Tulsa Morning News and Tulsa Daily World. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 186, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I I . 1M. W'tiKUi MONDAY AI'KJL 30 1906.
Tmk Tulsa Daily .World
J. P. BK'ADY liditor and Owner
TERMS OF SUUSCRIPTION.
Daily except Sunday one week by carrier $ .10
Daily one month by carrier 40
Daily one year by mail 3.00
Office in Seaman Uuilding Third Street Telephone No. 3f6
Entered in the Tuba 1'ostoftlce as second class matter.
MONDAY AI'KIL 30 lHOti.
A MORNING PAPER FOR TULSA.
It I he intention of the inaiiaueinent it' tin World
tn begin publishing a mornim; paper in Tulsa tomorrow
Ii i ri i i 1 1 . lull lin ing In ineideiils and ; i i i -i I i i i 1 s iiite un-
avoidable the morning edition will nut bo started until
Tuesday morning .May 11. Tul.i will then boast us line
and complete a newspaper as (here is published in Indian
Tenitiii y mid willi (lie possible exception of the Oklahoma
City paper... second to none in Oklahoma.
The new morning paper will he a seven-column ci''ht
and ten pa ye daily with illustrated Sunday issues cftiryiny
(he full morning Associated Press reports fhe Associated
Press reports will be the same as carried by the Muskogee
Joplin and Oklahoma City papers. The reports will bo
len times u renter than any telegraph service now being
used in any city of Northern Indian Territory. There
will be no larger telegraph service received in (lie entire
Southwest than that carried by the morning edition of the
World.
The editor of litis paper received a telegram from the
Mermen! halcr Linotype Company of New York requesting
that the machine bought by him be shipped to the ruined
San Francisco ollices now rebuilding mid the aid asked for
was freely uivi'n. On this account and the imu-arrivfll
of other necessary machinery the iiiiiiigiiiiiti' n of a morn-
ing dailv has been post pi ned until the middle of the!
month.
At present Tulsa lias no mm ninir paper ev en the
outside a ers do no) reach lu re until afternoon. The
moiniir.' issue of the World will theivfoie present its
readers with the latest ami best news far in advance of any
other piper. The complete market reports the bae ball
scores i I' all the leagues of the country the Territory new
the V;..-li!iiglon congressional news in short iill'jhe news
of the woil I while it is news will be given the subscribers
of the 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 'r paper. The paper will be laid on the
breakfast tables of people within a radius of one hundred
miles i I Tulsa and will be an aid for the business men to
reach l'-e nearby cities and will be an important factor in
the'hu'l ling id' the city of Tulsa.
Kveiy. ue at all conversant with the cost and labor
will rc::dily see that the World is tackling a big proposi-
tion. Tie price of all composition done at night is in-
creased. Xight work requites additional lUiiing expenses
in all I'epartinenls. Salaries and wanes advance all
a Ion!; the line. News service expenses are quadrupled.
More Ii.n types to yet up the copy and more operators to
handle 'ie linotypes are neccsaiy. The working force
in boll; (' e front and back i Hires iniiM be doubled in
fact in !:'iinciiii!.r a morning paper the World just multi
plies it- evpeiisc nccoinit by three.
S' i e miy ask why this is done. Tulsa the beau-
tiful; V .1 '.-a. the pri speions; Tulsa the maivel is situate
in the ! : u r of a ureal lb Id of opportunity. Around and
about ' : lie (he richest vrlloy in the Southwest. Kich
in evi y ei reival.lc resoiiice: rich above and below
gronn . fir a wide radius in every baud thriving towns
are gr. . :ng into 1 1 1 1 s 1 1 i 1 1 lt little cities; everv inoi -ning live
dilT' teut railroads send numerous tiains out of thin city
in ii these towns arriving thero in company with the mm.
In a year or thereaboulu rural free deliveries will reach
Hie Homes oi every iarincr in me new conn try oi which
Tulsa will be the metropolis. The World believe that ere
twelve more months have passed Tulsa will double again
in population. The World believes in Tulsa and the
.'lealness and stability of this remarkable section and
believes that a snappy up-to-date morning newspaper
will be well received. It is for these reasons and a greater
one a desire to give its thousands of loyal friends the
entire news of the entire world at their breakfast tables
that the big step has been taken. The World does not
consider the move hazardous. It has an abiding faith in
Tulsa and the future of the great state of Oklahoma.
The people of this city have been askinir for some time
for a mornim' paper. An opportunity will be afforded
Ibem to show their appreciation of such an undertaking.
The editor has been accorded a welcome far exceeding bis
expectations and is now ready to show his appreciation by
giving the army of loyal friends of the World what they
demand a creditable aggressive mornim; paper with
full Associated Press reports.
AN ENCOURAGING FEATURE.
One of the most encouraging features of the present
statehood situation lies in the interview of O. P. Slunn.
editor of Sturm's Statehood Magaine with President
I'ooscvclt. Mr. Sturm states that the preside!. t last week
personally nave him positive assurance that Oklahoma
would be made a state at this session of Congress. When
it is borne in mind that Mr. Sturm's visit to Washing! ui
was directly in the interests of statehood and that In
journeyed as an ambassador extram diuary for the whole
people of Oklahoma this assurance is made d mbly assur-
ing. The piesideni has never given any reason to cause
the suspicion of doubt to enter in his utterances yet
i..me instances it is altogether probable that things have
iceii credited to li i in of which lie knew nothing whatever.
iSul here is an unqualitied .statement made to one of the
:n st pr niineiit Oklaln mans and one who is known t.
.ill of us. In the face i-f this knowledge it will be hard
for any of us to believe that justice is going to be much
'oil :er denied us.
0
IMOGtL
a
AN ANALOGOUS CASE.
California which was made a state of the I'nioii
Se leml.er 1Mb 1S.10 is the only state added to the ori-
ginal thirteen without being lirst organized into a territ ry.
California was part of Mexico up to the time it was coii-
piered by (iencral dobn C. Fremont in K"4. and was after-
wards included in the territory ceded to the 1'nited States
by Mexico at the treaty of fiuijdaloupe. California was
the lirst state in the geographic western half of the I'ninii
and sixth west of the Mississippi river.
mi. r -. : o -- -- nuV section of the
eouutrv which will enter the I'liien without bavin;;
through the transitory period from wild domain to an
organized tcrntoiy up to the tune they were admitted a
soven-iun states. The rush for gold in 1S40 and lS.'il)
populated the (iolden Slate sufficiently to admit her at
once. The breaking down of artificial barriers of this sec-
tion has resulted in quickly tilling it up with inhabitants.
:o :
IT IS HIGH TIME FOR ACTION.
HMMHMNNNtlllHHimiHUMMHMMNNNNMflUHIHMNHMMHNMN
l0C000O000000C
Fancy Carnations
At THE ROBINSON HOTEL CIGAR STAND
10
(g A DOZEN
coocccoccocooooo
high-priced
;;ing.
show 'in town that evc-
Dowie's promise of miracles fell
:uvfu! short of results lt did not
even provoke the paragraphcrs to re-
newed energy.
And now (lovernor lloch is ac-
cused of kissing Kx-Oovernor Stan-
ley's wife. I suppose they'll be tell-
iir; stories on the blonde and me next.
Tin woik of paviinr on First street should be';iu with-
ul delay. The condition of the street is undoubtedly as
bad as it possibly could be. In dry weather dust in fierce
.rules slaps the pedestrian in the face and after every
rain leh noisome smell which greets the scent is nauseous.
In plain words. it slinks to high heaven. Let the pa vim.'
be dmie at once.
DOOOC JOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCXXX
Palace Market
The most mpleto Grocery in Tulsa.
Exclusive agent for Sherman Bros.'
TEAS COFFEES and SPICES
Kd. G. North Main Stiver . Telephone 107
oococoocxxooooooo
DOOOOCCCXXIOOOOOCXOCCOOCOC
Western Well-Tool Machine Company
Portable Drilling Machines
Riir Inm.vBoil' lv Ermine? Pipe Casing Drilling:
and F shini? Tools andOii WollSupplics
General Blachsmithing and Repair Work
Shops lloiiMk.T Avert ie nnd I'risco Trncks. I'hone 134
Office Archer lllock. C -r vr Tirst anJ jMain. Phones 421-422
DCOOOOOOOOCOODDCC-OOOO XKXX)OCOOCOOOOOOCOOOOOOGC
00000000
O 0
OBSERVATIONS BY BUNNY.
0 C
OI0I0IOIOI0I0IO9
In this country the old sayinir "it
never rains but it pours" is trans-
posed to read "it never rains but it
r ars".
Our motto is hi'-'h quality sroods
'ind best service. The Southwestern
Hottlimr Co. 3-2-t-tf
tMHI
I Grand Opera House
5 One Night Only Tuesday
nn 4 a 2
: iviay jsi
rTT7STTvTM0NS SIGNED.
j Marshal Paber has blossomed out
in a new blue uniform. It is sui.'-
rest "I tl-at .Indue Abbott I'.iilow with
1 '-ol e . f el mine. t
I Tliv'i'e is-: "t nvicli (Kn'ert'iii'e lie-
Iwe. ti S.ipnlpa and Li ndon. L union
I
nn'de uji.i f a urmip of villages
d Snpulpa of villaueis.
A northside lady asked the other
day i he li t in on the blonde propo-
jsitiin. I've been asking the same
tl.'nu inysilf frr sexcal months.
Adib'd to my pxj'erienee of never
I bavin: r de en a train which was on
i:me. is the frequency with which I
jv.i out of clean linen Saturday eve-
I in-.
T. D. I. PP.
A. J. RISINOEK
A I.ouis:ii:ia -ill told me (hp other
day that the M'cri; r( the flowers in
I' e sout;i made everybody lazy. 1
always did h.-ve a passim for Im-
qmts.
To Go 20 Rounds with Tommy Burns
on May 30 Articles Signed.
Leavenworth Kansas. April ill).
Si;; 1 fart manager for Tommy Hums
today signed the articles of ap-ee
inent for a twenty-round Hirht to take
pl '.ce May i!0 between Hums nnd I'ob
Fitzsiniinons. The articles had alrea
dy been siuned by Fitsimnioii 's man-
rjcr when they arrived here today.
The ILHit will take place under the
auspices of Tom ( ) 'Iiourke's N'ew
Tuxedo Club in Philadelphia. Hart
arrived here this mornim; ' from (he
Past and is lookim; over the interests
of Hilly Khodes. for whom he is man-
a;er. Iihodes will flight twenty rounds
with .Jack 1'obinson who is now in
liurht trainim; in Kansas City h'hodes
is traininj at Fort Leavenworth and
is in liner trim than ever before and
the fii;ht where takes place here to-
niuhl. is beiti'.' looked forward to with
much interest. The li'dit takes place
at an athletic exhibition which will
be under the auspices of the Fort Lea-
venworth 'I'l'dic flub. Several in-
terest im; preliminaries have been ar
ranged anions; them a mill between
John Minpareil and Jack Monroe two
Filipinos. Several other events are
scheduled for this exhibition.
Tommy Burns (N'oah Brusso) is a
Canadian who fights near lsil pounds.
He made bis debut in l!M)0 at Detroit.
He has met and defeated Tony Capo-
ni. foii-l.t draws with Mike Schreck
Twin Sullivan and others in his class
lie has not cut much of a limine in pu
gilistic circles lately.
Farewell tour of Melville B.
Raymond's Cartoon
Comedy
m
N
m
m
m
BUSTER
BROWiM
That Great Big Laughing Show
You've Heard So Much About
m
o
A
i
For the entire month of May a big
discount on all wall paper Gc Papers
at Sc 10c Papers at 5c. Tulsa Dec-
orating company 114 East Third St.
4-2S-2t
If you have a silk dress to be
cleaned send it to the Unique. 4-iW-ot
May Sale on Wall Paper 50 per
cent off on all grades. Tulsa Decorat-
ing compary. . 4-2S-2t
At Cost Our stock of furniture.
Clav Furniture Co.
MODEL STEAM LAUNDRY
Lee & Uislngcr Prop's.
) Since tbr. Missouri Republicans
j have declared for Love it is pre
sumed that the state central eemmit-
t e will have a genuine honeymoon
time this vear.
West South 1st St.
I'hone 88.
Tulsa Ind. Ter.
Once in awhile Ieander pets the
best of it and the other night the
blonde told me she did think a great
deal of me after all. There was a
Half a HundrsrJ Singing and Dancing Comedians-
Pretty Gi ls
Gorgeous Costumes
Elaborate Scenery
I A hit everywhere. Ask anybody. Your
last chance to see these two great
fun producers Buster and Tige.
NOTE--Thls is the show that plajed to
I $11624.50 at Grand Opera House Kansas 2
J City Alo. recently. 5
2
IIHMtMlttMtmWMMtMIMMIMIMMHHIMHtt
s
3
M
THE SPRINO POET IS ON DECK
ayrain and if he exasperates about'
the etherial mildness of gentle spring
you may call it "poetical license"
O0O 'O00O0jbutiflie sings the praises of the ar-
O
t
o
o
o
MATHEWS & RUGGLES
ARCHITECTS
Suit 7 and 8 Roxenfeld Bid.
TULSA I. T.
3 Money Ioaned on City Property.
tistic laundry work done by us you
can attribute it to his gratefulness
and enthusiasm for the exquisitely
laundered linen that be always re-
ceives fr Laundry The Right Way
Our patrons are always eiithndntie.
Laundry The Right Way
m
9
z
:
3
n
m
:
2
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brady, J. R. Tulsa Morning News and Tulsa Daily World. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 186, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1906, newspaper, April 30, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc134636/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.