live stock
board composed of three men, and that
it will be a saving in that respect. He
will alio advocate that the state ap-
propriate money direct for the em-
ployment of inspectors. Under the
present system the cattlemen or rail-
roads arc held up for the inspection
fees. He does not believe this is right.
He thinks the state should be abso-
lutely independent from both of these
interests and should pay its own
employes. By abolishing the board
and placing the supervision of the
work in the hands of one man, he is of
the opinion that the present appropria-
tion will not have to be increased to
to any extent in order to meet the pay
roll of the inspectors.
Clirlatlan Burial of Uonvlrfa.
Leavenworth. April 11.—The funeral
of (ieorge Jackson, a prisoner from Ok-
lahoma. took place from the chapel in
the I'nited States penitentiary. In
accordance with a new custom intro-
duced at the federal penitentiary by-
Warden MeClaughry, the body of the
dead prisoner was given a Christian
burial.
One of the main reasons why Chris-
tian funerals are not conducted at pen-
itentiaries is that most of the convicts
are worked by private contractors and
they object to the loss of time in tak-
ing the men into the chapel to hear
the religious services. There is no
contract system at the federal peniten-
tiary and Warden MeClaughry has his
own way about funerals.
Agricultural Appropriation Bill.
Washington. April 10.— The agricul-
tural appropriation bill reported to the
house carries 84,116,400, being 8390,778
more than the law for the current year.
Two additional scientists (one biologist
and one botanist) have been allowed.
An additional allowance of 840.000 for
seed distribution is granted upon the
petition of 225 members of the house,
$4i0,000 is appropriated for iron warn-
ing towers for the weather bureau in
place of the present wooden structures;
838,000 for an animal quarantine sta-
tion at New York: 847,000 additional
for meat inspection, and 8200,000 for a
laboratory building in Washington.
General (It In' Heporta.
Washington. April 11.—General Otis
cables: "General Pates just returned
from south after placing fortieth in-
fantry at Surigao, Cayagan. Iliganea,
Isamis. Dapitan. northern Mindanao,
Jolo, attended by the naval vessels and
two gunbaats. Troops occupied point
without resistance. Two hundred and
forty rifles, ninety-seven pieces ar-
tillery surrendered. Eleven places in
Mindanao and three in Jolo archipela-
go now occupied by troops without the
firing of a shot. Affairs in that sco
tion quiet and satisfactory."
That HIk I ulirrltane* Tax.
New York, April 10.—Controller
Coler con timed the report that he. as
agent for the state of New York, had
collected 8V 000,000 inheritance tax on
the estate of the late George Smith,
who died in Ixmdon. The controller's
share for making the collection is f'.'O.-
000 commission. The government of
ireat Britain collected 84 500.000 in-
teritance tax from the estate—suffi-
cient, as the chancellor of the ex-
.hequer said, to build and equip a bat-
Meship.
SERVICE PENSION LAW.
House Committee Would Pennlon all
Veteran*.
Washington. April 11.—The most im-
portant piece of general pension legis-
lation before congress, that revising
the pension act of June 27, 1H90, and
other genera! (tension laws, was passed
upon by the house committee on invalid
pensions, and the sense of the commit-
tee taken on reporting the bill to the
house and placing it on the house cal-
endar for early consideration. The
revision has been advocated by delega-
tions of the chief officials of the O. A.
K.. and Pension Commissioner Evans
has been heard at length on the sub-
ject. The committee has decided to
take the bill of Senator Gallinger as a
basis of action and to make several
amendments. The details of the
changes are not made public for the
present, but it is understood that the
most important of these increases the
age limit on which pensions are to be
allowed and fixes a bliding scale be-
tween the ages of 62 and 70. viz.. 86 at
62 years, 8* at 65. SlO at 68 and 812 at
70. Another important amendment in-
creases from $96 to 8250 the amount of
annual income which a widow may-
have without forfeiting the right to a
pension. As amended the bill is to be
reported, but Chairman Sullowav is
given considerable latitude in-the mat-
ter. in order that an opportune time
may be chosen to secure practical re-
sults in the house.
OTIS HAS BEEN RELIEVED.
A HINT FOR SPRING.
When Hoaaekeepera Are Brightening the
Interiors of Their Homes.
Now that the backbone of this re-
markable winter is broken, housekeep-
ers are remarking the dingy look of
the home interior. The question of
new wall coverings is up. Paper is
dear and short lived; kalsomines are
dirty and scaly; paint is costly. The
use of such a cement as Alabastine,
for Instance, will solve the problem.
This admirable wall coating is clean,
pure and wholesome. It can be put
tin with no trouble by anyone; there
Is choice of many beautiful tints; and
it Is long lasting.
A fasting case is puzzling the doc-
tors at Ghent A young girl fell ill at
the beginning of November with a
kind of dyspepsia, and since that time
has not taken any nourishment what-
ever. Although exceedingly weak she
retains all her faculties.
Ragaeusau la Real Life.
a "Cyranno de Bergerac" trade-
mark case has just been dccided in
Paris. In the play appears a poet-
pastry cook named Ragueneau, and
while the Cyrano fever was raging an
enterprising Parisian, who writes
verses, set up a pastry shop in the
Rue St. Honore, which he named "The
Ragueneau Sign.'' Coquelin sent him
the picture of Kagueneau. and Rostand
was present at the opening of the
shop. Soon other dealers began to sell
"Ragueneau" pate. Suit was brought
against them, and the courts have de-
cided that the exclusive use of the
name as a trademark belongs to tho
Ruo St. Honore shop.
If a man has no temptations it's easy
to remain honest.
Don't cry over spilt milk: hustle
iround and get some more milk tickets.
Send for "Choice Recipe*.•*
by Walter Bafcer * Ou. Ltd Dorctoester,
mailed free. Mention this peptr.
The average woman wouldn't feel
comfortable unless her shoes hurt her.
Any cough is serious enough to
warrant prompt attention. It is what
it may result in that makes a cough
dangerous. For all slight or stub-
born coughs, for grippe, lung fever,
bronchitis, asthma and other throat
and lung affections you can find no
other remedy so agreeable and harm-
less. or so promptly effective, as Mor-
ley's Honey Pectoral. Price, 25 cents.
Sold by agent in every town.
The Bloodiest Battle.
The "bloodiest battle of the cen-
tury" was that of Borodino, a Russian
village, where Napoleon fought the
Nearly 80,-
Are Too Tela* Allen's Toot-Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, j
Gmartlng, Burning, Sweating Feet, [
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Russians on Sept. 7, 1812.
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken Into Q00 men were placed hors du combat,
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. ,
' England is repaying
"Mother ITubbard"
Done in Greek.
the debt 1t
(ireat enterprises often result from owes to the literature of Greece with
Fmall beginnings.
He Will Sail for llo
A bo i
t the First of
Next Month.
Washington. April 10.—General Otis
has been relieved of the command of
the United States forces in the Philip-
pines and of the Eighth army corps.
The correspondence showing how this
was brought about is as follows:
"Manila, April 3, 1900.—Private in-
terests require my return to states:
absent from family and business, at-
tention to which important, since No-
vember. '97. except few days: wish to
sail by May if possible. Matters here
can be placed in quite satisfactory con-
dition by that date: large repressive
military force must be maintained
some time.
(Signed) OTIS."
"Washington. April 3, 1000.—Reply- I
ing to your cable of April 3, the secre- I
tary of war instructs me to say that
the President regrets to have you leave
the Philippines, but the requisite order
will be made for your return May 1, by
such route and taking such time as may-
be agreeable to you. With understand-
ing that General MacArthur will suc-
ceed you as military governor.
(Signed) CORBIN."'
"Manila, April 6.—I think can leave
about May 1. Will cable latter part of j
month date I desire to be relieved, and
recommend officer for department com-
mander. Wish to return by most ex-
peditious route and await orders short
time until private business receives at-
tention. No request to make regarding
future sphere of duty.
(Signed) "OTis."
\rs t for Contract School*.
Washington, April 10.—During an
almost entire session of the senate an
amendment to the Indian appropria- |
ticn bill offered by Mr. Jones (Ark.)
providing for the government's con-
tinuation of theeontract Indian schools
in certain circumstances was under
consideration. The debate took a wide
range, the whole question of sectarian
school being gone over at length. The
notable feature of the discussion was
an eloquent speech delivered in sup-
port of the amendment by Mr. Vest
(Mo.) The amendment was pending
when the senate adjourned, the vote
upon it disclosing the fact that no
quorum was present.
Nothing
in the
Wide
World
has such a record for ab-
solutely curing female Ills
and kidney troubles as
has Lydla E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Medicines that are ad-
vertised to cure every-
thing cannot bo specifics
for anything.
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound will
not cure every kind of ill-
ness that may afflict men,
women and children, hut
nursery rhymes. A Greek lady who
has lived in England and has lately
established an Infant school In the
neighborhood of Athens, ha9 translat-
ed such classics as "Jack and Jill"
and "Old Mother Hubbard" into her
own language, and set them to music.
They are immensely popular with th*
Hellenic infants.
Stomach •*§
Troubles
In Spring
Are that bilious feeling, bad taste
in the mouth, dull headache, sleepless-
ness, poor appetite.
No matter how careful you are about
eating, everything you take into your
stomach turns sour, causes distress,
pains and unpleasant gases.
Don't you understand what these
eymptoms — signals of distress—mean ?
They are the cries of the stomach for
help ! It is being overworked. It needs
the peculiar tonic qualities and diges-
tive strength to be found only in
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
The best stomach and blood remedies
known to the medical profession are
combined in the medicine, and thousands
of grateful letters telling its cures prove
it to be the greatest medicine for all
stomach troubles ever yet discovered.
POMMEL
i. SLICKER
Keeps both rider and saddle per-
fectly dry In the hardest storms.
Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for
1897 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker-
It Is entirely new. If not for sale In
your town, write for catalogue to
A. J. TOWER. Boston. Mas*
The Hknnk'a Handsome Far.
Although thousands of skunks are
yearly killed and their hides sold to
furriers, it is impossible to buy a
skunk skin in a fur store. By some
occult means the pelt changes Its name
between the time it Is ripped off the
back of the animal, and the time that j
It takes its place in the show window.
Sometimes it changes its color as well,
though the skin is the loser thereby, i
for there are few bits of fur handsomer
than that grown on the outlawed 1
skunk. Pariah though he is, this un- 1
savory animal, against whose life tho
hand of man is ever raised, has been !
able much better than any of his
brethren of good repute to hold his
place in the world.
(7ATAL°6U&
Send your name and address on a <
| postal, and we will send you our 156- ]
1 page illustrated catalogue free.
winchester repeating arms co.
1 174 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, Conn.1
Nails Made of Rubber.
A German novelty consists of India
rubber nails for use in places where
proof Is monumental that ?r'!lnar,y, "ails fe "^le to eorrcalon.
V, _ « _m as It is said that they may be driven into
j soft woods in sizes up to one inch long,
■ without boring a hole for their re-
I ception. In larger sixes It is necessary
to bore holes to start them, and for
the largest size holes for their entire
length. They are said to be very use-
ful in chemical factories, dyeliouses,
breweries, etc., and they are also used
in building accumulator cells and
! other electrical apparatus. It is said
j that they clinch fairly well. They may
! be used about explosives, where a
j spark from a nail head when struck
by a hammer might prove fatal.
it will and does cure all
the ills peculiar to women.
This is a fact indisput-
able and can be verified
by more than a million
women.
If you are sick don't ex-
periment, take the medi-
cine that has the record
of the largest number of
cures.
Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass.
1,000 NEWSPAPERS
Arc dow using our
International Type-High P!ates
Sawed to
LABOR-SAVING LENGTHS.
They will save time In vour composing
room us they can be handled even quicker
thau type.
Noext ra charge is made for sawing plates
lo short lengths.
Send a trial order to thia office and be
convinced.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,
WICHITA, KANSAS.
A
CURES WHERE *it EL&E TAil^.
Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cee
Ikl In time. Pol 1 by druggists. d_
I j EsEHniKHEGa J I
Buy a package of
Save the Round Trade-Marks,
mailed upon application to mfrs. of
and find out how to obtain
FRIENDS' OATS
VALUABLE PREMIUMS FREE.
This is only a few of the premiums. A complete list
FRIENDS' OATS, muscatine, iowa.
The Asylum Site Cala
Topeka. April 11.—The suit to enjoin
the auditor of state from approving
the warrants to pay for the l'arsons
asylum site is before Judge Hazen of
the Shawnee district court. The Clay
Center lawyers are attempting to es- |
PREMIUMS
a as ~e -
2TXU32D
rprcm adaettlaamanta and cnitabla
for PRESENTS to any on*
tnd ira ALL UBEFU1*
PREMIUMS mailed o.nlt in e*. <
_____ r cbaagt* for 0,6 roand tbaue a 4 at of
th* Little Frieo<V Girl, with the circular border complete, aa
shown above, which will be found on Uta narrow eidc of each
2 lb package of
"FRIENDS' OATS.19*
( r THE NUMDER of Tiadi Maw and
pottage required for each premium is in-
I <Ueat*J with the illustration describing it.
K SHOULD PREMIUMS not reach yon
tablish as a fact the records of the j two weeks after eending, write us the date
governor's office show John Seaton re-
signed as a member of the state board
of public works during the Morrill ad-
ministration. and that ( ov. Morrill
accepted the resignation. This, they |
claim, abolished the board, as Sol
Miller had died, leaving only one mem-
ber, Mike Heery. Under the law. it
takes at least two members to consti-
tute a board.
WE INVITO a comparison of eur celebrated
••FRIBKUS' OATS'. tU aa; otbei
brent). —
THE QUALITY It guaranteed and you will
fed it tree from ImpurlUes asd superior lo acj
PREMIUMS alone *
•reonly supplying theac
'nC. preferring lo pay
stU foods. We
hen joa aent and the full circuoiatancaa
so we may investigate.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
Bound M rk (Savor *od Trade Marks separately ) ' , w
OK CA&EFUL that the posters oa your Utter la fully prepaid, and U yea wish any o1 these
sel.18 oat meal co., Muscatine, IowV
XKFaIl ALTEMUS' editions i"d
c .- ...
+ + QUO VflDlS Stir -
By HEN8YK SUNKOSWICZ.
Part of Book Llet COMPLETE Llat 8©nt on Application.
... _ nnuivu ho. aao
Vadeinecum Series
Kitnan* Hoy lllri nt College.
Leavenworth, Kas., April 10.—A
message was received here stating that
Charles Shoyyr. a Leavenworth law
student, attending the Ann Arbor uni-
versity was killetl by the cars at that
place. No particulars of the accident
were given. Shoyer is the sou of a
wealthy family of this place. He has
been away attending school three years
and was about to graduate as a law-
yer. He was CI years old and wa,
born and raised in Leavenworth.
Valuable Laboratory Burnett.
Bethlehem, 1 'a., April 12.—The phys-
ical laboratory of Lehigh university, |
one of the largest in the country, is
burned to the ground and all its scien-
tific apparatus destroyed. The build-
ing was a four story stone structure
erected in 1N 3 at a cost of 91 •*>0,000.
The apparatus was valued at f.'.O.OOO
and included all modern improvements.
There is only f.r 0.000 insurance.
A Himinh* MI *Ioiihry llles.
Abilene. April 10.—Mrs. U. C. Cress,
one of the missionaries sent from thin
county to South Africa by the River
Brethren church, died there on Feb.
H. Her hu*band was also in a precari-
ous condition from fever. They were
married just before starting on their
long journey. The misHicnaries re-
port all goods very expensive, and the
attention of the people taken up with
the war making it difficult to pursue
the work, though they ate not in a
•dahgerous situation.
raxKivxs no. i to ioa
ONE HOOK
I UlVliN loll
16
Trade Marks
4 Cants
Po«Us*.
In! ead
k 00LI.RCTION of the masterpteoes ef Eng-
lish and Amerioan Literature, handy wtlume
stM, larfe type edition . v . -
H RVBUY VOLUME eonUlns Illuminated title
Pme cad portrait of author *4 numerous aa-
ffravltn .
Sa ' Barriti nZS?
i 223 as!
Aad 10S Ottsr (lead Bosks.
FAVORITE SERIES
i
s smsav,
r lot to si*
ONE cuua
orrtv rot
20
Tr&do Marks
art "
1 « CENTS
post ao a ^
S aew series o efcelm llterelare for eblldrm
Rulseuitl; printed ea Be* euper-esleedered
pepar I Arc* eleer type aad prefeeely Ulisa-
Sr%kad by tk« eaft fa*ou« artist*
• nriBNM' aunocrtptw Pencil.
IM • mot VIXXI Mi le Neasfe
TBADE|
MIMH
16 CenU
TRiSB alXXB
14
TRADE
MARKS
Superior Ladlea- Drasalng Comb.
qivdi roa
•7 TEADB MARIS and 9 Ocls Partsffa
PURE ALUMINUM TJA BALL
Liflit' llnbrukitla Getiitir Rubber Comb
Lsaztb. t teeaaa enryeoab wamaiea
\orra ron
Q Oonta Postage!
Coffeo Percolator
iTRADE MARKS I
a Conta PoaUga.
s la the
This grand historian!
le life the custras and dally Ufe lo im
time of Nero. -*• v
The story of Heme s opulent aad
patrklses aed politicians; her meroet
rustalM and leftoes ; bsr Ignorant and
populace, and allsn rabble. Is told by this mar-
velous wcrd-painter la a manner nerer before
equaled The haedaoae en^rariufe add freetly
to the pleaesre aad eotertalsBeet of the reader.
Bound lo English oloth. 1# pefee.
The Cbre of Children
I
30
TtiDE MAnra
asd
10 OaDti Pwt <*
THADE MA RIB
nir1 1 fhiun
^^T^JZTasrttt h coon.
TUtPE ma1is
•TAQ H4N0U WW •UTTO* Kftlft
raMMXVM KM
' * *
i « ««
vnuvMio.ua
r\ io
—iflmr m IURO
Or VP5* S.
Embroidery Boloaoro.
runra ho aat
14
nun nana
Idn' NMhM l H«.
rusnwi aaa
KlUor* ^ Oft
"n'i
gSaajd^
nnnm ao aaa
Boy*' Jack Knlf®.
ome m i p fiuM MAaca . a u re***
Iqirtit Kslfs.
**t" " Viniiur "* u ^ 4
ot*ee Ut M TtiDE Hill* sal is fabga
ruKius iro r >
oivin roa
TEiua Mi&xa
Se roffraoa
6lfv#r Platvd Napkin Ring.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Detwiler, J. R. The Enid Echo. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 18, 1900, newspaper, April 18, 1900; Enid, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90585/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Territories+-+Oklahoma+Territory%22: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.