Texas Christian Advocate (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1903 Page: 4 of 16
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TEXAS CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE.
4
February 19, 1903.
Washington are confident
The Alaskan boundaries
needed.
Machinery was at first constructed
them is the interpretation
L
-
20th century way is the
A Generation Ago
coffee could only be
was
Des
the inhabitants of the Chinese Em-
pire shows a total population of four
hundred and twenty-six million peo-
ple.
nounced: The Japanese Exposition, at
Osaka, 1903; the Louisiana Purchase
Exposition, at St. Louis, in 1904, and
the Lewis and Clark Exposition, at
Portland, Ore., in 1905.
The old home of Jefferson Davis at
Jackson, Mississippi, known as “Beau-
voir,” has been sold to the Sons of the
Confederate Veterans for $10,000, to
be used as a home for indigent Con-
federate soldiers.
- ----- _ --------— ------P-----able to the United States that there
inter- the truth of the report, “begged to be general outbreak of hostilities in Cen- will be no need of any disinterested
R.
able that the American commissioners
will give their British colleagues to un-
derstand that the only question before
LION COFFEE
$m) way—sealed pack-
E2 ages, always clean,
F2.m fresh and retaining
L iti rich flavor.
I
2192
Three great expositions
and con-
that the
bought in bulk. The
are an-
l
the official notinqthe-the Sultan of...a (__
N/ UmX LAK+ Ke: Q1 A A AhA ; F,,-r
-
Gec111ar NeWS Items. only a matter of a short time before that there has been a general inclina- his claim. The affair would not so ___
much of the charm of the islands, tion to disbelieve the report. Mr. Rock- greatly interest the outside world, only facts inthe case are so plainly favor-
--------------- from the standpoint of the tourist, will efeller himself, when asked regarding that it is feared it will develop into a ’ ‘
The Cramps will build the magnifi- become but a memory. The i h tt .______2 -- ' " ’.... ... L.ca an, _____________
cent new cruisers “Tennessee” and mingling and affiliation of the races excused.” It is affirmed that President tral America, involving Nicaragua, San third party to assure a just and equita-
“Washington.” will soon change the whole complex- Roosevelt himself gave to the press Salvador, Gautemala and Costa Rica, ble decision. The Alaskan boundaries
The United States Government holds ion of Hawaii. the facts concerning the Rockefeller Secretary Hay is endeavoring to pre- are entirely a matter of written evi-
that the Isle of Pines is not under H. H. Vreeland, the New York trac- telegrams, and it is regarded as a vent this, by using his good offices and dence which appeared in a certain An-
Cuban jurisdiction. tion man, knows one veteran street shrewd move on his part to insure friendly advice, but as a precaution glo-Russion treaty made before Alaska
The Arizona Legislature is opposed car conductor whom he likes to ban- effective anti-trust legislation. preparations are being made by Uncle came into the possession of the United
to the proposed union of Arizona and ter. The employe is a very intelli- Another new religion has fallen by Sam to have a naval force on hand if States. It seems to be altogether prob-
New Mexico for Statehood. gent fellow, with a great variety of the way. This time it is the Univer-
ThP genti comnieteG census of old and useful information stored sal Eclectic Religion, and one Protab
recently completed census One day Vreeland „asked him: Chandra Mazoombar is the man who to^uto^ to the extent of 50,000 horse-
Why does hanging kill? The con- set himself the task of rearranging the Wwer electricitv generated at Niag- . . , --------- ---
ductor replied promptly: “Because the world by its aid. The foundation on PrW rrhecompan is’now preparing struction of the treaty.
inspiration is checked and the circula- which he was to build was “the divin- 10 devejon 100000 horsepower addition- The imports of merchandise into the
tion arrested, while there is a suffu- ity which is in every man;” but some- 11 There is a plant under construction Philippines during the nine months
sion of blood to the brain and a conse- bow he found it a hard work to get "n +LA Canadian sid, of the falls to de- ending September 30, 1902, were val-
quent cephalic congestion.” “I thought his material together. He failed to LJJ 11 000 horsepower. In all there ued at $24,338,322, against $21,818,212
hanging killed because the rope was take account of sin in man, and to try is 360 000 ‘Lorsenower insiqht ‛ for the same period of 1901 and $17,-
always too short to let the feet touch to get it out of him; so his system ’ 1 ° 187,991 in 1900. The total value of ex-
the ground,” said Mr. Vreeland. failed. His hopes are buried in that One underground conduit is in pro- ports for the nine months ending Sep-
The bureau of public charities of vast cemetery where lie the ambitions cess of construction in New York for tember 30, 1902, was $19,239,018, as
New York has sent a letter to Mayor of all false prophets. local traffic to relieve the street rail- compared with $18,860,798 during the
Riddock complaining of the Norfolk • Several societies in New York ways •.Another tunnel has beerachar previous year and $17,883,200 in 1900.
employment agencies, which send ne- which aim at public improvement tered bY.which the Pennsylvania rail Bishop Cosgrove, of the Roman Cath-
groes to New York under pretence of Wale takken t h of Sunday road will bring its trains under the olic diocese of Davenport, la., is wag-
getting them positions, and the vic- concerts AndPare using a number of Hudson river into the heart of the city, in a warfare against the wickedness
tims in the end have to apply to the (ulii school-buildingsas pUces to Now the New York Central railroad is of that city. He says: "I have heard
Nowrojee Manockjie Wadia, a weal- bureau for food to keep them from Which tassemble th peopled hear trxingato.secure.permissiontoucon enough and 1 have been sufficiently
thy Parsee of Bombay, has announced starving One negro employment agent ing these programs. It is well to ap- strus.ne-t wi?h the tanK told by men who travel and have the
that he will devote his fortune of near- in Norfolk has been arrested innumer- prove every laudable effort at popular ort- ith at Thirtv third street chance to know, to convince me that
ly $5,000,000 to the relief of persons able times on complaint of victims. elevation but one must be sure of his ania -acms a - street. we have a city here with worse con-
in any country deprived of their He has an iron-bound contract, which grouna before he allows his good feel- There are to Ireland twenty-two land- ditions of immorality than any other
means of subsistence by sudden ca- the applicants sign. When he is ar- ing to lend assent There are several lords owning over 50,000 acres, while town in America. I believe, from
lamities raigned in court and the signature is binds of Sunday concerts and we there are in Scotland forty-seven. One what I have heard, that Davenport is
That universal education has taken acknowledged the cases are always hope that these in New York City are of the broadest-acred of the Scottish the wickedest of them all. I don’t like
another decided step upwards is evi- dismissed as the contract is legal, not like some which are much adver- landlords in the Prim eMi . rent^U to n't while is going
denced by the establishing of a college Mayor Riddock will ask Senator Sale tised and well attended in this vicin- ownsjust90,000acres,Witharenti
at Calcutta for the education of mon- to introduce a bill in the Virginia Leg- ity. of sme $10,000. The Lf Sutherland Questions having been raised on the
keys. This is, perhaps, the logical islature to put such labor agents out President Eliot, of Harvard Univer- iSLofcsurseesthenuknonutherrtdr subject of the decision of the French
outcome of the theories or discoveries ol business.sity, is pessimistic as to the results if acres which brings Mm in some maratime authorities to allow women
of Professor Garner. J he fact that more than 9,300,000 of our popular educational system. He 335060651"Amminnn8s 1 1 S5 toactassailo rs in the Channel fshing
Woman suffrage received its death pieces of mail matter reached, the thinks that it is in a bad way, and -3‛eanumsn. + +11, at smacks, the mm ster of marine has ad-
blow in the Montana Senate last dead letter office during the last fiscal that we may not look for much good to The ndications Pointto tou vca dressed, a circular to all the French
Thursday, as far as the Eighth Legis- year is conclusive proof that many of come from it. We count ourselves as dayintheBakans; the Mge port officials, in which he says: Wo-
11, A^Pmhlv is concerned When the sins for which we blame the postal Among the warmest advocates of our donia is in a ferment, and the lively men can not navigate as captains, but,
hPhi^ came un for fina? action b? service are chargeable to the careless- Amorstnen"eni school We are as sympathy of Bulgaria with those of according to the French law, they can
the Senate it met its defeat, sixteen nesssand illegible chirography of the Aendy as any person to admit tht its tkcebtondandfaitnarrosstheiBalvans notuyempreventedafrom embarking as
members voting for indefinite post- people. faults are not few. Its very imperfec- t . T PIt h atrsites and members of the crews-
ponement, while ten voted against it. “Between this country’s birth as a tions and need of careful supervision Storres,om e,c0.T refu4es from Mace- The famine in North Sweden still
According to the Advance there was nation and the end of 1847, the aggre- make us all the more its friend. But .4 resut j tn Bulla ria Russia continues. About 70,000 people are
AC ‛ fS Athe Britain in 190’’ a gate gold output of the United States we see no reason for becoming wor- doniahave fed. toBui8arid.Euss1a suffering caused by the failure of
reported for Great Britain in was $24,000,000,” says Charles M. Har- riea about it. It is meeting the needs and Austria will try to stay toe tide crops and scarcity of fish. It is esti-
tptalo ’member! TOI 146 Sunday- vey in The Worid’s Work. "In 1848 of the people more perfectly every and preventan outbrrakin Whether mated that $6,300,000 is needed to pre-
448,26 mem-e The increase in toe the gold yield of California sprang year. Some of President’s Eliot’s crit- they will succeed is uncerta . vent a repetition of the horrors of the
schools scho ais ieinee II the from nothing to $10,000,000. It was icisms are well taken, but this does Another of Third Assistant Post- famine in 1867, when thousands died
numbei ot Church me p $65,000,000 in 1853. California’s ag- not argue that the system is either a master General Madden’s progressive of starvation and typhoid fever; but,
year was 11 984 or J y , f gregate gold product, from Marshall’s failure or in danger of wreck. ideas has been agreed to in the house, according to the last statement which
scholars 16,399 of min1ste s discovery to the end of 1902, has been sng nf earthouake were felt which last week passed the postoffice we have seen, only $200,000 had been
lay preacheis 118. about $1,500,000,000.” Verily Califor- Si Indiana Illinois Missouri appropriation bill with a provision un- subscribed, of which $12,500 was sent
Congressman Goldfogle of New nia is a land of golden promise and of thoughounon sin, evening der which pieces of third or fourth from the United States.
York, was towing a party of his con- golden realization. • between 6:20 and 6:45 o’clock. classmatter, numbering not less than To the author of “Little Breeches”
stituents around the Capitol building. amE, g, I-incALom, are , m . 2000 in a lot, may be mailed in bulk, and other provisional treaties has comp.
Passing the rotunda, he said: “That is The Osage Indians of OKlahoma are Senator Penrose has introduced a without affixing stamps, provided the Al ° 6 o- ImE5116hmnome
a picture of Washington giving up Ms Washington and to own 1 500- bill author izing.theP urchase.o.a postage is fully prepaid. This will Morocco hasset aside $100,000
commission.” One of the party, a -on aud. ,°Wl.c‛ sg farm at Appomattox, on which the sur save much labor and expense, both to that h is countrv may be fittingly rep-
practical politician, observed regret- 000 ^s of land, worth pnrther 88. render of General Lee took place, the business public and the postoffice resented atthe ST LouisX oiiUoS.
fully: “I didn’t know Washington was ‘eir ’realty holdings give a per capi- Mr. John D. Strassburg, of the department. The letter is signed by Abdul Ka-
such a sucker as to give up his com- wealth of $4 000 for every brave Louisville postoffice, is believed to be The death of ex-Senator Henry L. riem Ebu Sulayman, grand vizier, and
mission. How much was it?” squaw and papoose in the tribe. The the oldest employe in the service. In Dawes, of Pittsfield, Mass., at the it starts off this way: “Thanks be to
“I have quit worrying about my own interest on their money in Washington March he will complete sixty years of advanced age of eighty-seven, removes Allah alone. To the venerable, the
nomination,” the President said to a afcords annually a little over $300 to continuous service. a prominent figure in the public life of highly honored, the wise, in whom
friend the other day. “I consider that each member, old, middle-aged, and The British postal authorities have the last generation. Mr. Dawes was great reliance is placed, John Hay,
settled and am quite sure I am the young. This makes the Osage’s the practically prevented for the present in public life, in his state and in the vizier of foreign affairs of the exalted
choice of the convention. “What I am richest people in the world.” use by the public of Marconi’s system nation, for nearly fifty years, being a American Government.”
worrying about now is whom the Dem- ne civilizing influence of America of wireless telegraphy, member of congress from 1857 to 1873, Delegate Rodey, of New Mexico, has
ocrats will nominate. From all I can Cuba is being shown in many The poverty of the poor in Clerken- and in the Senate from 1875 to 1893. been astonished during the fight for
learn and from the trend of things in but in none more strikingly well, London, is so great that many He was prominent in tariff and Indian statehood to find that a great many
general, it seems to me that a man ’ in the railway development ‘of people are prevented attending Church legislation, being the father of the people in the Eastern States think that
from my own State, Judge Parker, will /Peari of the Antilles ” On De- for want of decent clothing. There- Dawes act of general allotment of In- New Mexico is a foreign country. A
be my opponent.” cember 8 the first train left Santiago fore the vicar of toe Church in that dian lands which was carried out by friend of his who runs a big store in
According to a London weekly the for Havana over the new railroad, district is holding a Thursday night the Dawes Indian commission of which the Territory, was in New York re-
Duchess of Marlborough was astonish- connecting those two points, with one service in the dark. The only light he was made chairman, and continued cently and went into a wholesale house
ed at the extravagance displayed by hundred and fifty passengers and an in the Church is that thrown upon in the position until his death. to purchase goods. He told a lordly
Hew York society during the recent vis- enthusiastic crowd at the station to a large screen, upon which are dis- in the United States theie is a looking attendant that the goods were
it to relatives there. Especially was she cheer them on their way. In fact, all played the words of the Psalms, re- church for every four hundred persons, for shipment to New Mexico. “The
amazed at the splendor of an enter- along the way the train was greeted sponses and hymns. This light is suf- A bill has been introduced in the expor department is on the next
tainment given in Newport by the with evidences of enthusiastic appre- ficent to dispel the gloom, but not to House increasing the President’s sal- foor, said the New Yorker, which so
wife of her kinsman, Cornelius Van- ciation of what such an innovation permit a view of people’s clothes. ary from $50,000 a year to $100,000. enraged the would-be purchaser that
derbilt, who brought an entire com- means to the island and its people. The British steamer Para, which ar- Someone has figured out that Vene- he left the place after giving the as
pany over from New York to amuse A bin has been introduced into Con- rived at Kingston, Jamaica, February zuela has participated in one hundred tonish edattendanta rather sulphurous
her guests one evening. . gress to increase the salary of the 8, from Colon, brought the news of the and four wars in seventy years. 5m 1U 55-slmsu-:
Ballington Booth has been telling President from $50,000 to $100,000. It suicide on January 30, of the former An insane asylum in London was Dr. Charles Henry Hoffman pro-
his friends about a woman who stood should be passed. No ruler in the Colombian general, Uribe-Uribe. Gen- burned a few days ago. Fifty women fessor of histology and bacteriology in
up to testify to her conversion in the world is so poorly paid as our Presi- eral Uribe-Uribe published a letter De- patients were burned to death. At the the Iowa College of Physicians and
days when he was with the Salvation dent, especially where we take the cember 12 advising Colombia to await time the fire was discovered there were Surgeons, which is a department of
Army. She said: “I was very foolish character of the country into the ac- the lapsing of toe Panama canal con- InWards of six hundred women con- Drake University, has resigned be-
and vain. Worldly pleasures, and es- count cession in 1904, which would leave the fih ed in the asylum cause he WaS requested to show his
pecially the fashions, were my only o;-ads Laye raiseg the wages Colombian government a free hand in p,:c to the diplomas. He has intimated that he
thought. I was fond of silks, satins, ohes emffioves avqraised, als^S the matter of the canal. The reports The arch erected in^Pek ng to the is not known in Des Moines by his own
arS
■ Sofgavethem ilon to the Panama analtreaty. marieserecman Minrstoryonunottslar he
“tameriehn have a aesire to see Xk M “ ine o Efimsstdadpend"Bosstiieaah,ovas
Hawaii, there is no time like the pres- sumer, the wage-earner will pay his to all coast fishermanto decapitateand The wall .surrounding Paris is to be Pleasant. He then gave his name as
ent. The native environment is fast extra wages in increased prices Thus clean their fsh.atsea the mSets removed. It is regarded as a useless Carl Schwartz, but this is not believed
passing away. The last census shows the worker will pay the freight. Is will not be allowed in the markets. . fortification. The wall, which is twen- to be his own either. Doctors who
62,000 Japanese, 26,000 Chinese, 29 - this one reason why money is called Nature seems to have made Jamaica ty miles in circumference and sixty conversed with him were amazed at
000 whites, and only 30,000 Hawaiian . a circulating medium. the home of the banana, but it .remain- feet high, and surrounded by a deep his knowledge. After spending a few
In 1894 the natives represented halt The reading of the Bible in the pub- ed for America enterprise, to turn the ditch, was constructed about fifty years months at Mount Pleasant he was pro-
the population; now they are only lic schools has received the approval yellow fruit to gold. It is estimated ago at a fabulous cost. nounced cured.
about one-fourth. At this rate it is of resolution adopted by the school- that 9,000,000 bunches of bananas were ninn o +L, authorities at
— teachers of Iowa in their State Con- shipped from this island last year. At wtisstheorini ?hlllaskan boundary
DRAKE’S PALMETTO WINE. vention but the fight against giving an average of 25 cents a bunehtMs “sptetetweenttheOnitedstates"and
A trial bottle is sent prepaid, free of theashldrenethi sohancetts hteargths That ab7ut/l 850 S Great Britain will soonbensettled.A
charge, to every reader of Texas Chris- reading Q8eamrerr There can ally in wages by fruit companies, treaty for the solution of.tthe question
tian Advocate who has chronic Stom- on with too mucn success. Inere can - has been signed by Secretary Hay and
tian AdvIa Flatulency Constipation hardly be any other explanation of this German efforts to strengthen the Sir Michael Herbert, the British am-
&ha- of the Mucous Membranes antipathy than the old one which tells German element in Prussian Poland by bassador. The treaty provides for a
Congestion of Liver or Kidneys, or In- us that sinners, haters of God, despise promoting the return of German colo- commission of six members, of whom
flammation of Bladder. One dose a day his Book, and flee from its searching nists from Southwestern Russia are each side is to select three. It was
relieves immediately, cures absolutely, pages. meeting with considerable success, the desire of England to have the com-
builds up the nervous system and pro- The most startling political sensa- Some twO thousand German 4mies mission turned into a board of arbitra-
motes a larger, purer and richer blood tion of the season was sprung last have already left Russia, mostly tor tion by adding thereto an umpire, who
supply Saturday, by press reports sent out nmosen. would cast the deciding vote, should
Every reader of Texas Christian Ad- from Washington, that John D. Rocke- Another Central American revolution the commissioners be equally divided
vocate who needs medicine will be feller, of the Standard Oil Co., had is on. It is in Honduras this time. One in their opinion. However, this propo-
supplied with a trial bottle of Drake’s wired certain senators, urging that the Bonilla claims to have been elected sition was rejected, and to that extent
Palmetto Wine free of charge, by proposed anti-trust legislation be de- president of that republic, but the old the diplomatic incident closes with a
writing for it to Drake Formula Com- feated. The amazement at such an government doesn’t agree with him, victory for the United States. It
pany, 100 Lake St., Chicago, Ill. audacious act has been so profound, so he has organized a revolt to enforce would seem that the authorities at
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Rankin, George C. Texas Christian Advocate (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1903, newspaper, February 19, 1903; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1594168/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.