The Chandler Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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FACTO
m
WE OFFER
§
SI0,000Furniture
GHQIGE
COMMENCING
FRIDAY, NOV. 1
SELECTED FROM THEIR STOCK
SOMETHING FOSS EVERYBODY
A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY-DEPENDABLE F!!RN!TURE:
COMMENCING
FRIDAY, NOV. 1
Embodying; everything necessary to furnish the home-Rugs, Lace Curtains, Dining Sets, lied Room Sets Odd Dresser,
and Rotkcrs* k'tche" Cab,nc,s- Portiers' Pictures. Oueensware, Couches, Davenports. Leather Rockers, Parlor'Suits
MANY ARTICLES WILL IE SOLS" REGARDLESS OF 8881=
^a!e W?H ^ast 1 )«'i%VvS. Make No Purchases Until
Yoti Our Iviiit
CHANDLER
Ja%e Collar
OKLAHOMA
THF PURE ITIQT wi,en w,ll 11TAKEEFFECT?
1 flU 1 (JOLlLildl The question is often asked
|now when will the prohibition
! provision be effective? When 1
: must the saloons and breweries |
; close up? That question is very
I easily answered in the words of
! the enabling act as passed by
i congress and the constitution as
prepared by the constitutional
| convention and adopted by the
I vote of the people. The fol-
lowing are the words thus
adopted:
"I pon the admission of this
state into the union this pro-
Sucessor to IIS LAND PRIM IN(j O
OFFICIAL CITY PAPER.
Entered, According to Ai t of Congress
at the Postofllc• ,u ()handler, <)kla., as
Second Class mail matter.
Published every Friday by
ULAM <!\ iiOTKIN, Proprietors'.
P. L. ULAM, Editor.
L. B. NICHOLS, Associate Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION RATI S:
One Year SO cents
'Publicist Phone 228.
Teddy ,■ >t a bear just the
same.
Put a lL'tT on the new court
house.
■m n-m A
privingf away or otherwise furn- j state legislature will convent
ishingr, etc., of intoxicating: at Guthrie. That body will
liquor, etc., is prohibited tor a I elect as I nited States senators
period of 21 years etc. If a both T. P. Gore and R. L. Owen,
man has lecently taken out a democrats. Ivven though there
license and paid his $J*K) to the is not the slightest hope of
WOLFE'S
JEWELRY STORE
IS NOW SHOWING A
LARGE STOCK OF ..
"Was $1.50 now $1.4W" is a i
sign now displayed in the ad-i
vertisements of many of the i
big liquor stores.
We are to have at least a one
week's notice before the state-
hood proclamation is finally
signed, so says the department
of justice. Plenty of time to
lay in a supply of wet goods—
should you be so inclined. !
* vision shall be immediately en-
We understand that a certain ! forceable in the courts of the
newiy elected state -en. tor who state."
resides within 1000 miles of, Therefore when President
Chandler has given it out that Roo-sevelt issues the proela-
one oi his first official acts, mation declaring Oklahoma at'*
when the legislature convenes, mitted into the union, the min-
will be to introduce a bill the ute he signs his name to that
object of which is to reduce document every saloon and
the fees of the ofiice of county brewery in the new state is a
judge. dead one, and may immediate-
~' 'y be prosecuted for violation
I he first legislature will con- of the law unless they close
vein-- sixteen days after the their institutions immediately,
president signs the proclama-j Many contend that saloons
tion. 1 hen Haskell will be : will be permitted to run until
crowned ruler tfver the people the expiration of their license,
ot the most prosperous state ti . •
ever admitted to the union and " a serl0us mistake. The
the curtain will go up for the Pr°b'':)ition does not s ty that li-
first act of the greatest farce cense shall not hereafter be is-
comedy ever presented to the, sued, but it does say that the
Public. manufacture, sale, barter and
Good Reliable Watches
| omplimentary there should be
exercised the same care and
diligence in selecting these?
minority nominees as though
they were to be later elected
by the legislature as a whole.
This, for two reasons. First,
because the candidate for a
minority caucus frequently be-
comes the candidate for a ma-
jority causus later on; and, sec-
ond, because the minority mem-
bers in Oklahoma's state legis-
lature may by this very means
do splendid service to their
party—in strengthening and re-
are viewe
PRICES ARE RIGHT and that is why
they are selling so. fast. We person-
ally select all our time pieces and we mean
it when we tell you that we are able to meet
your watch needs \sith particular advantage
to you. We meet all prices quoted in any
reliable catalogue, save you the express
charges, and your watch is guaranteed
a reliable home merchant.
f)f)
by
9/xQ at
^mmmmrnrn
asm • erarataBa&Q wv <
| county treasurer he has done So
at his own .risk. If he 'manu-
factures or sells intoxicating
liquors one day after the piesi-
dent proclaims Oklahoma a
state, he is liable to prosecu-
tion and the full penalty of the
law, including imprisonment
as well as fine.—Oklahoma
Issue.
their success, it is to be pre-
sumed that th1. minority mem-
j*be: s, nr republicans, few though
they be, will, accordance
with a universally recognized
procedure, also choose two sen-
atorial candidates from among
the citizens of the state and
pay them the tribute of a com-
plimentary vote.
Hut even though this action
SENATOR FRANK fRANTZ on the part of the minorit\
In the fulness of time the members is purely formal and
.habilitating it in the popular
mind. For these reasons the
men so honored should not be
taken at random, but should be
1 chosen with an eye single to
their espicial fitness—men with
records absolutely clean, ot
known probity and integrity,
and aggressively honest in pub-
lie service.
In the opinion of the World
there is one man who stands'
out distinctly as deserving'the
hoflor, and as meritipg it thor-
oughly after the tests just
enumerated have been rigor-
! ously applied. The man is
Frank Frantz. No matter from
what view point the state of
Oklahoma is scanned, Frantz
catches the eye. No matter
from what view point the
caucus nominees
Frantz fits.
There may be those who will
insist that in the nomination
for governor Frantz was "given
his share." The World does
, not know how Mr. Frantz fee's
; about the matter. It does not
know that he wants or would
accept the caucus nomination
for the senate, but it does
know that when Frank Frantz
j was given the nomination r
! governor, and the Tulsa plat-
| form at the same time, he re-
ceived both a boquet and a
brick-bat. Just which was «.f
the greater weight he alor.e
til list determine.
Frantz made a splendid cam-
paign, and he did not at any
stage of the proceedings d:s-
; credit his party. He was hand-
| icapped as few men were ever
j handicapped in a political cam-
paign, yet he came through t
all, far ahead of his ticket,
| with no aftermath of ugiy
charges, his flags flying, a
bigger and more popular man
I by far than when he accepted
| the nomination in this city a
I few weeks before.
If a party ever owed a mr.n
anything the republican party
of Oklahoma owes Frank Fran' z
the caucus nomination for the
senate, tie led that party
through the most hopeless
campaign it will ever expedi-
ence, and at great pecuniary
loss to himself. lie ahou 1
have all of the honor that c.vi
come to a man who is given the
caucus nomination for the sen-
ate by a pal-ty that is hopeless-
ly hi the minorjty. And if t'-.e
republicans of the legislature
confer this honor on the gov-
i ernor and another "equally as
, good," they will have dis-
charged their duty to their
party.—Tulsa World.
Tillman, Nov, 2
At Egbert Opera House
*
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Ulam, P. L. The Chandler Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1907, newspaper, October 25, 1907; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc151272/m1/4/: accessed May 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.