The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1897 Page: 1 of 4
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The Chandler News.
VOLUME VI.
CHANDLER, OKLAIIOMA, FRI DA Y, J A N. 22,1897.
NUMBER 18
Rail Road Time Table, Guthrie, 0. T
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa F« R. R.
NORTH, EAST, AND WEST.
Arrire
(.'btcatro
5:35 it m J a m | o:no p in |
4:58 pm 5:08 p m 0.50 a ui I 10::<0 p m
7:00 a m I Local FreltfUt.
12:18pm | Local Fre.ghf
BODTH. southeast. and southWK8T
{ Arrive ! Leuve j Arrive : Arrive
No. I Guthrie J Guthrie | Ft W'th
12:85 poi. I l'J::i5 pm • 9:16 pm j 9:25am
10:58 p m. | 11 OH p m | 8:10 a m p
12.15pm. I l:00pm| i.Q'-it) frrett/ht.
D hour a lo Lot* Aageleit,
Free chair cam on all
trains. I'ulmau P.ilaca
elorpers to Kansas Citv
and CblcDKO without
chtinjfp. Also to Ft. Worth
and Galveston Connects
at Newton with Vestibule
limited having chair cars,
Pulmon palace compart-
ment sleepers and dining
cars through lo Los An-
gelesandSan Diego also
with train carrying chair
cur*. Pullmun and Tour-
ist sleepers to El Paso,
Los Angeles, and sau
Fransisco Through railroad and steamship
tlcktes sold to ail points. Pussengurs booked
to all points in the continent of Europe: also
from any port or inland point in Europe through
to any point in the United Stater Prepaid
tickets paid for here will be delivered to pas
sengers at their residencoin Europe. For full
particulars, call on or address. Geo. T. Nichol-
son, G. P. A.. Chicago; W. J. DlacU, A. G. P.
a., Topeka. Hans.; L Jt. Delaney, Agent.
Guthrie, Oklahoma
Wanted—An Idea
Who can think
of some simple
thing to patent?
Protect your Ideas; ther may bring you wealth.
Write JOHN WKDPCKBURN ft co., Patent Attor-
neys. Washington, D. C., for their $i,8U0 price offer
and list of two hundred Inventions wanted.
liailroad Time Table. Shawnee, Okla.
CHOCTAW, OKLAHOMA, & GULF R. R
The short line from and to all points in
the Indian k Oklahoma Territories,
Through ticket* sold at short line rates to
nil points.
Depart
Except
Sunday. Dally.
2 85pm 145pm Wister
3 13pm 2 12pm Fanshawe
3 58pm 2 32pm Red Oak
4 57pm 3 0ipm Wilburton
H lf>pm 3 45pm Hartshorne 1L' 15pin
7 10pm 4 09pm Anderson 12 20pm
7 33pm 4 25pm Ar South Lv 05pm
8 15am 4 gOpra L McAlslr A il 45pm 040am
0 35am 5 39pm Calvin 10 36um 4 25ain
150am 6 12pm Holdenville 1002pm 3l7 rtr
2 33am 6 32pm Wewoka 9 42pm 2 28aio
2 10am 7 20pm Earleboro 8 51pm 1 Ouam
2 00pm 7 40pm A Shawnee L 8 34pm 12 15am
2 45pm 7 45pm L ' A 8 29pm l Oi'pro
2 30pm 8 14pm McLoud 8 01pm 12 30pm
8 00pm 8 41pm Choctaw City 7 35pm 12 01pm
3 30pm 9 10pm Okla. City 7 05am 11 30pm
5 15pm 8 10am " "
5 Wipm 8 46am Yukon
6 20pm 9 15am El Reno
pm 9 85am Fort Reno
For rates and other Information apply to
Hknhy Wood, J. F. Hoi.dek,
Gen. Manager. Traffic Manager,
South MoAledtor, I. T.
Arrive
Except
Dally. Sunday.
2 32 pm 1 05pm
2 12pm 12 25ji
1 52pm 1 1 00] m
1 2:<pm 11 50pm
0 10| m
9 07pm
7 55pm II 25p
7 2"prn* lO.VlMin
6 50pm 10 20ptn
9 50am V 5 'air
Wanted—An Idea
Who can think
of some simple
thing to patent?
Protect your Ideas; ther may bring y<>u wealth.
Write JOHN WEDDEKBURN ft co., Pat. nt Attor.
neys. Washington, D. C.,for their $i,8ui> prlso offer
and list of two hundred Inventions wanted.
JOHN EMBRY
ATTORNEY-A.T-LAW
CO. ATTORNEY OF LINCOLN CO
Office at Court House,
CHANDLER, . OKLAHOMA
EMERY A. FOSTER,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office, Corner Manvel Avenue and
Tenth Street.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
DR. L A. KELSEY
DENTIST,
Office on Manvel Avenue, Between 9th
and 10th Streets. Office Hours
9:00 to 12:00 & 1:00 to 5:00.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
CALVIN AND FUNK
BARBERS.
Second Door North of Man vol House.
Only First-Class Shop in Town.
12 Shaves for $1.00.
CHANDLER, • OKLAHOMA
H.L.COHEN
MERCHANT
* TAILOR . . .
Men's Fine Furnishing- Good?
and Hats. A Full Line of Fine
French and Domestic Piece Good?
Now on Hand. Call and Examine
GUTHRIE,
OKLAHOMA
l^. W. I ASH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office on Manvel Avenue, Between Tth
and 8th Streets.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
D. N. FRAZIER.
J S. NEWBY
FRAZIER & NEWBY,
Attorneys at Law
CHANDLER.
OKLAHOMA
CHANDLER ^ SHAWNEt
I MAIL AKD STAOE LIN1-
R. S. BLAIR, MANAGER.
Lv. Chandler I) a.m. Ar Shiuviio ■p.m
Lv. Snasvnce 9 a m Ar Cbundl.iUi'.M
(JTConnects with traia. on Ch etsv
raliroud. ripMlll cure uiven to ix-
j>r«sM Ollicu in post oflice, Chandler.
IN THE ODD CORNER.
SOME STRANGE, QUEER AND
CURIOUS PHASES OF LIFE.
Th« First Cloud—A Welch nip Van
Winkle—Converting Tree Into m
Newspaper—A Mutt Extraordinary Co-
Incidence— Munlrr Co Avoid Suicide.
HEY stood at the
altar one short
year ago;
He vowed from
the troubles of
life to defend
her,
To have her and
hold her for
weal or for
woe—
She spoke the re-
sponses In accents moat tender.
To-night, in the gloom, they are sit-
ting apart—
Oh! has all her wifely devotion been
wasted—
She mopes there in silence, a pain at
her heart;
The lamps are unlighted, his supper
untasted.
Their sky, erst all cloudless, is now
overcast;
For joy there is sorrow, for gladness
dejection;
The serpent has entered their Eden at
last,
And left its dark trail on the flowers
of affection.
Oh, well may there be in her bosom a
pain,
A grief that she vainly endeavors to
smother;
To-night he has told her, in language
quite plain,
She can't cook his meals half as well
as his mother.
—Boston Courier.
A Welti! Rip.
Every nation has a Rip Van Winkle
of its own, but the Welsh story of Rip
is unique. He is known as Taffy ap
Sion. One morning Taffy heard a bird
singing on a tree close by his path.
Allured by the melody, he sat down
until the .nusic ceased; when he rose,
what was his surprise at observing
that the tree under which he had taken
seat had now become dead and with-
ered. In the doorway of hio home,
which, to his amazement, had also
suddenly grown older, he asked of a
strange old man for his parents, whom
he had left there, as he said, a few
minutes before. Upon learning his
name the old man said:
"Alas! Taffy, I have often heard my
grandfather, your father, speak of
you, and it was said you were under
the power of the fairies and would not
be released until the last sap of that
sycamore had dried up. Embrace me,
my dear uncle, for you are my uncle—
embrace your nephew."
Newspaper from a Tree.
An interesting experiment was made
last April by a paper and wood pulp
manufactory at Elsenthal in order to
see what was the shortest time in
which a standing tree could be con-
verted into a printed paper. This ex-
periment conclusively showed what
can be accomplished by modern ma-
chinery and ingenuity. In a forest
near the establishment three trees
were felled in the presence ' the own-
ers of the manufactory at 7. 'in the
morning. The trees were can .ad to
the manufactory, where they were cut
into twelve-inch pieces, decorticated
and split. The wood was then raised
by an elevator to the deflbratlng ma-
chines. The wood pulp produced was
put into a vat and mixed with the nec-
essary ingredients. Then the liquid
pulp was sent to the paper machines
and at 9:34 in the morning the first
sheet of paper was finished. One hour
and fifty-nine minutes was the time
consumed in its manufacture. The
owners of the factory, accompanied by
the notary public who watched the en-
tire work, then took some of the pa-
per to a printing shop a little over two
miles away from the m anufactory, and
at 10 o'clock a printed copy of the
journal was in the hands of the party.
3o it took just two hours and twenty-
to him, "Sir, I hate no malice or ill-
will against you. I never saw you be-
fore, but I was determined to kill some-
body, that I might be hanged and you
happen to be the man. and I am sorry
for your misfortune."
Bruluman died on the gallows, ex-
ulting in the success of a scheme by
which he deemed himself not guilty of
his own death, though he effectually
shortened his own life.
Mont Extraordinary Coincidence.
In September, 1892, a girl gathering
driftwood for fuel on the shores of a
small bay near her home at Canna, In
the far Hebrides, Scotland, picked up a
piece of wood bearing the inscription,
cut with a knife, "Lachlan Campbell,
Bilbao, March 23rd, 1892." It was the
name of her brother, who was a boiler-
maker In Spain, and on showing It to
her mother the latter was naturally
somewhat disturbed, and could not
help superstltiously regarding this
mysterious message from the sea as
the herald of evil tidings respecting
her son. In her next letter to him she
mentioned the circumstance, and was
greatly relieved on receiving a reply
assuring her of his well-being, but
was astonished to learn from him
that he had remembered how, when on
a holiday, he had cut his name as
above described on a piece of wood,
and had Idly thrown it into the sea
from a rock near Bilbao. There is
nothing wonderful In the fact that this
piece of wood should, after drifting for
six months, have been carried hun-
dreds of miles away by the winds and
ocean currents, but that after Its long
wandering It should have been washed
on the shore within a hundred yards
of where the writer's mother lived, and
that It should be picked up by one of
his own family, is a sufficiently mar-
velous coincidence to be accounted in-
credible were it not substantiated by
undoubted evidence.
SCIENTIFIC CORNER.
CURRENT NOTES OF INVEN-
TION AND DISCOVERY.
A Curious Freak of Nature Clock Itun
l>y Water Power An Invention Which
May Restore Hearing Kite Flying
Extraordinary.
ARMER R. C.
Otis of Lewis coun-
ty, N. Y., owns a
remarkable pig. It
has only two legs,
but it differs from
all other recorded
freaks, in that the
legs are neither
fore nor hind legs.
They are placed
squarely amid-
ships, like those of a duck, und a fur-
ther resemblance is given to that bird
by a tail which curls up over piggy's
back. This biped is a trifle unsteady
on its limited equipment of legs, and
in its watery blue eyes there lurks a
puzzled expression, as though it
missed something, but It never falls to
reach the trough as soon as the other
members of its family when the swill
pail comes into view.
The Moon.
It is an interesting fact that our
moon contains about the same number
of square miles as North and South
America, but the volume or bulk of
the earth is almost fifty times greater,
and it would take 60,000,000 of moons
to equal the sun. As It has no at-
mosphere to protect it from the sun'i
rays, its heat In daytime is intense
strong enough to boil water—while at
night the cold is frightful, being sev-
eral hundred degrees below zero. The
moon is a dead cinder; if it ever had
air and water, they are now absorbed
in the porous lava that covers its sur-
face. It has twenty-eight mountains
higher than Mont Blanc; ten of these
are over 18,000 feet high, the two high
est—Mounts Llebnitz and Dorfel—be-
ing almost 25,000 feet high. These
mountains have been measured with
greater accuracy than any of our own,
and in a general way the maps made
of the moon aro more trustworthy
than those made of the earth. The
extinct volcanic craters on the moon
are enormous. The crater of Clavlus
has a diameter of 130 miles By the
aid of powerful telescopes 33,000 cra-
ters have been counted on the side ol
the moon which we see.
Extraordinary Recovery of a Ring.
The recovery of the Frangipani ring
not long ago by Prof. Thode occurred
under very remarkable circumstances.
The relic belonged to the Croation
leader, Count Frangipani, who lost it
near Pordenone, in 1513. When on a
recent visit to the Marcian library,
Venice, for the purpose of studying the
history of that city ir the sixteenth
century, Prof. Thode met with a peas-
ant who brought him a curious old ring
of gold, engraved with a double scroll
of waved lines, leaves, and minute
Gothic letters, bearing a German in
scrlptlon. It had just been dug up
from the cell of an old earthwork at
Castell di Prata, near Pordenone, and
was offered for sale by the peasant
who had found It. On examining it the
professor found to his infinite surprise
that it was the long-lost Frangipani
ring which disappeared in 1513—the
very year he was at that moment in
vestigating.
A Singular Delusl
While in a small town in France, a
traveler saw an inn-keeper engaged in
sawing apart a five-franc piece, and in-
quiring the reason, was told of a sin
five minutes to convert the wood of a \ gular delusion entertained by fully
stafcdjng tree into a newspaper ready
for delivery. During the course of
this experiment there were a number
of interruptions which it another time
might have been avoided and the own-
ers claim that twenty minutes can be
cut off the record time.
Murder to Avoid Suicide.
Perhaps the most curious murder on
record occurred In Philadelphia in 1760
when a Capt. Bruluman, a disgraced
officer of the Royal American regiment,
shot a man for no other reason than he
desired death and preferred to be
hanged by the state to taking his own
life. Having formed this design he
loaded his gun with a brace of balls,
and asked his landlord to go out shoot-
ing with him, intending to slay him
before his return, but the lucky land-
lord, being particularly engaged at
home, escaped the danger. He then
went out alone, and on his way met a | during the years 1892 and 1893, respec-
man whom he was about to kill, but tively. In connection with the Swe-
recollecting that there were no witness j dish emigration to the United States
es to prove him guilty, he suffered the 1 the report of the Swedish postmaster
person to pass. Afterward going to a | general, just published, is interesting,
tavern he engaged in a game of bil- ! For the year 1895, $1,311,920 waa re-
half of the population. The story Is
that Napoleon Bonaparte put a check
for one hundred thousand francs In a
silver five-franc piece, and that the
coin is still in circulation. The people
did not want the five-franc piece, and
in order to create a demand for It N
poleon resorted to the device men
tioned, the check being written on as
bestos paper, and inclosed in the
metal at the time the coin was made.
Thousands of five-franc pieces are an
nually broken open and inspected since
this absurd story was first circulated
and the credulous people are deaf to
all argument on the subject.
Emigration From Sw-e<i
Swedish emigration is slowly Inoreas
ing. The total number ot emigrants
for the three-quarters ot the year
11,618. In 1895 the emigration was 10,-
781, and In 1894, 7,047, against 30,000
Fatal t'asca of MuHliroom Poliioning;.
For some unexplained reason there
have been very many deaths this year
attributable to eating poisonous mush
rooms. One Is forcibly reminded of
the familiar rule, "If you live, it's a
mushroom; if you die, it's a toadstool."
As a curious incident in the singular
fatality which has of late attended the
use of this edible, it may be related
that a number of experts and dealers
have been among the victims. Under
these circumstances the rule can hard
ly be said to hold good. Medical sci-
entists are beginning to wonder wheth-
er it is possible that atmospheric con-
ditions or the season may have any-
thing to do with the toxic properties
of mushrooms. S irely those who have
dealt in them and been familiar with
them for half a century should be
able to say which were mushrooms
and which were not. But even this
experience was of no avail, according
to the accounts that have reached us
from France. It Is an understood fact
that stormy, unsettled and changeable
weather, with exceedingly hot and dry
spells following chilly dampness and
humidity, have a deleterious effect on
certain forms of vegetation. The sug-
gestion that druggists and fancy gro
cers keep In their windows jars con
tainlng genuine and spurious mush-
rooms might be an excellent one were
it not for the fact that, as shown by
the statements previously made, per-
sons thoroughly familiar with mush-
rooms through almost their entire life-
time have died from the effects of some
poison, the nature of which has not
been determined.
himself included, are working untiring-
ly with the electrical agent, and are
sanguine of even greater success than
has already been attained.
Klte-Flylng Kxtraordlnary.
A great kite ascension was one of
the events of October 8, at the Blue
Hill observatory. The ascension be-
gan at 9:15 a. m., and ended at 9:05
p. m. The kites reached and passed
through clouds, the fact being duly
recorded by the instruments attached
for that purpose. The meteorograph
was sent up 9,385 feet above the level
from which it started. It took three
miles of piano-wire to carry the me-
teorograph to this surprising height,
and the pull on the wire varied from
twenty to ninety-five pounds. The
temperature at the start was forty-alx
degrees, but fell to twenty degrees at
the height of 8,750 feet. The meteoro-
graph made its record in ink upon a
revolving cylinder run by clockwork.
Seven Eddy and two Hargrave kites
were used. These measured from six
to nine feet in diameter. For threo
hours the Instrument was more than
a mile above the surface of the earth.
This Is the most successful kite-flying
experiment ever made, and breaks all
records in this line.
Clock Run l>y Water l'ower.
A water clock has been devised by
a Chicago Inventor. It is operated by
water power, and the man who de-
signed It says that it will tell the timo
as well as any other machine, besides
having the charm of novelty, which Is
so much admired In these days. It is
a small, circular box, partitioned in
several compartments, and is suspend-
ed by two strings to an ordinary
wooden frame or backed by a wood
panel. The hours are indicated along
one side of the frame. The interior
divisions are similar to those of
water-wheel, and in each, at alternate
A Device to I-liable the l>caf to Hear.
By means of an invention of Dr.
Thomas McKendrick, a noted expert in
electro-therapeutics of Glasgow, Scot-
land, it is possible for the deaf to
hear music. To accomplish it the deaf
person must dip his hands into a tub
of water. A phonograph is used for
supplying the music. The sound waves
are directed into a regular telephone
transmitter. The transmitter connects
with a series of batteries under the tub,
connecting therewith. The harmony
is carried to the brain through the
hands. The principle on which Dr.
McKendrick based his idea Is one
which is but little understood. Water
is one of the best conductors of elec-
tricity known. Dr. William Harvey
King, an electro-therapeutical expert
of New York, who has studied Dr. Mc-
Kendrick's discovery, said in the New
York Herald a few days ago that the
great difficulty which had always baf-
fled experimenters in this line was that
the batteries used did not produce the
perfect rhythmical vibrations neces-
sary. "We have made this experiment
with the Faradic battery," said Dr.
King, "but to speak technically for a
moment, the long period of cessation
between the 'make' and the 'break' de-
stroys the rhythm, and consequently
the sensation is not transmitted. Tho
European expert has prepared a special
battery, the secret of which he still
retains." The process by which the
.,:v
,-.srn-
; celved in money orders from the United
I btates, while (277,310 were sent from
! Sweden, leaving a balance in favor of
Sweden of $1,034,610. Probably an
equal amount was sent to Sweden
j through the banks and emigrant agen-
cies.
Hards. Mr. Scull, a party engaged in
the game, having struck his antagon-
ists ball nto one of the pockets, Brulu-
man said to him, "Sir. you are a good
marksman; now I'll show you a fine
stroke." He Immediately took hl3 gun,
levelled It deliberately, took aim at
Mr. Scull (who imagined him in Jest), I
and shot both the balls through his i Learn to say no, and it will be ol
body. He then went up to the dying more u6e to you than to be able to read
mau, who w as still sensible, and said t i-atio.
rhythm of music is transferred through
the nerves to the nerve center of the
brain is clearly described by Dr. King.
"Take, for instance, a person who has
been deaf from birth. He immerses his
bands in the prepared water connected
with the phonograph. The rhythm of
the music is conducted by the nerves
locally affected to the fissure Rolando
in the brain, and the sensation is one
of pleasure. Greater still is the pleas-
ure experienced by one who has at one
time had normal hearing and who has
become deaf from some cause or an-
other. If the tune selected is one with
which the subject has been familiar, he
may easily follow the varying changcs
of the music, and by tho aid of his
imagination, which in the deaf is un-
usually acute, he can thus enjoy the
oddly conducted concert almost as thor-
oughly as if his hearing was uormal."
While th* new system of making the
deaf hear is yet in its Infancy, Dr. King
lays that i- utlsts all over the world,
r
I
A. D. WRIGHT'S DRUG STORE
•<BOOK AND NEWS DEPOTS
IDiru^o, Medicines,
4 Palnta, Oils ndQltt i School Sup*
plies, Fancy B.nd Toilet Article*.
-A. Frt_*ll Lino of Wall Pepar
p&bauurtio carefully compounded.
SOUTH MANVEL AVE., CHANDLER. O. T
O. ■. KM. J1. HOYT. O.iNiaa. V. I. aUWYDITH, A T. OulM
Tho ♦ Llncolr) * County BanK,
«msoap!tal, • to.ooo.oo.«s ~
0OE3 fi aiNC^AL BflNMNa BUSINESS
..... SPECIAL attention oiven TO COLLECTIONS
• STOOKHOLDinai
W. E M.rydlCfc, F B hoyt. O. B. V. I. Marydlth.
ChaQdler,
OKIahomo
ends of the divisions, is a very small
hole. Water is senled In one compart-
ment, and Is uppermost when tho
drum is at the top of the panel. It
slowly trickles into the next compart-
ment below it in front, and on account
of the leverage exerted by its weight
tho drum gradually revolves down-
ward. It is rewound to the top when
another journey is necessary. The
time can be told by the position of
the indicator on the uprights.
1'rorluHlnn of Artlflrlnl Hlllc.
Considerable interest attaches to the
process of M. Chardonnet for the pro-
duction of artificial silk, a process
which will soon be in actual operation
both in France and Grrat Britain. Tho
method of production has been com-
pared to that employed by the silk-
worm itself, who eats the mulberry
leaves, and after the mysterious in-
ternal transformation emits through its
mouth an extremely fine thread, which
it uses to spin its cocoon, and which we
use as silk. For the manufacture of
the artificial silk wood replaces the
leaves. The wood is worked into a
paste, which, after being dipped into a
bath of acid, is dried and placed in a
bath of other and alcohol, by which
treatment it is turned into a kind of
glue or collodion. From this material
the artificial silk is produced by sub-
jecting it to high pressure in strong
metallic cylinders, from which it is
forced into a series of pipes, and is al-
lowed to escape through suitable ex-
tremely minute openings in the shape
of fine thread.
A Niniple Skunk Trap.
"A skunk is the biggest fool in the
world," says Charles O. Cappers, the
cleverest amateur trapper in Lewiston,
Maine, who can catch a skunk every
night in a flour barrel. Ail he does is
to incline an empty barrel over a stone
or something that will slightly tilt, it
and drop in a hunk of bread or almost
anything to bait it. Along comes a
skunk In the night; he smells the bait,
jumps into the tiited barrel, his weight
tips it up. and there he Ir an<l he can't
get out.
SlilelcliiiK Ujchtniuic.
It is reported that an official inquiry
recently made in Germany concerning
the efTe<t or telephone wires on at-
mospheric electricity, showed that a
network of such wires extending over
a town tended to diminish the danger
from lightning during thunderstorms.
Reports were compared from 900
towns, of which 560 possessed telephone
systems, and the conclusion.drawn was
that a network of wires lessens the
danger in the ratio of 1 to 4.6.
Electrical Purification of Witter.
The purification of water by elec-
tricity is just now engaging the atten-
tion of scientists. Experiments show
that bacteria and microbes are effectu-
ally destroyed by electrical currents,
and the water completely clarified; but
a cheaper process than that under
which the experiments have thus far
been conducted must be found 1 ">fore
electrical filtration can become i com-
meroiul success.
m V—FIRST-CLASS WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS—g
| — «3F0R $1.00 CflSHt*—
!, „ THE KANSAS CITY JOURNAL,
THE GUTHRIE STATE CAPITAL,
AND THE CHANDLER NEWS
Will all be sent to any address in Lincoln county one
, m year for one dollar. This combination will give you
I ? all the news. The Journal can be relied upon to keep
a® you posted on general news; the Capital will give you
more Oklahoma news than any other^ paper published,
while the Ciiandi.hr Nkws is the leading couuty 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
■< •' and St. Louis Republic 1.25
« 41 and Cosmopolitan 1.50
« " and AfcClure's 1-50
'< " and Arena 3.00
" " and Munsey or Peterson 1.50
j i Clubbing rates with any other newspaper or magazine
i | made known on application. These rates arc to new sub-
scribers and to old subscribers who are not in arrears,
\M Send all subscriptions to Thb News, Chandler, Oklahoma,
h|OYT ABSTRACT CO.
BONDED ABSTRACTERS.
WTUB ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTHAOT
BOOKS IN LINCOLN CO.
E. W. HOYT, S«cratory and Maoafl".
Office in Lincoln County BanK-
■9
SAMUEL ELLIS,
JOBUF.n AND RETAIL DEALER IN
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS,
GLASS, PUTTY, BOOKS, STATIONERY, AND A FULL
LINE OF DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES.
Cor. Av«. aind lit** Wo.
Chandler, - Oklahomi
Hi
SUBSCRIBE
For The
CHANDLER
Poor Printing Pays
Poor Profits
Work that is done in a slovenly manner or done
upon a poor quality of paper is dear t any price.
"Cheap John" printinj is regarded as an itir ex to
a "Cheap John" business. While our work is not
i in price, it is uperior in quality. We have
advantage of experience and equipment. Exper-
nee mean a time; time means money. C.a:n time .and
,no monev by taking your printing to THE NEWS.
hig-b
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Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1897, newspaper, January 22, 1897; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115325/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.