The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1903 Page: 3 of 10
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THE CHANDLER NEWS: THURSDAY, MAY 7,1903.
i
Seamless tfhoes
The growing demand for a
Seamless Shoe for every day
wear causes us to put in several
styles of these shoes. Prices,
$1.50 :=: $2.00 $2.25
Our $2.00 and $2.25 lines have
been tried and proven satisfactory.
If you want a good cheap shoe,
Try the $ 1.50 line.
ew %(ork dtore
Chandler, Oklahoma.
"v!
IL
Gossip of the Territories.
\
Enid is to have a boiler factory.
Muskogee now has seven banks.
The Frisco has 700 employes at
Sapulpa.
Sapulpa has organized a commer-
cial club and feels better already.
J. C. Clark, of Oklahoma City,
has b=en appointed game warden.
The famous county seat case from
Grant county is again in the supreme
court.
ACCURACY,
THOROUGHNESS.
RELIABILITY.
ST the filling of every
prescription that comes
to our store we are ac-
curate, thorough and
reliable in every part of
the work. Not an item
in any prescription is
~ ever changed without
instruction from the physician.
Not a part of the work is ever
neglected. Not a single speci-
fication is varied from in the
least. We know that our pre-
scription work is such that we
do not hesitate to have any
competent judge inspect it at
any time. If you want the
best results from the medicine
which your doctor prescribes
you will get them by bringing
hisprescription to us to be filled.
Corbin & Lynch
Druggists and Opticians
Indian Territory Sunday School
convention will be held at Vinita
May 14-16. .
The first Jewish synagogue in Ok-
lahoma has been organized at Okla-
homa City.
Mulhall is quite proud of her fine
flouring mill with a daily capacity of
ISO barrels.
Mangum voted $30,000 water-
works bonds last Monday, 276 votes
being cast in all.
Indian Territory has 2,841 miles
of railroad and 2,000 miles more
under construction.
Vinita has had a little paving
done and likes it so well that the de-
mand for more is growing.
No spot in the United States is
getting more good advertising right
now than Indian Territory.
Norman is working hard to get
the Coalgate branch of the Frisco
with good chances of success.
It is certainly encouraging to note
the interest which the papers are
taking in the good roads question.
A. A. Babbitt, of Ada, I. T., was
paid a reward of $500 for the cap-
ture of Pete Williams of the Casey
gang.
About thirty merchants at South
McAlester are resisting the pay-
ment of tribal taxes to the Choctaw
nation.
The News, from Bluejacket, I. T.,
is a new exehange and a neat and
readable one, too, of the up-to-date
four-column class.
The Shawnee postoffice claims to
I now rank third in importance in Ok-
lahoma, Oklahoma City being first
and Guthrie second.
One of the brightest and prettiest
papers in Oklahoma is Tom Woos-
ley's new paper, the State Journal,
published at Mulhall.
And still the democratic papers
say Flynn is dead ; and still the same
sheets devote columns to abuse of
the alleged corpse.
Ed Felt thinks that the Republican
Anniversary club ought to take the
young men and newcomers into fel-
lowship more readily.
Pliny .Soper and Win. Melette are
said to both be candidates for elec-
tion as republican national commit-
teeman from the B. I. T.
Joe McNeal, of Guthrie, has re-
cently returned from a visit to old
Mexico and has a lot of interesting
things to tell about it.
An interview with Secretary Wm.
Grimes has been published in which
he declares himself as favoring the
government ownership of railroads.
Oklahoma City, Fallis, Agra, and
Cushing are each claimed to be
slated for divisions on the Katy rail-
road. That's putting it pretty thick.
Sidney Clarke, who is mighty well
posted, still believes in the possibil-
ity of statehood for Oklahoma with-
out the delay of waiting for Indian
Territory.
Col. Bob Owens, the well-known
Muskogee democrat, is standing pat
on his statement that Oklahoma and
Indian Territory will eventually be
two states.
Perhaps that statehood interview
attributed to Flynn was published
just to see what his enemies had up
their sleeves. It drew their fire,
anyhow.
Granite has a new company incor-
porated with $30,000 capital for the
purpose of erecting a polishing plant
to handle the product of the granite
quarries.
Flynn says that the declaration of
the convention that nominated B. S.
McGuipe for congress will be the
republican position on statehood till
it is modified by another convention.
The Spencer News is a late addi-
tion to newspaperdom. Ed Felt, of
the Edmond Enterprise, being the
publisher, a fact which is a guaran-
tee of the good quality of the new
paper.
The single statehood executive
committee will meet at Oklahoma
City on May 25 to consider the ad-
visability of trying to hold a consti-
tutional convention without authority
of law.
The recent meeting of Indian
Territory editors at Muskogee seems
to have been the most successful in
the history of the association.
Twenty-seven new members were
enrolled.
Territorial Oil Inspector Ashton
announced the following appoint-
ments of deputies last Monday : T.
E. Beck, Jefferson ; A. M. Williams,
Sayre ; W. R. Kirkpatrick, El Reno;
J. P. Barton, Ponca City; G. W.
Fahs, Oklahoma City; J. H. Mc-
Coy, Weatherford; J. J. Kennedy,
Guthrie.
The Guthrie correspondent of the
Kansas City Journal has done mer-
ited justice Jo Mat Duhr, the writer
of Indian stories. The Oklahoma
press has never appreciated him for
his worth because of his age and
foreign accent of speech, but he is a
character in his way and a chroni-
cler of odd biographies equalled by
no other writer in the territory.—
Guthrie Register.
Editorially the Watonga Republi-
can says : "There are some people
in Oklahoma who try to persuade
themselves that Dennis Flynn is past
history, politically speaking. It was
said once before that he was dead,
but the famous El Reno convention
revealed the true condition of things.
The politician has not always been
with Flynn, but the people have
always been with him."
The Oklahoma and Indian terri-
tories' C. E. convention is to be held
at Guthrie, O. T., June 16, 17 and
18. In addition to the best speakers
of both territories there will be pres-
ent Rev. Van Ogden Vogt (the new
general secretary) and Prof. E. O.
Excell, who will have charge of the
music. Guthrie local union is pre-
paring to give a hearty welcome to
all C. E. workers.
White
housework,
tf]
Girl Wanted.
girl wanted for
general
Apoly to
MrI?. A. D. Wright.
Call down and see what the Photo
Car is doing these days.
If you owe The News and can't
pay the money, bring in wood—20
inches long—and we will give you
credit on your account.
Bond for Deeds, Leases and all
kinds of legal blanks at The News
office. In any quantity, wholesale
or retail.
The News gives prompt attention
to mail orders for job printing. If
you cannot come to Chandler, write
us what you want.
The News would like to have a
good reporter in every town in the
county. Write us about it.
JOHN DEERE
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS
THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
Studebaker and Schultler Wagons
The Best in the World.
FlcCormick Mowers V?
The Best on Earth.v#
^iltsch.
4.
i
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Gilstrap, H. B. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1903, newspaper, May 7, 1903; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117672/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.