The Yukon Sun. (Yukon, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, April 23, 1909 Page: 6 of 8
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1
YUKON SUN
GORDON McCOVlAS, Publisher
YUKON, - - OKLAHOMA
There is plenty of business for thoss
who are determined to get it.
The Paragraphers' union will_ note
with delight that Ambassador White's
daughter Is to marry a Count Josch.
Great Britain can protect Its new
antarctic possessions without an ex-
pensive navy.
An Anti-Affinity league Is bring
formed. Take a membership card
home with you.
Some think the last sparrow would
bo a more welcome bird than the first
robin.
It Is a matter of condolence when a
man who desires to be a private citi-
zen finds advertising thrust upon him.
One test of a man's greatness seems
to be the number of old anecdotes to
which posterity decides to arbitrarily
attach his name,
are sorry to learn trom the doc-
tors that King Edward is soft and
pulpy. Let him try the strenuous life
lor it.
Panama can promise something bet
ter than inauguration weather when
the opening of the canal is celebrated
In 1915.
As Told in a
Few Words
Good and Newsy Items
of General Interest Con-
densed to Small Space
Perhaps Duke d'Abruzzi Is going to
climb the Himalayas in order that he
may take a tumble with respect to his
Btanding In the Elklns family.
An English scientist declares that
the Chinese had automobiles 1.000
years ago. Impossible, else there
wouldn't be so many Chinese living
now.
A conscientious Galveston man Is
deeply chagrined to find that he had
robbed an old woman's home under
the mistaken Impression that It was
an orphans' asylum.
Hetty Green's daughter Is tearhlng
her husband to walk and save cab
hire. She feels that he should not
throw money about recklessly now
that he has a wife to support.
"Flirt with your husband" Is a Chi-
cago woman's advice. And those who
will be the first to take it are the(
ones that weigh 200 pounds and have
biceps like a blacksmith's.
A bill has been passed by the Ne-
vada legislature making bridge whist
a gambling game. Some of us sus-
pect that is what it was a long time
ago.
Perhaps the duke of Hraganfca, who
announces that he has quit pretendihg
for the throne of Portugal, desires to
remain among us for some time and
docs <not care to go hence by the dyn-
amite route.
"The new hats," remarks the New
York Evening Mall, "are what you
might call flarebacks." And the com-
ments of various husbands and fa-
thers are what you might call swear-
backs.
WASHINGTON
The tariff debate was opened In the
senate Monday when Senator Aldrlch
reviewed at length the pending meas-
ure which had been reported froiQ
the committee on finance. He receiv-
ed practically no Interruption througtv
out Ms remarks, which wore listened
to not only by every senator, but by
Speaker Cannon and members of the
U use of representatives who visited
the chamber for that purpose. Sena-
tor Daniel, the senior minority mem-
ber of the committee on finance fol-
lowed Senntor Aldrlch, and laid down
the general line of opposition that.
wUl be made to the pending measure
by the democrats.
Secretary Knox Friday telegraphed
Ambassador Leishman to take every
step for the protection of American
missionaries and to send full infor-
mation concerning conditions in Tur-
key.
Secretary of War Dickinson said
that besides Major Bell, chief of staff
of the army, a party of seven persons
will accompany him on his trip of in-
spection of the Panama canal on
board the president's yacht, Mayflow-
er, from Charleston, S. C. Postmas-
ter General Hitchcock may go. The
secretary and his party will be gone
until the middle of May.
President Taft discussed the prob-
lems of the working man for two
hou*s Friday with members of the ex-
ecutive council of the American Fed-
eration of Labor. The labor leaders
headed by Samuel Gompers, presi-
dent of the Federation, called at. the
white house and found the president,
k enl yattentive and deeply interest-
ed. , t,,
Senator and Mrs. Robert L. Qwej).
and daughter, Dorothea, expect to
sail for Europe shortly aftei; congress
adjourns, which will probably be ,in
early June. Tfjey Wi\l Ue gone two,
,or three months. ,
Senator Aldrich cpnferred yitli
President Taft on tariff matters, for
'two hours Saturday afternoon. ,A1-
drich is alive at last to t,U<: 'stonn Ui;it
is gathering over the, senijt,<*. .ajid,
.which is due to break as soon as Hie
upper chamber gets well .Intq the t^-
ably for thj^firgt ho
:sumed leadership .qEjUic senate, will
not*lc'ablo >to ] mm." throng* it btllf-Wr
his oWnlufiaided
The shah of Persia has been "called
down" sharply by Great Britain and
Russia because of atrocities perpe-
trated by Persian troops. It begins to
look as though the chaotic conditions
in the realm of the shah might invite
active Intervention.
At 3 o'clock Monday morning a mob '
of about one hundred men stormed
the county Jail at Ada, Okla., anil |
lynched four white men. as follows:
.1. B. Miller, charged with the murder
of A. A. Bobblt, a wealthy cattlcman
of that section; E. E. Brown, Jesse !
West and Joe Allen, alleged accom-
plices. The mob worked rapidly and j
quietly, nothing being known of the
lynching until the men were discov-
ered Monday morning. The barn in |
which they were found is known as
the Frisco barn and is within 100 feet
of the back door of the jail. The
mob effected entrance Into ti" a Jail
yard by tearing down the high board
fence which encloses It. When he re-
fused to open the jail doors and admit
the masked men, Deputy Sheriff Bob
Netcher was struck over the head
with a revolver In the hands of one
of the masked men. The other guards
^ ere overpowered after a short strug-
gle.
The validity of Oklahoma's "jlm
crow" railroad regulations is left to
the United States circuit court of ap-
peals by a petition filed in St. I^ouis
Monday by negro residents of Okla-
homa. They appealed from the Unit-
ed States circuit court of Oklahoma,
where the railroad's demurrer was
sustained.
The four men who were lynched at
Ada, Okla., Monday, were well known
throughout Texas. West had large
holdings near Canadian. Miller lived
in Ft. Worth. He was a big cattle
owner. He is said to have killed a
score of men. He killed James Fores
a short time ago in the Delaware ho-
tel at Ft. Worth.
U, S. Judge Bryant, at Beaumont,
Tex., Monday vacated the federal re-
ce^vtyshlp in the Waters-Pierce oil
coip'jHiny case and ordered the prop-
erty fijveu to tlie state.. This will re-
duce, tjie state 'fax to ope, cent on the
$100 valuation. ■ , .
Suits were, tiled in the U. S. circuit
cnrfrt'"a r (MUsltoge^i Jftpjulny < by -Mio
government against V)out 40 defend-
ants; seedling to recover dead ;Clalms
at Durant and-Purcell. It ttf gtvcu out
that 175 similar suits In the five na-
ttnrik win J>e flletf tfil? week against
approximately fm defetjdAiifs lnvoiv-
lns on aiY'avVrij&e of 160 acres to each
.' 1 • • 't I", i
case.
. I 1 S ir; \ - i -
\yjjd:.;repojrts, pt^rsyn. jjmrfler and
''revolution. / .in Constantinople, the
home of the Turkish empire, are fly-
ing, Iu street battles, tlje last .few
dity«ia to,.-*luujvi young Turks are
aUempUus to. fatpe,jnt)re froedom in
the government, ^,000. are..supposed to
havi. jb<mn .-.A,', dispatch from. Sa-
Jont«a,.T( rlj*y,';ha« tooep received say-
Ingi that :t;6Qp volunteers ,aiwl a batta-
lion of the third corps are marching
against-Constantinople, with, the, (n-
Jentlonfof. restoring the young Turks
+
OKLAHOMA ITEMS
j. reported from all over the state by ouk correspondents
Arm Jerked Out of Socket.—Guy
Wagner of Billings was the victim of
a painful accident, hi left arm being
jerked out of the socket by a flight
ened mule which he was leading.
When the mule began to run, Wag-
ner's fingers were caught in the bits j rain in the southwest. There was a
In such a way that he could not re-1 good deal of realizing and some sell-
ing for a reaction, but offerings were
absorbed by fresh buyers and after
COTTON MARKET.
New York, April 16.—The cotton
market opened firm at an advance of
4 to 7 points on better cables than ex-
pected and the absence of further
lease them. It was all that two strong
men could do to reset the arm.
the president. Aud. the simple reason
' ' ■" ' ■ hud,pending ngaii
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN. i(askell a
ShortV' before *2 o'cfock pk'laKon.inns. ,
iff debate. IJo desires, Jf PRP9ibl<* to. , . .
be able to say when toe full* oatliurs ft" pOww.iThe young Turjss have b(<n
his bill in the senate, that.it is the
bill, that, niaetp 4>fjep AtftXinej1''ften^fal 'Wiekefsfiam SSt-
worttMftai the Jightims. to-date.
tin. ■
Urday wired United States District At-
fi>n„thj£ itt tji^| 'fiteg'l' of the eastern district
dfJpKlfffigSfct a1! TuffsC rtiat the pres.
(^mSffipury'lH session at Tulsa can
not jcpmy re-mveshgate' the charges
o'f lofglra and rrSud' wliicn the gov-
!A*c1|' had", pending agairist
Gover-
and other
W rcauction'. iriW'ne prtee of crude
A Boston woman, who is teaching
the people of the Hub how to Increase
their health and beauty by eating a
portion of sand every day, says she has
cured 70.000 patients of their Ills.
Sand may be a satisfactory food for
the New Englander, but out this way
the natives are not provided with
gizzards.
Comparatively few people learned to
pronounce Mr. Roosevelt's name prop-
erly during the seven years of his pres-
idency. In comparison the name of the,
new president may seem easy, but per-j
mlt us to ask whether you pronounce!
It with the "a" of "ask," or the "a" of
"cat," or the "a" of "father"—not tos
mention the broad "a" of "want."
The defense to be put up in a Bos-j
ton murder case, the defendant havlng:
killed his wife. Is that the man was!
driven to Insanity by the woman's per-
petual nagging. It seems a reasonable:
defense enough. A woman who nags
Is a fiend who ought not to expect any
mercy after she has driven jer victim'
to desperation.
The official figures place the cotton
crop of the United States for 1908 at
13,408,641 bales, or, figuring the bales
at 500 pounds each, a total of 13,563,-
SI42. The final returns for 1907 put the
segregate st 11,375,461 bales, esti-
mated In the same way. This repre:
tents a big gain for 1908, but the re-
port appears to have had little effect
on prices, notwithstanding the effoits
of the "bears." There is general be-
lief In continued industrial revival aud
that manufacturers will readily absorb
the large, product.
Why Is It that the bad man's revol-
ver doesn't miss tire so often as the
good citizen's does when he Is shoot-
ing at a burglar?"
Short.
mprn^rig two robbers dypfunit1?!
bank of .Havana, a siuall'tcftyn on Hj9i,olV iw «W.*ttPnn" Pool j and Morris
Oklahoma-Kansas line, anU^' secured J tn-lds of from thirty-five to thirty
about $-,30Q in^cash. Later;^lioy, V'4&:«cents a barrel was announced by the
arrested by a night omcex it Bartles-
ville, but escaped fjrora liim before lu;
succeeded iu gettiug them behiud the
liars. Since then nothing his been
seen of them. Before blowing the
safe they cut all telegraph and tele-
phone wires, making it impossible for
the alarm to be given to towns near
by.
Much excitement has been occa-
sioned at Elk C\ty within the past.
few days because of a sample of ore.
brought to. the city by A. R. Cole
lrom his farm, twelve miles from that
place. The ore bears evidence of gold
and is embedded in red shale that
was taken from a rocky knoll.
Clyde Lisman or Oklahoma Oltv, a
former attache of Congressman Scott
Ferris at Washington has accepted a
position In the office of SecYf>tary' ?>f
State Cross, as assistant record efferft.'
Mr. Lisman is a valuable addition
this office.
A special dispatch to the Loka,l An%
zeiger ut Berlin froifl. RistqwJU Ij'cv
day sajs that afler .a monster .inuet-
Ing there the Young Turks i tele-
graphed the sultan saying). "We art"
marching on Constantinople 'id' oiflt>f
to save the constitution ypu ^re try
injj to abollsV" The Belgrade cor-
reRpondent of the paper spys thai thu
Turkish minister there is reported ,to
have received a dispatch saying that
the Pern and Galata quarters uf Con-
stantinople had been bombarded by
the Young Turks and 2,000 persona
had been killed.
Mount Aetna Fridav resumed Its
eruptions with increased violence, and
the complete destruction of the conn-
try around the volcano Is threatened.
Cinders are falling in showers for
miles around and lava is running from
the crater. Inhabitants of that sec-
tion have been warned to flee.
Waurika, through A, L. Walker, sec-
retary of the Waurika chamber of
commerce, wants to add J60.000 to I ho '
$75,000 bonus offered by Wichita
Falls for the projection of a railroad j
from Oklahoma City to Wichita Falls, i
Tcxhs, via Waurika.
During Ihe severe wind storm which
held the state 111 Its grasp the first of
last week considerable damage was
done to crops and buildings.
With the signing of the nntl-clgar
Cougars, coyotes and bears are ter-
rorizing the Inhabitants of the Four-
leenth ward In Seatlle, but this will
not cause any surprise to Europeans,
remarks the Chicago Record-Herald.
who believe bison continue to roam
the streets of Buffalo and that Chica-
go is a frontier settlement where the e((« bill by Governor Johnson, a cig
men wear leather breeches and carry arctV slaughter sale Is on In Minne
bowle knives. apolls.
Gulf Pipe Line company Saturday.
,U. S. District Attorney Gregg, of
Muskogee, Friday admitted that fur-
tr\pr prosecution of Gov. Haskell and
the co-defendants in the Muskogee
townsite case, was impossible under
Federal Judge Marshall's recent rul-
ing. He may appeal the case to the
supreme court of the United States to
secure an interpretation of the law.
In the' district court at McAlester
Saturday afternoon a jury gave Rev.
J. W. Bool he a verdict for $1,000 dam-
apes in an ncllon for libel against
the Capital Printing Company. Ho
sued for $20,000.
J. F. Adnmsen. representing six fac-
tqi'^r, enterprise* of Parker City. Ind.,
is,, in, Sapulpa, and probably w ill lo-
(i|te the entire gjroup thef«{. .Tfce pro-
jqpt j-pepre^euts. $">Op,QQO and about
1,600 emplpyys with a monthly payroll
of $5(7,000. The factories, it is esti-
mated. would use 1,000.000 cubic feet
of. every day.
The price of flour continues to soar
in Rympathy with the advancing ten-
dency of wheat. Millers In many sec-
tions Of thd Country have put the
price up 40 cents a barrel for winter
wheat flour. The price Is now $7 a
barrel. This advance makes a gain of
a dollar a barrel lu the past ten days.
Jobbers say that the price may go to
$!> before the end of the year.
Tliad T. Adams, representative In
the legislature from Bexar county,
Texas, has been indicted for permit-
ting gambling on his premises and
ten othf-r members of ihe law making
body, under fictitious names, pleaded
guilty to charges of gambling and
paid fines of from $10 to $25 each.
The penalty for permitting gambling
In one's room or house is a term In
the penitentiary.
In the southern part of Perry coun-
ty, Ohio, near Straltsvllle, a mine is
burning and the fire has been in pro-
gress without intemiptlon since 1ES4.
It was charged by t'ue owners at the
time that tne fire was started by
striking miners, but whether this is
true or not the lire broke out whilo
•lie great miners' strike of that year
was In progress. That no effort Is
made either by the owners of the
property or Ihe state to put it out
seems inconsistent with the publlo
movement now being mude to pre-
serve the national resources.
Code Commission Down to Work.—•
The code clmmission has settled
down to its work of codifying the sta-
tutes of Oklahoma. Headquarters are
at the lone hotel at Guthrie. Chair-1
man Harris announces the appoint- j
ment of the following assistants: .|
D. Grigsby, Norman; K. L. Fltzpat-j
rick, McAlester; Grey Moore, Caddo; J
Clint Dunn, Ardmore; W. J. Work,
Hugo; F. M. Adams, Chickasha. The
commission serves until December
An appropriation of $36,000 is pro-
vided.
$25,000 Fire at Shawnee.—Fire was
discovered in the excelsior factory of
the Shawnee Bedding company at
Shawnee and before the fire depart-
ments could arrive the buildings were
completely enveloped in flames and
firebrands were being carried by the
high wind to surrounding buildings
and threatened residence portions of
the city. The bedding company suf-
fered a complete loss, while other
business concerns near it was dam
aged until the total loss will exceed
$25,000.
Mother Would Be Worried.—Three
trains of homeseekers on the M., K. &
T., passing through Muskogee for
Texas, stopped for lunch the other
day. In one of the coaches was an
old man with two sons. One of the
young men poked his head out of ihe
window aud calling to a policeman
asked: "Say, officer, is there any
danger here? Do you think the In-
dians will get us if we leave the
train?" The youth was satisfied but
Ihe father was not. "Bill, you stay
right in this car until we get o Texas.
Then you can get something to eat.
I've been reading the papers about
this here Crazy Snake and mother
would be worried to death if she
thought you'd leave the train in this
Indian uprising country." The boy
remained.
Wild Scramble for Schools.—A wild
scramble, only second to the contest
fpr state institutions witnessed during
the session of the recent legislature,
is now being made by the cities and
(owns in the third, fourth and fifth
supreme court districts that are after
district agricultural schools. Four
agricullural and mechanical colleges
of secondary grade are to be located
within the next thirty days in these
three districts and there is no lack of
candidates for the locations in any
of the districts. In the third district
there are three leading candidates for
the agricultural school to be located
in that portion of the state. They are
Pond Creek in Payne county. Broken
Arrow in Tulsa county, and Chandler
in Lincoln county. In the fourth dis-
trict few candidates have come to
the front. Lawton and Minco, how-
ever, are after the institution. In the
fifth district the candidates for the
agricultural school to be located there
are so numerous that they can scarce-
ly be enumerated. AniSng the towii3
that want Ihe school are Helena,
which offers eighty acres of land and
a $100,000 building, now the county
high BChool building of Alfalfa coun-
ty; Erick, Sayre, Elk City, Taloga,
Woodward and Cheyenne. Practically
every school teacher In Roger Mill#
rounty has sent, letters to the board
booming Cheyenne for the location.
Time to Register Kicks.—The
school land board has set April 29 as
Ihe date when a hearing will be given
to all school land lessees who are
dissatisfied with the appraisement
made last year.
some little irregularity the market
developed quite an advancing tend-
ency with October particularly firm
and the general list showing a net
gain of about 11 to 13 points during
the middle of the morning.
St. Louis, Mo., April 16.—Steady.
Middling, 9%c; sales, none; receipts,
288 bales; shipments, 278 bales;
stock, 44,785 bales.
Galveston, Tex., April 14.
10 l-16c.
Steady;
Lively
It would be a different proposition
if the men who are leading double
lives were doing the work of two men.
-Judge.
Not New, Just Overlooked
We have every reason to believe-
that the statement that a new planet
has meen discovered at Harvard i
untrue. All the indications point to it
having been there for some time,
though in the hurry of modern astron-
omy it would appear to have been
overlooked.
Lion Shooting Record
Three fine lions, shot by Capt. Geof-
frey Buxton in East Africa, have just
been placed in the Castle museum.
All three beasts were shot within fif-
teen minutes, and when Mrs. Bux-
ton arrived at the spot 20 minutes af-
ter her husband's setting out sho
found him regarding the three bodies.
—London Daily Mail.
New Orleans, April 16.—Spots were
firm, He higher; low ordinary, 6 5-16c
nominal; ordinary, 7V4c nominal;
good ordinary, 8 916c; low middling,
9 7-16c; middling, 10c; good middling.
10%c; middling fair, 10%e; fair, ll%c
nominal. Receipts, 7,474 bales; stock,
211,741 bales. Sales on the spot,
2,800 bales: to arrive, 1,200 bales.
Sneezing Superstitions
The Germans say: "Good health!"
because they maintain, and not with-
out reason, that the sneeze is a warn-
ing of the approach of a cold, and
also marks the movement when a
charm, a wish, or a suggestion may
drive it away. The Persians go fur-
Lher in this direction, inasmuch aa
•hey exclaim, "God be thanked!" its
Being held that the sneeze has actual-
ly put to flight some evil spirit that
was about to gain entrance to a man'*
oodv in order to feed upon his sacred
Bres.—The Sunday Magazine.
Never trust a husband with your
diamonds. He may lose them or the
pawn tickets.
Wm. Austin is Paroled.—Governor
Haskell has granted a parole to Wm.
Austin, convicted of forgery in Mus-
kogee county, March 28, 1908, and sen-
tenced to three years imprisonment.
Attorney General Gives Opinion.—
In his reply (o an inquiry from
Bryan county, Attorney General WTest
holds that fees colleeted by the coun-
ty judge for performing marriage cere-
monies must be accounted for to the
county, like all oilier fees received by
virtue of his office and the balance
above the maximum amount allowed
by law for his salary turned into the
county treasury.
Sent to Prison for Life.—Tow
Crowell, who with Nate Stover, was
charged with holding up and robbing
two young men from West Virginia
of $75 in Tulsa a year ago, was found
guilty of highway robbery in the dis-
trict court. Life imprisonment is the
penalty for highway robbery in Ok-
lahoma. Stover was convicted and
given life for his crime three months
ago. Charles Hobaugh a notorious
bandit, is to be tried oil a similar
charge at this term of court. The
penalty for highway robbery was les-
sened by the last legislature, but the
statute does not become operative un-
til June.
Plan for Higher Education,—Advo-
cating the inauguration of an educa-
tional system that will bring higher
education within the reach of every
pupil attending school throughout the
state, Attorney General West ad-
dressed the state meeting of county
superintendents in session at Guthrie.
He declared that he is now working
for the adoption of a plan whereby
each county could send one or more
students to one of the higher educa-
tional institutions of (he state, pay-
ing his or her way through the insti-
tution. "Our system of education is
not democratic," said the attorney
general. "When a student gets a
higher education It is largely if not
wholly through his own effort. The
state should help Ihe young man or
woman who is without means, If It
is desired." Mr. West, who is a mem-
ber of the state board of education,
requested the county superintendents
present to broach the plan at home I
and report to him later what the peo- j
pie think of the proposition.
Try for City Local Option.—A [
movement has been started to send
out Ihe petitions for the constitutional
amendment for local option and high
license which the Sons of Washington
will try to initiate. The amendment
provides for city or town local op-
tion only, and not for county local
option. The lioense is fixed at $2,000,
and not more than one saloon is al-
lowed for each 1,000 inhabitants.
Provision is made for local option in
towns and villages on Ihe issuance of
"merchants' licenses," under which
merchants may sell liquor in original
packages subject to the same destrio
(ions and penalties as regular saloon
men. Perpetual licenses are to be ls>
sued under the Ix5s Angeles plan.
Violation of the law subjects the hold-
er of a license to suspension for thirty
days the first time, and for five years
for a second offense.
Assistant United States Attorney.—
J. C. Denton, an attorney of Nowata,
has been appointed assistant United
States attorney and will move to Mus-
kogee at once. He succeeds Harlow
A. Leekley, resigned.
Property Worth $15,346,491. At terests are Creek. $2,626,429.91; Mus-
wood Cady of Independence, Kan . kogee, $383,867.72; Nowata, $356.
tax commissioner of (he Prairie Oil 169.72; Okmulgee, $453,453^45; Osage
and Gas company, has filed with State $671,801.49; Pawnee $.28,164^06,
Auditor Trapp a statement of that Rogers, $90,8o2.61, and Tulsa, $3,618,-
company's property In Oklahoma sub-
lect to ad valorem tax on March 1.
showing a total valuation of $15,346,- Fargo's Big Fire.—Firteen business
491.51. This is about $700,000 In ex- houseB and thirteen homes In Fargo
cess of the valuation returned last were destroyed by a fire that started
vear Washington county again Ifads in a bakery. The total loss is $60,000.
Jn the amount of Prairie property re with but $10,000 Insurance. John
turned with a total of $6,617,188.43. Johnson lost $2,500 In currency, which
The figures for the other counties of ilie had lu a trunk In the Balle} hotel,
the state In which the Prairie has ill J one of the burned buildings.
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Ask us about it. Write or call. Kills
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New York Star Clean-
ing & Dye Works WJzt
OSTRICH FEATHER Dyeing «nd Cleaning a
gpe« ialty. Mail «nH e pre« orders solicited.
JOSLYN ENG. CO. Su Jl
218 West Grand Avenue. Oklahoma City, Okla^
r-/%o cxi r best bus. baggage
r tJIrr oaILC. and carriage une
IN OKLAHOMA. Addrew all commnnicatiori to Liverr
No. 109 W. California Ave.. Oklahoma City. Okla.
DURHAM MUSIC GO.
pianos, tal.ki.no machines. Write for catalo|
310 N. BROADWAY OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.
-^Notary or Corporation Seals, $2 00
Notary Public. Record Hook, *! .V)
^ 100 .stock Certificates * Seal, $T> 1)0
Corporation Record Book. *1 (O
C*er. Sliver Hat or Coat HadR*. $1
Write for Rubber Stump Catalog
0. K.ST AMP & PTG Co Okla City.
AUTOMOBILES
®le michiot. We curry full line of Ant..
Jobber* price* W*rtpalr tire* and chmrfa hal
promptly CORY MOTOR CAR CO , M W Ut
nd On* Enjln
AWNINGS, TENTS, IF
Cover*. aU kinds of CANVAS WOODS. TENTs AND CAMI'
OUTFITS for Henl Send forcataloB DAT ti MKU. CO .
W California St.. Oklahoma City
SCHOOL AND CHURCH FURNITURE
OPTRA CHAIRS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES. Map*. OI .Ih..,
Dictionarie*. .Everything U**d in a School House Writ*
for prices aud terms. JASPER SIPES, Oklahoma City
veteran*' Association to Meet.—
The directors of the Northwestern
Veterans association have decided to
hold an old soldiers' reunion at Rock
Island park, near Jefferson, on Au-
Kiist, 11, 12, 13 and 14. A committee
has been uppointed to make Ihe pre-
liminary arrangements.
Haskell Case Unsettled.—William
J. Gregg. Vnited States district attor-
ney at Tulsa, said that the statement
this his office had made an announce-
ment as to the future course of the
government in the prosecution of the
Muskogee town lot fraud cases
against Governor C. N. Haskell and
others is wholly unauthorized and un-
true. The statement was sent out
from Muskogee to the effect that Spe-
cial Attorney Sylvester Rush and Dis-
trict Attorney Gregg had decided to
abandon further prosecution of these
cases.
Send for Samplo
ROOFING
and free eoureoir
Oi e us name
your hdw Si luinhot
FREE 1«l r Bn.-l |ir.
pared rooflnc made
THE OKLAHOMA SASH A DOOR COMPANY
N. S. Darling. President. Oklahoma City, l/.S.A.
0rmice8, SKYLHJHTS. COPPER WORK.
ROOFING. U E ti E R A I. HIIKKT
WOKK Write or call on us Wora
b ■ a ■ If CORNICE!
TANKS S6!
i City
KEYSTONE TAILORS
Vi EAR SUITS Mes n
free on application
(JAUTHIEK. Manarer.
Make a Spm-ialtj
.•f PINK TAIL-
OR K D A IN I
R K A I) l TO
f blanks and «arnplss mailed U fow
KEYSTONE TAILORS, J II
Oklabon
City.
TINWARE, WOODEN WARE
PAPER
. BAGS.Etc
r for QUICK ACTION AND SNOWBALL Waaliinc
EqiSlI0 DEERE IMPLEMENTS
and VELIE VEHICLES y°<" ■)«!«
OR JOHN DEERE PLOW CO., OKLAHOMA CITY
FOR BEST RESULTS USE
0. K. SEEDS
r
.
y
best that grow.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
BARTELDES SEED CO.
Oklahoma Seed Houae OKLAHOMA CITY
ROOFING
MALTH0ID
AND
"C. & G."
BEST F.VER
Curtis & Gartside Co., Oklahoma City
Wholesale Manufacturers of Sash and
Doors, Hardwood Finish Office and Bank
Fixtures. Ask your Lumber Dealer.
EVERY GOOD COOK
and observing housewife knows that
it's economy to use the best. In
you have the beat and cheapest,
your irroccr for it.
Ask
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The Yukon Sun. (Yukon, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, April 23, 1909, newspaper, April 23, 1909; Yukon, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc128051/m1/6/: accessed May 24, 2022), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.