The Weekly Examiner. (Bartlesville, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 11, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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s
HIS STEAK WAS ALL READY
NEW
PROTOCOL
SIGNED.
|)K. W. T. FEAZELL
Measure Makes Two States of*Ok-
lahoma, Indian Territory and
New Mexico.
MANY RADICAL AMENDMENTS ADOPTED
Heoator Keat-tm. of (tali. Correct* a Mis-
take Kpnrdint Ilia Vote on the Admis-
sion of N> Mexico an a .Separate State
— Oeclarea lie Voted Say Until Time*
But the Clerk* MUundentood IIim.
Washington. Feb. 8.—By a viva voce
vole the senate at nine o'clock Tuesday
night passed a statehood bill. Nobody
«8ked for a roll call on the bill. Not
one of the more than 80 senators who
voted knows exactly just what minor
provisions are contained in the bill.
It is not the Hamilton bill; it is not
the senate committee bill. It is no-
body's bill, and everybody's bill.
Whether it will ever become a law is
as uncertain as its authorship.
If the house, which had previously
passed an almost entirely different
measure, concurs in the senate action,
Oklahoma and Indian territory will
come into the union as one state. New
Mexico with its present lioundaries
will also become a state and Ari/.ona
will temporarily, perhaps for years,
remain a territory. But the state of
Oklahoma will come into the union
under different conditions than any
other territory ever admitted. For I'l j
vears It will be a prohibition state |
it must declare by an ordinance irre-
vocable that the manufacture and sale
or giving away of intoxicating liquors
shall be prohibited within its borders
for that period.
But radical as were the Oklahoma
amendments, they did not compare
with those which related to New Mex-
ico and Arizona. Arizona was stricken
from the bill and New Mexico admitted
hv two votes. Kearns, of Utah, mad
House Devoted Entire Time Wednes-
day to Discussing Bill Regulat-
ing Freight Charges.
Kepre.entati.e ThWer. of Mssa.ehua.tU.
Congratulated the I'realdent ,„| the
Keput>lirau Tarty on Their Forealcht-
Mr. Shotier. of K„„ Vork. Maid the
1 Had Hern Lured to Ruin.
l>«*iuo< r
Sarcasm of the Wife Not Wasted i
the Delinquent and Imbib-
ing Husband.
Sarcasm loses nothing by awaiting
the psychological moment for its ut-
terance, remarks the New York Tri-
bune. Also it oftentimes is most
Iraught with the sharpness ol' a two-
edged sword when r is contained in a
simple statement of tact. A husband
given to periodical looks upon the
cocktail when it contains a cherry, his
glance at such times dwelling thereon
for two or three successive days with-
out interruption arose one morning re-
cently with a head out of all propor-
tion to his hat measure and a throat
that felt like a lime'c'ln. No explana-
tion was needed when he told his wife
he was going out for a moment to get
rio of the olive rjreen taste in his
mouth; he would be back right away.
All she said was ' Bring a steak
home with you for breakfast." He
went to a cocktail dispensary and got
his brace. As he v.vs going out he met
a friend, who told him he would feel
better if he had another. He did feel
better, so much better that he was
prevailed on further to improve the
stat« of his physical and mental being
by a third diving at.er a cherry. He
din not see his home for two days.
Again, oue morning he awoke with
iron bands pressing into his head and
his tongue cleaving to the roof of his
tuouth. IBs wife heard him stirring
and went to the door "Your steak is
ready," she said.
*i . .. i Wed th® Townsend hill, which repre-
ALL WOMEN MARKET THERE i rented the position of the administra
tion, than a jackrabbit does a race-
Aereement Wherehr the Clilted State*
Keen me* Keaponxlhln for San Domingo
Finances on tile W ay to Washington.
W ashington, Keb. 8.—Minister Daw-
son has cabled the state department
from San Domingo that the new proto-
col providing for the responsibility of
San Domingo finances by the United
... 1 S,ates wat> signed Tuesday. The docu-
CALLEO IT A DEMOCRATIC MEASURE. I "lont is ex )ected hero early next week
and will be submitted immediately to
the senate. It Is drawn on the lines
of the original protocol so far as con-
cerns the administration of the cus-
toms by officials designated by the
linitcd States and the segregation of a
portion ol the customs receipts to de-
fray the foreign indebtedness of the
country. No dale is set in the docu-
j ment for the beginning of this adminis-
tration am! that will be left for the
senate to insert.
Washington. Feb. 8,-The house
Wednesday again met an hour earlier
than usual, the subject of the regula-
tion of freight rates still being under
consideration to the exclusion of all
other business. The galleries were
crowded, in anticipation of the inter-
esting ceremony of counting the eieo
toral vote.
Wednesday's discussion was opened
by Mr. Thayer (Mass.) who congratu-
lated the president, the republican
party and the majority of the commit-
tee on interstate and foreign commerce
for adopting what he declared to be a
purely democratic measure. After
characterizing the Hepburn bill as be-
ing also a democratic measure, lie
charged that it had been pulled down
at the instance of the president as not
meeting with his approbation. The
Hepburn bill, he said, no more resem-
bled the Townsend
British Privy Council Decides Against
the American Boodler Who
Fled to Canada.
WERE CONNECTED WITH CARTER CASE.
j Average Housekeeper of Paris Does
Her Own Buying, Declares
French Writer.
, Almost every woman in France does
; her own marketing an.I ladies take
j their maid or cook along to carry
| home their purchase, writes Jeanne
| Constentin. in Good Housekeeping. I
[am speaking of the average household;
horse.
Charging that an opportunity had
been lost to the democracy by offering
an inadequate substitute to the Town-
send bill, Mr. Shober (N. Y.) said a
similar mistake had been made at the
St. Louis convention, when in spite of
WANTS PLATT EXPELLED.
«. W. I'oat. of lint tie Creek. Mich.. Filed
Petition Willi Senate for Kxpulalon
« f Nfw Yorker.
Washington. Feb. 8.—C. W. Post, of
Haitle Creek, Mich., who has interested
himself largely in the establishment
ol a parcels post system, has tiled with
President Pro Tempore Frye of the
Senate, a petition for the expulsion or
Senator Thomas C. 1'latt from the en-
ate. The petition is based on the as-
sertion of Mr. I'lrttt. as the executive
officer ot the I'nited States Express
compnnv, is a party to a consplriacy to
maintain identical rates among 'ex-
press companies for articles shipped
over their lines and he asserts that
Plait has told representatives of bis
that In- will oppose ail legislation in-
juriously affecting his companies inter-
ests.
Tile fugitive* W'ere indicted Together with
Cunt. Oberlin II. Carter at Savannah.
Ga.. In I KIM> Charged with Kmbeule-
ment and lien-audio* the Government
In Savannah llarhor Work.
DENTIST.
t utu-,• Kiaiins 1 h lid 2, Bindley A Bryant
liulldlntf, Bartlesville. Indian Territory.
FRANK B. CR08THWAITE
Attorneyat Law.
HpeciaI attention given to approval of
Nast ^ heforu Interior Department; practice
null courts of Indlan Territory and Okla-
homa. j,, |T. s. hup mint* Court, Court of
< lalms and before all the Departments at
Wash 1 usr ton.
pORTEB W. FLEMING,
Attorney at Law.
in l Bindley Bryant Hldir.. Bartles-
liui. Ter. Notary mid Stenographer
Looking (:p IVimion
Washington. Feb.
Blackmar, commander
I'( (Halation.
-On. W. \V.
n chief of the
i deal by which his state would get : ",'h or very chio lK>°l le leave the mar-
the Grand Canon of Arizona changed ' hft,,1K to lhe ,0<>K- vvho 'n stores
his vote and the amendment admit- I WhiCh have rpS",ar deliveries; while
-uarately was lost. Very Wealthy >o.i«ehold«. that all-
THE FORTY-SIXTH VISIT.
IBy McCutcheon. In Chicago Dally Tribune.J
Jfl TCHINGS, VEASEY St MURPHY,
Attorneys at Law
BUCHER & HILL,
Attorneys at Law.
Practice In Ktnte and Federal Courts, be-
fore I'awns ( ouinilsslon and Interior De-
partment. offlcc in First Nntloi.al Bank
Building. Special attention given to col-
lections.
william t. sidell,
Attorney at Law.
4 1ji^,i!^"inD11 u"' courts- Office-room
*. "radlry a- Bryant building. Bartlesville.
0. ! • clevengek,
Attorneyand Counsellor.
Notary In office. Practice l„ all courts of
Indiii" orrliory. Collections made. Ufflce
In (.ntes A- Clevenger building.
I)HS. J.ARTON & BARTON,
Osteopathists.
ting New Mexico separately
Tuesday's contest found an early
echo in the proceedings of the senai
Wednesday in the shape of a personal
explanation by Mr. Kearns of his vote
on the admission of New Mexico as a
separate state.
Immediately after the opening
prayer Mr. Kearns took the floor and
said:
"I rise to a question of personal priv-
ilege. In the first vote on the amend-
ment of the senator from California
<Mr. Bardi last evening. I voted 'nay'
in a distinct manner. Ii appears the
clerks misunderstood me and I was
numbered among those favoring the
amendment. My colleagues called my
attention to the error and 1 was on
the point of correcting, it when it was
suggested I could do so on the vote to
concur in the amendment before the
final passage of the bill, in case the
amendment should be adopted. This
course I pursued.
"The seriousness of this matter did
not impress itself upon me until this
morning, when I read in the public
press the statement thai I had voted
■for the amendment in order thai I
might force the managers of the bill to
accept my amendment ceding the Ari-
zona strip to Utah. This I deny in j
vhe most positive manner. Such a '
oro'-eeding I would not countenance I
nor be a party to. My word had been j
?:lven the managers of the bill that r 1
would support their measure, and 1 ;
would not have played them false
for the whole territory of Arizona. '
"II this be the proper time, Mr
President. I desire to have 'he record
corrected as Tar as it relates to my
vote upon the amendment of the sen-
ator from Calitornia in accordance
with this statement."
important personage, the chef, would
j not hear of anyone interfering with
j his prerogative of selecting and order-
ing everything, an 1 this able creator
of sauces, of things savory, steaming i
J or jellied, may ev • i have his own !
coupe to take him to the Halle.s. the ,
j huge market that each day provides
j the provisions for all of Paris and its
; suburbs. Servants love to go to mar-
| Ket, for it is a custom with almost
every storekeeper to give them one
: cent on every frail ■ spent, so you will
j find it next to an impossibility to make
j your cook deal wh've she does not re-
| r"ivo her sou de franc, and in engag-
I ing a servant many will ask you:
! Does madame do her own market-
rs?". .
ORIGIN OF THE MUSTACHE.
: Chicago Antiquary Unearths Manu-
script Telling the History
of the Fad.
THE RAILROAD RATE BILL.
Tin. President Knv.im Stronger Trorisloill
Itelating to I'rivatr t'nr I. inc. -Wants
Ac tion in tli« Senate.
Washington. Feb. 8.—While Presi-
dent Roosevelt approves of the Ks.-h
Townsend railroad freight bill pending
before the house of representatives, it
«s understood that he would like to
liave incorporated in it stronger pr<!
vjstm- relating to private car lint
Representative Babcock, of Wisconsin,
>ih<1 a tali, with the president about tlir
j tending legislation. He holds the came
views regarding private car lines as
'he president. They discussed the bill
for some time. Senator McComas, of
Maryland, also talked with the presi-
dent about the pending railroad legisla-
tion. The president is endeavoring to
'iring about action in the senate at this
■naillae on the rate question, hopinp
thCMMt* may take up the Kseh-Town-
send measure when the bill reaches it
K t« of I 5 l'ttraon* Unknown.
St. John, N. B.. Keb. 8.—No further
news from the scene of the wreck of
the steamer Damara at Musquodobia
has been received and the fate of th'
missing boat in which the captain and
14 persons left the sinking vessel is not
known. Wire trouble between here
mid Halifax delayed communication
and the fart that the nearest telegraph
•(ation is 12 miles from the coast wher<
ihe wreck occurred is believed to ac-
count for the absence of news.
Ml. l«oaU Uruf(|«t « .Stilrhl**.
St. Louis, Feb. 8—James N. Rich
urdson, 50 years old, president of the
McLean Drug company, committed
suicide at his home here by shoot-
ing.
Mi iu( Huh! Ik Mate.
Halifax. N. S., Feb. 8.—The Furnesa
line office here has Just been advised
of the arrival at Pleasant Point of the
missing boat from the steamer Da-
mara.
( A Chicago antiquary found in an old
I Spanish manuscript the other day th®
story of the mustache's origin. "We ow.
j ihe mustache to the Spaniards," he said
| afterward, to a Baltimore Herald man.
! 'The Spaniards adopted it to distinguish
j themselves from the Moors. After th"
j Moorish invasion, you see. Moors and
I Spaniards were so inextricably mixed up
j that it was impossible to tell them apart
i lint the Spaniards were Christians, ami
I therefore they decided to wear a emu
I upon their faces—a mustache andachin
: tuft, or goatee. This hair cross became
I the fashion ail over Spain, and gradually
j it spread to other lands. Before that
I time men had either gone clean-shaven
I or fully bearded. Now they adopted first
J the muslarhe and chin tuft, and finally
the mustache alone. When you stroke
i the thatch on your upper lip. remember
that you are stroking a part of the irue
cross, and when you see a man with both
| mustache and chin tuft, point out to hint i
| that he should live up to the declaration 1
I of faith that his face makes.''
mms
.- ;>r. "J'
i ho ra
treated wlth-
t* and chronic t
iijjs. Consultation and examination
mic. iJartiosvillc, i.t.
London. Feb. 8.—The privy council
has rendered its decision in the Greene
Gaynor case in favor of the American
government. The council ieversed the
two judgments of Justice Caron of
Quebec August 1.!, and ordered
the respondents to pay the costs of the
appeal. The council's decision causti-
cally criticises the action of Justic
Caron in releasing Greene anil Gaynor
and Caron's "extraordinary interven-
tion," and adds:
"Where a prisoner is brought before
a competent tribunal charged with an
extradition offense and is remanded for
the express purpose of affording the
Prosecution an opportunity of bring-
ing forward evidence whereby the ac-
cusation is to be supported; if in such
case a writ of habeas corpus a learned
judge treats a remand warrant as a
nullity and proceeds to adjudicate the
case as though the whole evidence was
before him it would paralyze the ad-
ministration of justice and render it
impossible for proceedings In extra-
dition to be effective."
John F. Gaynor and Benjamin D.
(ireene were indicted in Savannah G:i
December S. 189H, charged with em-
bezzlement and defrauding the I'nited
•States government, together with Cap!
Oberlin M. Carter, in the performance
Of government contracts for the im-
provement of the Savannah river and
other river and bai lor work in that
district, the illicit profits being esti-
mated at $2,000,000.
Gaynor and Greene were arrested in
N'ew York. They contested extradi-
1 ion 1o Georgia and when the United
Stales commissioner decided that tli -y
must go to that stale and plead to
the indictments they fled to Canada.
1 hey had been at liberty on $40,0(mi
bail each and this was forfeited. Ef-
forts to extradite Gaynor and Greene
troni Montreal were progressing favor-
ably and the extradition commission
was sitting in Montreal when Gaynor
and Greene went to Quebec, a ques-
tion arose as to whether they coul.l
be brought back and detectives kid-! , .777
"aped them and took them to Mon- rUL<LAKD,
! neal. There wa* a big legal fight ov.-r
, 'his action and a Quebec judge issued ; Physician and Surgeon.
; a writ of habeas corpus which was
I served on the jailer at Montreal who ! s,
i delivered up ihe prisoners without | l'HRkl""ci\ hv.i.
notification to th" extradition tribu- n n umvivw
j nal and permitted them to be rushed j • . 1 1 ( «'• '*•,
ii.ick to Quebec. Efforts to quash the I _
urit of habeas corpus under which j Surgery
I they had been returned were denied by and Dtseas,-, women aspeoiait
Justice Caron. After a long legal con- I i".ruv h'J"- I'lioae—ottic
1 iroversy Gaynor and Greene obtained
their liberty witbin the limits of the
i Province of Quebec. The United Stales
j government then appealed to the privy
J council of England, the highest court
| in that country.
The decision simply reverses Jus-
tice Caron's judgments and leaves
Greene and Gaynor under remand as
before Justice Caron intervened. The
"tivy council granted the I'nited States
leave to appeal in the Kitty Dee case
after the vessel is returned to the
custody of the Canadian court.
])\i.
X. BUCK.
Dentist.
1 "UI ('"IU-Ke, Kan-
aMIank.' ovl,r "nrtlesvlle Natlon-
i)k. a. m. bruce,
Physician and Surgeon.
Calls promptly attended day or nlalit.
Itesidi-in-i. Sout Invest corner Klrst and Oher-
oki •• streets, Hiii'tlesvilte. Indian Territory.
• 1 ' /nc —tiiiiuc, I'l.); J
Hours ai office, when possible, I
|)k- c. c. woollomes,
Dentist.
t. with I)r. G. F.
WOODRIXCi,
Physician and Surgeon.
I District surge
1 Texas Itiiiiwn\.
Ottlce, No. '
Missouri. Knosiis nnd
I lioneh— Itesldeiice. No. «.
STUDENTS STRIKE.
rimplishing
Hie false hopes and promises held out
by the Belmont's, the Ryan's and the
Cord Meyer;' of Wall street, and trust
lame. Into disregarding the wlshos of
the people and thereby
disaster for the oartv.
Continuing his criticism of the action
„ _ , „ , ; some of his partv leaders Mr Sho-
So Declares Student of Reptile* and h., declared that notwithstanding (he
He Says They Have malicious and false stories circulated
No Ears.
. fllp of tho Orand Army of ihe Republic. John K
democracy and the cry from industrial f'-ilman. adjutant general
renters, the party had been lured bv \ organization
■innii Tiiat St. f,
•iy H« ( tonril I',
lice Inter*vi
SNAKE HEARS IN TONGUE.
of the same
and Wm. M. Olin. secre-
tary of slate of Massachusetts, were
presented to the president by Senator
Lodge. They are here in the interests
ol pension legislation pending befor.'
congress and solicited the Influence of
Hie president in favor of it.
U'riliiii-K Military Ac
itil Freedom from i'i
tion l« Oranteii.
-1 doctor \\ vait
Physician'and Surgeon.
Allen S. William-, who has spent bis | New Jersey and Indiana William Ran-
summer In the mountains of New York, dolph Ho-irst had polled 200 vote. in
studyingsnakes, according to the Detroit j that convention.
Kl«ht-H iir I.aw in Coiora.lo.
Denver. Col.. Keb. 8.—Republican
members of the house, in caucus, have
•nd the methods th«t w«re questionable 1 ilSTped upon an eight-hour bill which
ii taking from him the delegations of ',p Pressed for passage by the re-
Ncws-Tribune, says: "it is true tha.
snakes have no ears, but I bave discov-
ered that they can hear through their
tongues. A snake can live for two years
without feeding. I have Known cases
where snakes have come to life after
they had been frozen as stiff as a walk- „
ingstick. Last January two of my black-j president'had taken th-
snakes were frozen so hard that I could | \nnee of his party.
have broken them in pieces. My wife L
put them on lint water bin an*i in an i Ciatl Martini for <;*n. mmmm
hour tbey began to show signs of life, j Si. Petersburg. Feb, 8.—(Ireat pr
Declaring h's intention of standing
unreservedly by President Roosevelt on
Hie subiect of rejzul.nlne freljiht rates
Mi A'an Duzer (Nevada i. said there
bad been ko more courageous action
lhan that of the president since the
of Andr> .\ Jackson, because th"
lend far in ad-
publlcan majority in the legislature
The new iiill provides that the eight
hour law shall be applicable only to *ho cannot easily be replaced.
Fhe police of Odessa bave seize
St. Petersburg, Feb. 8. —The students
of the military academy of medicine
have struck on the ground that owing
to police intervention it is impossible
to carry on their education. They de-
mand that the academy be closed unlit
freedom is sranted them.
The police have forwarded to the em-
ployers of labor a list of prominent
-strikers asking for their immediate dis-
missal. The direetor or the Nevske
''aval construction yard refused com-
pliance and other employers are sim-
ilarly disposed because many of the
blacklisted men are skilled ' artisans
, .. . '"'i "'veil to discuses of wo-
ti"" and children. Office over HartIcsvIIIm
National Hank, lliirtlesville, i.t. Phoneii.
E.J- kertenshaw,
Physician and Surgeon.
Kooiii ij, new
promptly tinswc
r IJulldlng.
or nlirht.
men ! ' '> "ngaged In digging coal
(|r at tending blast furnaces, stamps: and
' hlorination pifxesses, and not to all
men employed In mines, mills and
smelters.
T. A. STEVENS, xM. D.
Sureeon and Physician.
nfP C,!!!!i^ PN'Mred to trentchronie disease.
. H"lll'sto a p. in. offloe
u Opera House block. I'uiicy, Kunsas.
Mgnmenta of revolvers and cartridges
destined for the strikers in the Cau-
casus.
I in file in eiit« for KnaaiH.
Norfolk, Va., Feb. S—The Danish
steamer Nordhaven has sailed from
Mil*t Oil
Sew York,
tritt, in the
• I n iler I'roperly.
Feb 8.—Justice Lev
supreme court, Alanhat-
W'hen about four inches of their bodies
were thawed out she began feeding them
hot milk, and it was not long until they
were wriggling about the parlor floor
a.s good as new'' Mr. Williams said that
recently one of hJs snake* was suffering
from indigestion. He found that he had
swallowed a large hen's egg. and in or-
der to cure him he hit him on the back
and crushed the egg, after which the
reptile recovered.
Names of the Sultan.
The sultan of Turkey, who has gained
for himself among European countries
so many uncomplimentary titles, is ad
dressed by the Turkish journals as "The
Pear] or the Nations," "The Nombril of
the World," "The Gate of Justice," "The
Prince of Camels." "The Master of Mas-
ters" and "The Shadow of God." On the
other hand, the Macedonians, the Ar-
menians and the young Turkish or native
revolutionary party stigmatize him as
"Abdul Hamid, the Red Beaat."
. ep.
a rations are making af C)dos.sa for thf?
reception ( t den. Stoessel and the
<iher officers returning from Port Ar-
thur hut the Ka/.vledchik, a Hemi-ofll-
<ial military weekly contains this week
all article declaring that It is mor-
than ever necessary to hold a court-
martial as provided by law in view :if
the statements In the foreign press
this port bound for a Russian port with ,a"' Kavp a decision in the Platt-Klias
suit, in which John R. I'lati seeks to
impress a trust on realty valued at
$r.S5,000 purchased out of money given
by him to Hannah Ellas, a negress, in
which he directs Hannah Kllas and
others to turn over (he woman's prop-
erty In their possession to Gilbert |[
Montague, the receiver.
cargo of agricultural implements
valued at $700,000. The Nordhaven
anie from New Orleans where the
cergo was loaded. It consisted of Till)
harvesters. ::.r.urt reapers, KiO boxen of
repeIrs and 10,200 bales of binder
twine. The value of the reapers is
$500,000.
E.
H. HOSKINS
JEWELER
iciitcd first door west
I lesvlite Nut *1 punk.
/
Prick a nil iln(rri In tlir Nunta |rr,
New York. Feb. 8 II. C. Frick and
^ H. Rogers were elected directors of
that the surrender was not necessitated Atchison, Topeka & Sanla Fe Hail
by the Internal conditions of the fort- r',mPany al a meeting of ihe Atch
lfss.
>ln« lien anil I.roff, at tli«. l-.ni
Motindsrille W Va., Feb. 8 - Former
head of the free delivery system of
the [Kistal department, Atigusl W
Nlacben. with Dlller H Groff und Sam-
uel A. Groff, who were sentenced to
imprisonment In ihe Moundsvllle pen-
itentiary as a resuli of (he postal In-
ison board of directors In Ibis city
Messrs. Prick and Rogers are both In-
iefferson City, Mo., Feb. 8 -The only '"rested in the Cnlon Pacific Railroad _ wir ioj
variation In the deadlock over the se- ">mpany. and are understood to ent-r I vesication, have arrived^ fronTwash-
lection of a United Si ten senator to 'he Atchison as represenlatlve of the I ington
succeed Senator Cockrell at Wednes-1 ' nlon Pacific
day's Joint session of the legislature
was in the recipient of Representative
l.ont ilfwHii Found.
San Francisco. Feb. 8—The casket
Walmsley's complimentary vote, which: of tewds belong..* •, m ™ M ,, ,
he cast for State Senator J. W Peckj broolT of^J^aL,? M„HO'"
of Atchison county. The ballot, the! on fh. „vn
eighteenth, resulted as follows: Cock-j t(r .u. a . . . ' ,Pr (lePart,,f'c
Pettljohn, 2, t inkclnburg, 1, Peck. 1. b«en deposited by one of the porters.
Missouri Constable Hliot.
Carthage, Mo., Feb. 8 —City Marshal
James Lamb, of Sarcoxie, shot and fa-
tally wounded Constable Corwlno
Strong, In Sarcoxie Tuesday night.
Strong was Intoxicated and resisted
arrest. Strong is also an ex-marshal
and succeeded Lamb only two weeks
ago. Lamb Is under arrest.
Watch Repairing a Specially.
Cold Watches,
Cold Chains,
Cold Rings
Charms, Htlckphis, Watch Koiw, Olueka etc
nit hv'imo i'slcj und n'ecu-
ratt ly (lUfHl with irliiHMoM or Hp(>ctacles.
SIGNS
All kinds of Painting & Decorating
DOUGHERTY
.vi^'iaKW;.!""
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The Weekly Examiner. (Bartlesville, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 11, 1905, newspaper, February 11, 1905; Bartlesville, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc143651/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.