The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1906 Page: 2 of 4
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THE WAR BALLOON IN GERMAN ARMY
took crl AS H„ REWARD, Conference, at Rio Janeiro, Brazil
Youth’® Choice May Have Been Wise,
Under the Circumstances. i--1- •
TIip 1m Him in 'Mill wlilcli llio (Ionium nrmy ttltl In irll Ini'" I...... <'« Ixm'Iiiii'IiI Inn. Inm H l"HK. Iiir|n'iln llko
.I,,,,,, n |„ ....... ilglil, uni liv any fra........... liut by Iwn hiiiiiII Iiiilliinnii « IIliln Urn Ki'oul i-iivi«ln|.n. TIh'hh urn
cniit liitntllv hull III Mil |iillli|iinl Into III..... liv llm millin', wlilili lllnn il I'lVi i Urn nr row. II la kept nvini by
|«" rlKlil Inalminllil plain'll IlMal In I li n uliln-i Ilf llm lailli.inv aliovn I tin riiililnr. Tim III vontnr. MaJ. vim I'or- |
anval. oluliun I lull III. Iiallnnn nan Ini ilnllatml mill plli' K nil up vary ninrli ipilnlinr Ilian any nllmi oxlatlup ,
Notunliil
Bonator Boveridge was condemning
a notoriously corrupt and notoriouHly
plauHlbJe capitaliHt.
‘‘Tho man speaks well,” said Sena-
tor Beveridge. “He promises much.
If he acted iih he talked, he would
he famous for his goodness. But, alas!
he Is like the German who nearly lost
his daughter.
“This German, with his daughter,
was walking beside a deep stream on
a Hummer afternoon when the young
girl slipped on a stone, fell in. And
sho would have drowned hut for the
prompt bravery of a youth. lie,
slipping off coat and shoes, plunged
In, and after four or live minutes of
hard work, brought the girl salo
ashore.
"Tho old German father was trans-
ported.
" 'Noble-minded youth,’ said ho, ‘wo
do, indeed, owe you a debt of grati-
tude. A hundred thousand marks or
my daughter’s hand—choose! Which
shall It he?’
"The youth, who was no loss wlso
than bravo, thought to himself that if
he took the daughter he would some
day get. the money also, and, accord-
ingly, without a moment’s hesitation,
ho made answer:
" ‘I choose your daughter/
”'A wise choice,’ said tho old fa-
ther. ‘1 could not have given you the
100,000 marks, for I am a poor cob-
bler; but you shall have the girl, and
that gladly. Join hands, dear chil-
dren, ami receive my blessing.’ ”
AMERICAN WINNER, AS USUAL.
The third session of the Pan-American conference, at which Secretary
Root is representing this country, met at Rio Janeiro, Brazil. The sessions
are held in the Brazilian pavilion at the St. Louis exposition which was re-
moved to Brazil affer the close of the great fair. Aside from Secretary Root
the members of the delegation from this country are Edmund J. James, presi-
dent of the University of Illinois; Leo S. Rowe, professor of political economy
in the University of Pennsylvania; Julio Larrinaga, resident commissioner of
Porto Rico to the United States, and James S. Harlan, a lawyer, of Chicago,
and son of Associate Justice John M. Harlan, of the United States supreme
court. They were officially received on their arrival.
70 TEACH THE POOR.
Convention Plunntd by I Islet Work
ri • lit Winona l ok* for Purpose
of hpipmllng th* Uo*|»ol in
Mural Districts.
Wlumm T.film, Ind Olio of tho
Itiont pooulhw and Inloit‘Hllor. convon
fpm* of tho yonr will ho hold horo lit
Aunmd, Itoit tho Indiana Hold work
or* of tin* Atnoth'itn Hnnda.x Behind
onion, amt porhapa a monitor front
othor atutort, will hold tho first non
fioottoo tho Indiana worUt'i't haxo
mot hold It will tiling touolhor nlno
loon from IhU ntato. who am Holdout
noon ami hoard hy tho pooplo of oil Ion
it nit larut'r town a. but tho> au» non
who, In tho Mparaolx aotllod n*ghm*
of tho ataio, ah' hottor known than
tho oarrtm w on that no at mall route*
It la tin' htiNlnoNti of thorn* ttohl work
t'to to go among a ota»a of t*o*»i»h* that
xxtmht hot othorwlao ttoar *i tho ltlt»lo
and tpilrkon tholr tutoroat In tho book
Tito child purpose of ttto Honda*
Hohool untim la I»* rod ooplo* of tho j
lllldo In thowo homoa, and xvlth thh
pnipoao ta pIohoI.x linked that of ot
ganlahiK Sunday aohooU at point'
runxoitlent lot tho poor of tho rural
(tlati lota
Tho Amorlonn Hmotax School onion
with hondtptat tot >« in t’htladclphtn
xxa* ottiixnltod In 1ST. amt It ha*
•pent 110,000,000 Cor Itthtoa at\d othoi
religion* Ittot Mtum. all of which ha*
boon distributed free tu tho mmoto
iv a tone of American ctvttir Alton
It pays no aalavtca to its* Odd men.
who the a* host they o.tn from free
wilt offering* of the people amonti
whom they xxv'tk, and their tot ta
hawtos than that of the old time olr
cult rider who rode hi* horse from
settlement to settlement when in
dtana xx a * young The ttehl men seek
the crossroad* points, and them o, en
the Sunday aetuMts. vtsltxu hlaekamtttx
•hops mauartes or anx kind of hutld
tug that xx tit offer shelter from the
weathei and tn these Sundax sotwxol*
*sv aathemd the men. wrxxmen ami
chtldmn of the notghbnrhoxHl. regard
ten* of religion* beliefs
Of the men at xvork tu this state
J M y'amss, txf Nexx \than> g'4*'-*
tlx rough the hill x'ountry of southern
\ *
xHxunty tn hts d strict. and tie has or
faulted a nmnbei v>( Sundax school*
tx't the nog lex'tod |H\*r tn the htlU x'f
that and Moiaan conntx
W It Hess xx ho Is organising the
August x'v'nfe onoo makes his h*'nxe
at Winona take throughout the year
x'xot xxhleh he ttaxe'.s a x' one of the
laritoAt districts that the Sundax
Ss hsH'l union ha* tn the middle xxest
The method* tolU'xxed 1" Mt Hess
am typical of those x'f alt the ml*
nlnnttrh'1! lie Ihim u wngon almllar
to ihnl of the rural mull currier, only
It in mil lu'tltliuit with rod paint and
It In covered xvlth religious lnaerlp
(tons.
Mr Hess xvent Into this Sunday
school xvork hI\ years ago, xvlth his
pockets empty, hut In* xx a * tired xvlth
tin* hope that seems to till every kind
of mission xvorUer K A K lluckott.
of Fori Wayne, started a movement
which resulted In n good outfit for Mr
11ohm a strong horse, a good Hot of
hnrnoHN and a substantial, comfort
aide wagon, which can bo driven tn
all kinds of weather and over all
kinds of country roads Mr Itackctt
also keeps this “gospel wagon" sup
plied xvlth song hooks, xvhtch tin* mis
shornry uses In his Sundax schools
A variety of literature 1* stacked up
tn shelve* tn the Hess xvagon, but the
chief stock ts lllhles The Bibles are
substantially bound in cloth, printed
In minion type and the covers are of
dark rod, that the book may he more
attractive to children. In six years
Mr lies# has found ftOO families In
the ten counties of hts district xvho
had no Bible lie had found boys 1ft
xcars old xvho had never boon inside
of a Sunday school,
“it l* surprising to see.” he said.
Washington Completed figures of
the export* of American canned meats
for the past fiscal year am shown tn
a statement Issued by the depart-
ment of commerce and labor The
x aluod of canned meats exported from
the Tutted States tn June. 190$, xvas
9491.000, against $707.127 tn June. 190ft.
and tn the fiscal year 1909. 99.2JJ.410.
sgatnst 99.ft77.04ft tn 190ft The tig-
urns for the fiscal year 1909 Include
canned beef $9 490,449 canned pork.
$\.:Mft s.>;. other canned meats $1
fts; to:
t he Quantity of canned beef export-
ed Ux the tlscal year xxas 94.ft2J.Jft9
px'umt* as against 99.OSS ft9S px'unds
tn 190ft
The reduction tn export* occurred
almost exclustxrx'ly tn the shipments
to Japan, which country took large-
ly of American canned beef during the
xxar hut »■'"catty mdnex'd her importa-
tion x't\ the disbanding x'f the army.
The extx'its of canned beef to Japan
190ft. and tn the month of June, 191'*.
i v v
tn June 190ft
Hieat Britain xxas the greatest buy
ev of canned beef export* tv' that
what ilcstltutlon there Is tn tho way I
• ir knoxvh'tlgo of the Bible in this old
oltlcd region of the stale, But there
has bet'll mission xvork done among i
the poor and Ignorant tn this part of
Indiana, for In Wabash county 1 hint j
loulid tracts which were distributed j
to the humble homes ftO years ago."
Mr. I less has started a Sunday
school In an abandoned country
church, xvhtch during Its palmy days
scut out eight ministers of the gos-
pel. Five years ago he opened a
school In one neighborhood, and a
girl of 14 years old Immediately be
came Its mainstay. She Is now the
efficient superintendent of the school.
In one little town of his territory
Mr. Hess found a church that had
be«'n abandoned, lie obtained per-
mission to use tho structure, spent
two days tn driving It* the homes of
41 families, ami on the next Sabbath
opened a school. When the mission-
ary first entered this town the word
spread among the people that he was
a state fish warden. One woman
hurled her husband's fish nets tn the
ground Mr. Hess, a few months ago.
held a series of meetings tn this place
and converted 49.
The conference of the missionaries
xv111 bo held at Winona lake during
' the Bible conference, when some of
the best religious orators who speak
the English tongue will be here.
country increasing 4,ft7S.tS5 pounds
for the fiscal year, but decreasing for
the month of June. 1909.
Of the export* of canned beef for
the tlscal year the l*ntted Kingdom
tv*ok 9.9J9.254 pounds and Belgium
999.972 pounds.
Kaiser’* Son to Study in United State*.
Berlin—The kaiser s fourth son
Prince August William, will complete
hts educational training at American In-
stitutions Harvard. Yale, and Corn-
nell are mentioned by those who art*
laying out hts course. After his
American course the prince xxtil pass
a term at either Oxford or Cambridge,
tn Kngland He is to be made partic-
ularly proficient tn political history,
political economy and constitutional
and international law
Nexv Fruit Show* Fright.
1 A'ndon—A Philippov tile new spaper
announces the discovery of an ex-
travxrdtnary fruit which has grown on
a native tree known as the caroudier.
When sQueeied It utters a sort of in-
articulate cry. when scratched it
shudders it Is about the site of a
poach, and the i\apor from which the
de*crtptlxxn Is taken suggests that it
ts part animal and part vegetable.
In the fiscal xvar 1999 wore 2 JdtvcSJ
Beef Exports Falling Short.
JAPAN GOING TO TRY AN EXPERIMENT
AAsNhuxgtv'u That Japaa ta pre
paring tv' uattxvnalUc all the Industrie*
oi the xN'untvy ts tudtcaixnl b> adxh'v'j*
received bx the hupeau of nxanufac
l«:>vs This nxv'xe which ts xxwe x'f the
. '
ktstv'I'X tlXv ludv'S the ptX't«V t Iv'U SXIl'CI
xiviv'ii and dexvh'pment v' tlx*' xa »'\t*
Itxxv*-** v'f bxisvtixx*-** aB xinder the xttiwt
cha*vx' v'f the g\"v' nment Vhx* pi\>
xtsuxn fA'v the natb'sxa'.cativxn v'f the
rail ways t* vxnlx a stng'.e >tep ux the
gv*vM (dan
Vhe qu« x .'a v'f M.vwhn usn vtexxd
xVXXlx'XXX hA*
tWx'' X *xt x'A • V f\t'
At
tetxtUxix
AtXvt no** it
U t'YX'tSvsvsl th;
At
* x\'U\
|VXtX' *h*U
he hvr'.vxM hx C
jtx'x v; xx
IX..MXt AXX.t
t'HXAtV x'AV '.V >
'
ftxr xxp*e*Hxx
ji \ «'.x' V'A' XX A' *
fV'tVAt* thx'X
v VnwxKNixu*
xx
siHxiix* tV'1
thx* t V*Astv X'f 1
th<
* (I 'kVXX
M thAl thex A ’>
iwexvuU xX*
tVxMX 11 * x*'
rtu't xm(K the Ja;
Is*1
<'•>»• \\A
A v x\*t gxdM x‘f vv .ovx v.'x a,
l*< V\vy.‘, iNA - hA*
%NA , . X' th* M A' .
tr.v*<x
^\'XX‘*«W*HXt "
txxAke the
th-vuuh the V- - '
A tv A S xV'.i' V
xnihx'xo ' v i.v.'y -
A* t\' the *txx>
•*•4 V'A ' x'K V\S ix'A
w v . hut
matches, cement. b«vr. marine prxvl
ucta, lumber anvt vdher gwvts to be
oxpv'tted tv* Manchuria at the rate v'f
fv'ur and v'nehalf i'er cent I'he gov-
ernment w (U pursue a similar policy
with tvkaixl tv' Kv'tx'.-x
Ttiephv'>xf* Installed at Flax.
IaxwvIv'u Vx' enable young tux ed
wv'men if they become anxtxxua, tv'
lelephv'txe hv'tne aad tnxjutre a t\' the
vondttb'n x'f then x'hUxtren. telephv'ne*
a*x' flttxvl tn exety private N'\ at the
OxxlWo.mt. It ts a cxxtxxnxv'n tlrnf at
the v'tvj* and manx \Y,**t Kmt the
A ter* tv' w a group v'f women await
tng their turn at the telephone he
tv' haxx' a w , 5\1 w ‘T nurse
C‘vi Coach a Cc erx a' Re c.
Antrim. N M Melxxn H B
th** c*uer x'f a private vwav'h which
was bu'/t twvw than a xvrtui' *n«t a
qua' .x' ago tn Ph. lavS'lph'A. and was
President W ash in
in Mr l\v're* fa
U year* and l* il
eva vd px'-ex'Txa;xua
JACKSONS HEAD STOLEN.
Part cf H 1 * tor ic Statue Formerly F g-
urehead cf Constitution Gons.
Ia'wcII. Mass Who stole Andrew
Jackson'* head* This ts what per-
plexes the l.v'well iv’.ice and the mem-
ber* x'f the Bower* family', who vv»
oupy the handsome estate x'f Willow
lYx'e The statue v'f “Old Hickory' has
a Cue historic record which was little
thv'ught x'f t" the vandal*, who
thx'ught tt a Jx'ke tv' make away wuh
~x\Xt
wvt
x'f
tue x'f Gen Jacl
a-ly ft<x x,na:s At
lAale. was origi:
n the fanK'.i* old
tn x..e ca- .y s x-.u's it w .is pur*
chasxV. w;-.h a ^ v'f other rv os frv'm
the back rxv'r.r v'f the es.ay >vr*e«t
a »v\M v'a. xer tn
had lam for yxvar* after Nnng re*
nvoxed fr\'*.*. the war xvsac'. hy *hc late
. , . . k'm ^
V: uMim
*■ .* lf» '** , 4.^
Upheld Greatness of His Native Coun- j
try and Retained His Bank Roll.
A Frenchman, a German, nn Eng-
lishman and an American were slt-
IliiK before nn open lire, each one I
tolling of the greatness of his native I
country.
While speaking the Frenchman took !
from Ills wallet a dollar bill, rolled j
It up, touched It to tho coals, and j
lighted a cigar with It.
The ethers were impressed, nml '
soon tho Gorman opened his wallet,
brought forth a ten dollar bill, rolled
It up, touched it to tho couls, and
lighted his cigar with It.
The Englishman thought It very
foolish, hat he could not be outdone, |
nor have It app* r that England was
not, as ever, the richest of all, so lu>
calmly took a $100 bill and sacrificed
it to light Ills cigar.
The American looked on In wonder,
lie hadn't even a dollar hill with him.
and yet he knew he represented the
leading race of all—which was never
outwitted nor outdone by nnyouo or
any country; so he quietly drew forth '
a checkbook, wrote a check for $10,- S
000 on tt prominent New York hank,
duly signed It. rolled It up, touched it
to the coals, and lighted his cigar
with it, while his confreres watched
him curiously and Intently.—Ladies'
Home Journal.
Sea Cow's Back as Marking Pad.
People who visited the zoo greatly
annoyed (he keeper of the sea cow,
a new acquisition, by poking It with
canes or pencils. Exhausted by his
efforts to stop tho practice, he en-
gaged a tramp for SO cents and told
him to keep track of how many peo-
ple looked at the manatee. At six
o'clock the keeper looked up his sub-
stitute.
"There's been more than 6.000 peo-
ple here," said the latter. "1 haven't
time to reckon up the exact number
yet. and won't until 1 audit up my
books."
"Where's the paper you kept your
accounts on?" asked Stephen, the
keeper.
"1 didn't have any paper," answered
the hobo, as If proud of his ingenuity,
"but I ha.l a good soft lead pencil and
kept tab on the sea cow s back."
He pointed to the patient manatee,
the back of which resembled a black-
board In a country schoolhouse after
the annual examination —Cincinnati
Correspondence Cleveland Leader.
Question for Botanists.
It has often been observed that any
sudden change tn the superficial char-
acter of the soil is rapidly followed
by an alteration In the nature of the
plants growing thereo
n. nevx
« eciea
appearing xx here the g
round
has hith-
erto been a stranger
:v' them. Very
many farmer*, foresters and scien-
title men—among oth<
i*rs tht
' French
hot art ist Poisson—are
inclinx
'd to at-
tribute this phenomenc
Ml tO t
he reten-
lion by seeds bulbs
or spo
res of a
former growth uf u
'getatn
,'n ir. a
Quiescent state, those .<o
tnis and
growths retaining the
ar tx'
wers cf
cer miration o' en a?:e
r seve
ral other
< uve>> xe ere; > cf j
nts h.'.
\0 g.VWD
above them
Net H s Fj. t
Thoug
h.
•Tt is a very fine th
•r.g to
v
ami generous ar.d re'
hie.” s
Perry, the writer, edit
or ar.vi
VI >.y 1 - J
teacher, hut serretr.r
es xx e
Are gen-
erous and noble aca
r.st c
*ur will
Then x'f course. *o de
urt e
r.o credit
"Of this ty-.e as a
: married
man whoee father r.'.
reputed
and g *\\»r.»v
M \ ” f* ’ <• ' 1 « •**
1 married for l.ne, afb
H s Fin:
“TwYs ” . e
Tt pries.
Tep deed of amr. or a
krv.v .' a ' -a i h s tci.-hc- "Ch
>ea I ft > .■ a : ■ . a - ; —orris
\ — TV " X 1
seer. *hs x,v. , s The --....a s..cr ho
drw&k it
CHINA READY FOR WAR.
Reign of Terror Predicted for Celes-
tial Empire—Only One Good Army
in Country—Serious Flaws
of Soldiers.
Peking.—China Is a volcano. Close
observers not in Peking, because Pe-
king is not the place to get the real
nexvs concerning China, but foreign-
ers long resident In the interior, In
Shantung and Chili, put the explosion
nine years hence. Educated Chinese
bring tt nearer. For the present,
however, the American in China is
as secure as he would bo in his home
in the United States.
It is well understood in official and
other circles that it is useless to kill
foreigners. There is a general run-
ning after foreign things and foreign
ways. Men having foreign training
are in demand. The same men had
to run for their lives in ‘ Boxer” times.
At the same time there is anxiety to
shake off foreign control of every-
thing—partly from a new feeling of
national pride and partly from a de-
sire to keep the good things for the
Chinese.
Misgivings for the future are based
on fear of an antidynastic rising, prob-
ably on the part of the radicals. This
would become partly anti-foreign and
In any case would mean anarchy.
There are a great many “armies"
In China, but the only one that counts
is Yuan Shi Kai’s “northern army."
The Chinese are raising big horses
somewhere in Mongolia for the ulti-
mate use of the army, and hope to
remount their cavalry in about four
years. Of the other arms the men
are smart and the recent spring ma-
neuvers were most creditable.
There are serious flaws in the army.
The Chinese soldics will blaze away
blank cartridges in fine style, but they
are not trained to shoot. Target prac-
tice is rare. It is doubtful if the men
would follow their officers except to
the rear, and it is doubtful if the offi-
cers would go anywhere else.
The ‘‘American boycott” never se-
riously affected the interior. A few
items of United States imports came
into the interior in smaller quantities
pro tern. It was a question for the
ports, particularly those in the south.
The Shanghai riots were purely local
and magnified by Shanghai hysteria.
A serious question is the educational
one, which gives rise to the ‘‘young
China” movement. This is founded
on conceit, the basis of Chinese stu-
dent character. They are about o;.e-
quarter educated and think their eiiv
cation is complete.
1 'VX
Never Saw A Railroad
Cleveland, 0. — Oelrid Troy, IS
years of age, Carroll county, Virginia,
long and lean and as innocent as tall,
spent the other night at the Central
police station.
Until a recent morning Oelrid had
never seen a railroad train. All of
the IS years of his life had been
spent on a farm in the back part of
Carroll county; but. after Oelrid's fa-
ther died and his mother became ill,
four years ago, things began to break
bad at the farm and soon there was
a heavy mortgage in sight.
A chance seemed to offer itself in
the way of a Job proffered to Oelrid
by his cousin in Ohio, and it was then
that Oelrid made the long journey
from his home to the nearest rail-
road station, and started on his still
longer journey to his cousin's home
in Ohio.
As near as Oelrid could remember,
that cousin lived in a place called
Rich Hill, somewhere in Ohio; but
he lost the card bearing the address,
and is not now sure where his cousin
lives. The police gave Oelrid a bed
at the station. Oelrid had spent his
last cent on street car fare, and was
wandering aimlessly about the streets,
%
kind-hearted citizen's attention was
attracted to his forlorn appearance.
The man brought the boy to the sta-
tion. and Oelrid was glad to stay
there all night.
DOG KEEPS SMILING
NOW.
i other members of th
e medical assoc!-
—
ation. It is ex; lain
(d that the per-
Scranton Beagle Has
a Gold Tooth.
centage of alkali in t
! v water is high
and Is Proud
of
It.
and when it gets in:<
the human sys-
—
tern causes a scaly
formation in the
Wilkesbarre, Pa —
Dr.
Fred S
arteries The scale
.
Birchard, of Scranton. 1
h.as
a dog with
breaks off and the li
''•••* particles are
a solid gold tooth. Th
e dc
*g is proud
carried in the bloo(
1 to the brain.
of it. The animal is a
val
uable Eng-
causing paralysis; tc
> the liver, caus-
lish beagle. A few da
iys
ago. notic-
ing call stones, ar.d ti
o the appendix.
tug that one of its front
teeth xxas
A water com mis si o
n will spend sev-
very much decayed. Dr
Birchard tivx
oral hundred theus;
. - if
the doc a dentist
frit
*nd. The
necessary, on a new
supply Temper-
dentist suggested that
best thing
ance advocates are a
gl ast at the way
to do was to Insert a
J tooth.
beer drinking has inc
Teased for “hygi*
’Til do it now.** sa:
he dentist.
enic'* reasons.
w he* is a great lover oi
’ an:
ima'.s. The
operation took a little :
mon
e than half
L ses Sea Water;
Faces Fine.
an hour. All that time
\ u
x*i x\ ho t ,','k t wo
animal laid back :n his
mas
-ter s arms
buckets of xxater fr
om the sea to
submitting with an ocx
J4>.,
.Ua. whine
bathe her child, in
accordance with
the doctors orders.
w.xs astonished
Nv'w it sport* about
w:
th its fine
to receive ar. official
xx arning from the
go.d tvV'.h. a curios.t;
t all the
customs officers thrx
atoning to fine
>14.! tv'.'s of the comn
..er for breach of the
a xx There has
.-> r. d.scovered an u
I
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Smith, G. A. The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1906, newspaper, August 17, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc915160/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.