Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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OKLAHOMA STATE REGISTER
PACK 61
'EN
nama-Pacific international Exposition, Greatest
All Celebrations, Opens Completed !n
si Marvelous of
r> .
i:,very Bzte
20, 1315
Forty of the World's Great Nations to Join With America In Celebrating the Opening of the
Panama Canal In a Conclave Unsurpassed In History.
Big International Expositions Amusements
Novel and Wonderful
President Wilson Will Visit Panama-Pacific D:sp!av nf Nations via Panama Canal—Vanderbilt
Cup Race and Grand Prix Will Be Held In San Francisco.
By HAMILTON WRIGHT.
Wo Ai 1) K It F U L ti ud novel
amusements, parades and
pageants of the oriental
countries, auto and yacht
races and athletic contests will he ob-
served upon a scale of unexampled
magnitude and grandeur at the Pana-
ma-Pacific international Exposition.
The extensive participation of China,
Japan. Siam and Indo and Cochin Chi-
na. when tn k« n hi connection with
the plans already made and with the
interesting oriental population of San
Francisco. assures such spectacles as
have never before been seen In the oc
cident Pageants of miles In length
set off by wonderful floats and mar-
velous pyrotechnics will wind through
the streets of San Francisco.
There will he held throughout the
this event. The famous Salt Lake
Mormon choir, the deep toned plaintive
singers of Hawaii and even a chorus
of fifty Maorlan singers will take part
In the choral events. At an expend!
turo of $1,250,000 the (Exposition has
constructed a great Auditorium In the
civic center of San Francisco, which
will be used by the great conventions
and song festivals. Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Crane will present their latest
terpsichorean novelty, the "Exposition
Tango;" Mr. Harry Lauder will sing
the Exposition ballad.
The amusement section of the Ex-
position, the "Zone," corresjfmding to
the famous "Midway" at the World's
Columbian Exposition at Chicago, will
carry out the purpose of the Exposition
to give every feature a high educa-
tional value.
tlnental railways. The Grand Canyon
concession Is built upon so prodigious
a scale that visitors will view the
canvases from a standard gauge rail-
way coach running on a standard
gauge track. A huge working model
of the Panama canal is so extensive
that visitors seated in comfortable the-
ater chairs will be carried along the
route of the canal upon a movable
platform, and a dictaphone at the arm
of each chair will describe each scene
aa It comes Into view A novel amuse-
ment feature will he provided by work-
ing submarine boats of sixty-five tons
displacement, which will operate In an
artificial lagoon. The Aeroscope, a
huge Inverted pendulum, operating like
a giant seesaw, with a great balancing
weight on the short end and a car for
passengers at the extremity of Its long
k*AUL i HA I I.XLIDLM S lt£l ALLLD and horseback. Uov. Steele and escort 1
JL> OKLAHOMA. I *ode tue Irout carriage, and about;
Washington, Jan. 24.—inauguration ' cvei>u°dy who was not iu tno parade
of Judge Robert L. Williams as the! stood along Oklahoma Avenue to sec
tuird governor of the state of Okla-! tae new governor pass to Uie square ai '
uomu recalled to early-day Oklahom- j LUu edge of town wnicu had been set i.
ans In Washington the Bpectacular in- j aside by the United ti tale a laud oftiee "
auguratiou oi George W. Steel as the .lor tile future capitoi building. It was
iirst governor of Oklahoma Territory 1101 long until lue southwest wind blew
in 1SUU the bfg parade in Guthrie, then UP a rainstorm preceded by the rolling
the capital, and how a wind and rain ; ol heavy eiouus of dust and when Gov. j
storm prevented the new governor ^teel had about half finished his ad- i,
from completing his inaugural address.; dress, the ram came down. It broke ^
Governor Steele was from Indiana , ut> the meeting in a hurry, aud the gov j i
appointed by President Harrison, and, I enior, as did every one else hunted -
as did many others, believed the Terri- | cover. The inaugural address was u
lory would become a slate within a never finished.
year or two. He was looked upon as a
lrat Published in Oklaht
Thursday January.
NOTICE.
|)on said Indebtedness, also tli
ne Hundred dollars ($100.00) u
table attorney's ice, uldo for
rtain uioitgag -
e defendants. Jo
At. L'\
tilt
w.
ity, Oklal
Ider
ta>
it Company, and ther
<ned to the plaintilT herein, u
Southwest Quarter (%) of
I wcnty-nine (29) and the North H
and Southeast Quarter (Vi) of tl .«
west Quarter ('A) of Section Thl
(32), all In Township Eighteen
North of Range Two (2) West
Indian Meridian in Logan county
homa. and containing 280 acres, i
•ess, according to the Governmet
y thereof, which mortgage sub:
North-
•iy-two
• to iti
! side
Lot 15 in bio
> in bl
and If in
ek 17, lot
block 11,
ot 1
WONDERFUL GLASS DOME OF THE PALACE OF HORTICULTURE, PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNA
TI0NAI, EXPOSITION, SAN FRANCISCO, 1915.
Palace of Horticulture, looking through the Court of Palms. This beautiful structure has a glass dome 185
feet high and 152 feet in diameter. Crowning the dome Is a huge basket. The general style of the architecture
is the French renaissance, with Saracenic modification. The extreme length of the palace is 072 feet and breadth
820 feet.
entire period of the Exposition, which
opens Feb. 20, 1015, a series of great
events, including sports and athletic
contests of many kinds conducted upon
a scale of great magnitude.
The Vanderbiit Automobile Cup
Race and the Grand Prix, the two su-
preme eveuts of the automobile year,
will be held upon a four mile course,
embracing a circuit of the Exposition
palaces, a spectacular background far
excelling in beauty and grandeur any
which ancient Home beheld during Its
historic chariot races. The Vander-
biit Cup Race will take place on Feb.
22 and the Grand Prix on Feb. 27,
1915. Great motorboats of the deep
sea cruiser type will race for a $10,000
prize from New York through the Pan-
ama canal to the Golden Gate. A se-
ries of International yacht races In
the twenty one meter class will be
beld in San Francisco bay. President
Woodrow Wilson, Emperor William of
Germany and King George of England
have each offered trophies in these
•vents. Swimming, water polo, fly
casting, canoeing, football, baseball
and long distance foot racing are In-
cluded In a series of more than 200 dif-
ferent kinds of contests President
Wilson himself will attend the Expo-
sition, and It is probable the members
of congress will attend In an especial
ly chartered steamer
Of international Interest will be the
greatest live stock show in the world's
history. More than $500,000 will be
awarded In prizes In a continuous live
stock exhibit. Rare and valuable
breeds of all kinds of live stock from
distunt countries of the globe will be
shown. Specimens of the famous
Chilllngham wild white cattle will be
exhibited for the first time. With the
exception of two specimens at the Lon-
don zoo. tills breed has never been
shown outside of Chilllngham park,
England These cattle are pure white,
with black noses, black tips to the ears
snd black horns An International
sheep shearing contest will be one of
the unique exhibitions
For the musical events there has
been built by the Exposition the mag-
nificent Festival lalsce upon the
grounds. This Is equipped with a won.
derfut pipe organ, upon which Mr. Ed-
win Lemare. world famous organist,
among other celebrities, will give a se-
ries of recitals The International Eis-
teddfod will at San Francisco com-
pete for $25,000 In cash prizes. More
than 20.000 slutrers will participate in
Imagine, for the purposes of illustra-
tion, the Interest, action and novelty
of ten great circuses like Harnum &
Bailey's combined Into a single "great-
est show on earth" and presented at
ten times the cost of the single pro-
duction and an 'dea Is gained of the
originality of this section. A total of
more than eleven millions of dollars
has been expended in its establishment.
The concessions. a9 these less serious
features of the Exposition are known,
Include a great open air panoramic
reproduction of the Yellowtone Na-
tional park and a similar representa-
tion of the Grand Canyon of Arizona,
presented by two of the transcon-
er arm, will raise sightseers more than
325 feet above San Francisco hay.
affording an unsurpassed view of the
Exposition City and the Golden Gate.
Apart from the amusements, con veil
tlons and congresses, the vast pageants,
the superb pavilions of the nations and
the magnificent state buildings, the Ex
position itself is a sljrht well worth
seeing. The giant exhibit palaces, the
loftiest and most Imposing exposition
buildings ever constructed, are In their
architecture representative of the finest
work of a commission of famous Amer-
ican architects, who freely collaborated
with distinguished members of this pro
fession abroad.
VAST TRIUMPHAL ARCH AT THE WORLD'S GREATEST EXP0SI
TION, THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION
SAN FRANCISCO, 1918.
Arch of the Setting 8uo in th6 west entrance to the Court of the Pnl
rente at the Panama-Pidflc International Exposition Surmounting the arch
la a group of statuary representing "The Nations of the West lu the middle
of the group Is an emigrant wagon drawn hy oieu. Hiding In this is the
figure of a woman, "The Mother of Tomorrow.' and h.v tin side are two chll
dren, "The Hope, of Tomorrow." Other Hgurea represvni an American in
dlan, • Mexican, an Alaskan and other American types
ua
of
probable candidate for the United
states Senate. At the end of twenty
mouths it was apparent that state-
hood for the young Territory was still
in the dim distance. He resigned and.«ciu
returned to Indiana, from where he!
was afterward elected to Congress for
several terms. Governor Steele was a
veteran of the civil war. e had declin-
ed appointment to the directory oi
uie Union t acilie Railroad soon after
leaving tne army. He 13 now governor
of the National Military Home at Mar-
ion, lnd.
i'or a year before Governor Steele
was appointed, Oklahoma Territory
had no laws. What regulation there
was resulted from spontaneous street
meetings neid in Guthrie, where every j
fellow had a vote wituout regard to
residence and without talcing into ae-
count previous condition of servitude. | non.
When a street meeting was held and a
question put for vote, people from tne
States would gather in spots and, eon-
ventiou-like, east their ballots orally.
It was Iowa or Kansas or Missouri, so
many votes for or against the question.
The majority ruled, and little grumb-
ling was beard.
With the coming of the Governor,
which brought within the Territory's
borders the first semblance of organ-
ized law, there was held a legislative
session, the members having been el-
ected under provisions of an act of
Congress. The first Legislature will
long be remembered from the fact that
it bad 100 days within which to legis-
late, and that it spent nearly all the
time trying to fix the seat of govern-
ment and place territorial institutions.
Not until the limit bad almost been
reached did it occur to the members of
the Territory that they needed a code
of laws. Formalities were quickly dis-
pensed with and copies of statutes
were ripped bodily from the codes of
other states. The civil code came from
Kansas, the criminal code from many
states, and these, with other laws,
were enacted in a hurry, without the
members knowing what they contain-
ed. in the jumble there was enacted
a law on marine taken from the State
of New York, a feature of which was
fixing the number of times steamboats
were to whistle in passing and the col-
or of lights sea-going craft were to dis
play. Some of the useless laws were
not removed from the books until codi
fers overhauled the territorial statutes
years afterward.
The coming of Governor Steele was
made a gala event in Guthrie. The man
who was to give the new governor a
start was Cassius M. Barnes of Arkan-
sas, himself afterward one of the ter-
ritory's governors, and now a resident
of Emporia, Kansas. Barnes was con-
nected with the Guthrie Land Office.
Shortly after daybreak one morning
there was a rap at the door of Barnes'
home, and when Inquiry was made
from within the caller announced that
he had come to be governor of the ter-
ritory.
"The people will be greatly disap-
pointed," said Barnes to Governor
Steele, "for they had arranged to give
you a welcome in style and a commit-
tee has been appointed to go to Ar-
kansas City to receive you at the Ter-
ritory boundary.
Not wanting to disappoint them Gov.
Steele agreed after a brief parley to
quietly get out of town, travel back to
Arkansas City and there await the ar-
rival of the reception committee. No
one knew that the Governor had been
in town until long after the reception
committee headed by Barnes received
him at the appointed place and escort-
ed him to Guthrie.
"The ceremonies of inauguration
were partially upeet by the freakish-
ness of Oklahoma weather," said Rep-
resentative Diet T. Morgan of Okla-
homa discussing the event, and who
attended it. "The day was bright, rath-
er warm, and a stiff wind had been
blowing for some time out of the South
west. That meant a switch in temper-
ature, but no one thought it would dis-
turb the occasion. A big parade was
organized with people in conveyances
First l'ublisned lu Oki.i
ihursuay Janu.i
PUBLlCA riUi
in Tne LibK ut Coui t ot
Oklahoma.
issali
eglster
ISO i iCt.
suci
oy
otiiied tnat
blopk 20, lots 1, 2. 3, 4, 7, 10, 17, tu"' 11
md 35 in block 45, lots 3, 8, J1, and lori-,Ver
22 iu block 40, lots 24 and ;> in l>lock 1111,1 ,l"1
47, lots 1, 11 and 12 In block 4S, lots f , 'JU!laKal
0, 22 and 23 in block 4'. and lot 43 In , • 1,1
block 50. You are further notified that . '
unless redemption iu inado from said
sale within sixty days from the date of "'J,,.."''1,
the first publication of this notice, a tax
deed will be demanded and will issue as
provided by law.
WILLIAM HARRIS,
Holder of Certificates.
ADAMS, Atty.
ipph
lit un
the
id agn
endahts and an
•state which tii
•lairn iu and
said propert
tin
ids tin
(3t)
published in Oklahoma State Registei
Thursday January 21, 1015.
notice—sheriffs sale.
satisfaction -
torney's fee, interest aud costs of s
all other proper relief. And d.-t
are hereby notified that Uieymu.si
the said petition filed as alores
the plaintllT, on or before the 4tli
March, 1015, or Maid pi tltion will In
I Judgment rendered as
in pr
for
order
>ut 01 the List
ly, Oklahoma, bearing 1
of January, A. D. 1015
ami now In my hands,
ay of July, 1014, In an ac
In said court, wherein 11
> Land and Loan Compi
plaintiff, and 1
C. (J. UORNOR,
Attorney for Plain
(ATTEST:)
WALTER If. HUMPHREY,
I Court Clerk.
(SEAL)
(4t)
First published In Oklahoma State Regit
Thursday January 21, 11115.
notice.
To J. 13. Jordan ^ and Edgar A. Bel
property situ
id in
a pe
al Ju
id State of Oklal
Lo
(7), Li
nst said
ditto
a, to-wit:
>ht (8) :i
t ) of Bel,
Nine
i con, ajiu to apply.' mo pio-
id sale to Hie pay men i of
lgmeiit in thu sum ol >71.oO,
is piayed lor 111 said petl-
i^ated January 27th, 1015.
WALTER li. ilUMl'HREY,
, Clerk Court.
iURFORD, AlAtiMS BL'Rroiu).
Attorneys lor 1'iaintiff.
(SEAL)
xsy MARTHA M. NEAL, Deputy.
(3t)
First published iu Oklahoma State Register
ihursday January, ^stn, loio.
NOTICE.
In The District Court of Logan County
Oklahoma.
F. L. Williams, Plaintiff,
Lytle, Defend-
to said W. G.
3d lot
•ounty
ere by
A. D.
rdliied that t
on the ltl
1012, sold
dered in
favor of said plaintiff
defendants, William O. Mitchell and
Helen E. Mitchell, lor the sum of Three
Thousand Ninety-eight and 41-100 dol-
lars ($3008.41),debt, bearing interest at the
rate of ten (10) per cent per annum from
the u.ite • thcicoi, and i'or thu sum of
Two Hundred Fifty dollars (|25u.oi) At
torney's fees and costs of su
Sixteen and 80-100 (110.80) L ... _
eluding the costs of this order of sale and ,ilu Hai . . .1 ""Vi
accruing comb, which unu wvro du- (A" "er®,^ ^ s'"d.
;'"S!5.a"?_ad.3-ti¥^ b_y.?uld.™u,t..toJ,e for the sum of 110.20 the amount of The
Accumulated taxes, penatlios costs and
barges then due on said lots and proper
treasurer of said county, after
due and legal notice of such sale had
first been given in the manne
ult" bi*«ii nt ll.,ne lLllui,etl by law, for the taxes leg-
niiiin.« in ully lovled thereon for the year mil
/ which taxes were due and unpaid, and
first lien on the real estate
ml herinafter described;
And, Whereas, it further appears that
ertlttcates of purchase for each lot
it was further ordered by said court in were duly Issued to said county and by\
s.dd action that an order of sale issue hu-U county duly assigned to the Logan
of^said court, directed to the Sheriff County Bank on the 36th day of May,
- . , , , nty Bank ua
ot said ' ounty of I.ottan, commanding 1913, for a sum equal to tho costs of
him to advertise and sell said real estate demptlon of the sumo at I'Us tllne
without appraisement, or so much thore- said a l«nmi>nts ol uuivi, w. ie
ol as may be necessary to satisfy said duly signed on the 20th day ot May 1013
Judgement, or so much thereof us may by fred W. Rltterbusch County Trans-
lie necessary to satisfy Bald Judgment, In- urer of said County, and duly :u knowl-
terest, attorneys' fees and costs and fosts edged on the 26th day of Muv l'J13 l,e-
of sale; and all the right, title, Interest fore it. D. Stewart, a Notary Public In
anil equity of redemption of said defend- and for County of Logan and state of
ants in and to said property, or any part Oklahoma (with his official seal at-
-s- tached).
t. And you are hereby further notified
subject to confirmation by tho court. that unless redemption of said lots from
And, Whereas, 1 am commanded in said sale Is made by you on or before
«... ™.„ot,8aid order of 8alu now ln my hands to sixty (60) days from the date of this
adjudging and' decreeing that said I adVert,Be and 8el1 8ald estate pur- notice, the undersigned, as the legal
tilt has a valid and perfect title to sua,lt to the order and Judgment of said owner and holder of said certificates of
'Court as aforesaid; purchase, will demand of the County
w. c. Searcy and L. o
ants.
i he State of Oklahoma,
Searcy and L. O. Lytle:
You will take notice that you have been
sued in the above named court and that
you must answer tne petition tiled by 1 uVereof as in cases of sales of
In'th'.MvITml'1!"""!" against you Ule executl0„ w|thout appraise
ill the above entitled action, on or be-
lore the 12th, day ol March, 1 i 16, or
said petition will be taken as true, and
a judgment will be rendered against
yo
ction twenty-nine, in township flf- - Now Therefore, Public notice is hereby Treasurer of the above
Jd County,
teen north, range one west of tne i. given that on the 22nd day of February, that he issuo to Logan County Bank tho
M., in Logan county, Oklahoma, and that l'JlB, ut the hour of 2 o'clock P. M., of undersigned, a proper and valid tax deed
you have no right, valid claim, title or H:11<1 da.>\ at the north front door of the for said lots as required and provided
interest in or to said premises, or any Court House in the City of Guthrie in by law.
part thereof; and a further Judgment ! said county of Logan, 1 shall offer for LOGAN COUN TY BANK, Guthrie, Okla.
auly quieting plaintiff's title t<> said . sale and sell at public auction, to the By It. J. CONNEWAY. President,
premises, and perpetually barring and i highest and best bidder for cash, tho V. B. Curl, Cashier.
enjoining you, and each of you, from real estate mentioned in said order of (4t)
setting up or asserting any title to, mort- sale and described as follows to-wit:- | -
gage on, or interest ln, said premises, Southeast Quarter (SE'/4) of Section
to plaintiff; and decreeing to j Fifteen (15) and the North Half of the
odve
plaintiff such other relief as may I
equitable and proper, with a recovery of
costs.
WALTER H. HUMPHREY,
Clerk of said Court.
H. M. ADAMS, Plaintiff s Atteorney.
(SEAL)
(4t)
First published in Oklahoma State Register
Thursday January, 28th, 1015.
NOTICE.
State of Oklahoma, Logan county, ss.
IN THE COUNTY COURT,
Notice is hereby given that on the
26th day of January a. Ij., 1!u5 Fred J.
Armstrong filed in tho County Court of
the County of Logan and State of okla-
homa, a petition praying for letters of
Administration to be issued to Fred J.
Armstrong upon the estate of Mary El-
len Small, deceased, late of tho County
of Logan and State of Oklahoma.
And pursuant to an order of said county
court Tuesday, the 9th day of February,
A. D., 1016, at the hour of 10 o'clock, A.
M. of said day, that being a day of the
regular January Term, A. D., 1015, of
said County Court, has been appointed
jus the time for hearing said application,
when and where any person Interested
my contest said petition by filing written
opposition thereto on the ground of in-
compency of the applicant, or may assert
bin own rights to the administration and
pray that Letters be issued to himself.
Witneess John I). Chappclle Judge of
the county Court of the county of Logan,
and the seal of the Court ;ittixod, the
25th day of January, A. D., 1015.
(SEAL)
JOHN D. CHAPPELLE,
County Judge.
BURFORD, ADAMS & BURFORD,
Attys. for Petitioner.
(2t)
notice—sheriff's sale
Whereas, It appears from an order of
sale issued out of tho District Court of
Logan County, Oklahoma, bearing <iato
the 21st day of January, A. D. l'.'lfi, to
talnlng 210 acres, In said county of anti ,low "l ,ny haud ' lhat
Northeast Quarter (NVi of (NEV4)
Section Twenty-two (22) all in Tow
ship Seventeen (17), Nortli of Range T
(2), west of the Indian Meridian, con
Logan, State of Oklahoma, or bo much
thereof as may be necessary to satis-
fy said judgement, attorneys' fee and
costs and costs of sale, and all the right,
title, Interest and equity of redemption
of said defendants in and to said prem-
ises, or any part 'hereof, as in
20th day of July, 1014, in an ac-
tion then pending in said court, where-
in Bartlett Brothers Laud and I/O an
Company, a corporation, was plaintiff,
and William O. Mitchell, Helen E. Mitch-
ell, R. I. Phillips and C. H. Serutchtield
were defendants, a personal Judgement
was rendered in said court in said action
sales of realestate on execution without , ,
appraisement, subject to continuation by defendant8, 0 ' ^uhell a'nd
han/l thin „Mitchell. lor the sum of Three
1 housand Sixteen and 40-100 dollars
Witness my hand this 21st day of Jan
uary, 1015.
W. E. B. SHERWOOD,
Sheriff,
GRANT REDMAN,
Under Sheriff.
Devereux Rlldreth, HIldreth.ETAOI Ool>4
DEVEREAUX & HILDRETH,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
($3016.40), debt, bearing interest at the
rate of ten (10) per cent per annum
from the date thereof, and for the sum
of Two Hundred Fifty dollars (1250.00 At-
torney's fees and costs ofsuittaxed at Sev-
enteen and 50-100 ($17.50) dollars in-
cluding the costs of this order of sale
and accruing costs, which sums were de-
clared and adjudged by said court to be
a first lien on the real estate therein
and hereinafter described;
| And, Whereas, it further appears that
Jt was further ordered by said >:ourt in
said action that an order of sale Issuo
out of said court, directed to the Sheriff
ndlng him
to advertise and sell said real estate
First published in Oklahoma State Register
Thursday January 21, 1015.
NOTICE.
State of Oklahoma County of Logan, ss.
IN THE COUNTY COURT.
In the matter of the estate of William sald co"ntY of Logan, <
W. Cotteral Deceased. to advertise and sell i
Notice Is hereby given, that Vorintha without appraisement, or so much there
E. Cotteral the duly appointed and qual- , ,as may be necessary to satisfy said
itied administratrix of the estate of Wil- lodgment, interest, attorney s fees and
Ham W. Cotteral, Deceased, has rendered COBts aml Ctsts of sale; and all the right,
and presented for settlement, and filed In title, interest and equity of redemption
said court her final account and report °' defendants in and to said prop-
of her administrations as such Admin- erty. or any part thereof, as in cases of
Istratrlx and that Monday, the ninth sales of real estate on execuUon without
day of February, A. D., 1015, being a appraisement, subject to confirmation
day of a Regular Term of said Court, hy the court.
to-wit: of the January term. A. D., 1015 A d, Whereas. I am commanded in
at 0 o'clock In the forenoon of said day, said order of sale now in my hands to
at the County Court Room in tho City advertise and sell said real estate pur-
of Guthrie in said County of Logaif has suant to the order and Judgment of said
been duly appointed by tho said Court, Court as aforesaid:
for the settlement of said account, at Now, therefore, public notice is hereby
'J | which time and place any person Inter- given that on the 22nd day of February,
if —■ i.. —I., - 8tate may appear " I
First published in Oklahoma State Register
Thursday January. 28th, 1016.
NOTICE.
Notice is Hereby Given, That In pur-
suance of an order of the County C(
of the county of Ix>gan and State
Oklahoma, made on the 25th day of'j,j8 exceptions In writing to the account said day, at tho north front door of the
January 1915. in the matter of the es- und contest the same. Court House in the city of Guthrie ln
tate of Euphrasia J. Clayton deceased, I jn Testimony Whereof I have hereunto said county of Logan, 1 shall offer for
t my hand and affixed the seal of said sale and sell at public auction, to the
sted !n
and file 1915, at the hour
clock P. M. of
administrator!
the undersigned, as th
of the estate of said deceased, will
at public auction, to the highest bid-
der Jfor cash subject to confirmation b
said county court, on Saturday, the 2Sr
day of February, 1015, at ten o'clock X
M.. and bids will bo received at the of
flee of J. C. Strang at Guthrie In said
county of Logan all the right, title, ir
terest and estate of the said Euphrasia
J. Clayton at the time of her death, and
all the right, title and interest has, by
operation of law, or otherwise,acquired
in antl to all the certain lots, pieces or
parcels of land situate,lying and being In
the counties of Logan and Oklahoma,
State of Oklahoma, bounded and described
ua follows, and upon the following terms
and conditions, to-wit: Ix>ts 13 and 14
la Block No. 4 City of Guthrie, Logan
county, Oklahoma. Northeast Va of sec-
tion 26, Township 15, Range 3 west, In
Logan county, Oklahoma. Subject to
life esttate of Ge«rge E. Clayton therein.
Lots No. 1, 2, 3 and4 in A. H. Clas-
n's 5th Addition to the city of Ed-
mond, Oklahoma, Oklahoma county.
Dated tills 28th day of January 1915.
GEO. E. CLAYTON.
(2t)
Couit this lOtii day of January 1015.
(Signed) JOHN D. CHAPPELLE,
(SEAL) C>unty Judge, sale and described as follows, to-wlt:
MILTON BROWN, Atty for Adinx.
(3t)
Lot One (1), and the Southeast Quar-
ter of the Southwest Quarter and the
North-half of the Southwest Quarter
First published in Oklahoma State Uegistor 'SK'^ ,??a i°',sw' 1
Thursday January, 21, 1U15. Section Klfteen (16), Township hevou-
PUBLICATION NOTICE I U' " (1,)' N°rth IU"'*e TWO (2), VVe't
PUBLICATION NOTICE. tlie [n(j|un Meridian, except H. R.
In the District Court of Logan County right of way, containing 152 10-100 acres.
Oklahoma. Ln said county of i.okui], state of Okla-
Conneticut General Life Insurance Co- homa, or so much thereof as may be neo-
mpany, a Corporation, Plaintiff. | ,-ssary to satisfy said judgement, attorn-
, . ... „ , X.?; % a n * , , ey's fees and costs, and costs of sale,
John W. Fowler. Ellen M. Fowler, his anj a,j tfle riKj,t. title, Interest and
wife, Henry P. Kramer, a widower, John eMU,ty of redemption of said defendants
ir , ^ ttl? Harmke Beninga, his jn 1U>(1 (o premises, or any part
rr!' . j thereof, as in cases of sales of real
, ye named defendants are here- t 8tate 0u execution without appraise-
the Hlstilet Court of liogan county, Ok- -'<• <° confirmation by said
ISS ,a„nd.a.Sa CoPr,nVn 'Zd ftleciuie" ' ua~.
praying Judgment against the defendants, , y' w Pi R SHRHWOOD MhcrlfY
John W. Fowler. Ellen M. Fowler and! W' b h n a v t i m vm
Henry P. Kramer, for the sum of | GRANT REDMAN.
Twenty-flve Hundred Fifty-one and pBVEREAUX & HILDRETH,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
55-100 doIlars(|2551.55)wlthInterest there-
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1915, newspaper, February 4, 1915; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169475/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.