The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 6, 1901 Page: 1 of 4
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J Bd\icatc y«ur children jj
I at the |fc
A. 4 M, COLLECJU *
j at Stillwater. ^
60 per copy.)
Vol. i
the daily gazette.
Demoted to The Interests of Stillwater.
Stillwater. Oklahoma. Wednesday Evening, November 6. 1901.
"firry Junes, our county cominis-
Lr •« '. lS " taxpayers
I ..I,!.! ^ y f."'' , . pro.
T-00 fr.-m the fund*of tin- coiin-
* STILLWATER jjj
The largest, Liveliest tfc
jjj and Healthiest City in ^
Eastern Oklahoma. jjj
($4-,f30 per year
No. 236
I printi
A Great Day of Victory. Tammany
Has Passed iuto the Beyond.
Low, Mayor, by 40.000.
Setli l. w. former president of Col-
uintiin I niversity and fusion candidate
nagyr-terday elected mayor of (.rent-
er V" York by 40.(100 voles over Kd-
wnrtl M >hepard, the Tammany caii-
didiiie. A
Voting iincliitn
pari
ive i , ,'"""' " Millw '" 'o b(
■ l I D«v«. i,. 0°?ton earn1*«l- The tax.
1 Dear wtn^w'i. ?6 eno,,Kh burden to
^ then having to b11y .. sliov. and
then pay admission before they ran
' 't.-Cushing Herald.
• J. I:., we rise on a point of or'er
"'form you, ,0„ have been griev-
ously inisiiiformed. The commiwion-
I ers of the county were not asked by
our executive committee to make an
appropriation to "buy a show and then
pay admission to see it." <)„ the con-
trary the commissioners were asked
to donate $100 toward paying prizes
f« r ho exhibition of a purely agricu1
win- m jmroiy Mgrictl -
heavy vote was polled. h,r"1 "attire on entries in the garden,
I I nut U'liru 11 lie 1(1 i ifc 11II r<i ...... I. __ ■ i .
iield, urchard. poultry and live stock
exhibits for which not one cent entry
fee was charged, and still you will
howl for the appropriating of a #10,000
building for the St Louis Exposition,
Which not one farmer in « thousand
living m I'ayne county will see. There
was no inconsistency in asking for the
u«ed in in
:s of the city and the result was
known in a few minutes after the polls
eloseii
OHIO
The K'publican- carried Ohio ves
tfrdny. ecling Nash anil the entire
ticket by more thnu fill,000 plurality. - j ... a-*.,,* ior me
Tbir- insures the election of -senator B"i,rol|riation for the exhibition and
Foraker. the "taxpayers" would have had no
i<>« * howl coming should the appropriation
A I! Cummins w as elected governor '"iVe '>een iiibiIh.
of Iowa by a majority of probably 1(X).-
(Ml A -olid delegation .,r republicans Fellow Quits Drinking Voluntarily
A n imiiuMfil ■ ■ .
• ere returned to the next congiv
NKHRAKK A
Republicans carried Nebraska by
ibuut 1 ■ kmi majority.
CALIFORNIA
Union Labor candidate Schmitz was
•lectrd mayor of Kan Francisco by a
•iiial 1 majority.
VIRGINIA
Virginia democratic by
SOITH DAKOTA
S vjtl, Hakota republican by a slight
majority.
REPORT NOT CREDITED
Oklahoma Officials Don't Feel That
Mulhall Will Be Governor.
\n unusual case is presented in per-
ry by ,I nek Uodgers, w ho lias appeared
liefore a justice of the peace and
caused notice to be sent to the saloon
keepers of perry under the Oklahoma
statute! not to sell him any more li-
enor. Uodgers claims that he has quit
drinking, and for this reason be took
this action.
(Jushing's New Paper.
I.ester I. (iiltin returned from Cush-
ing this afternoon here he has ju-t
completeil arrangements f..r the estab-
lishment of a newspaper in that thriv-
ing I'ayne county tow n. Mr (iiflin is
the f Tiner local editor of the I>aiIy
linzette and has recently been connect-
ed with the Stillwater Advance in the
same capacity. He is a thorough
newspaper man nix! will, no doubt,
edit a sheet which will bring honor to
himself and to the town of Cushing
lie has a wid e acquaintance with new s
er ami businessmen in Eastern (Ik-
Mail Between Lahoma And Cald-
well. Ft. Worth Train Is
Relieved of $2,000.
Guthrie, (I T, Nov. ."> The news
ftper «'ory that /nek Mill:.all, of Mill
hill, i- likely to In- appointed govern
or to suei . ed (loveriior VV. M .lenkin
has caused much comment in (iklaho
ma, and especially among territorial! pn|
affinal- Not much credence is given lahoma and all or these join in w ishing
the story, however, for, as far as is the greatest success in his new ven-
«nim Zack Mulhall is a democrat, ture, and a liberal support from the
but iia- never shown any particular town of Cushing Here's success to
political work, ow ing to the fact that the new paper.
his tun.- has
tiling else,
dent iii sey
intl it
thai i
ci«n. f.
been taken up with some-
ilis friendship w ith I'tesi-
-'•yeit is kllimti in (Ik .lliotna,
probably from this source
■tory originated. The politi-
that IfiMisevelt might give
Z«rk Mulhall poniM gowd position, but
that i! wil] hardly lit' tb0 oni of gov*
trnor of < >klahon.n
AT HOTEL ROYAL.
hiftii. r of Clerks at the Bit
telry at Guthrie.
Hos-
' • '•* < apital
Hi i ,s Iihs ;t^a in
,h(l Hotel Uoyal.
Oeorj.'" M i 1 ]<.r nl, j,,
Lcwih s i.oenwerk at nijjlit. TI
Janew mm in the oity I t is
be an
iftyn Manager .I
hifted clerks at
his changt
ie day ti in
Puts
and
e latter
*nid to
vpHricnced hotel man. Will
!i: s retired after several months
® I'1 mtvii• i■ behind the counter.
I/ wj* >chof*n\v r|j i* well l-.uown in
JillvAmter ami reaided here prior
J4 Ul . iiinec of t he posit ion at
H®tel Koyal.
Musical-Literary Lecture Recital.
Thursday night ft the college chap-
el Mr. \\ . \\ augli l.auder. the famous
pianist and lecturer, will give the fol-
lowing unique and splendid program :
TALK (>\ Ol.li i II Ills I'M AS AN l> Vri.K-TlllK.
I Overture—"William Tell"
Kossini-I.isjt
J Wedding March and dairies' Dance
Mendelssohn
( Fantasia on "Midsummer's Night
Dream Music by Liszt)
I! Lecture— Illustrated at Piano
Origin of Christ in is, Santa Klaus,
Kris Krinkle, -ml Nikolas, The
Tree, I be Tapers, M tun tilings. Car-
ols, Waits, New Year's Callings
and Kirst I'ooiings. twelfth Night
l Hexing Night . Kfiipbany
The Curious I'rc
resentation) ol
The lie fan a or Rome.
TheGuingolee of Kranee nnu Huel
Kites of the Mistletoe.
the
'111 to
ITense
bed J
re-
. The
■a111■. 1 iv „ perry negro wits
'"r niiiety-nino days. His
grave, 1 {.. approached the
l0"m "■ nulow of a white girl ami
at'silly tupped ii|will the w indow
win 1'ntined ami upon invest igai ion
f Mii" confi onteil with a big gun in
e hands of llrookins, who was on the
J1'1'" the window. The fellow ile-
'M that he "loved her" and desired
""mediate return of his nITcetions.
°"i that the girl was fright ened in
""K 'lmildly, She did not make
Hst""i|gtr,tlon but was prostrated
1 e shock of auoh an experience.
Knid, u. | . Nov. I The fact that a
tnail I ag has been robbed of #2,(1X1 did
not become known until this morning,
when Cashier Let non of the Bank of
Knid, Oklahoma, beenme suspicious
and refiistd to honor a draft on the
First National bank of Kansas City.
An investigation foilowed anil dis-
closed the fact I hat on October 31 rbe
mail bat from l.iboma. Oklahoma, to
Kock Island points north had been cut
open and $1,400 in draf'g stolen in ad-
dition to $i;oo in oilier forms. Many
ot the stolen drafts have been casle d
at Enid.
I he Eagle of this place gives the
following details :
I he through mail sack from Lahoma
to the Caldwell A K. rt Worth railroad
postoHice train No. 2 was cut open on
I'hursday. Oe.ober 31. and something
over $1,400 in drafts taken. Other
mail matter was also secured.
The robbery was not known until
Saturday morning, when one of the
drafts turned up for collection at the
Bank <f Enid. It was on the First
National Hank of Kansas City,and had
| been won by the party who presented
it in a card game. Other drafts have
also shown up in Enid during the day,
some of which were cashed by metcli-
ants.
'I his morning a le.y picked up a draft
for *'■•> from the Bank of Lahoma to
the State National Bank of St. Louis;
also some letters which had been open-
ed. I liese were found near the depot.
Cashier I.etson refused to honor the
draft presented to the Bank of Enid,
and an investigation revealed the state
of affairs related above.
I he mail sack which w as robbed w as
one which was put on the train at La-
homa and sent in as express consigned
to the Caldwell a Fort Worth mail
train No. 2, which picks it up at Enid,
and distributes the mail on the road
south. It is one of the few sacks from
outlying towns which does not pass
through the Enid postolliee.
By telephoning to Lahoma, Ring
wood mid Carwile, it was ascertained
what drafts and checks had been in the
•ack. These amounted to something
over $1 loo, .and to this can probably
be added a considerable sum repre-
sented by other mail matter.
The ollicers are working on the case,
and while they refuse to give out any-
thing it is believed that the, are very
dose on the trail of the robbers, and
arrests are expected hourly,
id. O T., Nov. I.—George O'lb-i, n
was br i'ight here this morning, having
lieen art' sted at ( lickashti by Sheriff
I't r, chargi d with the robbery of
1 State- mail, whien took
place last Thursday on ihe Fnid
Anadarko railroad between here and
Lahoma. O Brien was here Thursday
I'pio | Mauger Rep- j ">ght and in a poker game put up some
of the -tolen drafts as collateral. On
thi-i clue he was arrested. He is „
young man from Great Bend, ."Kansas, I
and has been a brakctnan on tho rail-^
pi.Chorals in liHrmany. road. Ilia father used to be a conduct-
Maz ip ill of (iertuaiiy 1 'an Forte of or out of (treat Hend.
Italy.
Plum Porrldg#, W*siall, Mumming-. Oklahoma Printing Co, Expanding.
The I'hinie^ and Kinging of Changes j
in Od Kngland.
Holy Wet k in Art
PITH AND POINT.
Clothes may not make the man,
but the better they are the more at-
tention lit* iv apt tt receive.—('hicag"0
Daily News.
I.lariir "Is Hetty happy in her mar-
ri«d life?" Esther "She ou^ht to
be. No less than three girls in town
were after her ( barley."—Boston
Transcript.
"What time is it?" "I dori'1 l<no*v,
I haven't heard the alarm go otV, but
as the baby is just going asleep it
must be near time to get up."—Phil-
adelphia Times.
"1 df) not understand what is
meant by 'piping times of peace.* '•
"Neither do I. There are always
more pipe stories told in times of
war."—Indianapo 1 is News.
Lenders—"How about that $5 I
loaned you?" Horrouglis—"Gee
whizz! I forgot all about it. I'll
make a note of it now." Lenders—
"Suppose you make a $.*> note of it." :
—Philadelphia Keeord.
Powell-—"Do you always agree with
your wife when she makes an asser-
tion?" Jeaffreson "Why, of course,
I don't! You don't think I would de-
prive her of every amusement, do
you?"—Town and Country.
The Modern Prize Fight.—"Mr.
Fitz-Jeffries," said the reporter, "a
cable message from Paris says the
champion heavyweight of France!
wants to fight you." "Well, if he I
does," replied the great pugilist, I
"he'll have to do it in English. I'll
be hanged if I'll learn his language." ;
—Philadelphia Press.
CURIOUS TABLE MANNERS.
Ocliuvlor nt on Ih TIi a I KxpKpn Miu-Ij
Co in tn en I In lloteln ttiitl llonrtl-
iiik 11 (i ti non.
"I am sure you make a mistake, mam-
ma," confides Elizabeth in her much-
talked-about "Visits." "in what you
told me, that well-bred people behave
nicely at dinner nd sit up, because
they don't a bit; lots of them put their
elbows on the table, and nearly all sat
anyhow in their chairs. Only two be-
haved like you, but, then, they were
quite old—over 40."
'Ihe astonishing fact that all well-
bred people do not behave nicely at the
table is also borne in upon the casual
observer w ho goes t o a hotel for a meal,
who watches the actions of his neigh*
bors, or upon one who boards or takes
many meals from under his own roof
tree. The writer would wot be believed
if she told all that she knew on this
subject, ftir it has been her lot in life
to be thrown in contact with many
charming persons undeniable aris-
tocratic birth whose table manners
Mary Anne, eating with the footman
in the kitchen, would have scorned to
emulate, says the I'lltinmre News.
She remembers one >u'ch individual,
the ieJf-coi fessed descendant of a
hundred earls, who always took the
hot cakes at breakfa-: oIT the plate
that was profl't red her with her fingers,
scorning the fork that went along as
ft n implement of no use on this occa-
sion. sometimes when the top cikodid
sii'; h-r *!ie ha <et this aside and
i kin at dinner parties hefoi
much to his hostess* distre.'
he is accounted a vcr\ df
(juaintance. and this the n
syncrasy incidental fo a gr
borhed mind.
Tin business of eating i< appar
one to be over as expeditiously a
s:l)le in America, and anything that
servi to hasten mntters is adopted by
certain persons, jnvt as sewing ma-
e using it,
s. and still
citable at-
crest idite
•::i and al>
ntly
pos-
chine
nomic
llow
The
in the
all 'go
of the better class have English or
(ierman nursemaid or a resident gov-
erness. When they are sent to a
boarding school they go to some con-
vent, but in Paris courses which leave
the young girl most of the time a;
home are preferred. The
weekly, semi-weekly or
classes. The government schools
have hitherto been attended mostly
by the free thinking element. Pri-
vate schools are fast being trans-
formed into day schools. Then them
are private teachers for those arts
called "accomplishments," which oe-
cup\ a prominent place. Th. Btyivzon
(Madame llluuc),
Journal.
i tolerated for its i_
value.
Trench fitrls \ro I'lluontoil.
children of the lower classes
country, as well as in town,
to public schools. Little girls
courses are
Ladies' iloiaa
i \ t
• pt r
the great
sons who (
>me
' potat
t pot
A
oved
a prt
er i'i
ng on the
made be-
has also
- out of a
oes with
> r sorts—also
e oik that she
"i i a u around
ma n iter.
lady, the rela-
she isn't a
bee;i use . he
looks upon
I oy, a nil t rl*
f bread from
, fli nt Vt r it
Ancient Procepsions and Plays.
Ml Hl( Al ILI I STHATIONB,
(Quaint (ierman, Italian, English and
1 Hl'oU.
Illustration of the "Waights."
How i he Chimes Hing*
The shepherd'f* Songs and PifTerari
, f Campagna and the Abruzzi.J
Noel of France.
Holy Night—The Spirit of Messiah.
Invitation to Ihe Dance—Weber-
J'aiiRig.
Tickets on pale at W. H, llan'g drug
atore.
it v <• of ,i noted America
lineal descendant simp!
had no linen! descendant
a sugar spoon as a um !<
umphantly forks a piece
tlie other >'i!e of the tab
siuts her to do so.
Still a not her cue Irink > h
her saucer, the ol.'-fashion ........
matter when he mid dees not saptain from the sli]
^r'1 1° eat j • ;i> \\ !i In r Knife wht n foil always get me t
the occasion, according to her ideas, want to say is
demands.
These arc all. of
r tea from
ed wa\
TOOK HIS ADVICE.
Yoniifc Wife Ciin n ii 11 n llacltolor I'noI«
in Hop Marital Trouble ami
ItriuuM nn ii Utaiax.
After she had been married six
months ^lle went to lier old Imelielor
uni'le. who believes that a matrimo-
nial alliance is a voluntary accept-
ance of slavery, says the Detroit Free
Press.
"Suffering from the conjugal yoke,
bey?" he replied to her presentation
of afflictions.
"No. uncle, from the conjugal joke,"
for she would not humor his preju-
dices.
"Same thing," with a hardening
voice, "lint I require details before
giving advice."
"Well, he is a practical joker nf the
worst sort. He delights to slip salt
into my tea, wake me out of a sound
Sleep by playing burglar: send anony-
pious letters threatening to burn the
house down; tell nie that he has
failed and that the poor house staresi
us in the face; swears that the house-
is haunted; anything to scare me and
give him a laugh."
"Of course. Marriage makes a finite'
of a man and a fool of a woman. But
don't you be a soft little fcilly. r,o:
right back at him with his own weap-
ons. Mi\ glue with his shaving soap.'
Ibist the inside of his underclothing
with red pepper. Put snnd in his
Shoes. Change his best hat for one
two sizes larger. Pretend to fall in
Ion with some other fellow. Keep
him in hot water day and night. I
jfiiess that will hold him."
She acted on this advice. The hus-
band thrashed th™ uncle. The wife
holds that he did just right, and now
there is every prospect that they will
live happily ever after.
\ame Xo lirawIII!eli.
The kii e or Italy, remarks the Chi-
rairo Hi cnni-lb raid. t ins to consider
'.onsiii U;>/w!n; .\-l<i a good enough
U a ti a n to d< coru I e in spite ot his name.
It MUcrt III in l'p.
"As to the coining yacht race," said
Mr. 8ezzlt to hi* wife, "1 think it will
be foiin'l that there is many a slip be-
tween 1 he lip and the eupton."
\ "What?" inquired Mrs. Se/itt.
"I mean there will lie many a slip
between ;lie lip ai -I th" slipton there
will be many a >■ ip from the slip to
Ihe eon found it, I me an there will bo
many a lip between the cup and Ihe
vliptcn no, tint Isn't right -there will
lie many a slap from the clip
upton--er—that is -then
liutlirie, 0. T,, Nov. I. \otlee will
bo tiled with Secretory William (-trillion
of the increase of Ihe capital stock of
the Oklalmmn Printing company of.
Oklahoma City, which publi-luH the ?!!•'' " " T" "" ""labl
,. .. . 1 ,lle tlilnir about tin in i- that in . verv case
Oa.ij Oklahoma* City'* the laill, s we,I born and would
luoriiing paper, with Associated I'mm indignantly ri pel any insinuation that
daily. I lie slock w ill be increased j they were not also well bred, f,
frum $1,40(1 to $:'5,000. Hoy E. Stafford '
t lie
will be a
aine it, Maria,
nfn ed 1 What t
that there will be many
I sip from the lip to the scupton hat
extreme the dickens are you laughing at, any
how?
fool
owns the principal amount of stock,
with Jennie J, Stafford and E. I). Mux-
ey ns the oilier stockholders. The pa-
pers will lie Hied by Senator John C.
Porter ot Oklahoma City,
flagrant eases are noticed every day,
where grown-ups, as Kliznbeth say's,
"sit anyway in t heir ehai rs"a nd do oth-
er things that they would surely rep-
rimand their children for imitating.
One man, for inslance, carefully pol-
ishes the silver at his plate on his na;i-
way with
womnn. Wonder to ine any man of
'sense ever tries to talk to them."
"Why, my dear, what is wrong with
ron this evening?"
"There isn't anything wrong. I was
folng to sny that there will be many a
ilip between the lup and—well, 1 hops
we lose the race, anyway, just to teach'
ron to respect your husband nior#
hen he tries to eutertain you."—
Ituore American.
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The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 6, 1901, newspaper, November 6, 1901; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117473/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.