The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1900 Page: 3 of 12
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THE CHANDLER NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1000.
ALL SORTS.
There are 2980 Seminole Indians.
Norman has a Mistletoe military band.
The sorghum season is on in Oklahoma.
Woodward county will hold a fair Oct.
4, 5, 6.
A K. of P. lodge has been instituted at
Billings.
The Rock Island extension is completed
to Mangum.
A flouring mill to cost $35,000 is to be
built at Alva.
Grant county promises to go for Flynn by
1000 majority.
The fall term of the A. and M. college
opens Sept. 10.
Dennis T. Flynn was born Feb. 13, 1862,
at Phoenixville, Pa.
In case of doubt Chairman Jones goes out
and views a rainbow.
They are having an epidemic of fractured
bones out in Woods county.
Harvey Buckles has been appointed
assistant postmaster at Enid.
Dollar wheat and ten cent cotton Jell the
story of McKinley prosperity.
The Twentieth Century is the name of the
women's club at Holdenville.
A tract of 80 acres has been platted and
added to the Shawnee townsite.
A party of people has left Claremore with
the intention of settling in Oregon.
Wild turkeys in the Creek country are
being exterminated by the hunters. u
Good crowds listened to Congressman
Eddy's campaign speeches last week.
The much-needed rain of last week ex-
tended throughout the two territories.
L. N. Ford, near Luther, is stocking his
ranch with high grade Angora goats.
J. C. Wails is the populist nominee for
representative from Cleveland county.
Seventh Day Adventists are holding their
annual campmeeting at Oklahoma City.
The Pabst Brewing Co. has been making
valuable real estate purchases at Blackwell.
Alexander Jester has started on a lectur-
ing tour under the auspices of his attorneys.
The populists of Pottawatomie county
pleaded in vain for fusion with republicans.
The newspapers of the two territories are
one in declaring in favor of the shirt waist
man.
Miss Bertha Ryan is the nominee of
Noble county republicans for superintend-
ent.
«
The singing convention at Lexington has
closed and the people are making up lost
sleep.
Southern Kansans and northern Okla-
homans participate in each others' political
rallies.
L. J. Jolly is editor of the Purcell Citizen,
the republican paper of the Chickasaw
nation.
Kay county is newspaper-poor. The
Ledger has come to fill a long-felt want at
Tonkawa.
Meat Market.
Porterhouse, Sirloin, Pork
Chop, Mutton ('hop, Spare
ii'ibs, Roasts, Hani, Bacon,
Butter, Eggs, Heinz Pick-
les and Apple Butter, But-
ter, Eggs, etc. Everything
clean and fresh and prices
tht; lowest.
^7™ T' Oscar banner.
B Does
h f Quality CowuiS
|l You?
Mil
0\
V
a *
Bain
Weber ,
Mitchell
Schuttler
Wagons
£
A Full Line of High-Grade g
Buggies and Harness.
l\ Buy the BEST and be
SATISFIED.
J. F. COLLAR
CHANDLER, OKLAHOMA
0M.0M. <***
Dr. Brengle, of Perry, has a team of
Arabian horses, the finest driving team in
Oklahoma.
When a republican rally occurs the local
fusion papers talk about fjost to keep their
courage up.
With the realization that Gov. Barnes has
joined their ranks the democrats are grow-
ing despondent.
The Kingfisher Times, which was burned
out last week, is published from the office of
the Free Press.
A wind storm near Yukon tore up 21
wheat stacks for a farmer and scattered
them far and wide.
Many Oklahomans, especially from Kay
county, will attend the Flynn speaking at
South Haven this week.
Bill Mclnturf has confessed to the killing
of Julius Roesch and implicates several
others. He is in jail.
Two Oklahoma City boys have returned
from Cape Nome with their pockets full of
souvenirs and experience.
Mrs. Mary Larkey, of Hennessey, has
been sent to the insane asylum. She is the
mother of eight children.
The Barnes papers, fusion, are alarmed
lest Flynn beat Barnes out of the Kiowa-
Comanche appointments.
Just give the defeated fusion aspirants
for nominations a chance to make campaign
speeches and they'll be happy yet.
Yes, Mr. Bryan, we are ashamed, millions
of us, that the Filipinos are expecting aid
from the democrats in this election.
A Logan county farmer has lost several
head of fine cattle by allowing them to feed
on the second growth of sugar cane.
At the request of Secretary Hitchcock
Tams Bixby has withdrawn his resignation
as chairman of the Dawes Commission.
A lively fight is going .on at Oklahoma
City between the Bell Telephone company
and the Citizens' Independent company.
Three new two-story stone buildings are
to be erected in Pawnee at once. * One of
them is to be built by the Masonic lodge.
They are to have overhead crossings at
Oklahoma City, or, in the language of a
prominent Chandler democrat, "aquaducts."
The sugar trust made the Wilson-Gorman
tariff bill and Mr. Bryan voted for it. Was
that not "placing the money before the
man."
Tom Woplsey, of the Mulhall Enterprise,
was nominated by the republicans last week
to represent the 18th district. He will get
there.
Mr. Bryan might tell us in the next of his
truly great speeches just how heavy a
burden he would find an income tax to be at
the present time.
A Tulsa man, who has emigrated to
Canada, is reveling in hunting anticipations.
He writes of droves of wild chickens and
ducks.
The Blackwell Times-Record shows a cut
of the Baptist college at that place. It will'
be a very handsome building when com-
pleted.
The democratic nominee for governor of
Alabama is a horrible gold bug! and an
awful expansionist! Everything goes in
Alabama.
John S. Allen, of Norman, editor of The
Peoples' Voice, was nominated for delegate
to congress by the mid-roaders Saturday at
Oklahoma City.
Hon. E. T. Tucker, socialist candidate
fot delegate to congress, will be in Chandler
on a speech-making tour some time during
the present month.
It is to be supposed that the Ohio repub-
licans had not heard of Barnes joining the
democrats w*hen they invited him to make
campaign speeches.
Barnes' letter has lined up various news-
papers which, for policy's sake, were trying
to be for Flynn and Barnes too. They are
for Flynn alon now.
Pretty soon Mayor Van Wyck of New
York will also begin to realize better than
ever before that there is not so very much
fun in being the ice man.
Judge J. C. Foster, of Guthrie, is the
republican nominee for councilman from
the Ninth district. He is the present pro-
bate judge of Logan county.
It is understood that Col. Mose Wetmore
of St. Louis, is very much opposed to trusts
unless he can sell $5,000,000 stock to one
of them for $15,000,000, say.
The Hon. JamestS. Hogg openly charged
the Hon. Joe Bailey with consorting with
trusts. Is the octopus getting in its deadly
work among the Texas democrats? «
The new Episcopal church at Newkirk
received a $25 donation from St. John's
church, Washington, where President Arthur
and Admiral Dewey have worshipped. .
New Jersy and Alabama have about the
same population, or had in 1890, yet Mc-
Kinley alone polled more votes in New
Jersey than Alabama polled altogether.
It used to be robber tariff with Mr. Bryan
and then it was the robber gold barons.
Now we suppose it is a conspirator of robber
soldiers, like Chaffee, McCalla and others.
Kingfisher Free Press on the fire: A
squirt gun would have saved the great loss
last Snnday morning but there was no
squirt-gun. The county don't insure tor
economy's sake. . a •
Do not forget that Bryan is pledged to
pay in silver the first government obligation
that he gets a chance to pay at all. And do
not forget the moment he does that we are
on a silver basis.
Hon. Arthur Sewall of Maine, who will .
possibly be remembered by 'Some of our
readers as having run for vice-president on
the ticket with Mr. Bryan tour years ago, is
out for McKinley.
There is no reason to doubt that the
democratic national committee will pay all
the expenses of the anti-imperialists and all
other ostrich organizations calculated to
support Bryan on the side.
in n
§ Come
8
v
n
n
ti
and see our stock of
SHOES. Host stock
and lowest prices.
We have all kinds
and sizes of footwear,
and sell them right.
New York Store.
Corner South ol Square.
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Gilstrap, H. B. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1900, newspaper, September 6, 1900; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115940/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.