The Oklahoma Times Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 6, No. 197, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 7, 1895 Page: 3 of 4
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Rfc I.iGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL.
— There are 47 Chinese temples in
this country, valued at Wl'.OOO.
—Every seventh year among the an-
cient Jews was a Sablmtie year. Np
labor was dor?, and the inhabitants of
Judea liveil on the natural produce of
the earth during" this }*eur.
—The spiritual life is not knowing,
not hearing, but doing. We only know
so far as we can do. We learn to do by
doing. What we do truly, rightly, iu
the way of duty, that, and only that,
we are.—Frederick \V. Robertson.
—The headquarters of the Russian
church in America ure at San Fran-
cisco Thirty years ago, according to
Roman statistics, fully 10,000 inhabit-
ants of North America acknowledged
the c/nr - f li>' as the head of their
cllUJt n
•—The American ttoard oi commis-
sioners for foreign missions has a very
extensive work in Turkey, having one
hundred and seventy-seven mission-
aries then '•* i i'-. *lvin*i " *• 1 in
VIGOR °F MEN
THE ANT MAN.
E«illy, Qulokly, Permanently Restored.
Wetkness, N«rrooin*W|
DrbllUy. nadidl the train
,of eriUrrcp. early •rrtirt or
| later exrn reoe the rwaita of
birwork. ■tckoaas. trorrr,
etc.. FuUttreofibt 4tv*V>
optnem end toneglf«a to
l«very organ and portion
of tlietxMly. Simple, nat-
. ural methods. Immedi-
I li '/luT I \ will ate luiproveinent^eeu.
Failure impoeelble. MOO references/^**,
explanation and proofs mailed (eealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y.
NOT FOR SALE.
Mrs. I'hloe Jason, a
charlady," as the siyt
residence <jeql|drea,
heaofitt.
A 1'iefnl ludivlilual iu the Troplre Who
Flfhti the Inecct W 1th Stuokr.
To look at the mild, timid ante of
pur cool climates, which run at the
sight or sound of people, build their
humble nests under a stone or the V° a* P°)*c
roots of trees, and contend themselves
| with gentlemanly little thefts of seeds
j jnr grain, or such small matters, to look
at these gentlemanly little fellows you
would never imagine that there are
J pome branches of their family, distinct
cousins, who are fierce in the pursuit
| of their human neighbors' goods, so
strong and so intelligent that even
TROUBLE IN THF JASON FAMILY
I'lain and < hlo- i'o.m < >i > I u|ipv «" t
A MODEL HUSBAND
ndr
front«
and
>f In
(!• U un So lYrfi . I
Wife tnu
One Free port hi
(vomen*s edition of
1 hut lf Maile Ills
u fort able.
> . writing to the
Journal, hus the
a few days Allowing interesting essay on the sub- I
, that her i00'model husbands;
>and 11 a in • ul.icnlv di - i I never t.a.1 t.ul one mwiel huib nd, |
appeared. ln" nu*r°y sakes! 1 never want another
T>at ornery Xiffffer owesine'n'de rn^'
younir uns a liviu' *n' he's jis' potter . , °" unow h°w mighty uucomfort-
wuck fer it; dat K she added, retlec- 'ble-hke >ou fe . wlu-n you're all Hxed
tively. " ef dev ham done kilt him, V u fo,r Sunday? Well, that's just the
way 1 felt ail the time that man was
MA.DTSON AVENUE
. . HOTEL..
ley is, ur he's juiupt inter de
1 spe
lalk."
Acting upon ad
na.>
■•ti.. <it relating to the
ui in Asiutic Turkey.
Swis authorities have pub-
ome inter* ting v'.nta in refer-
the women g< aduates at the
work
pu'.
An ii.
T-The
lished >
enc to
four . wiss universities during the past
acadimic year, in all thirteen women
took the doctor's degree—namely, sev-
en in Bern, one in Geneva, and five in
Zurich. lla:>el, the most conservative
university in the little republic, re-
ported no women graduates. Medicine
is still the favorite profession for wom-
en candidates for degrees, and of the
thirteen eight passed iu this depar,.
meut. The meaical dissertations cov-
ered a wide range of research, while
three of the philosophical were re-
searches ?* botany or philology. Two
of the five non-medical women gradu-
ates took philosophical subjects, one
on the relation of Schopenhauer's doc-
trine of human freedom as related to
the teachings of Kant and Schelling,
the other on the Power of Appercep-
tion.
—The lato President McCosh used to
tell the following story about the days
when he was one of the active cham-
pions of the Free Church movement in
Scotland: "Often 1 would be forbidden
to set foot in a town, such was the hos-
tility. In one place, after trying in
vain to get a hall or a vacant lot on
which to preaeh, I sat on my horse by
the roadside and delivered my sermon
to the crowd, calling on all good Chris-
tians to come out and be separate from
the oppressive State Vhureli, and ask-
ing those who might be so moved to
remain. A decent man and his wife
stopped and said: 'We desire togo with
you, but we ure in service, and our
master threatens to tu. n us off if we
have anything to do with the move-
ment.' 'And who is your master?'
'Sir John Gladstone, who lives yonder.'
*1 shall call up and see him to-night.'
1 went, and while walking through the
grounds I met a noble-looking young
man reading a book and deeply al>-
sorbed in thought. Asking his name I
was told that it was Sir John's son.
William Gladstone, a rising young man
and a graduate of Oxford. 1 saw his
father and carried my point with him,
and his two rcrvants were the nuclus
of a flourishing congregation which
was gathered in that place."
WIT AND WISDOM.
—Mr. Viveur—Did you see many old
ruins while you were traveling? Mile.
Frivole—Oh, yes! many. Why, one of
them wanted to marry me!—Tit-Hits.
—Fred—What do you think of my ar-
gument? Will—Sound—most certainly
sound. Fred And what else? Will—
Xothing else merely sound.—Boston
c;
tve v; u anv idea
ents for beg-
only twelve.
eltm upon the conduct of Ulam.
st. - Fliegende
i 1
Policeman Then I
have collected ' the
Blatter.
—lie—How does it happen that none
of you women have eome forward with
a new currency plan? She—Oh, we
already have; a perfect one. When we
need currency, we just sit down and
cry for it.—Cincinnati Tribune.
—"I wonder why Maxim's flying ma-
chine is so long, about getting out?"
queried the scientific hoarder. "As
near as I can figure it out," said the
Cheerful Idiot, "the trouble seems to
be a defective flew."—Cincinnati Trib-
une.
—"I can tell you, baron, that when
ray offer of marriage was rejected by
the prima donna, I was so miserable
that 1 was on the point of throwing
myself out of the window." "What
me vented you?" "The height"—Karls-
Doden Wochenblatt.
—"There's no telling about this cli-
mate," said the small boy, regretfully;
"no telling a thing. Most winters it
snows right up to Christmas; then you
get a sled, and the next day it thaws."
"That's so," replied his companion.
"This winter it was different. It kept
thawin' right up to' Christmas. Then
you didn't get any sled, and the next
day it snowed." Washington Star.
—He is a young married man, and he
dropped into the oflice Saturday morn-
ing and called back, "Got two locals
for you." "Well, what are they?"
"Mrs. will spend Sunday with her
parents at That was his wife.
"What's the other?" asked' the editor.
"Mr. —— is going to get drunk." That
was himself, and he run on up town to
get a running start on the holiday.—
Hillsboro Republican.
—Sullivan bought a goat, for which
he paid five dollars. Shortly after he
received a tax bill on the goat of eight
dollars. He called on Rafferty, the as-
sessor. and said: "Why do you tax me
eight dollars on my goat when I paid
but five dollars for him?" "Well,"
said Rafferty, "I have carefully read
what the statutes say, and it reads:
"Whosoever owns property a butting
on the street shall be taxed four dol-
lars a front foot' "—Shoe and Leathez
Beporter.
A f War at Uubuquo, la.
Dubuque, la., Jan. 97.—As the result
of competition between the Armour,
Hammond an I Swift packing com-
panies, the price of beef in this city
has been reduced from 1 and 6l< cents
to 5 cents per pound.
Mnch Coal Lost In the River.
PlTTSBUR1 'i. Pa-i Jan. 27.—The Mc-
Kinlev Coa< ' -..of this city, lost at
Hick*i : s'«- "• Pi '^teen
MANUFACTURING PEARLS.
Cultivating Oyster* In Chlneee Watera for
the Purpoee. >x<
The cultivation of the pearl oyster
has for years been carrisd on with
great success in the Bay of Ago, in Ja-
pan, under direction and restriction of
governmental supervision. The process
of nature is, however, too slow for mod-
ern requirements. A • Frenchman* HtiJi
been boring holes in the sheUs of pearl
oysters and introducing therein small
glass beads and stopping up the .holes
with cork- ' In six months'he has pure
surface pearls with a glass foundation*
The nacre of the pearl mollusk varies
according to its location, and almost
any color of pearl, lis white,-black,'
pink or gray, can readily bo produced
by lodging the nucleus on the appro-
priate part of the mollusk's body.
The Chinese are wonderfully expert
in the manufacture of pearls. They in-
troduce small balls of earth inside the
pearl mussel by very delicately opening
the shell and placing the nuclei under
the mouth of the animal, and allowing
the shell to close. This initial process
occurs in May or June; the mussels are
then deposited in Canals or pools, and
-abc* the mollusks are opened,
h •• < ived, h d s bored therein,
1 • ae hollow pearl
. i and the orifice
skillfully filled with mother-of-pearl.
Those Chinese pearls are flat on the
bottom, and ar^ nearly hemispherical in
shape.
Peoria can be made of almost any
shade or color by chemical means. The
black pi^irl. fujr instance,*is indelibly
colored in a bath of n^tn^te of -silver.
Pearls being parity of animal sub-
stance are subject* to fiet&rforatioh dnd
decay, and none of t)ie famoi^s pearls of
to-day can be traced \>ack many genera-
tions.
NOT MUCH OF V WORLD.
Melancholy Itaflectlona of the Young Man
from Baulc Ilrldpe.
"What a small world it is, after all,"
said the young man from Bank Bridge,
O. lie had just moved to Chicago, and
for some reasoii he was not greatly im-
pressed with the immensity of the city,
says the Chicago Tribuhe.
"For instance,"he went on, "I had been
in my hotel but a week when I discov-
ered that my uncle's divorced wife lived
in the next roopEi, while the man 'who
married a girl 1 used to be engaged to
is on the floor below. More than that,
the greatest bo^c 1 ever knew in my
life, a creature who has haunted mo
ever since ray scaool days, keens a big
boarding house in the next buildipg. I
have to dodge him every time I go down-
town. At four 'Mock this morning,
when I thought $>i all times I should
certainly be-alone, I started to walk
down State street. It was a misty
morning and the gray fog hid even
tho one or two 'all-night cabmen who
were still sticking to their stands. The
street was lonely ami deserted. I had
walked slowty along down to Jackson
street without meeting a human being,
when suddenly o^t of the mis a figure
loomed: s *
" 'Hello, there,1 soundedayoice as we
drew close together. 'I haven't seen
you for a long time. I'm in pretty
tough luck', ofil man. Can't you stake
me to a bed?' '
"It was a tramp printer I had known
eight years ago in Leadville, Col. I
gave nim fifty cents simply because he
had proved to me beyond cavil that life
,runs in circles around a globe and that
they all intersect somewhere in their
circumferences."
kindrej. ton. ranking ruidn on its weak- "uft nltrBer, she said, as she
cr cousins and bearing off their egtfs, "cowled «P«n the prisoner, "am no
which, in due course of hatching, hi- manner 'count 1 wucks day n out.
- • • erwashin' n'cr scrubbin way inter de
come the slaves of their captors.
Usually the people of those tropical night, 'X'he projics erroun', cornin'
regions pay little attention to the do- hojne drunk ebery night.
of the desk m n
grown men are afraid of them, and the "char-lady charged her
E**e That Appeared to Be Too ValuabU sometimes whole village* turn out to P*k*ing spouse with non-support and
to Port With. light them. Rut it is so, and these Cea*rtion, and the officers were in-
A well-known magician is a wag, eyes of mine have looked upon them Jtructcd to find him Before an uoi r
and finds amusement in mystifying ! and their ruthless doings. had passed a diminutive, wrinkled,
simple-minded folks. A corespondent The formiga, as the destroyer it and crook-legged darky ran in o
tof tho IlostOn Transcript, writing from called; constructs a citadel for itself the station with terror depicted upon
[Washington, where tho sleight-of-hand i underground, its only communication ^lt countenance. Giving the name oi
man had been exhibiting his skill, tells | with the world above being by secret i *■lam Jason he begged that he he lock-
lof his sucress in astonishing f%rroup of ! passages. If it can find any wood-lice ed up at once.
colored people. thereabouts it captures aud carriis W hen the case was called 011 the fol-
The magician one morning went them home, makes a yard for them, a lowing morning Mrs. Jason, who is a
down to the market. Washington has veritable farm yard, and keeps them, ™man <>' vast proportions tall, broad,
'one of th* largest and finest market- content by furnishing a supply of fr°wnd, fat, and a most decided ru-
Qiouses in the world, and one of its fresh leaves every day, just for all the netto ev®n African, took the
fmost pisturesque featuree.U the row of world as we feed our farm stock. The Stand and tearfully recited her criti-
comfortable negro mammies with has- formiga is a marauder of its own
'kets of eggs and vegetables, sitting
.outside the building, laughing, chat-
ting and smoking.
The sleight-of-hand expert, who had
)a friend with him, sauntered up to one
'inky-black old market woman with a
pipe in her mouth cid a beautiful ar-
Iray of fresh eggs before her. lie
|looked at them and asked the price.
"Twenty-three cents, honey," an-
swered mainm^, "an' dese heah is fust-
rate eggs—de hen ain' hardly • done
cluckin' ober 'em yit."
I should think so," said he, and, as
Ihe picked up on« and cracked it, out
came a quarter.
Mammy's jaw dropped, and the pipe
with it.
"And this one—and this one seem
pretty good," carelessly remarked the
man, cracking two more, out of which
fifty-cent pieces tumbled.
Tie crackcd half a dozen in all, and
mammy's store of silver was increased
every time. As he walked off, fol-
lowed by a dozen pairs of beady iriack
eyes with nothing but the whites show-
ling, somebody came up and asked the
awe-stricken old woman the price of
her eggs. 1 * 4
"Dese aigs ain' fur sale," she an-
swered, and she gathered tiiem up in
her apron and waddled'off in the di-
rection of home.
ings of the formiga. They come and
go as they list, running over the rooms,
tables, dishes; the3* are fished out of
the butter, tapped out of tho bread
and cake. It is all a matter of course.
Hut when these sturdy little fellows
invade the house in swarms, and a
warm reception—boiling water—fails
to diminish the nuisance, then tho ser-
vice of the ant man becomes necessary
and he is sent for in hot haste, llis
stock in trade is an enormous bellows,
and a load of a certain kind of wood
found in the neighl>oring forests. Af-
Here tears overcame her and she
swayed her body back and forth, while
a female friend, who accompanied her,
applied soothing words to her spiritual
wounds.
"Jedge, dat ooman momnut'^d me
jamby ter def," interjected Ulam.
This remark stirred up the prosecut-
ting witness, so that she promptly re-
sumed:
"Yaas, jedge, I did lam him; 1 haster
lam him, er dar'd be no livin' wiv him.
Lais' Chewsday night he cum home
frofin' drunk 'it' kiss de bedpos 'n' call
ter stopping up all the openings lead- '"t Daisy. Den I floored him wiv de
ing under the hotiM, except a central xcru'broom, arter wioh I tuck him in-
one, he enlartreB that aud forms it into ter mv 'aP 11 spanked liiin p intedlv.
a furnace that will admit the pipe of J'"1*''' 1 winter yon tnaik 1 lain stop
the bellows. I er Iflttin' drunk 'n' gimme somefin fer
Then he lights a Are, and with the I ^ taik keer on me de cblllun."
aid of the great bellows forces the
smoke into the ant cidatel under the
surface of the ground. Of course these
ftre very porous, and when the smoke
passes through them it goes out into
the house above. Then the ant man
leaves an assistant to work the bellows
and, going into the house, stops up
every aperture and crack that he can
tind.
Meanwhilfe there is a wild commotion
"Jedge," interrupted Ulam, "dat
ooman's de berry debbil. I runt erway
'n' I's gwinter stay plum erway s'lon>:s
I'ft 'live. She's a debbil, jedge, '11' '11
kill me shorely, ef she gits anudder
chaince.'
The evidence, as it progressed,"plain-
ly showed that Ulum failed to make
necessary provision for his household,
but as it also proved that all tie
breaches of the peace originated with
among these doomed insects whose ; ,he Prosecutor the justice .ectured the
home Is being bombarded with sinok.. Punier and dismissed him with lr-
They understand their danger with the structions that lie go uireotly home
very first puff that reaches them, and i "'ith hls "'lfe and provide for his fain-
know that their only hope is in fiijrht. ^ demanded
They all hasten to the central chain- n RT1 R" 1
ber. where their precious eggs are
stored. At a given signal from their
chief each one seizes an egg. then all
turn in haste into the subterranean
passages that lead into the garden, dt-
iserting their homes and carefully
stored stock of provisions, but holding
fast to the treasured eggs.
But there before them are cruel
wreaths of blue smoke. They turn and
rush to another passage^ The same
thing there. As a forlorn hope the
poor ants—we en n't help feeling sorry
for them, after all—run into the old . , . , ,, , . , .
deserted galleries, or set to work to J"1**'' n m^e afo t,nt 1
make new ones, hoping their enemy . b lf M> 1
will not find them there at least. ! tnW1,eln 1mut^rs were explained to
Hut the ant man is patrolling the Ulam he burst into bitter tears of dis-
grounds around the house. As the old , appointment-Chicago I ribune.
No, suh; so suh. Oo wiv r'.at oom-
an? Axin' yer pard n', but 1 shaint do
no such erthing. All I i«xt s dat you
keep me locked lip f'-.n her; uat's wot I
gin myself up fer."
"What's that?" demanded the judge,
angrily. "You refuse to obey my
order?" Then turning to the clerk, he
said crisp!j*: "Enter up live and costs.
Next."
"Look ere yere, jedge," aid Ulam
respectfully, "dattet- liain' ernougli.
Meek it fifteen; datter oo nan haln'
crgoin' ter furgit me in five years, dat
she a int. Jes' meek it fifteen years,
lone gone
or new galleries are cleared out by the
brave little ants the smoke penetrates
them and comes to the surface in a
thin wreath. They are thus betrayed
as well as smothered, and a stroke of
the spade ends their frantic efforts to
escape.
All this time fresh quantities of the
IN THE PERSPECTIVE.
t Picture That Pokm-khcU Invisible attrac
She had on what they call "half-
mourning," to signify that six months
had passed since her husband was laid
away. She had stopped to look at
hot smoke are bTn'g'fTrcert'thmugh Pk,ture displayed by a second-
: hand dealer on Graham avenue, and he
their highways and byways, and the
frail'bodies of the formiga are shrivel-
ling and dropping along their line of at-
tempted retreat. Soon they cease to
struggle. They can not breathe the
rarified, smoke-laden air. The next
day when the soil has cooled off, they ;
are found calcined in their once busy i
galleries, their roasted eggs at their j
sides. Poor little creatures!
But their human victims call the ant
man a blessing.—Chicago Times.
stepped out to say:
"Sell you that beautiful steel en-
graving and carved frame for only two
dollars, ma'am—just as good as new,
and never cost less than ten."
"I—I thought I liked it at first, but
it don't amount to much," she replied.
ivin'.
You can t imagine how wearin' it is
to be on your good behavior every
blessed minute, but you can reckon I
wasn't goin' to be outdid by any man
manners. So there it was! Instead of
bein' tit for tat in squabblin', we was
ill the time see'n' who could be the po-
litest, and* sometimes it would get so
monotonous that I'd be moot dead for
* good rumpus. Hut, land alive, I
might as well tried to pick a fight with
full-feathered-out angel.
First thing in the mornin' there he
was in the kitchen buildin' the fire!
Now if there's anything more aggra-
vatin' to a woman's temper than that,
I'd like to know what it is. 1 toll you,
I'd stood a good deal before in my time,
but that was a little too much.
Then, off he'd go to fhe barn, but
he'd never fnii to get back t 11 .break-
fast was ready, not him! Cate'4 hi.n
givin' tne a eli a ice to scold him ."or be-
lli' lute! And jutt let him be rcadin'
fcn" me goin' for an armful of wpod, an'
Wouldn't lie drop that paper and go
himself? Did you ever hear the beat
□f that?
An' if I wasn't feel in' well, an' was
tryin' to take a nap, he'd sneak out of
the house aa' never slam one door the
hull way, which same were terrible
tryin' to a woman as had had a noisy
man l efore.
Come evenin' an' me sewin', an'there
he'd set and read by the hour; so inno-
cent-like he was he never knowed men
didn't do such things when they're
once married, an' 1 guess they don't
much before, leastways not unless it's
poetry.
At night, when I'd forgot to lock the
basement an' was hearin' burglars,
he'd jump an' go along. Sometimes I
kinder thought as how he was afraid
to stay upstairs alona; but 1 never felt
that way unless he'd been fearful ex-
asperatin"'
He hadn't no consideration for a
woman's feelin's, or he'd have knowed
I was expectin him to belike other
men is, an' not so terrible polite an'
pretty-mannered to me after he was
married.
He would have made such a good
woman, but lund alive, lie didn't seem
a bit like a man. Why. 1 never heard
him swear but once, an' then didn't he
come an' apologize for bein' rude!
Law me! 1 thought I'd have to laugh
in his face, for 1 was thinkin' how my
other man would have swore a blue
streak, an' never give a cent whether
I heard him or not.
He was mighty queer. I might have
knowed he wouldn't lived long. He
always would persist in cleanin' off his
boots before he came onto the porch,
nn' if he got ashes on the stove he'd
hunt up a rag an' rub 'em off.
Poor man! he might have been livin'
now if he'd only been willin' to be like
other men. But one terrible cold day
when 1 was shovelin' a path, ho came
an' made me quit, an' of course, he
overhet himself in shovelin'. That
night his head were dreadful stopped
up. an' instead of lettin' me get up an'
pet some mustard, he would go him-
-elf. The next week he up an' died.
It were a very bad day the day ho were
buried, so I didn't go the graveyard. I
were bound to respect his wishes to
the last, an' lie wouldn't have wanted
me to go out in such weather.
I were a good woman to him, an' he
were a model man, but not half as
comfortable as the one I've got now.—
Uockfork (111.) Register-Gazette.
FORCED ECONOMY.
f!
T: mm m
V
Tgrgf-S'-Ov.
1 rr'"
Madison Avenue and 58th Street
3TOKIC.
$3 p^r Day and up. Am rican P an
FIREPROOF AND FIRSTCLASS IN EVERY
PARTICULAR.
Two blocks from the Third and Sixth Ave
nue Elevated Railroads.
"h° Madiso andFoirth Avenue and Belt.
Lin) Car? pass iheduoj.
II. M. CLARK j Prop
Passenger Elevator runs ill uight
The Forum
Sound Logic.
An old man who benfcved that "what
was to bo would be," lived in the west,
and was one day going out several miles
through a region infested by very savage
! Indians. He always took biagun with
him, but this time found that one of
j the family had it out. As he would
woald not go out without it, some of
his friends tantalized him by saying
there was no danger of the Indians;
| that he would not die until his time
j came, anyhow. "Yes," said the old
fellow; "but suppose I Was to meet an
'p" - and hh time had come; it
r, uji to have my
Hit* Certain Compensations Which I'rodl*
jjnl Spending Can Never Know.
There arc many compensations in
! economical spending. To be able to
i buy all one needs or likes without eldre
consideration of ways and means is
"Beg pardon, ma'am, but please ldok i doubtless a pure joy to some minds,
at the details. There's a farmhouse to I For to spend lavishly does not always
always remind you of the country; j imply selfishness. There are natures
there's a forest, a meadow, two horses : which are broadened and enriched by
and a cow, and there's " prosperity, and comfort and peace and
"They are Very common," she inter- j helpfulness for others spring naturally
up in their hearts so soon as the pres-
sure of tightened circumstances is re-
laxed.
And 3*et there are compensations to
he found in economy. To save and
contrive through long days to obtain
some coveted bit of household furnish-
ing. or some longed-for treat, carries
with it many a gratification besides the
mere attainment of the desire. The
Two dollars is too much," she said, arrangement and the planning, which
The man who is honest and true to his as s*ie looked more closely and exhib- iirt flavored with manj anticipating
ited more interest. 1 houghts of the pleasure they are given
"But consider, ma'am; consider that ! for; the expectation and satisfaction of
Difflcultiea ,
After all, difficulties are but friends nipted.
in disguise. They come with formula- "Perhaps, ma'am, but in that house
ble mien, aud to meet them men must is a lioy—a widow-—waiting for the
summon to their aid every faculty of (rcnt who is coming through those
brain and body; they must make a woods to climb this rail fence just hen .
fight, and whether they win or lose You can't see'em, of course, but tlie.s
they are the gainers. Success is not are there, and he's going to propose to
always measured as the world meas- ^er as soon as reaches the liOuse.
ures it, because the men who some- | ^ e ^ accept and they 11 be married in
times fail most signally are those who j V6 ^er-v' very happy,
have met difficulty most courageously. «■« n inn h im mnMi «. «> wn.,
own convictions of right and duty is
never a failure, though the world may •
write him such. Difficulties decide he's going to pop the question, and he s
who is the fittest to bear the heavy re- I an(^ handsome! Cant tell how
sponsibllities of life. The men who 1 this Picture may affect your future,
cringe and yield to them are the fail- ! y°u ^now-
ures and are not equal to the task of "I'll give you a dollar and a half
/.^ERICA'S LEADING REVIEW
r ~ & T:iu Forum will tuk< up for discussion, during
0 1893, nn unusuully wido ran go of timely un'l
1— * ■' C A . .. j
^ ... important topics by the most eminent writers
w ' ' i:i tho fields of Politics, Finance, Sociology,
r«r f. -• i— yvdicre.
Literature, Religion, Art, and Science.
it ad Ihe I urum i* 10 k«e|i In touch
w th tha butt thought ol the day.
To be without The Forum ia to misa
tha beat help to clear thinking.
A catalogue of tlio writer* wlio liavo contributed article* to Till: FOItl'M in
tlie prist would cutliraee prueticnlly every man af « inlnenco in America, and mo t
of those Iu Europe. A lint of Hiil«J«ctrt treated would cover iu the w Id eat degree all
topics o.f contemporaneous Intercut. Til K l-'OKUM ia therefore of Inestimable value
to any one wlio desire* to keep cloaely Iu touch with the best of i urreut thought.
doing great deeds, nor even to bear the
daily rfAind of toil* Difficulties have
for their object and end the shaping of
man's character, and he who comes
through them without losing his cour-
age, who can rejoice in obstacles con-
quered, and with quiet pulse and more
watchful eye await the next, who can
truly say, "Sweet are the uses of ad-
versity"—has learned his lesson well.
To hiin the gain has more than com-
pensated for the toil along the way, | Why Tin Boofa Leak.
and any other difficulties which may A housekeeper who has suffered from
rise before him will be undreaded and u leaking roof says that he has discov-
unfeaAd.—Detroit Free Press. ered why his tin roof should leak, and
how to prevent it. The simple rule is
never to have it put on in hot weather.
., , . . . . , If the sheets of tin are spread on the
thoughts of running for congress, but
. h , . roof in the summer months thev are
my family are opposed to it.
Col. Bigadzlr—Knowing yourself as
she said, as she took out her purse
"Oh,well, I'll have to take it, but it's
an awful shame. Fit for any parlor in
the land—drawn by an artist who usid
to milk this very cow—and in the per-
spective is one of the happiest mai-
riages ever made in this country. Here
it is, ma'am, and after tlie match has
been fixed I know you'll drop in and
give me the other fifty cents. '—Detroit
Free Press.
Col;
I.ooking Huckward.
Carter—I have had
you do, can you blame them?—Brook-
lyn Life.
—Dry snuffs are prepared from to-
ba.tco that has been subjected to a
hTg)i temperature before the leaf is
ground.
Howard Jolly daUea Restitution.
Mkmphis, Tenn., Jan. 26.—Howard
Jolly, indicted for embezzlement from
the C., O. A 8. W. and Cotton Belt rail-
roads, which he served here as agent,
paid over the full amount tak< n to the
American Surety Co. and waa released
from custody.
A tirand Jury for Abilene.
Ahii.knk. Kan., 27.—Judge Humphrey
to-day ordered a grand jury for the
com lug term of court. There was a
large remonstrance filed, but ho held it
was not discretionary. It is the out-
come of a prohibition fight.
bound to contract, la cr on, • hen cold-
er weather comes. And when they do
contract the leak follows, as a matter
of course.—N. Y. World.
—The Catholic Apostolic (Independ-
ent) has 10 churches, worth t06,000, and
claims 1,394 members.
TELEUHAPIIK3 HftKVITIKH.
A bill was introduced in the Okla-
homa legislature to compel drunkards
to take the Keeley cure.
Fifteen saloonkeepers and liquor
dealers have been expelled from the
Knights of Pythias lodge at El wood,
Ind.
The National Association of Custom
Tailors, in session at St. Louis, has
elected It. jj. Bishop, of St. Louis, pres-
ident.
The bodies of three men who were
drowned by the sinking of the steumcr
State of Missouri have been recor
aunting the fast-accumulating hoard,
and then the final joy, which extends
| beyond the mere getting, the glow of
I delight at the accomplishment of a set-
tled purpose, which is the crowning re-
ward of the economical soul, who re-
joices ever with a ten-fold satisfaction
at obtaining what he worked for so
long—all these are compensations
which the prodigal never knows, and
which to many natures are all-suffic-
ing.—Harper' Bazar.
Not a "New" Woman.
Jack (finishing his stor3*)—And I tell
i you, old man. the belle of the recep-
! tion was Miss Antique. She hasn't
had so much attention from men
in twenty years as she received last
night
Harry—Why was it? She's not at-
tractive.
Jack—No; but she was the only
woman present who wasn't a member
of the gentlewoman's political league.
i Judge. _
Appetizing.
Customer (in cheap restaurant)—Oive
, me beefsteak with mushrooms.
Waiter (loudly, to cook)—Slaughter
in de pan, wid fumygated toadstools!—
N. Y. Weekly.
A band of men robbed the railway
express office at Sugarland, Tex., of
? 1,500. Four of the robbe.s were ar-
' rested.
The republicans gained a complete
victory at the city election in Wheel-
ing, W. Va., the first time in many
years.
The saloon of Joseph Burke at St.
.Joseph, Mo., was raided by burglars,
who took everything, even to the bar
aud fixtures.
Citizens of Oklahoma petitioned
President Cleveland to remove Judge
. Scott, of the Third judicial district of
! that territory.
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Brown Bros. The Oklahoma Times Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 6, No. 197, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 7, 1895, newspaper, February 7, 1895; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc93516/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.