The Enid Echo. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 43, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1902 Page: 3 of 4
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/'V
Paderewtki 6 Wealth.
Paderewski, the celebrated pianist,
!b an excellent man of business. All
the money he earns by his profession,
and It is said to exceed $100,000 a
year, is invested to the beBt advan
tage. He is said to be a shareholder
In a well-known piano firm as well
as part proprietor in one of the chief
hotels in Warsaw. Paderewaki has
been heard to say that he has never
had a single serious financial loss
during the time he has conducted his
own investments.
Earthquakes and Electricity.
"It is now over 100 years," said the
KBK
Will Bring Several Hundred Thou-
sand Doilars to Treasury.
THREE-FOURTHS IGNORE LAW,
Topelca, July 25.—The decision of
the supreme court in the American
Boole Company case hits all foreign
corporations which have not filed
eminent engineer, John Gordon Gray, ! -°P*es of their charters with the seere-
in a recent paper on wireless teleg tary of state and paid the charter fees
raphy, "since Salve, a Spanish physi-
cist Inventor of the electro-chemical
telegraph, in a paper before the Acad-
emy of Science of Barcelona, said : "If
earthquakes be caused by electricity
from one point charged positively to
another point charged negatively, one
does not even want a cable to send
across the sea a signal arranged be-
forehand."
King Edward Sets Fashion.
Since it became known that King
Edward VII. has been in the habit of
taking a pint of champagne at break-
fast some of the younger swells of
New York city have tried it, too. Be-
fore that, though, many of these young
provided by law. It is estimated that
jver half of the corporations doing
business in Kansas are organized under
t.ie laws of other states, and only a
small per cent of them have complied
with the foreign corporation law as
interpreted by the supreme court. If
rigidly enforced by the executive
| branch of the state government, the
j law will net the state several hundred
thousand dollars in revenue.
The decision has called attention to
rtie fact that only a comparatively
-mall per cent of the foreign corpora-
tions have ever paid any attention to
the new law. It is believed that fully
men were accustomed to sip a pint of 75 per ceDt o( lheln have
completely
aauterne at breakfast. They consid- I ignored the law
SEPARATED ELEVEN YEARS.
By matrimonial Tronbl®. Woman Re-
gains Her Child.
Wichita, July 28.—After a separation
of eleven years in which both the
mother and daughter were lost to one
another, Mrs. Sarah llusch and Cora
May Busch, aged 12 years, will again
be united.
For eleven years the child has been
living in this city with Mrs. Rosa Bear,
her foster parents.
Twelve years ago Mrs. Busch lived
with her husband in this city. Tney
separated and she went to New York,
leaving him in Wichita with three
children, Fanny, Zora May, then 11
months old, and a little boy. The
father agreed to educate the children,
but soon after his wife left him he
placed the two younger ones in the
Wichita Children's llome. Soon there-
after the boy was adopted by some one oats and corn to the ground and every*
not now known by the mother and the J thing in the nature of vegetation is
girl was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. destroyed.
Hear. ' Geneva. N. Y.— A cloudburst caused
Mrs. Busch had no money to com- heavy damage near Dresden. Acres of
pensate Mrs. Bear for services to the crops were destroyed, a number of
dwellings, barns and other buildings
SINGLE STATEHOOD IMMINENT
Trlbrt
One ■* a
Pennsylvania, New York and In-
diana Are in It.
WIND, HAIL AND FRESHETS.
Irwin, Pa., .Inly 28.—Not a iimnu-
facturing establishment in Irwin is
running as a result of the last storm.
The breaking of the two dams flooded
the entire western part of Irwin and
at Coal Hollow houses, bridges and
railroad sidings were washed away.
The big Westmoreland ear shops were
damaged to the extent of thousands of
dollars.
In the country many coal shafts were
flooded and dozens of bridges have
been destroyed. The hail cut all the
to Uie
ahild but enough was raised bv sub-
scriptions, ami the probate eoi*\t ar-
ranged for the child to be given to the
mother.
ered that a mild "hair." Champagne
is more of a "horsehair."
A Foolish Lift.
Stratford, Wis., July 28th.—William
Junemaun was working with a farm-
er near this place last summer and
one day they got stuck with a load
of grain. Mr. Junemann says: "Wo j forejgn
had to lift like fools and my back
cracked and started to hurt me so
The penalty is the
loss of all rights in the courts of the
state. In other words a foreign cor-
poration cannot maintain a suit in the
Kfnsas courts for the collection of a
debt.
There are three contracts for work
j on the state house being completed by
companies. If the state audi-
tor follows the supreme court's decis-
that I couldn't stand It any longer, j1""'"' ,""sl hold ul> payments for all
The man 1 was working with took lhls work untl1 lhe companies take out
me home and I went to bed. I saw 1 charter and pay the legal fees,
an advertisement of Dodd's Kidney
were washed away and several miles
of traelc of the Pennsylvania division
of the New York Central was washed
out. One house was carried into Sen-
eca lake.
Hornellsville, N. Y.—A hail and rain
Pills in the paper and I sent and got
one fifty cent box. Before 1 had
this box used up 1 began to feel bet-
ter and 1 kept on and very soon my
back was well again.
"I can't say enough for Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills and I cannot understand
why anyone should continue to suf-
fer with backache when Dodd's Kid-
ney pills will cure it so quickly."
How Adam and Eve Were Punished.
The vicar was questioning a small
class of infants on the Old Testament.
"And now," he said, very blandly,
"can any child tell me in what way
the Creator punished Adam and Eve
for their transgression in the Garden
of Eden?" A tiny tot staggered out
of the line, with uplifted finger.
"Please, he sent them a baby."
Shop* Running an I'uml.
Topeka, July 28.—W. A. Nettleton,
assistant superintendent of motive
power of the Santa Fe, has returned
from a trip along the coast lines. He
says the shops at Needles and San
Bernardino are running about the
sauie as usual, only a little short hand-
ed, and that no negotiations in regard
to a settlement of the difficulty have
yet been made.
Americana Capture Trade.
London, July 23.—The trade crm
mision sent out to inquire into tlie best
methods for promoting British trade
in South Africa seems much impressed storm visited Canaseraga, 13 miles west
with the great activity of the Ameri- j ''ere, doing thousands of dollars
cans. In its first report the commis- damage, especially to growing crops,
sion says Americans will be the great- For a time the water was three feet
est menace to British trade, adding I d,'eP °° the Erie railroad tracks.
.loin Oklahoma
Time.
Washington. July 24.—The organic
act of Oklahoma Territory clearly gives
any nation in Indian Territory which
desires to unite with Oklahoma, and
will agree to abandan its tribal form
of government, the right to form such j
a union and it is made mandatory upon J
the president of the United States to
issue a proclamation annexing any
portion of Indian Territory to Okla-
homa when a majority of the people of
the tribe so petition. This is not only
true of the Creek nation but it is also
true of the Cherokee, Choctaw and
Chickasaw and Seminole nations. Any
one of them have it within their power I
by abandoning their tribal form of j
government to secure annexation with ;
Oklahoma within the next three j
months. There is no way by which
Oklahoma can prevent this. If this
course should be followed it would
solve many difficult problems that are
now being thrown in the way of the
people of Indian Territory in their ef-
forts for statehood and might compel
Oklahoma to divide her school lands
with the people of Indian Territory.
Aiika l or Woman HuftraRe
San Francisco, July 26.—At the ses-
sion of the executive council of the
American Federation of Labor, Miss
Hilda Goldstein, editor of Woman's
Relic to Be Preserved.
The North Shore Improvement Com
r any of Long Island has paid $200,000
for a sand heap which abuts a field
that is part of the Sagamore hill prop-
erty owned by President Roosevelt
The sand hill was known as Cooper's
bluff, and for some time it has been
feared that It would be dug away and
shipped to New York. The present
purchase does away with this pros
pect. Howard Gould recently ofTered
$50,000 for the property.
SURGICAL OPERATIONS
How Mrs. IJrnrr, a Noted Opora
Singer, Escaped an Operation.
Proof That Many Operation*
for Ovarian Troubles are Un-
necessary.
A Choir of Babies.
Grace church, New York, boasts of
the youngest choir singers In the
world Every Sunday afternoon
chorus of baby girls takes part in the
service. The youngest two of this
band are only four years old—hardly
able to walk, and yet they chant In
perfect unison, clearly and distinctly.
Each small girl wears a white apron
and n closely fitting baby cap, and
they nre a picturesque sight.
Lava From Mont Pelee Analyzed.
Tile sample of lava which caused
the destruction of St. Pierre has been
analyzed by J M. Camp, chief chemist
at the Duquesne Steel Works. Tho
result shows the composition of the
lava as follows: Silica, 57.60; seaqul-
noxlde iron, 7.21; alumina, 18.79; lime,
6.28; magnesia. 1.08; manganese, a
small trace; sulphur trloxlde. 1.60;
carbonic acid, 6.12, and moisture, 1.83.
Earth's Need of Mankind.
Every earthly scene is Imperfect,
as Eden was without mail's presence.
Hill and tree and clouds, waves on
" Dkak Mrs. Pink ham : —Travelling
for yearn on the road, with irregular
meals and sleep and damp beds, broke
down my health SO completely two
years ago that the physician advised a
complete rest, and when 1 had gained
that the Americans are making a tine |
Water ran down the streets of the vil-
effort to get hold of tlie market and I ''" rivers,
are introducing their practice of spe- ; Philadelphia.-* violent electric
cialization and concentration, with the | storm broke over this city and sur-
same result as so well exemplified in j rounding country, causing heavy dam-
other parts of the world. I aKe to property and vegetation. The
I Flint Glass Works of James J. Murray
Ship Owners Liable. ! & Co., was struck by lightning and
Milwaukee, July 36.-Judge Seaman. | partially destroyed, causing a loss of
In the United States court, held that a j ,50 000 Lightning struck one of the
transportation company is liable for j Bmnllcr oi, Unks ilt the |.oint Breeso
throwing overboard a cargo of lumber | ou work& The flames were confined
Mfftftpiicer lloyn Strike.
Chicago, July 28.—The messenger
boys of the Illinois District Telegraph
jompany, which delivers under con-
tract the business of the Western
Union and Postal .telegraph compa-
nies, have struck. They made no de-
mand and their grievance is unknown.
The Western Union company i6 offer-
Storekeepers report that the extra i
quantity, together with the superior I 'ng §40 a month to men to deliver
quality, of Defiance Starch makes it | messages, to avoid interruption of their
next to impossible to sell any other I business.
brand.
—. FrUi o Line la Oeneroue.
There are various walks in life but ! vinita, I. T., July 28.— The Frisco
railroad has notified the.city council
that it will pay taxes on its property
here as a moral obligation. The courts
have held that the railroads in the ter-
ritory are exempt from municipal tax-
ation. Towns will be glad to see the
other railroads follow the Frisco's gen-
erous lead.
Sphere, of Melbourne, Australia, ap- j the seashore, willows by the river's
side, fields with their broad green
beauty stretching out of sight, lack
with all their loveliness one element
I of poetry, gain It only when a human
frame stands in their midst, and the
signs of human work are seen among
them.—Phillips Rrooks.
I Tiealers say that as soon as a custom-
er tries Defiance Starch it is impossible
I to sell them any other cold water
starch. It can be used cold or boiled.
the political candidate prefers to run.
RED CROSS BALL I1LUK
Should be in every home. Ask your grocer
tor it. Large M oz. package only 5 cents.
You may not be self-made, but you
can endeavor to make yourself agree-
able.
or other material in a storm, even
though it be to save the boat and lives
of the crew. The case in point was
the suit of the South Arm Lumber
Company against the owner of the
steamer Wolverine, from which vessel
a cargo of shingles was jettisoned.
KnniBi G. A. R. Will IMnplay Product*.
Topeka, July 23. —Department Com-
mander I/x>mis, of the Kansas G. A R.,
proposes to make a display of I^itnsas
products at the coming national en-
campment of the G. A. It. at Washing-
ton. lie will urge the various local
posts to gather up samples of products
and send to headquarters here aud lie j failed to afford adequate assistance,
will arrange for their transportation , anj sajrs that therefore united effort
to Washington and secure a room there on their part is necessary. Among the
for their display. leading members of the combination
Will Try Anti-Trust Law I are Arthur Hugh Smith-Harry and
Topeka, July 28.—County Attorney | Lord Clon brock.
to the one tank.
Indianapolis, lnd.—An electrical
storm passed north of the city instant-
ly killing L. Wilson, a farmer, fatally
injuring a boy and destroying a num-
ber of barns, a church, and causing
oilier damage.
Irifth Land Owners Combine.
Dublin, July 23.—Irish land owners
have formed a combination, with a
capital of 8100.000 to protect tnemsclves
against the United Irish league. The
prospectus of the combination makes
complaint that the government has
Ladles Can Wear Shoes
One size smallerafter using Allen's Foot-
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new
shoes easy. Cures swollen,hot,sweating, |
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and j
bunions All druggists and shoe stores.
Prefer to Make a Large Debt.
Havana, July 25.—The matter of a
loan still absorbs the attention of both
houses of congress. The lower house
2.")C. Trial package FREE by mail. ^Ad- j tlie position that it will not vote
tl*e small loan of 81,000,000 which has
dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y
The baseball fan doesn't always keep
cool.
I flo not believe Plso't Cure ror Consumption
has un e<iual for coughs and colds.—John F
Botsu, Trlnltj Springs. Ind., Feb. 16,1900.
Even the prices are high on roof gar-
dens.
SKNSl liLIC HOUSEKEEPERS
vill have Defiance Starch, not alone
been proposed except as a part of a
large loan of 835,000,000 to be used in
paying the Cuban army..
Found Temple of «o!umoa.
Vienna, July 28.—The Neus VVeiner
Tageblatt says that Dr. Scllim, a pro-
fessor of the Vienna university, who is
exploring Palestine in behalf of the
Imperial Academy of Sciences, has (lis-
Settl -H Sunday Closing.
Galen Nichols stated that if his protest ;
was overruled by the state charter i
board and a charter was Issued to the Washington, July S3.-By direction
American Book Company to do busi- I of tlie secretary of the treasury, war
ness in Kansas, he would file proceed- rants -covering
ings against the company in the
Shawnee district court under the pro-
visions of the anti-trust law.
Dr. Leyds llarred.
London, July 25.—Denying a rumor
that Dr. Leyds, who was the European
agent of the Transvaal, was returning
to South Africa, Mr. Chamberlain, the
colonial secretary, made the important
announcement that all those not of
American birth, who had fought
against the British, would not be al-
lowed to return to South Africa.
the salarie
commissioners of the Louisiana Pur-
chase Exposition Company, at St.
Louis, and other government employes
will be issued at once. The payment
of these salaries has been withheld for
two months pending the signing by the
directors of the company on the con-
tract binding them to keep the exposi-
tion closed on Sundays.
pcared before the council and delivered
a lengthy and interesting address on
behalf of the extension of woman
suffrage. She was assured by the
council that the proposition of woman
suffrage would be taken up at a later
session. The application of the broth-
erhood of Railway Employes for a
charter from the American Federation
of Labor, was denied.
Elks liar a PrUe right.
Salt Lake, July 28.—Mayor Thomp-
son has announced that the Gardener- |
Root fight which is planned for the j
Elks' reunion week will not take place •
if the local Elks lodge requests him to
stop iu
Grand Exalted Ruler Picket has been
in telegraph and mail communication
with the local Elks lodge for several
days with reference to the Gardener-
Root fight and steps will probably be
taken to prevent it.
The Santa Fe Carmen.
Topeka. July 25.—Superintendent of
Motive Power Henderson has prac-
tically announced a settlement of the
differences existing between the Santa
l-'e road and the National Hrotherhood
of Railroad Car Men. The tcrius of
the new schedule are not given out,
but it is known that the wages of the
car men will be advanced about 25
cents per day over the entire system.
The wages of the men are more equal
than ever before.
a|«*fT Licks Bob.
Son Francisco, July 28.—Jeffries
knocked out Fitzsiinmons in the eighth
round. The battle was a hard one all
the way through. Jeff's last blow put
Fitz on his back and he failed to rise
before the referee counted ten. The
bett:ng was largely 8 to 4, Jeff being
the favorite. Long lines of men form- |
ed before sundown awaiting the j
opening of the gates. The battle coin- i
menced at little after 10 o'clock.
A man growls, a woman smiles—aud
the latter gains her point.
The average actress1 diamonds are
about an real as her complexion.
ALL UP-TO-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS
Use Red Cross Hall Blue. It tnukes clothes
clean and sweet as when new. All grocers.
Yc
neve
MBS. O. ltllUCK.
snfllclent vitality, an operation for
ovarian troubles. Not a very cheerful
prospect, to bo sure. I, however, was
advised to try 1,.villa 10. l'inkhain'il
Vegetable Compound ami Saii-
ativo Wash; 1 did so, fortunately
for me. Before a month had passed I
felt that my general health had im-
proved; in three months more 1 waa
cured, and l have been in perfect
h alth since. I di 1 not lose an engage-
ment or miss a meal.
" Your Vegetable Compound is cer-
tainly wonderful, and well worthy the
praise your admiring friends who have
been cured are ready to give you. I
always speak highly of it, and you
will "admit I have good reason to do
bo."—Mas. g. Bruce, Lansing, Mich.
#6000 forfait If abow tettlmonlal la net geriutm«.
Tli© fullest counsel on till*
subject can be secured without
cost by writing to Mrs Pink ham,
Lynn, IVfass. Your letter will be
entirely confidential#
EDUCATIONAL.
Li can feel a Panama hat but It is
• felt.
A man seldom says what people ex
pect him to say.
Old Prunes go to Europe.
San Jose, CaL, July 25.—Twenty-one
car loads of prunes have been sold to
Europe in four days. The sales are
Soldiers Die of Cholera not from tl e growing crop or for fu-
Washington, July 25.—The \y*r de- ture shipments, but are from stocks on
partinent has been informed from I hand for immediate shipment. The
Manila that between May 1 and Ju
because they get one-third more for j covered the walls and gateways of the
the same money, but also because of
superior quality.
The girl who steels her heart will
not have it stolen.
drTT c. brown t l'rartlrp IJlBtM to
Wichita. Kans. Eye,Bar, Nose ti Throat.
J. H. TURNER
WHOLESALE HH.
885-541' Weat
WICHITA.
KANSAS CITY, MO. Catalogue A, free,
■ and Steam Laundry
In operation (to with our IMPOETEI) DOLLAR
For particulars address R. T. BPEHCER.Orefonia.O.
HAMLINS WIZARD OIL
"BURNS. SCALDS
ALL DRUGGISTS . SELL IT
w
ard's Big Bargain Book
ards off high prices, by
holesailng goods to all.
orth a dolldr. *
III save you many dollars.
r 1,000 raf quoting whole-
— lifrerent artlel ' """
" ' "ielD yc
: lue. Send 15
It contain*o.„. - ...
■ale prices on 70.000 different arttclee—17,1 ..
UIuitratloiiB are nied to help you.under-
stand what the goods look lllto. Send 15
cents for catalogue and learn how to make
four dollars do the wurk of five.
CHICAGO
The house that tells the truth.
BOYS WHO MAKE MONEY
In a dainty little booklet, J5 out of some 3000
bright boys tell in their own way just bow they
have made a success of seiling
THE SATURDAY
EVES1NO POST
Pictures of the boys-
letters telling: bow tlicy
built up a paying busi-
ness outside of school
hours. Interesting
stories of leal business
tact.
We will furnish you
Ten Copies the first week Free
of Charge, to be sold at Five
Cents a Copy; you can then
send us the wholesale ptice for
as many as you find you can
sell the next week. If you want
to try it, address
Hoys' Department
The Ourtls Publishing Company, Philadalphla
I ancient temple of Solomon in the
' neighborhood of Janohalia, in Samaria
Denver Short of Water.
1 Denver. July 26.—A mass meeting of'
citizcns adopted resolutions asking Lhe
city officials to suspend street sprink-
ling on account of the shortage of
water. An ordinance which is being
I prepared for submission to the city
i council regulating the use of water by
; consumers was reported by Mayor
i Wright as incomplete. It was an-
I nounced, however, that the statement
| sent out from Denver that manufac-
turing plants have shut down for want
I of water is entirely unfounded.
Hear Coach Fell Forty Feet.
McConnellsville, Ohio, July 26.—A
wreck occurred two miles below here
on the Ohio & Little Kanawaha. The
rear coach jumped the track on a
trestle and fell forty feet, turning com-
pletely over. Out of about thirty pas-
sengers, Miss Gertrude Sherwood is
dead and W. F. Lightheiser is dying.
Six or more others are probably fatally
hurt and about a dozen others are suf
| fering serious injuries.
The train was going 30 miles an hour
and the coach was completely wrecked.
Guarantee Corean Independence
St. Petersburg, July 28.—A special
dispatch received here from Seoul,
Corea, announces the conclusion of an
important agreement between the Brit-
ish and Japanese ministers to Core
and the Japanese councillor, Kato,
special advisor of the Corean emperor,
I by which Great Britain and Japan mu-
I tually guarantee Corea's independence
aud pledge her their support and as-
sistance in all important questions af-
fecting her international and foreign
policy.
A Native Bishop.
Rome, July 24.—Besides an apostolic
delegate for the Philippine Islands the
Vatican is preparing to appoint an
archbishop of Manila who probably
will be Bishop Sebastin Messmer, (a
SisB) professor of Canon law at the
Catholic university In Washington
since 1800. Three new Philippine dio-
, cese will also be created. Governor
Taft before starting for Naples to visit
| Pompeii and Mount Vesuvius expressed
a desire that the bishop of one of the
' new dioceses be a native Filipino.
1, seventy-six enlisted men of the
aruiy died. Of those 62 deaths were '
caused by Asiatic cholera.
Methodist Central Headquarters.
London, July 28.—Robert William
erks, M. P., treasurer of the Metho-
dist Million Guineas fund announces
To Cure u Cold In One day
Take Laxative Promo Quinine Tablets. All
druggist* refund money if it fulls to cure. 26a 1
the university of notre dame,
N >TRH DAME. INDIANA.
FULL COURSES IN Class'c*. Letters, Gca-
Time is the capital of the intellec nomica and History, Journalism, Art, -VIjbm,
Pharmacy. Lew. Civil, Mechsnlcal and tilec*
tual man trlcal Engineering. Architecture,
thorough Preparatory and Commercial
People who have the least to say in- Courses.
variably talk the most.
Hull's Catarrh Curo
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
It's a good thing to be too "busy to
tell your troubles.
The bashful English girl cl.-ops her
h's and her eyes.
Mrs. Wlnslow'a Soothing Byrnp
F< r children teething, softens the gums, rrduoei in-
fluumiailuu. allsy« p..lu. cures wlud colic. !i5c a bottle.
A fellow doean't have to be very
strong in order to break a promise.
It doesn't seem inappropriate to say
"back up!'' to a camel.
ALL UP TO DATE HOUSEKEEPERS
use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-
cause it is better and 4 oz. more of it
for sam<- money.
sale* are from one shipper alone and
the fruit is from Santa Clara county.
The total number of cars sold for ex-
port since lust fall is about 400.
Kdwatti %'II to Visit C«ar.
Copenhagen, July 24. — King Edward
will visit the Czar in September. Im
mediately after the coronation Queen
Ksiishh Apples.
Topeka, July 28.—"Kansas will have I , ,, T~T I I
1 , . . The fellow who trusts to luck is not
a big apple crop this year and the . , , „ . ,
h 11 1 ,T . ... always to be trusted.
growers will get good prices for it, j
said Secretary Barnes of the Stat.- A river must be pretty angry to foam
Agricultural Society. "Apples brought at mouth.
good prices last year. The average
was probably $2 a barrel. The price
this year will no doubt be a trifle bet-
ter than last year. The crop will be
just as large and the apples arc much
better.
that Methodists had secured the royal Alexandra comes to Denmark to join
Aquarium theatre property, on which her sister, the dowager czarina, the
they would build a great hall, which j king following about September 1.
to be called the Central Ileadquar-| The king and queen will go to SL
ters of Universal Methodism. The Petersburg after a two weeks" stay in
price paid was £330,000. The ground Denmark, sailing on the royal yacht
comprises 2j; acres and on it also under escort of a British and a Russian
stands Mrs. Langtry's imperial theatre, warship. King Ktlward may make his
whieh will be transformed into an long expected visit to the kaiser on his
return journey.
Steamship Cut lu Two.
Hamburg, July 23.—The steamship
Primus, with 185 passengers on board,
was cut in two and sunk by a tug on
the river Elbe at 12:30 a. in. About 50
persons were drowned. Thirteen
John W. Mai-kay's Estate.
San Francisco, July 24.—James L.
Flood and Attorney W. C. Mclnery,
have filed for record deeds signed by
the late John \V. Mackay for all the
real estate which the latter owned in
this city at the time of his death. They j bodies have already been recovered
are drawn in favor of his wife, Mario , The Primus was an excursion steamer
Louise II. Mackay and his son, flur- from Heuxtehude (province of llan-
ence H. Macltav. who will share alike over. Prussia.) lhe Primus struck the
in all respects and in the three parcels ,-uj;'s engine room ami the tug en-
of real estate transferred the condi- ! deavored to rush her ashore, but the
Hons in the two is love and afFection j tug grounded and the ships parted,
iu the third a nomiDai sum is named. The Primus then sank.
Work on Manila i-o.t. I orMgi. >.w. Not...
Washington, July -fi.—Reports have Lisbon, July 2S. A dispatch from
reached the war department that ex- , the Azores Islands says there has just
cellent progress is making on the been a terrible submarine volcanic
Manila post. Congress appropriated j eruption off Herta, Island of 1'ayal. A
-,0,00'j early in the year and 1,800 j great rock, incandescent with heat,
acres of land on the Pasig river has | was thrown up. The people were
been acquired for the po&t. The lura* panic stricken.
ber for these quarters is sent from the London. It is announced that John
Columbian river and Puget Sound. It | Redmond and John Dillon, notionalist
is said that the white ant, which is so members of the bouse of commons, and
destructive to woodwork in the Phil- Michael Uavltt will start next fall on
ippines, does not injure the yellow pine an important political mission to the
of the Pacific coast. j l:ulu>d su>tc -
A,, lnt.rnatlonul Il uk Ml«, hell S.llt Con lld.nt.
Chicago, July 26,—American finan- Chicago, July 20. President Mitchell
clers are planning an international of the United Mmeworkers left for
bank with headquarters lu New York Wilksharre, Pa., where he will take
and branches in Chicago, San Francis- charge of the anthracite miners' strik
co City of Mexico, Havana, Rio de He said he was confident of success i
Janeiro, and Buenos Ayres. The in- winning the strike, localise the men
►titution will be known as the First j were standing solidly fo
International Bank of North America
Its capital will be #5,000,000. The pro-
moters, it is asserted include over two
score millionaires of the United States
with some others of the countries
named.
their <i<-
mauds, and not one had deserted the
union. He said the miners were ready
and willing to submit their side of the
contention to any board of arbitrators
iu the country and were not at all
fearful of the outcome
Mother <iraj's Sweet Powders for Children
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse
in the Children's Home in New York. Cures
' o/erisliness, Had Stomach, Teething I>is
orders, move and regulate the ItowelH and
Destroy Worms. Over 130,000 testimonials.
At all druftfribts. 25c. Sample FREE. Ad
dresb Allen 8. Olmsted. LeKoy, N. Y.
Wuoms Free to all students who have com-
pleted the studies required for admission Into
th'i Junior or Senior \ear of any of the Collegi-
ate Courses.
Uo ms to Rent, moderate charge to students
over seventeen preparing for Collegiate Oou rasa
A limited number of Candidates for the Kccle-
siasttcal state will be received at special rates.
St. Edward's Hall, for hovs under K! yearn, la
unique In the completeness of Ita fqulpnienv
The SOti Year will open heptember 9, 1002.
Catalogues free A-Mress
HHV. A. MOWRIS^EV. C. S. C., Prfsldent.
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY,
NOTRE DAME. IND.ANA.
(Ono mile west of the University of Notre I>ame.)
Thorough Kiiffllsh and Classical ftducatloa,
includlna < reek, Latin. French and German. On
completintr the full course of studies, studente
ret rive the Iteitular Collegiate Degrees.
The Conservatory of Mnalc Is conducted on
tho plan of the best Classical Conservatorleaof
Europe.
The Art Department is modelled after the
b"st Art Schools of Europe.
I'reparatorv and Minim Departments. I'o-
Slls are here curefully prepared for the Ae*.
rmlo and Advanced Courses < ■ vinnaslum uo*
der direction of Graduate of Boston Normal
School of Gymnastics. Bookkeeping. Phonog-
raphy and Typewriting extra. Every varietyo#
Fancy Needlework taught. For catalogue ad-
dress
DIRECTRESS OP THE ACADEMY.
Mary's Academy. Notre Dame P.O.. Indiana.
THE CHEAPEST SCHOOL
In the Southwest is the
Springfield Normal Softool
and Bualneta College....
Life Scholarship HllA.OO. Not a graduate out
of a situation. Mutlsfaetlon jcuar ut«e«J.
J. A. TAYLOR, President,
SPRINGFIELD, MO.
Must Have Kansas Charter.
Topeka, July 23.—The supreme court I
has issued a writ ousting the American !
Hook company from the state of Kan- Home-made pleasures are tfca best
and depriving it of the right to there are.
transact business as a corporation in
BROWN'S BUSINESS C0LLE6E
The lawyer s brief is uldom «s short j IWiu.4 totkHr.., iam„umc.t,.ls
as it sounds.
this state until it secures a charter.
The order was granted upon tlie peti-
tion of the county attorney of Shawnee
county and grows out of the fight for
the contract to supply the public
schools of the entire state with school
books. The case was taken to court in
the interest of a Kansas publisher.
OF ADVANTAGE TO TRAVELERS.
The Missouri Pacific Railway has on
sale through railroad and steamship
tickets to all parts of the United States
and the world.
We are agents for all the principal
Trans-Atlantic and Trans-Pacific
Steamship Companies. We invite in-
quiries, both written and verbal, from
those desiring information about rail-
Lit t'rum'i Successor. road and steamship tickets and rates.
Topeka, July 26.—'The death of U. Deposits received for prepaid steam-
S. Marshal Lit Crum at once opened hiP and railroad tickets from all
. . , , , , . points in Europe
discussion of who would succeed him. r Two tru|nh (,ally from Wichita for
Under the federal law, when a marshal Kansas City and St. Louis, carrying
dies the business of the office is carried Pullman Sleepers and free reclining
on In his name by his deputies until j chair cars. Connections made_at^.these
,, , points for New York, ltoston, IMula-
the president names a successor. I'rank , (jeipi1ja Baltimore and all points east.
Plenniken, the office deputy, will , i«\)r fun information, time tables, sail-
probably be the acting marshal dur- 1 ing lists, Resort books, and railroad
in* the vacancy. I.ieut. (Jo* H. E. '■<) steamship literature, call on or
Ilichter, and the postmaster at .Junc-
tion City, Wm. Maclcey, jr., arc men-
tioned.
Cattlemen Appeal to President.
Oyster Hay, R. I., July 28.—W. 11.
Sleeper, of Wyoming, presented to the
paesident resolutions of the stock rais-
ers of the Rig Horn country, Wyoming,
concerning the exclusion of cattle and
sheep from the additional Yellowstone
timber reservation. They ask the
president to suspend any action with
reference to the exclusion of stock from
the reservation during the present sea-
son, which will last scarcely 90 days
longer. It is said that the president
has practically granted the request.
Armour iompauy Growing.
Chicago, July 24.— According to a
report current that seemed to be well
substantiated. Armour & Co., have
absorbed the Hammond Packing com-
pany and the < . II. Hammond com-
pany which has 1111,000,000 of stock aud
$1,550,000 of bonds; the Hammond
Paekiug company has$1,500,000 capital
stock. The plants of the t . 11. Ham-
mond company are at Hammon^, Ind.,
South Omaha and Chicago, and the
Hammond Packing company's estab-
lishment is at St. Joseph, Mo.
addr
H. C. Townhknd,
g. p. 4 t. a..
St. Louis, Mo.
I. R.SI1 KRWIN,
P. & T. Agt.
Mo. Pac. Ry., I
Wichita, Kas.
The dog catcher s labors should be
curtailed.
Even the teetotaller must sooner or i
later take to his bier.
WHEN YOU HI V HTAKCII
buy Defiance and get the best. 16 oz. for
10 cents. Once used, always used.
The trouble with the man who loses
his temper is that he always finds It
again.
Woman's way to health. Home
treatment Send for free booklet.
J'4«t Bee HuildiiiK Omaha, Neb.
A striking: contrast
between Defiance Starch
and any other brand will
be lound by comparison.
Defiance Starch stiffen*,
whitens, beautifies with-
out rotting
It gives clothes back
their newness
It is absolutely pure.
It will not injure the
most delicatc fabrics.
For fine things and all
things use lhe best there
Is. Defiance 51 arch
10 cents for 16 ounces.
Other brands 10 cents for
12 ounces,
A striking contrast.
With
; Thompson's Eyt Watai
THE DEFIANCE STAKCH CO.,
Onulu. Neb.
PILES
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 29 vt««s lstablismed.
Wc tend FREE and postpaid a 200 pace treatise on Pilet. Fistula and Discasfs of the
Rectum; alto 100 page illus. tieatise on Diseases of Women. Of the thousands cured
by our mild method, noi.epaid a cent tillcered we furnish their names un apnlkatlo*.
DR3. THORNTON A MINOR, Klip Osk U.. Kansas City. M
11 K .
lEnonzEnE
W.N.U.—WICHITA-NO. 31—IOOJ
Uhea Answering Advertisements Kindly
Mcn'ion This I'u^cr.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Detwiler, J. R. The Enid Echo. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 43, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1902, newspaper, July 30, 1902; Enid, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90702/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.