The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 6, 1901 Page: 2 of 4
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DAILY GAZETTE
CHARLES F. NEERMAN. PublUher.
IRANK G. PROUrY, Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE.
One year in advance
4.00
Three months 1,20
One month 40
Entered at the postotlicn ut Still-
water, Payne County, Oklahoma, as
as second class mail matter.
wkpxks1mv, kkh 5. li)01.
Phone No. 13.
ENTERTAINED
YESTERDAY.
The Kansas City and .Stillwater
Business Men Mixed.
Three Pullman'sand a Dining car con-
taining the Kansas City Commercial
Club, rolled in the city yesterday
morning and were tsken in charge by
the Commercial Club and diiven
Homo Sweet Home.
The following is a part of a composi-. v.
tion written hy Blanche Lancaster, one ! «}
* - - ^
of Che pupils in Mrs. Johnson's class at j
The public building bill will
introduced this week.
be
There will be big crops in Okia-
honia again this season.
President McKinley will call an
extra session almost certain.
Pawnee:
I think we who have a home very
often do not know how to appreciate it.
Looking around us wo may see little
ones who never knew what it is to have
pleasant homo or a mother's love
which I priza more than anything else.'
I think a home should be the most
around th© city and out to the college 11plea,s"n(; ',Iace " p ''th. anil if we are
Many visited our stores and were sur- K"utl "' ,vi" ,,,v"
prised at the neatness and the excel-'' 'J* p,Hrj on I . n v H hits of
lent display of goods. It was a general
opinion that the Eastern Oklahoma
People are getting awful tired of
reading about Mrs. Nation's di-dos
in Kansas.
Col. Thomas P. Feuloa, the
oldest and ablest criminal lawyer
in Kansas died at Leavenworth
Monday.
The legislators are still grinding
out bills. They should be arrested
for introducing any more and tak-
ing up the time of the taxpayers.
The Daily deader is raising a
kick against another lease of five
years 'for the present postoffice
building. He claims it is a dingy
place.
road must be extended, as tho trade in
the eastern portion of the territory be-
longed to Kansas City and they were
Joi.ig to tee that city secured it,
Ihey realized that if this line tvns con-
nected it would be known as the Kan-
sas City Short Line, a nearer route to
Oklahoma by 137 miles. The press was
represented by II. L. Xicolet, Kansis
City Star; Geo. Ogden, Kan«as City
limes; J. W. Morrison, Kansas City
World, and Win, Hamilton ('line, of
the Kansas City Journal, These boys
had a head full of "Kansas City Mer- '
chant and Manufacturers' Talk,'' and
our boys bad a "Railroad Talk—How
to Get I here." This mixing of men
representing the two citii-s will be of
some value to both in the near future.
SHOULD BECOME A LAW,
A bill has been introduced in the
legislature entitled "An act
! gi'l.s, (I say girls li r .ii:- i mu one and
| «1" not know the ways of boys s(J well,)
I that are so kind and good out in eoni-
j ['any. and every one would say "Oh !
how sweet sho is, and how I love her."
!''t them ro in'o the home—there
th?y find the same girl that thry
bought was so sweet in company, rro?-
and snappish to mother unkind to!
little brothers and sisters,and anything
bu! the sweet character they seem to
be away. If they only knew that the
home was the place to be kind and
good, they would act so differently.
| Too often young people are discour-
aged by the treatment of their parents
f think that a mother or a father ought
to be very careful what they do or say
especially to a boy for they are easily
discouraged, and after they once get
out of the boundaries of home and a
mother's protecting care, they are very
often lost forever.
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL f
*);'• •!' AJ.'h;! >'• «; « / «) >i> •,«, .•< « < >t. «>< >|< ; >t>
t >. i« xK , v;*«, ij; vj;~«-;f «;«• >; * 5;.**•;-* ; vi> I« *!• I l
J. C. NORTH FIR- c. w. atterbuuy.
BOOKS AND. STATIONERY
School Books and Supplies
Confectionary,
\\ .ill 1 aper, Pictures and Frames.
High Art Decorating a Specialty. - - •
Call and Give Us a Trial,
j x MAIN STREET, STILLWATER
w. E. CHRISTIE,
SANITARY PLUMBER
! ^rp"nd "0t VVa,,'r Heating, Fine
1 Hath Looms a Snpcinlfv i,' ; •
['"•"ishe'! °n application
11. u. Bullen.
Stillwater
T)i
suhgeon dkntist
Graduate of the Baltimore College of
Dental Surgery.
Gas Administered for the Painless Ex-
traction of Teeth.
Improved .Methods in Plate Work and
Extraction.
L'ridge and Crow n work a Specialty.
Six Years Experience.
Ludy Attendant.
OFFICE 0vi:It F1KST XAI'loSAI. HANK
Telephone OS.
Stillwater,
Okla bonia
• DR. A. D. CAGE.
Oliice with
Okla.
This snow is worth $5,000,000
to the larmers of Kansas. If it will
stay 011 the ground a month at:d
will gooff gradually it will be worth
$10,000,000. "This is the obsreva-
^tion made last Sunday by Bank
Commissioner John Breidenthal.
amend article 2, chapter 15, ses-
sion laws of 1S97. relating to juror
and witness fees-." The bill pro-
vides that a witness in a criminal
case in the district court shall re-
ceive $3 per day for his service for
every day lie is attending court as
a witness in the case for which lie
was subpoueaed. In addition to
the witness fees five cents a mile
is allowed but only for the case on
trial.
Jurors are to receive $2 per day
Wife—Why is the merchant who
to J doesn t advertise like a man in a row-
boat?
Husband—Because he goes backward,
I suppose.
Wife—Xo ; because he has to get along
without sales.
MISS EDWINA BYERS,
Teacher of Piano and Organ.
Pupil or (he Scl.arwenka hool
P'J® of solicited.Pie
pared to each high grade music
1-1 College Ave. and W. 'Juitl\
Telephone Xo. 00
Office over new Barnes Building.
Stillwater, - - Okla.
The third annual reunion of the In-
diana Oklahomans will be held in this
city in the district court room on Feb-
ruary 22, Washington's birthday.
Samuel smith,
httorney-ht-lhw
Office over National Bank of Commerce
Collections nisde.
Stillwater,
Okla.
A. C. BARNETT,
Plumber-
mrl -i ' • 1 has all kinds of plumbing-material on
. .a five cuiK a mile, except 111 the hand and is prepared to do all kinds of
""" 1 work in his line at living-rates. Ksti
Tne house has passed a bill cut-
ting down the price of legal notices.
The price uow paid is at starvation
point and the council should kill
the hill and everyone who voted
for the bill should have their past
record written up correctly. The
house reconsidered the bill last
night.
STATEHOOD RESOLUTIONS
The big Statehood Convention at
Guthrie adopted the following re-
solutions and forwarded them to
congress:
"Resolved, By the statehood
delegate convention assembled at
Guthrie, on January 30, 1901, re-
presenting the people of Oklaho-
ma, without distention of party.
First—That in territorial area,
wealth and population Oklahoma
is entitled to immediate admission
to the Union as a state.
Second—We therefore earnestly
urge upon the congress of the
United States to pass an enabling
act at the earliest possible moment
providing for the admission of Ok-
lahoma with such botiudaries as
congress in its wisdom may see fit
to establish.
Third—That a committee of five
be appointed by the president of
this convention to prepare a mem-
orial to congress,, setting forth
the superior qualifications of Okla-
homa for statehood, on the basis ol
these resolutions.
The minority report insisted 011
single statehood if possible, but
demanded statehood at once 011 auy
terms that congress should impose.
After an exciting debate the fol-
lowing was added to the majority
report by unanimous vote:
"And if in the wisdom of con-
gress it shall be desirable at the
same time or at any future time to
attach the Indian Territory or any
part thereof to the state of Oklaho-
ma, we shall favor such action."
case of grand jurors who will re-
ceive $2 per day for a period of
eight days and uo longer. Each
grand juror will also receive five
cents a mile.
\\ itnesses and jurors subpoenaed
before a justice of the peace or
probate court shall receive a fee of
50 cents a day. \\ itnesses or jurors
coming before a higher court than
those mentioned put still under the
district court shall receive Si per
day and five cents mileage.
mates cheerfully furnished on all kinds
of Work with Dale Lytton's Implement
house,
STILLWATER
OK. LA
(v. e. williams. c. j,. bu&niCE
WILLIAMS & BURDICK.
A T T 0 It X E Y 8 -AT- L A \V.
Office over Swope Building
Cor. 9th and Main,
Josepfi jvi. pai|NT£p.;vi. o.
Physician & Suroeon
S,>ee!i^ '« •'
Spe<'i;ilcourse it, .Ment.-il ami NVivouj diseases
s medical a-
Ofllce: Itooin 3,over'u«<l Store. ^SUIIwat.-r, Ok
S. M. BARNES, M. I)..
Physician and Sur^ecn,
Office on Xortli Main street over tJ.t
zetk Office. Residence three blocks
north of Congregational church. Tele
phone Xo., resilience 33, office CO.
n. tk. getchell,
AUCTIONEER,
\V ill cry Sales in Payne and Ad-
j joining Counties. Term^ *uson-
able and Satisfaction guaranteed.
Stillwater, Okla.
J. B. .Ml lll'II V.
FHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office upstairs in H ilton building, west
side Xortli Main street.
•Stili.watki:
Stillwatkb,
Okla. Tkk
A lire on the old A. P. Bacon place,
two miles west of Ripley, occurred
Tuesday noon, which entirely destroy-
ed a dwelling and a smoke house. Eli
Barnhart, the occupant, was in Ripley
at the time of the lire, his wife and
children being at home. Just before
leaving home Mr. Barnhart built a fire
in the smoke house, where he was
smoking some meat. The wind chang-
ed blowingquite briskly from the north,
fanning the lire so that it caught on
the woodwork, and in a few moments
it was entirely ablaze. The flames
leaped to the dwelling, and before Mrs.
Barnhart knew it, the house was com-
pletely enveloped in lire, she barely
escaped with the children. The con-
tents were all burned. Ripley Times.
P. C. HTJHTj
A TTORXE Y AT LA W
Special attention KiVen to Civil and 1'roliat* ■
Kuslness ottirp on west side Main Street
upstairs in Hodges building. Stillwater 1
FARM i CITY LOANS
In Payne, Pawnee. Lincoln and Noble
Counties, at Lowest rates of interest and
BEST TEJBjVLS
OF PAYMENT. See or Write,
CLARK, SWOPE = & = JOHNSTON,
Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma
•••
A young man asked bis girl the other
evening to "not enough" out of the
word "enough" and she told him it was
done by transposing letters like this:
Take the third, second and first letters
of the word, "enough" for the word and
the sixth, fourth and fifth for the
second word.
-'i-'l'- -"it .*! . ."It>!> >!4 «•* ,},
i ..OUR..
JOMNIMIE
There can be no higher compliment
given you than to have false friends or
enemies tell lies about you with the
view of injuring you. It means that
they have prodded around to lind out
sqme bad things you have dune and
failed to find any.
"Women are not as bad as they are
painted" remarked a young man in the
postofflca yesterday as lie glanced at
one with plenty of complexion powder
on her face.
Coil! Coal!!Coal!!!
Always on hand. Best grades and
lowest prices.
The Keiger-Lahman Co.
A farmer died with the Cuban itch,
known in the country as smallpox, on
Saturday last, leaving a wife, a child
and L>,000 insurance in the Woodman
Jodge.
&
Was out somewhere the
other night. Dont know where £
' but the next morning we found !f
■J; in our store, 3 cases of Corn, if
'< 3 dozen Brooms, 3 cases of
$j Soda, 2 bbl, of Oat Meal and k
a whole lot of other articles P
v that we cant give you a clear £1
J abstract of title to, but will '•*
*'i Rive you a bill of sale at the fc
y following prices: £
J 10 Ills. Oat Meal 25c If
$ I can Corn 7C !f
I doz. cans Cern 80c £
i Good Broom 20c if
3 i lb. Good Soda 4c if
*;• 100 lbs. 6ood Fiotir | 70 if
*'j I gal. Good Vinegar 20c if
I gal. Best Vinegar 25c if
;i 0,1 Feb. 1st, 1901, we will if
\\ positively refuse to sell on !f
credit to any one rich or poor, £
white or black. This means •*
«j everybody, and no pets. If 'f
'! your credit isO K it will pay if
you to borrow the money and if
I' buy yotir Groceries, ete. at £
: cash prices. I
j Xo stamp given out after
| v cash sale begins
§ BLACK BEAR
MEAT MARKET
iff FRANK KNOWLES, Prop
| Fresh and Salt Meats, Oysters
,jf CELERY and GAME IN SEASON
South Main Street.
———————i—...4 ♦* *4* '♦« Jwj
*
I TINSLEY'S
| Corner Saloon
I Fine Wii|cs, Liqqoi<s
Giy,
3
- , , -- —crIFS e
if
if
(.Successor to Heaoh A Norris)1 if
W '1{ H? ¥ V >;> W vj - yft vf.-,,-
U. G. NORRIS,
|PALAQM
'I*
Meat
.•f'.
IMAI^HKT
norris bros, pr«p.
v|f i|f 0 v|f >|f ijf 0 ♦;£
.fipf K;,.,(,u
PRESfl 31H *J T5
autl Ovj^n
i'
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Breeder of
HEREFORD (JA
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Prouty, Frank G. The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 6, 1901, newspaper, February 6, 1901; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117244/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.