The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Chandler News.
VOLUME VI.
CHANDLER, OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY, DEC, 1,1896.
MMKt R II
Bail Road Time Table, Guthrie, 0. T
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe R. R.
NORTH, EAST, AND WEST.
I Arrto I Leave 1 Arrive T
No. I Guthrie. | Guthrie | Kan. ritt I
406 j 6:35 f
) I 5: Ml p m j 9:4.3 U .
i 6.50 a m I 10:80 p i
I t:o{J p ui I 5:08 p m I 6:50 a m I 10:1*0 p in
7:00 ami Local Freight.
I 1.:15pm I | Local Fre.gbt'
ROCTH. SOUTHEAST. AND SOUTHWEST.
j 1*:«5 p 01.
10:68 p m.
I 12.15 p m.
pm
11 • 08 p ni
1:0<) ] ni
0:15 pm I 9:85
8:l( nni '9:80 pm
Local Freight
00 hours to l.oa AngekH
Free cbmr cnra ou all
trains. Pulman Paine
fc.Vepers !o Kansas City
and Chicago wlthou.
change. Also to Ft. Worth
and liaiveston Connects
at Newton with Vestibule
limited having ohalr cars
Pulman palace compart
nu nt sleeprrs and dining
ears through lo Los An-
gelrs and San Diego nlf.o
with train carrying chair
cars. Pullman and Tour-
1st sleepers to El Paso,
I-OK Angeles, and Nau
I'ransisco. Tlirouirh railroad and steamship
tlcktes sold lo ail pointH. Passengurs hooked
to all points iu th«> i cntinent of Europe; also
from any portor Inland point In Europe through
to any point In the United Stater Prepaid
tickets paid for here will be delivered to pas-
bengers at their residence In Europe. For full
particulars, cull on or address, Oeo. T. Nichol
son, ft. P. A., Chicago; W. ,T. Illack, A
A . Topeka. Kans. L J{. Deluney, Ageut.
Uuthrie, Oklahoma
Wanted-An Idea <t
£T0.t®ct.Jour ,1?ea*: they may lirlnir you wealth.
Write JOHN WKDDEKBUBN ft CO., Patent Attor
"•ViWaahliifU.n, 1). ('..for their prise offer
and llat ot two hundred Inventions wauteii,
Who can think
of aome simple
thing to patent?
llailroad Time Table. Shawnee, Okla.
CHOCTAW, OKLAHOMA, & GULP R. 1
The short line from and to all points in
the Indian A Oklahoma Territories,
Through tickets sold at short line rates to
nil points.
Depart Arrive
Except e.
Daily. Dally. Sunday.
1 45pm Wister 2 3Jpm 105p
2 12pm Fanshawe 2 12pm 12 25pm
9 32pm Red Oak 152pm llOOjm
8 0lpm Wilburton 123pm 1150pm
3 46pm Hartshorne 12 45pm 0 10cm
4 09pm Anderson 12 20pm 9 07pm
4 25pm Ar South Lv 12 05pm 8 30am
4 cOpm L McAlstr All 45pm 6 40am
5 39pm Calvin 10 35nm 4 25um
6 12pm Holdenville 10 02pm 8 17nm
6 32pm Wewoka 9 42pm 2 28.ua
7 20pm Earleboro 8 51pm i min
7 40pm A Shawnee L 8 34pm 12 Inn
7 45pm L A 8 29pm 1 <M r
8 14pm McLoud 8 01pm 12 30pm
8 41pm Choctaw City 7 35pm 1201n
3 30pm 9 IOpui Okla. City 7 05am U80p
5 16pm 8 10am '• •• 7 55pm 1125pm
5 50pm 8 46am Yukon 7 2i)pm lOAOnm
0 20pm It 15am El Reno C f 0pm 10 20pm
pm 9 36am Fort Reno 9 50am «6>uia
For rates and other information applv iu
Hkniiy Wood, j. f. hoi.dkn,
uen. Manager. Traffic Manager.
South McAlester, I. T.
Sunday.
2 36pm
3 13pm
3 58pm
4 57pm
6 16pm
7 10pm
7 33pm
1 50am
2 33a m
2 10am
a 00pm
2 46 pm
a 30pm
3 00pm
Wanted-An Idea I
ey may bring
BURN ft CO., Patent Attor-
'.. for their |l,f*«i prise offer
Who can think
* some simple
...tag to patent/
... .(leas; they may bring you wealth.
HN WKDDERHDRN ft CO., Pa " "
Protect you
Write J0H>
neys. Washington, V.
and list, ot two hundred Inventions wanted.
JOHN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
CO. ATTORNEY OP LINCOLN CO.
Office at Court Ilouse,
CHANDLER, . OKLAHOMA
EMERY A. FOSTER,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office, Corner Mnnvel Avenue and
Tenth Street.
CHANDLER, - OKLAHOMA
DR. L A. KELSEY
DENTIST,
Office on Manvol Avenue, Between Oth
and 10th Streets. Office Hours
S):00 to 12:00 & 1:00 to 5:00.
IN THE ODD CORNER corridors of Its nest had Rradually
W Jfc* broken w jr the mortar whleh held It;
bo that It was weakened at the founda-
tion, and unable to resist the violence
of the storm. What ages had failed to
do, what the enormous power of a furi-
ous element could not accomplish
u.one, was wrought to its bitter end by
the least of all powers In the world,
the burrowing and building of a little
ant.
SOME QUEER AND CURIOUS
FEATURES OF LIFE.
The Lad That la (tone Extraordinary
Mania for flock* A Fireproof Tree
What a Little Ant Did A Singular
Will Other Odd Stories.
>/
r
I* -.,ri
ING me a song of
j a lad that is
gone.
Say, could that
lad be I?
Merry of soul he
eaileu on a day
Over the sea to
Skye.
At till was astern,
rum on the
port,
Egg on the starboard bow;
Glory of youth glowed in his soul—
Where is that glory now?
Sing me a song of a lad that Is gone.
Say, could that lad be I?
Merry of soul he sailed on a day
Over the sea to Skye.
Give me again all that was there;
Give me the sun that shone!
Give me the eyes, give me the soul,
Give me the lad that is gone!
Sing me a song of a lad that is gone.
Say, could that lad be I?
Merry of soul he mailed on a day
Over the sea to Skye.
Billow and breeze, island and seas,
Mountains of rain and sun;
All that was good, all that was fair,
All that was me is gone.
—R. L. Stevenson.
Quaker of the Orient.
The Turkish porter is one of the
most interesting objects seen in a tour
of the orient, says the New York Re-
corder. Of herculean strength and
power of endurance, he is usually
prompt and obliging, also honest, so far
as in him lies. He cannot speak the
truth and would not respect himself if
he could, for that is a virtue of the
Frank. His place of business is on tho
streets of his native town, where he
^ <an be found at all hours of the day,
! dad in a loose, soiled jacket, usually
gray, with gray gaiters, Turkish shoes
j or sandals, the inevitable fez and a
i neck kerchief that makes him look as
If he were strangling. All the burden
of conveying large or small articles
( falls upon him; and he will for a gra-
i luity carry a piano as easily as a trunk.
J He is the most contented of the work-
ing fraternity one meets abroad,
whether he is found in the streets of
Constantinople or in those of Stam-
j boul, and the tourists make much of
him because he Is interesting. His
occasional smoke under the shade of a
mulberry tree or his lazy sips of sher-
bet are treats that renew his strength
for the hard work by which he must
live if he is not able to sell merchan-
dise. Being sturdy and industrious,
( the traits of the Turkish porter com-
\ mend him to the public, hence a pic-
I turesque description of him by one
j traveler who named him the "Quaker
I of the Orient."
' Handsome is that handsome does,'"
whether in one form of life or another.
It ain t no use tryin' to get a 'coon at
all unless you've got a 'coon dog," say3
a Maine woodsman. "You can take a
Extraordinary Mania for Clocks.
About ten years ago a man named
Menager died In New York, who was
known as the "clock miser." The de-
tails of his life were told In the dally
papers. When a young man he be-
ame the junior partner In a manufac-
turing firm, and threw into his work i hi , --- -
sweh energy and intelligence that a ca- , og of Home fan°y breed,
reer opened before him both useful and ! a" g , m up as careful as you
successful. It was necessary that he ,)lea80t an t,ie chances are that he
should be punctual each morning at his ^on t be 110 more ,,se for huntin' 'coon
office, and for this reason he bought a ho would if you set him agin'
Swiss clock and placed it opposite to Wild e,ePhants- Or mebbe a measley,
his bed. Doubting its correctness ho nion&rel, yellow cur that nobody knows
bought another of German make, and | ™here he ct>me from an' that looks as
concerned himself to keep the two run- he K,ovved from a burdock root will
ning exactly together. He grew inter- bo a regu,ar cyclone when he gets after
ested in their mechanism, studied their a pa,r coons- It's a curious thing,
points of difference, and began to buy ; *00, that a coon dog ain't good for
from time to time other clocks. He ' nothin' else. For ten months of the
had ceased now to care for clocks for year he'H hang around, gettln' licked
their real use, and valued them as curi- a11 the other dogs an' gettin' kicked
osities and articles of property. The *,%oni here to yonder by everybody, but
whim grew upon him as the years i wben the middle of September comes
passed. He was learned in the history hc* perks right up an' for a couple of
and in all the peculiarities of the dif- months he's the biggest toad in the
ferent time-pieces that he possessed; Puddle. He realizes his own import-
his accumulation increased until he ance then, an' he's right about it. for a
had specimens from almost every sood 'coon dog is the hardest kind to
clock-making nation. So keen was his get. It must be born in him oi he
won't be no good at catchin' 'coons."
Must be born in him! Well, that ap-
plies to other knacks besides that for
the successful pursuit of 'coons.—
Lewiston (Me.) Journal.
zeal in this pursuit that he grew in-
different to every other object in life,
dropped his friends, and at last lived
n a large dingy house, with only an
old servant and the ticking multitude
of clocks, that seemed unceasingly, to
strike the funeral knell of his wasted
ears. Interest in man or woman he
had none, but spent his time among his
treasures, winding them and talking
Prince Max of Saxony, who has re-
cently taken up his abode in London
j He died at last. In his house were
found over four hundred clocks.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
CALVIN ANI) PUNK
BARBERS.
Second Door North of Manvel House.
Only First-Class Shop in Town.
12 Shaves for $1.00.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
H.L.COHEN
MERCHANT
; TAILOR
Men's Fine Furnishing1 Goods
and Hats. A Full Line of Fine
French and Domestic Piece Goods
Now ou H;nid. Call and Examine.
GUTHRIE,
OKLAHOMA
JK. W '. I -A.SH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office on Mnnvel Avenue, Between 7th
and 8th Streets.
CHANDLER, - OKLAHOMA
D. N. FRAZIER.
j. S. NEWBY.
FRAZIER X NEWBY,
Attorneys at Law
CHANDLER
OKLAHOMA
^HANDLER fp SHAVVNEt
, MAIL AND STAOE LINK
R. S. BLAIR, MANAGER.
Lv. Chandler 0 a.m. Ar. Shawnee " p.m.
Lv. Shawnee. 0 a.m. Ar Chandi rtip.m
CyConnectt with train* on Choctaw
rati road. Special core given to ex
j-nisv-. Office in post ofliee, Chandler.
lo them, as if they were live creatures, as a Catholic priest at the Church of
St. Boniface, Union street, White-
chapel, la the fourth son of Prince
j 0eorSe, Duke of Saxony, anil nephew
1 Kiret.r n.f Tr 0t 'he klng of Saxony, when he be-
catne Priest ho formally renounced
In a government report from Colom- ! all his rights to the throne to which
bia appears the description of a tree, i his father is heir. Prince Max is nlv
known as tho chaparro, which pos- 20 years of age and he quitted the
sreses the property .of being fireproof. German army to enter a monastery i
It grows on the vast plains of Colom- I few years ago. His determination to
bia and the north of South America | retire fro* the world and to enter the
called Savannas, extensive districts j priesthood is said to be due to an un
which are parched with heat except ! fortunate attachment he entertained
during the rainy season. It has long i for Princess Fedora of Schleswig-Hoi
been the custom to clear the ground | stein. By his modesty he has become
for the new vegetation which springs I very popular among the poor in tho
up so luxuriantly on these plains after east end. His reply to the cheers raised
the rainy season by means of fire; and in his honor upon the occasion of his
ouch fires, miles In extent, kindled by first visit to the "Geeellenverein " or
the herdsmen, destroy everything in | workingmen's club, attached to' ths
the shape of vegetation, except the mission, was, "I come among vou not
chapario tree, which survives to afford | as a prince, but simply as a priest I
a welcome shade in an almost treeless I am a worker myself, for, to my mind
region. It is a small tree, seldom no honor is so great as that as that of
growing to more than twenty feet in labor."-New York Commercial Ad-
height, with a girth of about three feet veriiser.
and it owes its protection from fire to
the nature of Its hard
thick bark.
The bark lies on the trunk in loose
layers, which do not readily conduct
heat to the more delicate parts of the
structure. It is a general idea among
the natives that this tree grows only
where gold is abundant in the soil be-
low. That it is common in auriferous
districts is indisputable, but there is
lio ground for supposing that it does
not grow elsewhere.
Old Style K•>niecli(>H.
Down even to the end of the eigh-
teenth century, in popular medicine
at least, the nastier the substance the
more potent the remedy. Thus wood-
lice were used to cure indigestion, or,
to put it in the lingo of that day, were
potent to "dissolve the mucilaginous
tartar of the body," "open obstructions
of the viscera," etc. When it came to
treat epilepsy, the grand mal, some-
thing more powerful was necessary,
so we are not surprised to find the old
The most splendid reminiscence of recommending bedbugs as
uin in Athens is In the sixteenth col-
umns of the old temple of Jupiter, the
Olympi together in one group, and
three by themselves, one of which lies
prostrate on tho ground. For forty
years it has lain on the earth, un-
broken except in the separation of its
component pieces. And as its fellows
outline themselves, still strong and
rect, against the sky, they seem not
only memorials of the grandeur of
which they made a part and speaking
witnesses of the past glory uf a past
Arls-
Dio8-
cy of
in quartan
n almost infallible remedy,
tophanes. Aristotle. Pliny ant
enrides. all maintain the effl
these disgusting creatures
fever. Pliny 3ays that seven bedbugs
swallowed at the beginning of an at-
tack will certainly work a cure.
A Don hit. i
Jennie slipped into the pantry one
morning when her mamma's baciSwaa
turned and took the largest peach from
dish of fruit that was to be served
When mamma
SCIENTIFIC
CURRENT NOTES OF DISCOV-
ERY AND INVENTION.
I'orkM I'hmI Iii Ancle
Kt-huolliouet* In l>
pars tan.
k Liquid Air A p.
ONQ before there
was a Dame Fash-
Ion to decree whai
kind of garments
people should wear
a curious reptile
rejoiced in a "rip-
ple cape" of na-
ture's own work-
manship. This
V/v singular creature,
known to natural-
ists as the chlamydosaurus, or frilled
lizard, is still to be found In the north-
ern part of Australia. The finest ex-
amples are usually about three feet in
length, the slendei; hard, tapering tail
being a little longer than the body.
The remarkable frill that gives this
lizard its more popular name seems to
be a development of the skin of the
neck. This takes the form of a ruffle
or gored collar, bearing a striking re-
semblance to some of the present femi-
nine styles of shoulder capes and col-
larettes. While the animal Is undis-
turbed its frill hangs gracefully around
its back and breast in rippling folds or
plaits. When, however, it is provoked,
intruded upon or assailed. Its opens !'s
mouth and elevates its frill, so that the
latter stands out almost at right angles
with its body. It is a swift mnner,
and, when alarmed, it usually makes
for a tree, but if overtaken, it faces
about boldly, displaying its sharp
teeth in the cavity of its frill. This
striking effect is shown in one of the
accompanying illustrations. It is said
that it uses its tail like a whip when
fighting, lashing about with it in a
furious manner. The neck and face
muscles, by which the up and down
movements of the frill are made, are
so adjusted that the opening of the
mouth and the erection of the frill oc-
cur simultaneously. So startling and
formidable does the lizard appear with
its neck ruffle suddenly thrown out
like an inverted parasol, that its pur-
suing enemy will usually slink away
from the chase In terror. Concerning
the use of the frill there Is some differ-
ence of opinion among naturalists.
The older authorities believed that the
lizard made a weapon of the toothed
edge of its open frill when fighting,
and some writers describe the crea-
ture's teeth as "formidable." But
Mr. W. Saville-Kent, In a late number
of Popular Science News, states that
"the function of the frill is purely that
of a 'scare organ.'" This writer
holds that the lizard is not a natural
fighter, and that when its little strata-
COKMH. strang* traveler of that name, was tu*
* llrst to introduce the use of the fork
into England, In the beginning of the
seventeenth century. He says that he
observed its use in Italy only "because
the Italian cannot by any means eu-
dure to have his dish touched with lie •
gers, seeing all men's fingers are not
alike clean." These "little forks,"
were usually made of iron or steel, but
occasionally also of silver. Coryate
says he "thought good to Imitate the
Italian fashion by this forked cutting
of meat," and that hence a humorous
English friend, "in his merry humor,
doubted not to call me furcifer, only
for using a fork at feeding." This pas-
sage is often quoted as fixing the earli-
est date of the use of the fork in En-
gland; but, they were In reality, used
by the old Anglo-Saxons and through-
out the Middle Ages. In 1834 some la-
borers found, when cutting a deep
drain at Servington. North Wilts, a
deposit of seventy Saxon pennies, of
sovereigns ranging from Coenwulf,
King of Mercia (79tl A. D.) to Ethelstan
(878-890); they had been packed in a
box of which there were some decayed
remains, and which also held some
articles of personal ornament, a spoon,
and the fork which is first in the group
here engraved. The fabric and orna-
mentation of this fork and spoon
would, to the practiced eye, he quite
sufficient evidence of the approximate
era of their manufacture, and their
juxtaposition with the coins confirms
it.
In Akerman's Pagn Saxondom, ano-
ther example of a fork, from a Saxon
tumulus, is given: it has a bono handle
like thoso still manufactured for com-
mon use. It must not,however, be Ima-
gined that they were frequently
used; indeed, throughout the
middles ages they seem to have
have been kept as articles of
luxury, to be used only by the great
and noble in eating fruit and preserves
on state occasions. A German fork, be-
-xbcz^
ANCIENT FORKS.
lleved to be a work of the close of the
sixteenth century, Is the second of our
examples. It is surmounted by the
figure of a fool or jester, who holds a
saw. This figure Is jointed like a child's
doll, and tumbles about as the fork is
used, while the saw slips up and down
the handle. It proves that the fork
was treated merely as a luxurious toy.
Indeed, as late as 1G52, Heylln, In his
Cosmography, treats them as a rarity:
"the use of silver forks, which Is by
some of our spruce gallants taken up
of late," are the words he uses. A fork
gem of raising its frill is disregarded | this period is the third of the exam-
It is practically at the mercy of an or- pies here given; it Is entirely of silver.
dinary enemy. That the chlamydo-
saurus can stand and run on its hind
feet, in an almost erect attitude, is a
comparatively late discovery, the re-
sult of a study of the animal in captiv-
ity. It does not enjoy the restraints
of civilization, however, friendliness
not being one of its characteristics.
But for the fact that its keeper takes
advantage of its open mouth to drop
Into it pieces of meat, when its frill is
raised in anger, the creature would
persist in starving itself to death.—
Jane Ellis Joy In Philadelphia Times
Tho
.Villi
. Iioolhi
The queerest school In the world is
the Dyak medicine man's house of in-
struction in Borneo. There 1s no wilder
country on the face of the globe than
Borneo; in this far-off land the famous
glades, and nearly all the inhabitants
' .i IM' 'f* L i«(,
A DYAK SCHOOLHOI'SB.
head hunters still haunt the deep forest
are cannibals. The Dyak medicine men
are very old fellows and dress In queer
costumes, made of grasses and the
feathers of wild birds. Realizing that
be day the aged sor-
or three promising
and initiate them in-
the medicine man's
n they grow up they,
high places of the
tribe. It is in one of
L'alowH that the med-
hool for his class of
What takes place
vails of the medicine
but himself at
know. Whs i
d to the black
•Tt are neve.. _
'i death. The man
i hard master, and
arn to fear aud re-
in any public school
ever dreams of fear-
his school principal.
the handle elaborately engraved with
subjects from the New Testament. In
conclusion, it may be observed that the
use of the fork became general by the
close of the seventeenth century.
Liquid Air Apptrutiin.
Everything concerning power Is un
usually Interesting Just now, in view
of the improvements in machinery and
motor apparatus of all sorts. The new-
est achievement In this line is strictly
scientific, and simple as well. It is
thus described: "A powerful engine
compresses air, which is cooled as far
as possible by ordinary refrigerating
methods, and passed into a spirally-
colled pipe over one hundred yards
long, this pipe being enclosed in a sec-
ond spiral. By means of a throttle
valve at the end of the inner spiral,
a certain proportion of the compressed
air is allowed to expand in the spaco
between it and the outer pipe. Thus
the stream of compressed air from the
pump is cooled by that portion which
has been allowed to expand, and arrives
at the throttle-valve at the end of the
same in a colder state than tho portion
which preceded it; consequently, It
roaches a still lower temperature on
expansion, cooling yet more powerfully
the advancing stream in the inner tube.
By carrying this cumulative cooling
effect sufficiently far, the circulating
air is at last brought down to its criti-
cal point and liquefies, after which a
continuous stream of liquid air is mere-
ly a question of engine power."
Mill
Ev
lh<
rth
they must die
cerers take n
young Borneoa
to tho secrets
duties, so that
too. may hold
wise men in t h
these elevated 1
Icine man k' ;i
junior sorcerei
within the ree
man's hut no (
young pupils <
secrets are re\
students of o<
peated, on i i
witch Is usual
his pupils
into
what is known as the meteoric belt,
and extensive preparations are being
made for observing the conduct of the
expected shower of meteors which is
in November. This modern exhi-
believed to he due to the
ossing a belt made up of
dies, i he precise character of
not been ascertained. The
h Into this path about the
f November. These or-
)sed to intersect during
9, or November, 1900. It
about one
d
bltlon is
j earth's r
j minute b
; which ho
j earth go
12th
13 th
is ht
th.
id re
oblique
five hot
miles w
ti rough
but
in ;
d his I
iwful 1
little i
ly about four
?d in the flight.
i.phy.
en ray
at It ha
religion, but faithful guardians and l^at day for d< d ,XJUU1I11.
watchers over their fallen companion, discovered what, the little girlhaddone ' Bpm hini m'
The column was blown down in 185:' fihe sold. "Suppose af the last great ! BCholar of our
in a great storm, but the reason why it day that peach should rise up to ac- j lng or resp"
fell and the rest still stand was found CU8G >'ou- what would you do?" " Eat '
to be that an ant, taking advantage of 11 again," replied the child, promptly" j AmUnt i ork*.
a small opening in the cement between ' 4n • v#ry curious
the pedestal and the base, had worked There are 200/ 0 factory girls In ' vork, {Jr,ry*te's Crudities, it has
its -way In, and with tUe branching London, 1-22 of the whole population. ' imagto^ that its author, the
on tin ues
J tQ
• ant to
1 J -*th .iOgist. Bv
oi her i , a long-HOit" lit
ma between V Ju ts,
| oones occu^ing gen-
erally in t ..uerfed babl<"
rickets or a somewv
pi liiyg which atta^'
girls s* *
1,0 r
sub6tan*;at dii i<
fantlle allr it. ij bJ
tacked In a liffeit. w
and "late
nllar com-
eu. chiefly
as demon-
s'' shows a
the in- |
being at- j
r
i
A. D. WRIGHT'S DRUG STORE
•<3BOOK AND NEWS DEPOTS
Druj^B, Medioinea,
—WffH Paintl, Oils ind QlusjJ, School Sup' l^sa_
^^1 plies, Piney end Toilet Articles, [sH^
-A. fe-uii Lino of Wall Papar
P&BSGIUPTJO&b CAREFULLY comfouxdcb.
SOUTH MANVEL AVE., CHANDLER, O. T
O. a. Kll. P*aii aar, J>, , HOYT, V. I. MIBYOITM, A r. Otamtt
Tho Llncolr} * County * Banl^,
amboapital, «to.ooo.oo —
•0E8 (I OINEI^AL BflNIUNa BUSINESS
SPECIAL ATTENTION OIVEN TO COLLECTIONS
STOOKHOLDinsi—-
w, E, M.rydltb, B. Hoyt, O, B. K**, V. I. MirydlU,
ChaQdler, • . . . . Oklahoma
7—FIRST-CLASS WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS—7
—«IF0R$].00CASHt —
THE KANSAS CITY JOURNAL,
THE GUTHRIE STATE CAPITAL,
AND THE CHANDLER NEWS
Will all be sent to any address in Lincoln county one
year for one dollar. This combination will give you
all the news. The Journal can be relied upon to keep
you posted on general news; the Capital will give yoa
more Oklahoma news than any other paper published;
while the Chandler Nkws is the leading county paper.
SOME OTHER CLUBBING RATES:
Chandler Nkws and semi-weekly Globe-Democrat.. .$1.25
" " and Chicago Inter-Ocean 1.00
" " and Washington Post 1.00
i ] " " and St. Louis Republic 1.25
" " and Cosmopolitan 1,50
" " and Mr.Clure's 1.50
" " and Arena 3.00
" " and Munsty or Peterson... 1.50
Clubbing rates with any other newspaper or magazine
made known on application. These rates are to new sub-
|,2n scribers and to old subscribers who are not in arrears.
Send all subscriptions to Tub News, Chandler, Oklahoma,
j : ;r,7;£,: . ..
-I - '■ - • if. v 15
hjOYT ABSTRACT CO.
BONDED ABSTRACTERS.
WTQE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB3THA0T
BOOKS IN LINCOLN CO.
E, VV. HOYT, Sacratary and Marjogar.
Office In Lincoln County Ban
SAMUEL IiLblS,
-JOBBER AND RETAIL DEALER IN-
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS,
GLASS, PUTTY, BOOKS, STATIONERY, AND A FULL
LINE OF DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES.
G or-. M«nv«l Av*. «nd lltH Bo,
Chandler, Oklahomi
Poor Printing Pays
Poor Profits
Work that is done in a slovenly manner or done
upon a poor quality of paper is dear at any price.
"Cheap John" printing is regarded as an ir.'c* to
a "Cheap John" business. While Our work is not
hi^b in price, it is euperior iu quality. We have
the advantage of experience and equipment. Exper-
ience m ■ -is tin: •; time means money. G.rtl time and
a«o nninrv by taking your printing to THE NEWS.
SUBSCRIBE
For The
aissSr
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1896, newspaper, December 4, 1896; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115318/m1/1/: accessed May 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.