Cherokee Telephone. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1893 Page: 4 of 4
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debtor to doos.
TH •
Old C inp >«"«
rmpior.d >■ €*««!■'■■ Vot~-
AmoDI «h« ln rhln4 ®
l Mlr •" n 01,1 KrilzlJ Tcnnes ee n.
who w « nightly the e.ntr l B^ur*
of ft clrclo of fttorj-t«Iler , and thft
following the Chicago limes thlokft
u oat of tho boat o< Iho lot:
It (Mini that ft ahort lima liter
tho war there was an attempt to dl-
ride tho county la which Memphlft l
§ituato<l—Shelby—and the attempt
to create a •ubstantiftl majority
(gainst It was to donpei-ato
th.it It became necoa.ary to
send to Memphlft for a /ew
thousand dollars tor judloloua di -
tribution. "This cold storage fund
has put in my charge," said 'h« °®
fellow, "aDd It was not long before
I had engftged a,U bl.<l«^r «f
tho Maxwell house and hail stocked
a smoking room with .ome good
cigars and • barrel of Robertfton
county Whisky. I h.a at thft time
one of the prettiest nd cunnlnge.t
Scotch terriers that had ever been
brought to this country, for wh.ch I
had paid
••Pretty soon afte** 1 opened up an
honorable legislator from West Tea-
DOMOe strolled into my sitting-room,
took • drink, and lighted a cigar,
and then roratrkod that while it did
not make much difference to him,
•till ho had about mado up his mind
to oto for the division of Mini by
eountv At this I began to sizo him
up. when the terrier jumped into a
chair by the legislator and bold out
his paw. Tho honorable member at
once saw the nioo points of the ani-
mal. and said ho would flvo or do
anything (or such a dog. I just said
to him quietly to vote uRuinst tho
division of Shelby county and ho
should havo that dog or ono just liko
It The bargain was closed ln a min-
ute. Tho transaction gavo mo an
Idea I could promlso dogs for votea
and carry back tho money.
••Well, to mako a long story short,
I had thirty odd callers who were a
llttlo dubious as to how they should
vote on tho Shelby county division
bill, and. as they all fauciod my ter-
rier, I promised tho dog. or one like
It, to each one who should 'vote
right' on said bill, taking caro to ex-
plain pleasantly which was tho right
aide. Well,tho bill came up for Anal
action in duo time, and tho division
party was beaten by a vory large ma-
jority. I returned at onco to Mem-
phis with nearly as much money as I
had taken away, to tho groat sur-
prise of thoso who had collcctod It,
and explained mattors by stating
that I had paid out no money fop
vote?, but that I owod thirty-four
doga*1
A Saffron Colored Index
Of the condition of a blUtous •tomaeh an«
ilunKlah tlvcr Is the human countenance.
Not only the skin, but the eyeballs arc tinged
«rith the yellow hue when tho bile grU into the
blood. Bnatdof this, slckheadachoa ensue. the
ton goo becomes fnrred. pains are felt In the
}|*er and throngh tho right •honhler blade,and
dlzcinoaa is experienced upen rising from a Bit-
ting or recambent posture hy tho billions In-
valid. For thcs«> and other Indications of bll-
liousncss, lloaiettcr's Stomach Hit tern In a
sovereign roAoiy It Is also efficacious In
chilli and fever, dumb ague, ague cake, Inac-
tivity of tho kidneys and bladder, rhcum..ti m
snd nervousness. It stimulates, restores di-
gestion and aleep, and tenus greatly to miti-
gate the Infirmities of age.
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
It Is better that she como to uch
DIRECTIONS FOR BUILDING A happiness, even through what may
SUCCESSFUL SILO, «v m drastic tneaauroa. thun that she
j should misft It entirely by too early
Th. Squar. silo the being ent to tho shamble,.— Amorl-
K Irking of Cowl—Scarlet
Uoaae-Mado Clod Matlior-Torh Point
era and lloushotd Help*
can Cultivator.
Hulldtoa i
The Farmers Voire Is asked by
S«.irlet Clovtr,
Tho wouderful rapidity and low
cost at wktoh our worn out lands can
bo brought to great productiveness
aiio , ia a CO ti h tan t surpriso. No better
Nebraska subscriber to give diroc- | ffjuttration ran bo found than tho
lions for building a silo, mn(i lands attached to tho North Carolina
fiponda as follows: Silos are u agricultural experiment station,
square, round and in octagon shape. Qnjy a fow years ago this was a bare
All things . onsldorod. the square hilo hm tQp ,n ar ol(J field, aud notoil-
is best At all events It is letter OUB|yt jho moat poverty-stricken pot
than the round, for it is less trouble o( |am, jn tho country. ], m|ghl
to build and repair. >iios aie built have madu. in a ijood soason.
partly under and par'U above ground j v0 ijushels of eorn per acre, prob
and above ground al together. I bey „ . And vet we fc
CYCLING IN FRANCE • "ra,t-TrouvlUe by preference—wateh- |
i jng the gay Freneh life, the bathera in j
i their pretty. bril!ian . coatumea; the
a TOUR OF PLEASURE ON ,nen BI),i w„mi-n, the children and
THE WHEEL. nurses, the peiisanta and flshermen, I
I whom the French comic draughtsman
is never t'reit of caricaturing. If you
la tb« i.an'i of Verier, Bosits, Pr.it, have ever cared for voer Mars in the
tltiu. Good liinnrrs n<t I'oapiteM* printed reproduction you will < ;oy
- T"« . sr.- ['(;™rhaevrce;°u ^ w°hen TOU laa^Trou.
aiao. ville for ( aen, with ita two ancient
: abheva, Abbeveaux Ilamesan.l Aobeye
Purls CorrrnponJencl i Hommes: no meeting there in the
r ALL (1 O O D °'t'1 days the two sexes on equa
P^r'Xn^the? Te*?' eomeft llaveux. of Up-airy
ii.™J^t1I Is fame, a pia. e to linger in for many a
die.a lgoodcv.ll,U ' ™e^*lPho,lr And then follow, the
Kraure whilf they "" t perfect portion .! ull this perfec.
'li>e It is the laud tourney. If tou are adventurous >ou
|of perfect roiMis*^)f ! ^^Urnor,h^rheHjourg. -t
Hichcst of all fn Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Rtpoft,
are built on side hills, on tho level
and in barns. They are built with
floors and without them. They are
built of stone, cement and wood:
and all of these different ways are
more or less successful. Wo prefer
a square silo, built of wood, above
ground, about sixteen feet high, and
of just sufficient dimensions other-
wise to enable us to feed off tho top in
three or four days. If a longer time
than this is taken to feed off the
top, it will mould. About fifty cubic
feet must bo allowed to tho ton.
<>ood drainage must be provided und
the silo must bo tnado air-tight. l>ig
a trench u foot doop and fill in tho
bottom with grout made of fivo-
sixths of stono and one-sixth of
An I nklnd Itrmnrk.
Voung Wife—Yes, father always
gives away expensive things when he
makej presents.
Husband—So I discovered when he
gave you away. And then ho went
to the library to draw a check for
the monthly milliner/ bill.—Texas
Sift lues.
tlca cement On tho top of this lay
a L'xIO studding. Then sink tho up-
right studding which should aiao be
2x10, a foot and a half in tho ground
along side of this horizontal studding
on the grout and splko them to-
gether, filling up around the upright
to a distance of six inches above the
surface with grout; or a cheaper way
would be to lay sills on a stone foun-
dation and bind them together with
bolts. Tho silo must havo good
strength. The upright studding
should be placed not over fifteen
inches apart and some contend for
twelve inches. At the corners have
double studding. On the outside of
this studding put on tarred paper,
lappod about an inch and a half. Put
on this drop siding. On tho Inside
put on tarred paper also, und on that
matched flooring. Paint this with
coal tar and gasoline, two parts of
tho former r,nd ono of tho lat
tor. Paint tho outsldo with
common paint. 'J lie roof an
ordinary roof mado of shingles.
Drace the uprights at tho top in a
substantial manner. The ground
may bo used as a floor, or a cement
floor may be put on. Those who use
tho ground say that it is all right.
Put In two doors, ono above tho
other, like ice house doors. When
the cnsllago Is used down to tho
lower door tho upper ono is kept
closed and the lower ono U used, iiut
while this is a plan of a silo it can be
built in any way that will insure
strength, drainage, and tho shutting
out of the air. Anybody who can ef-
fect these purposes can build a silo,
if a silo is. say 1*^x2 feet, it is well
to divide it by partitions into throe
apartments. Corn in tho silo gives
tho best satisfaction of any of the
green crops, though any green crop
can bo ensilaged. Tho corn is cut
just as tho ear begins to glaze. Some-
times It is cut before going into tho
silo and sometimes it is not. It is
hetto" to cut it. When tho tilling
begin* fill as rapidly as possible, and
nave a man placing tho ensilage and
ably loss. And yet we have ou this
poverty-stricken hill, to-day, a va-
riety and luxuriance of growth which
is surprising to those who havo
known the land. And it has not
been by lavish expenditure of the
station funds that it has been brought
up, but merely by tho aid of those
poteiat factors in soil improvement in
tho South, cow |M as and crimson
clover, and at no greater cost than
any farmer can afford. Wo have ono
piece of land, several acres in extent,
which has grown a crop of ensilage
corn every year for four years. The
first year's crop was a miserably poor
one, und each succeeding ono bettoi,
while this year's crop would havo
made forty to fifty bushels of corn
per acre had it been cured for gram.
Tho agent in this was crimson clover
aided by doop plowing of tho red
layoy soil. Kuch season, us the
corn is cut off, seed of crimson clover
is sown on tho land. By April it is
knee high, and Is turned under later,
when fully mature, and corn is
planted, ln the short space of four
years this barren hillside has como
ival tho rich bottom lands at a
cost of #1 50 per acre for clover toed.
CorjrrWt
llent dinners,
'of j. av cafes. You
uta \ count upon
tine sport all day.
upon something
more, and much
better, to eat than a chop or a s ealr
when your machine is put up for the
night, upon a far plea*anter place
than the Kngliah inn coffee ro m to
spend the hour bctwetn dinner and
bedtime.
All France ia the cyclists' paradise.
Normandv is the special corner re-
served for the English wheelman's de-
light. It Is so near and so easily i
reached—it coines within the possi-
bility of an Easter or Whitsuntide
holiday. It can be entered by Dieppe,
the port of all othera to be preferred
by the man who travels with hi
wheel. The custom house officials
there lire men of common sense, aud
this is a consideration, siuce the French j
ustom house is a strange and unac-
countable institution. I do cot pi^
tend to explain the exact law that
regulates tho duty upon cycles, and,
indeed, it matters little: an arrange-
ment lias been made bv the Cyclists'
Touring club hero according to which,
nominally, the presentation of your
member's ticket will act like a charm
and admit your cycle free, but I would
advise no one to rely upon it too im-
p'icitly.
My experience is that whether you
aie compelled to leave a deposit or not
ays within f - lench of the sea-
wheeling in am out of queer littla
towns, long since dead or forgotten,
like \ alognes. for oxample, silent and
d.serted, the grass growing in its
streets. Hut even if you do penetraie
into this far northern .region you
will probably come ba k by w y
of St. 1 .o tnd then, riding
through Coutances and tiran ville
and Avian lies on the western coast,
always breathing the fresh, keen sea
air, you wi.l finally reach Mont St.
Michel, the abbey crowned .ock fort-
absolutely PURE
M*?S.DICKSON'S BURGLAR TRAP ; Lost children in Japan do not long r *
nj*ln astray. It Is the custom for pnrecti
It Caught and Held Two tha flrtf Time tQ thoir children with their aldret*.
It «raa Sprang. j ef tlmt m Cftie they go astray say
A widow of the name of Susannah , wayfarer mny send them horae.
Dickson, owning u farm witnin ball a !
thi. 6av, H (irtnaila, I Car.Dl.p>p,l •«! Canllpttla*.
Mis,., corre-pondont of tho Phll.de:- j nr
phla Tfmcs, recently lill cn a novul Dru«gi«u,:*c. dh snoop, um w .iucIm wi*
manner c! capt^lnB ^rglar^ On« ^ m,Uo( Colorado h„ ,.t th. ,„0.
night It happened that «he wu, left fflr an lrrlgtttioB cl„„| ,„llet
entirely alone by tho rost or tne jonK jt jg lo cogt over a million dollaiv,
household, and as it grew late she nn(j wm reclalm a vast amount of duasrt
heard noises In the kitchen that i lan(^
mado her auspicious that there was
somo one feloniously inclined on tho
premises. Bo she bethought herself
of a largo wardrobe, old-fashioned in
make, und shut herself thctoin,
locking tho door after her.
( nf'l tough Unlawm
III th" and I""U It Witt br^di up :"«W
ei-llmu anyltiiaffeUC lt/ialwajri reliable. Try a.
The German navy has 1,231 officers and
18,249 men There arc ninety one v*.
„ — . «i Is of all sorts, of which nineteen are
Sho could hear tho men as they | and eighteen armored crulsen.
rummaged tho house, and their i ———— - •
voice, ln dispute ln regard to tho ,<*
value of tills obji ct or that. Mio | iruggUtfurlt. prUe&ccat*-
recognized two of thorn by iholr ac-
cents. At last they had collected
The richest prlre ever carried oil by tha
everything they considered worth 1 wlnnar of tt.Jerby
carrying off aud loaded it Into empty • the o78 ,Ascribe™.
pillow slips when, costing his eyes
about him, ono of tho rogues espied ' .^ti stopped rw r r DB« su>i* aeu|
tha wa^l^rtlua nml nnllin<7 out to the ! >ad*M
(ireen llona I>ry Itoue.
Heme one has wisely suggested that
poultry men will do well not to con-
found green bone with dry bone for
poultry food, (jrecti bono fresh from
the market Is a valuable food. Dry
hone, as found at poultry supply
stores, contains little nutritive food.
Tho former is not bono alone, but
contains a largo per cent of meat and
gristle, and by a littlo selection of j
those bones they often contain sov-
enty-tivc i>er cent of nutriment ma-
terial. Tho dry bono is invariably
produced by prolonged boiling or
steaming, and often potash and naph-
tha are used in tho process to extract
tho last particle of fat in thorn for
soup making purposes. Green bones
and dry bones, as the terms arc used,
aro practically different things. Tho
price of dry bones per pound should
havo no bearing upon the pyco of
green bone and vice versa. 1 ney aro
obtained at different places in a dif-
ferent way. Ono can bo stored and
sold by the bag. tho other cannot.
One can be ground ami prepared by
steam power at largo factories and
sold at wholesale, tho other cannot
unless it be to a very limited extent.
Dry bones can be ground or crushed.
Green bones must be cut The grind-
ing or crushing of thorn is imprac-
ticable.—Fanners Voice.
ll un«aliold 11 «* I | «.
' Tannin mixed with mutton tallow
j is good for chapped hands.
Don't put a bright colored carpet
into a room where the furniture is
dull, old or of neutral tints.
THE rARADISF. or CVCI.KRS.
HHP rising from the waters of the bay
(the deposit to be returned if you go the same nume. It is the Cornish
out of the country within six months) j M Michael's Mount on a larger scale
depends wholly' upon the temper i Hncj glorified-a marvel of nature and
of the officials with whom you come in | urt> 0f wiia cliffn and stately archi-
contact <m the frontier. At Calais.
for example, sometimes I have been
forced to pay: soinetimts I have not
Hut I think "the chances are, if you re
n>otnber that a Frenchman, even if he
be a customs officer, likes to be
treated with common civility, and
you learn enough French t > be
ahl* to assure him that you are
on pleasure, not on commerce bent,
you will be allowed to pass at no heav-
ier coat than a bow and a smile, llow-
er, at Dieppe you can land with an
ntirely easy conscience. No money
v-i 11 be asked of you, because it has
long since Iccn realized that the ob-
ject of the visitor who arrives with a
wheel is to enjoy the roads, not to in-
juro thj trade of France.
Once the customs house ordeal is
er, only pleasure lies before the cy-
clist 'liie real difficulty is to decide
hat road to take, which route to fol-
low. The country is charming, with
its stretches of woodland, its shady
orchards, its lines of tall poplars, and
its old chateaux and farms each en-
closed in a square of trees. It is look-
ing its best, perhaps, in the spring
The Trouble a Thotograpltcr Onee Had
wllh the Emperor of Germany.
'•'1 lie worst sitter I had was, I think
the present emperor of Germany," said
_ ^ Frith, the photographer, to a rcprc-
when the apple trees are in blossom I tentative of the Westminster (.az-'ttc.
ormandy is the land of the apple, as ! "lie was a small boy of four or five and
treading it down, ('over with tarred I 1'on't furnish u north room in bluo
paper aud boarla As our corres- | or any other cold color; something
pondent doubtless knows thoro are
M T. THOMPSON & CO, Prn lato, Con-
fleraport, I'n , any Hull'* Ca'nrrh Care it the
best nn-1 only rare cure for catarrh the? over
■Old l*rug'ginl8 soil it 75c.
Tha McteiitWi- Stile.
Young lrfwly—Why do 1 got so nor-
vous when I ploy bctoro an andl-
fncoF l'rof. von Thurapp—Sympa-
thy and magnotiim, my tear young
Udy— mind acting on mind, you
know. "I don't sea how." "Kot cos
very tlmple of explanation. l>o
nervouaness, and re.tU«- no*s. nnd
weariness off do gompany alTooU
yourself#."—New York il'eoltly.
The Modern ]leaa*y
'Thrives on good food and sunshine,
with plenty of exercise in the open air.
Her form glows with health and her
faee blooms with its beauty. If her
av stein needs the cleansing action of
a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle
nnd pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of
Figs.
GENERAL NOTES.
Men attending the pans in salt works
aro never known to have cholera, small*
pox, scarlet fever or influenza.
Tha Cronton aqueduct Is 40 miles long,
having 10 tunnels an<l a eollortiug reser-
voir of 8,000,000,000 gallons capacity.
cutters made for tho cspccial pur-
pose of cutting ensilage.
1'reveiitlnir Kicking of row*.
It is no exaggeration when tho
farmer says that it. is always tho best
cow in the herd that becomes werth- i . . 5n fl uinaii
, . iii ii hangings are out ol place in a Hinau
\chh, because she kicks so it is Im- 1 " •_ ._,4U
possible to safely milk her. The
of u warm tint should l o chosen
Don't strain tho baby's eyes by al-
lowing a strong light t >shine direct-
ly into them, especially when ho
lirst wakos.
Don't hang a heavy portloro over
a narrow door; generally speaking
N
you know at once from the cider
that is set before you at the t iblo
hote, instead of the wine
the central and southern
provinces From Dieppe, or from
Havre, to Kouen, you pass orchard
aftes orchard, at their loveliest when
covo.'cd with the "tfowery frost of
May" On the whole, this is the
journey I wovld recommend to the
cycli&t'who has never before been ;n
S'wriaandy, and who has but a short
holiday to speud there. Outside of
Dieppe there are hills, but they are
not very terrible, and for every climb
there is a coast. They give the touch
of varietyVhich the cyclist loves and
he peasant cannot understand. It is
lisy day's run from Dieppe to
fact that a cow has a full bag and
teats congested with milk makes her
especially liable to be hurt by rough
treatment Both bag and teats are
fonder, nnd ff handled roughly the
cow is hardly to bo blamed for re
bouse, or with small room
A bottle of flexlblo collodion Is
very useful for cracks in the hands,
scratches, cuts, etc. Caro must b<
taken to keep it well protected from
tho air.
Don't fill tho contor of tho room,
99
"German
Syrup
Justice of tbc Fence, George Wil-
kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co.,
Miun., makes a deposition concern-
ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In
the Spring of 18S8, through ex-
posure I contracted a very severe
cold that settled on my lungs. This
was accompanied by excessive night
sweats. One bottle of Boschee's
German Syrup broke up the cold,
night sweats, and all and left me
i:i a good, healthy condition. lean
five German Syrup my most earnest
commendation." ®
sponding with a kick. The hubit of ' unless thcro is plenty of spaco on nl-
kiekine thus formed soon becomes "Wes; nothing offends good tusto so
second nature, and tho cow is soon ! furiously as ^tho sen60 of h? ng
worth nothing cxcopt to be futtone.l ••cluttered up.
for the butcher. ' Don t spoil the infant by walking
It is not enough to prescribe or rocking it to sleep, and do not lot
gentleness in handling cows ac- anyono else do so; it will sleep best
customed to the kicking habit. It is and most naturally when lying upon
true pounding the cow only makes a comfortable bed.
the matter worse. It is u tight in
which the cow has the advantage.
for a milker is necessarily in a hclp-
Porlc ro uter*.
Never breed from a grade boar;
lur a Illlllicr IIOIX9SBITIJ 111 M I1UIU- Al . . „_,u1
loss position, ami If not lu.ncd by the the Pure ^eed wjonotoo.good.
first kick ho can do no more than ~ * * '
strike back, making matters worse
than before. What is needed is
some method of making the cow even
tnoro helpless for offensive operations
than tho milker is. The device was
the suggestion of a keen-witted boy
many years ago. It has never failed
Do not bo stingy with the bedding
given hogs, especially tho sow that
Is in farrow
Avoid getting your 'breeding boar
loo fat; rather give him food that
forms bone and muscle.
Stagnant water is the homo of dis
ease germs; hence it is ttio best poll
when tried fairly. The bey had icy to have a drain in tho hog yard,
noticed how peacefully the most The curl in tho pig's tail is an in
savage bull was led by a cord through dication of health and thrift. Don't
tho ring fastened in his noso. Ho fail to keep your cyo on the indi
noticed, too. that every tiuo a cow cat r.
kicked she jerked her head in a When you purchase any pigs quar
vicious way, lowering her nose. Why antinc them for thirty days before
not then put a ring in that nose, letting them associate with your
hold her head up high enough so others.
that the rope would constantly pull Mix all slops fed fresh at each
on it. This would give the cow feeding. Nothing is more injuriou
something else to think about than than the feeding of sour, fermented
kicking. rotten slop
The suggestion was promptly put Never feed a pig so liberally but
into practice. A ring was inserted it will always be ready to en
in the nose of the rao«t fractious cow heartily ut the next meal Over
in tho yard, and a small rope was gorging is as unprofitable as half
passed through it, holding up tho starving it.
cow's head a3 if to pre pare for a j brB ghould be taught to eat atthe
kick. Hut the attempt stopped short ear]|est age possible. Give them
very suddenly. I'he milking was jn a shallow trough, and oat
*ISH BR
TM, Tr 4, Mir* U • fc"'
WATERPROOF COAT
in. .treted |(] the WCfld !
■"KS* A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MAS*
gentle, and soon the swollen bag was
relieve 1 of its burden. For a few
weeks the rope was put on cach
morning, and tho cow's head held up,
but this was soon changed, and very
soon tho fact that tho cow had the
ring in her nose was enough to make
her peaccably disposed. In the end
she became entirely docile, and re-
mained so ever after.
There is no cruelty In this method
of preventing kicking, the slight pain
involved in putting a ring through
the animal's nose saving her from far
worse abuse, and sUo keeping her
tenipcf from becoming entirely
spoiled, which is only less desirable
for cows than it is for humans. A
good-natured cow contentsdly chew*
icj bsr qui while being milked is uri*
upon the ground where tho sow cun
not molest them
The grass-fed sow never become*
addicted to tho vice of pig eating
Her whole system is in good condi
tion, and only feverish, constipated
sows devour their pigs.
Good oats, wholo or ground.arc fa
prcfcrablo to corn as a food for prog*
nant sows. Oats form bone and mus-
cle rather t.ian fat,hence their value
for tho breeding sows and cmbry
pigs.
The best quality of meat is secured
from a pig und not from a hog
Therefore we should erOwd our pig
from birth so as to get them fit for
market at th* earliest possible age—
, six months.
tecture. Of late years it has become a
trifle tourist haunted, perhaps, and
the restorer has been at work. If you
arc not breaking records, as is the way
with most wheelmen you could not
do better than break your journey at
Mont St. Michel and spend a week, or
ut lenst two or three days, witli Mine.
Poulard, who will give you as clean
a bedroom, as well cooked a dinner
aud as decent n bottle of ordinary
wine as you could ask for, even it j*ou
be the most exacting of men.
When I consider all these advan-
tages. to me the only wonder is that
a 1 cyclists do not. at every holiday
season, pack their flannels, put a guide
1-ook and a good map in their pockets,
get out their machines, pump up their
tires and set sail without delay for
Dieppe.
A ROYAL SITTER.
r> nil
flr t Anf* '
lr_ , «. «... _ ... tilalboilta
Dr Kline. Ml Area St . ilUUdeJph'•*,!*
Assuming tho working S® to l>o t n«
20 to BO years, «nd counting only inula
\vork.n,~440 persona In tlii, couutiy lira
ou the labor of every 100 workera.
if ik* Hni.> .« rmiim
Hint «.l«t *n<! wcll-trted rcmedr.
for Children TMthinC
tho wardrobe, and calling out to the
others that hero was a depository
where something o! value might bo
concealed, he started toward it, fol-
lowed closely by tho others.
Mrs. Dickson, alarmed at tho
thought of falling into tho hands of
so unprincipled a band of wretches.
involuntarily gavo a spring forward BmrtwJ
as if to escape from the confined hole
in which, to her heated imagination, t ti,e most expSn ive fur Is the skin of
she coulu bo murdered and her near- the black fox of Knm< liatka. These aoi-
est neighbor hear nothing of what main aro scan-o aud .iar l to kill, anils
was taking place. As she threw her- si"*-1** -k* soils for at>out Si.000.
self against the door in tho attempt
to escape her weight caused the mas- '^ep"^ ^tTc'iol and the live.
forward oft °l oTTZZ ^
ucath it two of tho three advancing : —.—-
men. Tho ono in tho rear sprang I n,0 shark manifests a distinct rhoici
back in tinio to savo liimsolf, with | for people of certnin wes, end will e l
tho cxcoption of- tho treat too 011 the CI Asiatic In preference to n nogro, aud
loft foot. Tho b ino of that was a European r.ithor than either.
broken, however, and injurod In such . ,
a manner as to make the wound very t^nTol
painful and tQ what his „f the p,incl,.,lcitif. of re.t Prifln.
Fut this was m
companions had sustained. One lay j -
as though ho were dead. IIo had
been struck on tho head by a picco
of tho network crowning tho ward-
robe, while tho other wa* pinned bo-
neath it firmly, and held so by Mrs.
Dickson's weight. In a'')Oilt half an
hour tho rost of tho household ro
START -A.
PEOPLE'S PARTY PAPER
No Capital. Plant or Nnwapaper Er
pcrienco Nece*sary
The National Reform Prm Aaaonailon Dr
S Mcl.nllin. Topeka, Knn «n, rrv l<lonl; WS
" • Ark irisas, Herrrtarjr.
"nrtf
turned home and wo-xj surprised to | mor^n.^hnnir ^^.'^£7*' nr-ir-plVor'
sco and hear nothing of tho lady j JJJhJ * iJiJ1,,™'' w.rkijr'' i- ni p^pie's Pni
They found the two mon, ono still I newepniM rs will br> pnnui nt K'
I..„0 ^,1„„. „i«nrtln«T sn«fBbipiHHl for l nbli«;« ilon to «n ■>
_ . egulsr young Turk. Att^e wedding
1 had noticed him working hard
all the time to pick out a
precious st ne which was set in the
hilt of the dagger he wore with hia
IIighland dress, lie accomplished the
feat successfully, the stone rolled on
to the tloor, and, strange to siv, was
never found again. When the little
lad came to sit to me I found it quite
impossible to keep him quiet for two
minutes together. He was like quick-
silver.
"At la*>t I hit upon the plan of giv-
ing him a corner of the canvas on
which I was painting and let him daub
that over. This kept iiim quiet for a
while. One morning, however, he
managed to s.nudge hia face all ov« r
Krtttt) 'and you stop to lunch at the wi h the colons with which lie was
illage of Totea, where there is an inn working, and he was in distress,
with a most marvelous old kitchen; 'Yn"n'
and tho other pleading ! ..pi •• r.iny nu.T n. - \>%
\h 1 h r.ui !>«♦ ciUi-ii- t it* SiTimil Clan* Mat
tho landlady may overcharge you but
the rafters and fireplace and the brass
and copper hung walls are worth a
Utile extra.
Tl;*n Rouen there arc few finer
towns in France; if you cycle into it
frou\ the north, true your first impres-
s ou is of an endless suburb, straggling
on either side a badly paved street,
whe/ft a liit'e one bora * tram c aw s
drearily along. Hut while the town
itself, as everybody knows nowadays,
hat kept many of its old streets ami
tiMlisrcd houses, it has its cathedral.
Never mind.' I wild to Mm, 'we tan
easily rub that off,' and 1 began to
apply a little turpentine to his green
eliec. s. Unfortunately he had a little
sore spot on his face, and when the
turpentine got into it you can imagine
that it was pt inful. r The boy yelled
like mad for a few minutes, but the
thought that he need not appear on
the sjenc w th his faee Irilliant with
various oil colors soon quieted him."
Impr-rtlncnt Old Itcnux
"The ladies at Long Hianch," rays a
correspondent, •♦have been greatly
annoyed by a number of effete boaux,
who pers st in parading about tke
beach anil staring rtnlcly at them
while bathing. The other day one of
these old nuisances who had neen
persistently annoying a bathing party
l). ogling tliein through his eyeglass
kent up his persecution even after
they had left the water and entered
the dressing house, by walking back
ward and forward, and hemming as
though to attract the ladies attention,
cncoi the girls, however, had pro-
vided herself with a putty blower be-
lonfrlng to her young brother, to be
ready for an emergency, and as the
old fool strutted past she took hiai
through the door, purposely left a.'ar,
j and planted a pellet right in the an
eient donkey s eye. He started in
! amazement, and involuntarily ex-
' claimed, I'll!'at the same time clan-
ping his hand to h >s face. A loud peal
of laughter from the dressing house,
accompanied by another pellet which
hit him 011 the nose, sutli iently ex-
plained the catastrophe, and the ven-
erable noodle went crestfalle
1 lie lint Woman Arctic Explo
Lieut. Peary's wife is not the lirst
woman to brave the perils and hard-
ships ot arctic exploration. About
thirty years ago J. W. Taylor of Lon-
don was placed iu charge of an e.vpcdi
tion sent out from London to colonize
the east const of Greenland, and wa
accom anted by Ills wife, an aveom-
pltshed yonng .woman who lived
with him two years in an isolated tet
tlcment ou t oiiwin s island. She wa
the only Kuropean woman in a colony
of thirty men, most whom were
wha'ers. Mrs Taylor's nealth failed
at the end of two years and she re
turned to England, her husband re
maining a year longer. Mr. and Mrs.
Taylor have lived in lloston for twclv.
yeais, and are at prosent visiting C am-
bridge. Mrs. Taylor was very des r-
ous of seeing Mrs. Peary beforo she
started north and of wish ng her sue
i ess in person, but was prevented by
circumstances from doing so.
An Vnplrmnt IJUcovwrj.
A tramp was found under a berth
o cujSied t>y a lady in a sleeping coach
of the llaltimore A Ohio railroad com-
pany, near Cumberland, The lady oc-
cupying the berth first saw a pair of
loots at the place whoe she would
KKFRSSIUIKXTS OS THK ItOAU
its Church of St. Owen its Hotel Ville,
and. above all, it has the Seiue wind-
ing through it, an inspiration to l'uvis
de t havanncs and many an art st who
has looked down upon a towered city
.1 storied stream from the great hill
its southern outskirts. From
Kouen another day's journey will take
ou over the hills and by the river to
,es Andelvs. the two little vil-
lages bv the Seine, to Vernon,
ami f-o to Mantes the town that
Maubigny on e painted as he saw it
in tho evening with its beautiful
church towers rising above the roofs
against the sunset There is no pret-
tier two daya' ride to be had, the coun-
try through, than this. And here, if
time pre.'sos. you can do one o? two
things ^ ou can leave Normandy al-
together indeed, at Mantes you are
well over the borderland, and you can
follow the road to Pari*, now keeping
by the riverside, now leaving it for
nia* y miles now wheeling for hours
through the cool forest of St (iermain.
It is an unrivalled dnys' journey, and
from Paris you can train it back to
Dieppe. This is ono alternative. Tho
other is to wheel homeward from
Mantes th ougb somo of the other
Norman Towns, Evrenx, Pout Aude-
mer, Caudebee to Havre or Dieppe, as
the case may be.
Hut the tourist with a fortnight or a
month at his d sposal must go further
westward if he would learn how inex-
haustible is the pro*-inco into which
he h; s travelled He ma;, *i..iirthe
coast by Hontleur and T oaville and have to step on lislng; but ail investi-
Deauville, and the many watering gation by the porter disclosed the fact
£ laces to which French fashion crowds j that the two feet of a tramp were in
1 the suaimer time. And a day would aide of them.
n r. You can t ml lu your 8.|v«.rtt em®oU id
i locals for insertion in >our pnprr. nn 1 JfM «
WINFlELD, KANSAS.
unconsciou:
for his liberty.
Hearing no sound from Mrs. Dick-
son within, tho lattor roguo endoav- 1 in'iTii li'rat-cbBs Kopiilml lend pip rat
ored to secure his release by stating | ^,o{h*qani5i y Vr.wi".imVlunoiMi'tof lU
that whilo passing by ho had seen i run. ihpupp.iprrgareoditod bv w s.M«>r«nn.l
M,s. UU'ksun ieavinR tl.o house
with a neighbor who had como for for st.w ity this t lmi wo &in lmvo a.p pti
her in Croat haato to nur«> •
child, and that, not liking to leave wifto otonvi* for ciroalani, >arapl ^ a«
her houso alone, sho had requested , i"11 particulars.
him and his friend to remain there I P©rOy FspOOH,
unt.l tl.o ro«t should return, when. |A^ol
entering, tho cat had leaped from the j
top of tho wardrobe and upset it on
them beforo they could escape. The
follow having hitherto borne a fairly 4 WORLD'S-
good character, tho story sounded
plausible enough, and ho was about
to be sot at liberty when tho lady in
tho wardrobe revived sufficiently to
call out: ••Thieves! Kobbcrs! Help!
Help!"
At this tho man threw himself out
of the noarost window, unl would
havo mado his cscajK) had not Hob
Dickson, tho widow's nephew, leaped
out after him and altera short strug-
gle succeeded in capturing tho burg-
lar. Tl.o tvr t had budod themselves
liberating too poor widow, who
soon able to tell tho story ol her .suf-
ferings for herself, and insititin^ on
an officer being sent for, to whom
she doscribcd tho burglar who had
escape J. Search was tnado for him,
but ho had had timo to socurq,a horso
and is still at large. Tho remaining
Columbian Expositio
OmciAL Souvenir is:
In honutifnl nnd bright rolo
an l 1110 1 . Hiaim . HI.IM.PV
11< hfil <>n silk, liik«*u from (
Paintinus ami tl.o o«l« b(
tnl. vtorlil - r«-n..w in d imd
. iiuvr < 11 rxPihitioa st, I
yL,i 1 v., • ■ V/orld'a Fair. On thot
the famous portrait, ot
• ' *.1 iloro, «.f Cnristoph
4s,' i}"/ Columbus. In thoreut*
' < - nn exact reproduction 1
Santa Maria in full a
shov i' ; tl.o brnvo ciow ti
iiHsiHton In "IVnivoiiriK AMI!
CA.«in iho liottoiu 1h a O'-bi
showing t (i!i't Hi-'1
i.iadthe now world.: -.fl«iea
U Vhriitnphrr Columbia, •
round-d bi- hiw rn-w, ropro6f
iug tho lir t Inndins on <
shore*, nnd on t hoot horn 00
pb-to bird's cyo vi< w of l
WORLD'S FAIR. I« i rononncodono< P tho hat
muni', t and niunt ntr.raclivo uioinoat'1* ■ jrot iw
a Souvenir of tho a rent t'xjuuHtio ~
I'd H3(i It i lgo, liook-3Ja.r
.1 tho parlor.
AflopU tl by Hnc{ct{r , Claim, Churrhrn. ana I
if. Prtct, fir. WAl or turn fori
No ft«M ^ t.1 lu AfiEHTS WANTED Every«vhern. Prico p r lrai.,1
ignorant Old farmer in tho j 8p^c dtnrms for Inrffo l.oti*. Mailoilonddehrsi
concussion of tho ln-nin
An
(ro to any part r,l tho U.8. or C'nuatla.
• j. McLEAN & co., 157 s. Clark St.. ch cai
rough regions of West Virginia owned
a farm which was so poor, to use a
classic expression, that you couldn't j wu-lilia lluntneas llonars.
raiso an umbrella on it, when all nt j
^i ™
of coal on it and tho old follow was
a rich man for that country in no
time. The outsiders could not get
hold of tho f^ . so they proposed to
coroproiniso by organizing a syndi-
cate. with the old man as ono of the
heaviest owners in it
anil
ml I
.M . Wi :hl
(Vernal
1 skint
w.s >t
Unn. Trent chronic nn«l aui^lcnl dtneani
women. Iirtormith'n. i'rivnt •, lllool
rm,o#. Vnrt w.olo. Stricture. Ilydr k!.«IC, U
I'lirs cured wliliout kntf.
churge "i r tklllrd
(nun ltd*, etc.,
blank nnd l>cok 10 men.
UNMS 8TEAM LIU KDIty,.','a.^
nil In ;lm
cutll.u.
,. „ ulint Chu.• el
ireiU'.jr cnre.l. heut for qnow
ageaM
liut how air you goin' to get at Liberal CoimntMlons «.,Khl pr-wipttyVI''1
It?" ho asked with a puzzled air. | Adarc**. tx. •{;rwl,r|(
••Kasy enough," thoy said; ♦•we'll j
mako a stoc'i company of it.'*
The ol 1 fellow laughed as if he |
had run into a great joke.
"Stock company,11 ho exclaimed, I
"why. gonts. tho:*e ain't a dorn head I
0' stock on tho v liolo place but a
muloy cow and a ra'or-back hog."
To lui, .« vo .in - it untut."
"How vat the audience at your
rendering of •Hamlet* last night:'"
was asked of a barnstormer,
••Vory, very poor."
••Why, what was tho matter with
it?"
••I don't know, but 1 suppose
shall lutvo to rewrite the plu.v beforo
the people tip here will liko it." 1 Exa,n,Bau,
By tho tenth census 010,000 inbab- { lawnt.
itanta of tha t'aitcd Otatca wero support- '
cd by agriculture, 11,520,01*0 by cotn-
raoreo.
NSOHT
Z'J; von c
> HcmCly for .aiaffh
lo U!"". rtd C heap**--
l'c-t, Kaatr
BoM hy rresmfta J^ot
V. T. Haxcl-.lnr.. W«rt o.
AFJD DA
Itoldn the +n"\I.
tnrt; *« Hl> '"J. _
Hrwini*t«ntft« ^
Ilinprnrem.-nW «
| ni I .-<1 rn.,
m!f> for
•eiled. O.
mko. CO.,
' Patents, Trade-Mail
I m n:"1 Ai'.v, " "".J.0 ,L <"
Sunt (or •' li'v.riil.nI* wJrklirafe1. 1
tsv:::z otashsll
nrp.c^"^0
E' ^
Sixty million dollars' worth of leather
Is iei| 11:ed ovory year f-jpiovido boots
ond shoes for th iulmbiianU of Great
Ilritain.
^ .HnC0K.bi -U'WMr.'
2? I Thompson's Ey« W
\v X,U. Wiufl 'd, Vol-Q- ^*a
KduratlunaK
LAWRENCE & ATCHlSOh
BU8I ^llEGES
t.t iltli j.aii.:
liiustmt^O c«i l« irie l'UI'[ ollJiTli.
COt K Atl-al'oS. 3
*CE. ••• A. —-
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Ivey, Augustus E. Cherokee Telephone. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1893, newspaper, September 28, 1893; Tahlequah, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc99414/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.