The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 197, Ed. 1 Monday, September 23, 1901 Page: 1 of 4
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X Educate your children *
! at the £
X A- * M, COLLEGE 5
§ «t Stillwater. f
per eopy.)
vol. 7
the daily gazette.
1
Devoted to The Interests of Stillwater,
Stillwater, Oklahoma. M^ndTy E^nS^^^orT^T
* STILLWATER I
J The Largeit. liveliest *
J and Healthiest City in ♦
I Eastern Oklahoma. §
($4,60 per year
millinery
KICK HIM OUT,
Movement Begun to Expell Wel-
lington From Senate. Senator
Hanna Expected to Take
The Lead In Adminis
tering a Rebuke.
George h. Wellington'* alleged re-
marks niieiit the assassination of Presi-
dent Mt'Kinley may coat him hi* seat
in the United State senate. Through
• clote friend of Senator Foraker the
statement wan made in this city
tonight that a vigorous movement was
in progress to exp«U Senator Welling-
ton .
Nenator Hanna is expected to offer
the resolution when congress meets
and Senator Foruker with numerous
other senators high in the councils ot
the Republican party are expected to
fight for the measure until it is car-
ried to victory.
• 8?iiator Wellington was it thorn in
the flesh of the Republican party even
before his reported remarks to the ef-
fect that President McKinley was his
•nemy and that the shooting or fate of
the president was a matter of indiffer-
ence to him. Scarcely, however, hnd
the tenor of these remarks swept over
the country than a storm of indigna-
tion arose. KepublicanH swore they
would avenge the sentiments which
appeared to them to be of an anarchis-
tic if not of a treasonable nature.
They could not understand how the
fate of a president could be a matter
of indifference to even his most bitter
foe.
In his home state members of both
parties condemned the attitude of
Benator Wellington. He was a mem-
ber of the Union League club of Balti-
more, compo«od mostly of Republican*,
but in part of Democrat*. Thl* aris-
tocratic and powerful organization
Have just re-
ceived a com-
plete line of Fall
Millinery Goods
and with Miss
IAultmiller in
charge of the
Trimmingde-
partment we are
prepared to give
you fashionable
and up-to-date
Millinery. Please
call and examine
our goods. Our
styles are the
latest and our
prices all right.
millinery
conventions of 1884 and 1888. In 1890
he was appointed assistant United
States treasurer at Baltimore by Presi-
dent Harrison. In 18V4 he was elected
to the fifty fourth congress by the He-
publicans and March 4, 1897, he took
his seat a* senator having been elected
bs a Republican. His term will expire
March 3, 1903. Owing to a personal
quarrel with President McKinley he
bolted the Republican party in 1900
and voted for Bryan.
No. 197
ii
if
m
II
• Stillwater Meat Market...
All kinds of Fresh and Salt
Meats. Fish,^Oysters, Pic-
kles, Catsup, Horse Radish
-Etc. Hides and Furs.
took up the issue, investigated the re-
ported statement* of the senator, then
began to agitate the question of his ex
Pulsion from the club. Scarcely three
'lays were necessary to call a meeting
to vote on the question. The result
was that Senator Wellington was
ousted from the club by unanimous
vote, even Democrats writing ballot*
m favor of his expulsion.
According to Sen,tor Foraker'*
j fnend, who is now i„ Baltimore, but
who was with the Ohio senator only a
day or two ago, the contagion spread
far beyond the limits of Baltimore and
the borders of Maryland. Senator
Wellington had bolted the party and
voted the Democratic ticket in the last
national campaign, so tlie Republicans
could not repudiate hi* sentiments bv
means of reading him out of the partv
to which he o\va* his seat in the high-
est council of the nation. Their plan
for revenge then took the turn of a do-
sire to rid that council of his presence
They hoped to brand him with the
stigma of deepest disgrace, The leaven
has been steadily at work through the
whole Republican loaf until now the
senators of the party have a backing
that they think justifies them in at-
tempting hi* expulsion from the sen-
ate.
There is no representation to the ef-
fect that Senator Hanna as the closest
friend of the late president is to vent
personal animosity against Senator
Wellington if he offers the resolution
m the senate. It i* not a question of
Senator Hanna's choosing. It is to be
a duty imposed upon hitn simply be
cause Mr. Hanna is a senator from
Ohio, the Republicans {believing that
Ohio, Mr. Mckinley's own state, owe*
it to the world to teach the Maryland
senator the bitter lesson In store for
him.
Senator Wellington was born in
Cumderland, Md„ of German parent-
age, January 28, 1862. He ro.o through
clerkship* to become a bank teller and
treasurer of hi* home county. He wa*
a delegate to the Republican national
MIND TESTED,
No Report Given of the Result-
Supposed to be Found
Sane.
Buffalo, Sept. 21.—Leon F. Czolgosz,
whose trial for the assassination of
1 resident McKinley will begin next
Monday morning, was examined as to
his sanity for one hour this afternoon
by Dr. Carlos F. McDonald of New-
York. the eminent alienist, who for
years was the chairman of the state
board of lunacy commissioners.
The prisoner's counsel, former Jus-
tice* Lorain L. Lewis and Robert C.
Titus, were present at different times
during the examination. At its close
Dr. McDonald declined to discuss the
case and the attorneys would not ex-
press their opinion as to the assassin's
mental condition, although the infer-
ence drawn from their answers was
that they believed Czolgosz to be sane.
Mr. McDonald was brought to Buffalo
through the efforts of President Adel-
bert Moot and other members of the
Krie county bar association for the
purpose of passing upon the prisoner's
sanity, as the association has promised
to assist Judges Titus and Lewis, who
were suggested as counsel for the de-
fense by the trustees of the bar associ-
ation. The examination was held in
the private office of District Attorney
Penney in the city and county hall,
and preparations for it were kept se-
cret. J udges Lewis and Titus appear ■
ed at the city hall a few minutes past
3 o clock, and went at once into the
district attorney's office. At 3:25 Czol-
gosz was brought into the office, hand
culled to Assistant Superintendent
Cossack of the police department. He
had been taken through the tunne
under Delaware avenue. The prisoner
was left alone with Judges Lewis and
Titus.
At 3:30 o'clock Dr. McDonald a p.
peared in the district attorney's office
and went at once to the private office
of Mr. Penney. Ten minutes later the
two lawyers and the district attorney
came out, leaving Dr. McDonald with
the prisoner. They were alone. The
prisoner sat at the end of the attor-
ney's desk and the doctor sat in a chair
directly in front of him, stooping down
and peering into Czolgosz's face. They
remained alone for exactly half an
hour, when the prisoner's attorneys
again entered the room. Five minutes
later they came out, and Judge Lewis
left to catch the train for his summer
home at Lewiston.
When questioned as to whether
not the prisoner would talk to
counsel, as lie had refused when Judge
Lewis had visited him on Tuesday, be-
fore the arraignment, to say a word,
the venerable judge said:
"lie is talking more freely, but he is
not a voluble chap. Ho said nothing
upon which we might work in basing a
defense."
B. D. Bobbins, the popular short or-
der man on Ninth street, 1* contem-
plating a chango of location for his
business. Mr. Robbing informs us
that he is about to secure a building
on North Main street. He intends to
furnish his now place elegantly and
run a thoroughly up-to-date short or-
der and restaurant. We think that
Ben is perfectly able to manage nuch a
place and we congratulate him on the
strength of hi* propoied new buiinen.
„„ GEO- STEES, Prop.
'Maaggj
black bear
f MEAT MARKET I
¥ tr . FRANK KN°WLES, Prop. *
I celery^ Salt Meats, Oysters,
CELERY and GAME IN SEASON
I
hUESTON MOUSE
B. HUESTON,
* BEST furnished rooms i/m the city 5
ki°. BATKC ■ • *1*
Phone No. 25
4 Blocks West of Depot,
RATES $1.00 and $1.25 Per Day.
Corner 10th and Main.
lUttlQ,
SI ILLWATER, OKLA.
A. Z. HUTTO, PROP.
"• Board by day or wppI^ ■
This Hotel has been rfnovaTed , , ' " ~
throughout. Table furnished . newly furnished
We can please you and win be gtati to ^ be8t"
_ of your patronage. l° haVB a
his
Ladies and Gents Suited
! Every
I have just received my fall aild winter samples.
()\ ct jMMi elegant styles of foreign and domes-
tic woolens to select from. Also fall styles and
samples for Ladies' Tailor-Made Suits. I
garment a fit. Call and inspect them...
OMER L. DUNN..
Ladies' and;Cents' Tailor.
FRANK J. WIKOFF, Pr«ld<„t.
C. A. HOUSTON,
-i, .. D,, S.D.HOUSTON. "
The National Bank of Commerce
_ . . *TIU# TIR. OKI*until '
P ■. „ . "WWW". OKLAHOMA.
Paid up Capital •-.«««
Surplus . . _ $25,000.00
Funds secured by Motler Patmif u„. rv 1.500.00
lock*, the best ^
RESPECTFULLY SOLICIT YOU**.BUSINESS. .
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The Daily Gazette. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 197, Ed. 1 Monday, September 23, 1901, newspaper, September 23, 1901; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117436/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.