The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 143, Ed. 1 Monday, July 22, 1901 Page: 2 of 4
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J
Mi
ft
JUL7
CmMIK SUE!
I now on at Jones' Dry Good Store. Big reduction
in prices, special lines to close out, all lowquar-
ter shoes, in mens' and boys' clothing
every suit at cost. These must go
if prices will take, and we
think they will.
Remember The First Sole in 3hoes is Still on
and will continue as long as a nair is Ipft Ymi'ii i>* 1 . .....
Hats, we have a few left; $1 Straw Hats 50e- 1 5ft TTat h"n v-sizes, will he broken. Sfraw
to appreciate the prices we are making on them- fiS ? g° i ]°V"- ( ?1G8' 5011 must see them
dren's Vests with sleeves atZ^ncenuVJh lidred ^ "J fl.v" cents ««ch. Chil-
twos to fours, button, worth from two dollars'™, go in thiV MlT'i't 8< ""s'l '""I Sll0.es• sizos
was seen in Stillwater before Wp can mopt q ' i i f . Such a haigain never
lose. We never eonsider 0„me "nd see us ^ evw Sfen whpn ™
West Side
North Main
J. D. JONES.
Stillwater,
Oklahoma.
DAILY
CHARLES f. NEERM4N. Mj
LESTER I. GiFFIM. Editor.
GAZETTE Some people who have register-1 Don't file on a claim in ti •
ed may knew what to do with a j Kiowa-Comanche country thinking
claim hut we 11 bet a cent they don't1 you will be given free homes
know a neck yoke from a hold- i —■ .. . . j.
; Owing to the drouth this sum-
: mer the
. and Publisher.
back strap.
SUBSCRIPTION' PRICK.
One year in advance $4.50
Three months . i on I c, , ,
One month J(l " lckalett, the boy
-Miss Beers at Xewton Kan,
"he Way The Man Is Built
The average man who ha« never
been able to pile up any stuff may
think that he could make money if he
Entered at the postotfic* at still-
water. Payne County. Oklahoma. ar
as second cla<s mail matter.
mosquitoes have been C""W "n'y 'J"rr,m ut tA" lM'r <-ent
who killed !quitescarce' but the>' wil1 make the"'""""''l «<•
! u!' for lost time wheu it does rain. • SUMl w"r"
" without intere.t lie could not pay
If Home
I>>nri hitn money
RiB&SSiflllSEiiii
Editorals
The registration ending Satur-
day evening was 102.271.
said to have been very teticent and ! |. "" ",mlu 110
timid. There is no telling what •'an V . 7 nCCeSSary to have , oa<* the principal wh,n the n„,« fell |
kind of. fellon i. £k„ ,o * Z '* I'^ , rJ
harm. Physician has discovered a new j a"d *<""* are not One man can start1
disease called eroso membraneus " dilapidated ^aw-hor-.* for
a kind of sore throat and tra,ti"K stock and in tur> we.k- b< will
ow" a blooded steed that can hit the
at a 2:40 gait
. atignia—a Kina 01 soi
It is thought that bidders for it is all the rage now.
town lots have gone into a combine -
to keep prices of lots down to the - There are now is towns in Ok
One hundred and two thousand
two hundred and seventy one.
Since 1865 England's imports of
eggs have increased from 280.000,-
000 to 1.700.000,000.
1 he Lawton farm is more valua-
ble in the minds of some than it
will really be sixty days hence.
very lowest price but Uncle Sam is lahoma with over 1,000 population,
next and say competition must bo anc* 20 in the Indian Territory
a part of the play. with 5,681 while Oklahoma City
the largest in Oklahoma has 10,'-
E1 Reno is full of men, natives, j "37' 3' more than Guthrie.
who make fun of people who come in lS9° Guthrie was 1.182 larger
The government didn't seem to
be afraid of any bluffers on the new
country opening and walked right
along as it started out to do.
The other day, at Pond Creek,
a young fellow got on a Rock Is-
land train and finding the conduct-
or loaded down with work, preced-
ed that gentleman and collected
fares from the passengers. The
conductor found the fellow, took
the fares away from him, stopped
the train, and put him out on the
in to register, declaring that they
wouldn t have a claim if some-1
body paid the taxes tor them. The
same men were at Arkansas City
in 1889 and in 1893, and declared
that a farm in Oklahoma or the
strip wasn t worth picking up.
Those claims are today worth more
than the croakers ever saw togeth-
er at one time
than Oklahoma City.
| gravel at a 2:40 gait. Another could
-tart out with a thoroughbred and
« '"nd up In a week with a jack-knife
with one blade broken out It de-1
Real Estate Transfers.
I.jst.of real-estate transfers a. re
corded today.
C. II. 8towe to J. W. Smith, lot Xo.
Personally conducted
hoineseeker'g ejeursions to
• alifomia, August ti and JU,
•September 3 and 17.
Only ,,ne fare. p|,„ ^ ^
round trip.
Through tourist sleepers and
chair cars.
1 alifomia is an open door of
opportunity for the hustler.
^ ''fand Canyon of Arizona
en route.
The wise farmer who is carrying
his head with him is not selling off
his hogs and cattle in an excited
way. He realizes the fact that
next year he would be required to
buy back at a big price and thus
lose big money ou the two trans-
actions. Feed will be scarce, that
is true, but not so scarce but what
a farmer can get feed euough to
winter his stock and by such means
t>e ffxed for the next year. Corn
will be a good price but it would
pay to feed 50 cent corn rather
than sell off a drove of young hogs
At one Oklahoma point the other
evening, a man on a box car had 8'l,lopk Xo- 39. Glencoe
a plank reaching to the top of a ,r, >rles Edwards to Toles lot-
passenger coach, and he charged j X" " '2l 3 and 4-,,lo°k W, in Stillwater"
25 cents for a man to walk across - Kobt" Le9,"r to J.me, Baggett 4fl
Hardly a Rock Island train went I,ectiun township 20, N. rang(>
Santa Fe
1 Address Agent. A. T A S. K. R'y, Still-
water.
into El Reno without one or more v
Special Summer ezcuraion to South
Dakota and Minnesota. Those desiring
taking a trip to Hot Springs. I)ead-
wood and Lead City. S. D.. St. Paul
Minneapolis or Duluth should take ad-
vantage of cheap rates now in effect
For further particulars relative to rates
routes, connections etc.
E. R. MCCARTHY
coe
J. Hunter Williams to Job
• muh, lots \o Oand lti, block
(ileneoe.
W.
in
Kd Stevenson, or Greenfield, la but
formerly of this place, is in the eity in
company with W. II. Allaback of the
same place. These gentlemen are
neighbors in Iowa and came out to
register, and will spend several .lavs
in Stillwater.
b «..o g,„, noun of Ki„Efi.„tr., ,r„;si;jy z,lzziri
To be buried .live isoertainlv .ome
thing awful. The KingHsI.er Vree
r,Sa5"':~"Th°"m" K,'" edy wh0
- hi", little son. was bnried JdBr
^ bushel, of wheat last w,.ek by
earing In of bis granary, is ,itt£
worie for the accident lie is earrv
'ng. crippled wrist as a result of xL
rescuing p.r„ who chopped into the
5r« '11*.
r, " "H-r.™
.. . "wf,,lr"''"' of being buried alive,
o oy, aged two and a half yeBr«
""injured, but he could not have'
survived much longer "
SCHOOL BOOKS,
Stationery,
and
Wall Paper,
i. C. NORTH
North Main St.,
Stillwater, Okla.
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Griffin, Lester I. The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 143, Ed. 1 Monday, July 22, 1901, newspaper, July 22, 1901; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117386/m1/2/: accessed May 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.