Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 293, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1905 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Chandler Publicist and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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,. v v:v »AV
I. ;
\
'When the Skin
Gets Rough
When the skin gets rough
or hard, when the hands
get chapped or the lips
cracked a few applications
of
Cuti-Balm
•.ti *
Will quickly heal the skin
and leave it soft, smooth
and silky. Nothing better
made.
Corbin &. Lynch
Dross Rets *nd OpUdara
■will more than equal the coat of!
the bridge.
What, with the splendid school
buildings, electric lights, tinej
business blocks, steel standpipe, |
and the magnificent plants of t he j
oil mill and pressed brick plants,
and this immense new viaduct,
seen from the trains and dei>ot,
the investments pay for them
selves in the value of advertis
ing the town receives from them,
even aside from their transcend*
ant usefulness.
Chandler has been very quiet
while otlier towns have been rip-
ping the atmosphere vrith self-
adulation. Hut when all has been
said and done it is only neces-
sary to look around and take an
inventory of our many striking
advantages to be able to win even
the proverbial Missourian by
“showing him.”
To Cure a Cold <n One Day. Courr House Barber
Tftke L§ ■ at I vt I Iromo Qu n n« Tab-
lets. All druggists refund the monev
if it fails to cure. fc. W. Grove’s sig-
nature is on each box. 2oc.
The Chandler Bus Line
FRISCO SPECIALS
Chandler Daily Publicist.
Pabll.b.d .T.rr »»»» »* Sun<,*r-
MK. v. H. Editor and Publisher
KATE RICHARD CHARE. Associate Editor
'WAITER OLDS. Bittiness Manager
Second-Class Colonist Rstes to
California, Arizona, New Mexico,Old
Mexico and Texas Points.-From
March 1 to May 15, 1905, one way sec-
oad-class colonist tickets will be on
sale to California common points, also
to intermediate points in above states
and territories, rate of 12a from Chan-
dler.
publicist ’phone
Dallr*r«d by carrier, per week
» Year
Six adonihe
Three Month*
OUR VIADUCT
It should l>e encouraging to
the men and women who have
chosen Chandler as their home
to look around and see the evi-
dences of progress which greet
the eye on every hand, and men
tally contrast the Chandler of
today with the town it was eight
years ago when, on March .i0,
1H97, the memorable cyclone had
done its work, laying the little
city desolate, killing twenty peo-
ple and injuring scores.
Chandler had about 1.000 peo-
ple in those days. It was sur-
rounded by a practically un-
broken country; poverty was on
every hand and those who were
not well supplied with funds be
fore taking up their residence
here had a hard and bitter strug-
gle of it.
Today Chandler is a live, pro
gressive city of 3,500 inhabitants.
It has a population that is sec-
ond to none in the west in intelli-
gence, energy, hospitality and
liberal-mindedness.
It has thn-e tine school build-
ings and a corps of teachers that
would bt‘ a credit to any com
munity.
It has a waterworks system
that means that" property ts
reasonably secure from fire;pub-
liciy owned and administered for
the benefit of the citifetiship.
JU building material as
good as any that exit*, not at
doors, but on nearly every
i*rre. Many beautiful business
blocks testify to the utility of
Chandler's quarries and brick
clay.
And now one more monument
to the progressiveness of the
town is rapidly assuming shape.
A modern steel wagon and foot
viaduct, with length of 300 feet,
and with its top 1 beams a maxi
mum distance of *0 feet from
the ground, is being thrown
across the Frisco tracks and the
big draw on east Ninth street.
This bridge will prove to be
one of the best investments ever
made by the municipality.
One Wav Secofad-Class Colonist
Kates to the Northwest.—From March
1 daily to May 15, 1905, one way sec-
ond-class tickets will be on sale at
following rates: To Billings. Mont.,
and intermediate points on Nor. Fac.
Ry., *24.45; Hinsdale, Mont.,on Great
I Nor. Ry. via St. Paul, *31.46; Living-
ston,Logan,Gardner and intermediate
^ ■* points on N. P. Ry., *25; Ogden and
Salt Lake City, Utah, Pocatello,".Ida
and intermediate points, *25; Helena,
Butte, Anaconda and points on Gt.
Nor. and Nor. Pac., *25; Spokane,
Wash., and Nor. Pac, main line
branches, Thompson Falls, Mont.,
and Mullan, Idaho to EUensburg,
Wash., inclusive, *27.50: Portland,
Ore., Tacoma, Seattle, Wash., and
Vancouver, B. C., *30.
.... I Or
14 00
a.oo
1.00
General assembly Presbyter i a n
church.—Fort Worth, Texas, Mav lb-
20, 1905. Rate of one fare plus *2.00
for rouna trip. Tickets on sale May
16,17 and 18, final return limit May 31,
1905.
Inauguration Ceremonies.—W ash-
ington, D. C., March 4th, 1905.—On
Feb. 96th to March 2nd, 1905, inclusive,
tickets will be on sale at one fare plus
•2.00 for round trip with final return
imitnot later than March 8th, 1605.
Mardi Gras Festivities.—New Orleans,
La., and Mobile, Ala., March *-’, '05-
Rate of one fare plus *2.00 for round
trip. Tickets on sale Feb. 28 to March
«th, 1905, inclusive. Final limit March
25, 1905, if extension is secured at des-
ination. ___
Around t»he
Courthouse
LICENSES ISSUED.
MARCH 14.
Frank Johnson, 44, (colored) Car-
ney.
Drusllla White, 50, (colored) Car-
ney.
An agreeable movement of the bow
els without any unpleasant effect is
preduomt by Chamberlaise's Stomach
and Liver *blets For sale by A. O
W right,
.J. O. LAV,
, •*-' >»« * .
Auctioneer.
Firm uaf Step Sal** * Speaafty. Swtufsc
loo Gulftnted. Terms t per cent.
Call at Carr & Johnson’s Impleme
Store, South P. O. and Get Dates
CHANDLER, OKLA.
,, »t4S44 444H4444*‘4t444«^
' H. G. LEE '
AUCTIONEER
AT CHANDLER
Will cry sales anywhere in r,
the county. It is not necessary A
to have my picture at the head *
~ of this ad .as I am better look- £
1 ing than I was last year. Office *
3 at A. D. Wrights Drug store. *
see me before you get out your *
bills. •
The cost, $7,100, raised by the - a
issuance of bonds, means that|>”**«*««*«*««*"** *
the municijtality is taxed about
10 cents per year for every man,
woman and child in order to en-
joy s public benefit that once
q*ed will be considered indis
pensabfe.
It is safe to say that the »p
ptertation of valaes In the city
CHEAP MONEY
,, * »
When in need of Short Titne
or Farm Loans see
Will call for Passengers or
baggage from any part, of
the dt-y. Leave orders at. tne
St. Cloud Hotel, or Phone 92
GEO. W BATEMAN
Shop
Donaldson .v Jackson, Proprietor.
EVERYTHING FIRST CLASS
\Ve Give Our Patrons th
Dr. Carroll Rogers
DENTIST
Rooms J and 2 Frazier Building
Are You
DISSATISFIED
with Your
OCCUPATION?
f
Best to Be Had
0. J. Shaffer, Manager
1 One hundred and sixty acres of land
in the fruit belt of Missouri, 50 acres
in cultivation, 50 acres of pasture and
balance good timber, to exchange for
city property See W.E. Willoughby,
with Lincoln County Abstract Co.,
for particulars. 285t4
HOLLISTER S
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets
\ Busy Medimne for Bqij People,
triage Ooldea Health and Renewed Vigor.
▲ specific for ConsLiQaUon, Indigestion. Live
xnd Kidney Trouble*, rimple§. Ecxema, Impure
Blood. Bad Breath, Sluggish Bowels, Headache
,nd Backa^e. It s Rocky Mountain Tea in tab-
n, Ss cents a box. Oenutnemade by
*n«------------„------ .
>t form, 8b cents a box. Genuine mi
tloLusTER Drug Company, Madison, wl*
iOLDlN nuggets for sallow people
Offices ft* {Chandler and
WettsVm, Oklahoma • Ter
loir
2 w S £.--.
EUGENE VICTOR
i * \ t- < v
nt
Greatest Living Exponent
of the Science of
a
SOCIALISM
Will deliver a Lecture on
“Socialism and the Trusts,,
at the Egbert Opera House
in the City of Chandler,
3 .1
Monday
March
at 8 o'clock in the Evening
All Good People
May find by Coming and
Hearing, what Socialism Is,
Who are Its Friends, who are Its
Enemies, what it Has Done, and
what it is seeking to accomplish
Here’s an Opportunity
to Hear the Real Truth
About this Sublect. Maybe you II like the proposition. And if you
really don't like it, AFTER YOU KNOW WHAT IS, just think how
much better you will be able then to tell your friends wherein
the Socialists are wrong and why they should be suppressed. It
will be worth the time and the two bits, in any case-
Reserved 5eats, 25 cts
General Admission, 15 cents a*
Tickets at Corbin & Lynch’s
i *' t ■ * +J
Every mar, who has ambition is dissatisfied: rot
necessarily disgruntled or discouraged. « a
content but dissatisfied because he ..ants to go
“gheT The right Kind of dissatisfaction ,s a good
-,gn-it is a sign of a man who »ill maKe progre^.
V* man wno jets left behind in the race for sue-
c^s is the man Who is content to drift along with
the current.
It is the mission of the International Correspoi d
ence Schools to hel-> the man who is dissaUsfied-
the man who wants to tetter himself.
These Schools, through their system of inslntct-
ion by *1 offer a way by which every ambitious
man may anility, in his spare time, for promotion
or a more profitable occupation, or to rOTiwice
worK at atbetter salary than if he started without
training.
That this system is practical, efficient and ad-
equate is attested by tne fact that over joo.ooo
students have enroUed with the schools Since
their inception is years ago. and by the thousand,
of stories bf success furnished by graduates who
have taKen high positions after receiving their d-
plomas. The accounts of the rise of some of these
students read like romance.
courses am ineypen^. ^ from »g
over the
Decide
fill in
will
up with alltextbooKs furhished. ted or
position whic^ro ,mayrCfgosegl Atte
what the Schoou-
INTERNATIONALlCORRESFONDENCE SCHOOL.
BOX :99. SCRANTON. PA.
please send
t c <r " a
i’ssSS'Si
Bookkeeper
/tenographer
Advertisement writer
Show Card Writer
Windov'
>w Trimmer
Mech, Draughtsm
Ornamental designer
Illustrator
Civil Service
Chemist
Textile Hill / Jpt
French I withphon-
/panish | ograph
Electrician
Elec. Engineer
Elec Lighting/upt.
Mechanical Engineer
/urveyor
/tationery Engineer
Civil Engineer
Building Contractor
Arch. Draughtsman
Ardhitect
/tructural Engineer
Foreman Plumber
Mining Engineer
i
Name-
/treet and No,.
City----
_/ tate
d280t6W43t*
The Colonel’s W aterloo.
Colonel John M. Fuller of Honey
Grove,Texas,nearly met his Waterloo
from liver and kidney trouble. In a
recent letter he says: “I was nearly
dead of these complaints and although
I tried my family doctor he did me no
good, so I got a 50c bottle of yonr
great Electric Bitters, which cured
me. I consider them the best medicine
on earth and thank God who gave
you the knowledge to make them.’,
Sold and gnaranteed to cure dyspep-
sia, biliousness and kidney disease,
by A. D. Wright, druggist, at 50c a
bottle.
A Good Route
to Try
FRISCO
SYSTCM
It traverses a territory rich in
undeveloped resources; a territory
containing unlimited possibilities for
agriculture, horticulture, stock rais-
ing, mining and manufacturing. And
last, but not least it is
The Scenic Route
for Tourists.
t
The Frisco System now offers the
traveling public excellent service and
fast time—
Between St Louis and Kansas
City and points in Missouri, Kansas.
Arkansas. Oklahoma, Indian Terri-
tory, Texas and the Southwest.
Between’ Kansas City'and points
in Tennessee, Alabama. Mississippi,
Georgia. Florida and the Southeast.
Between Birmingham and Mem-
phis and points in Kansas. Arkansas.
Oklahoma, Indian Territory. Texas
and the West and Southwest.
Full information as to route mid
rates cheerfully furnished upon appli-
cation to any representative of the
Company, or to
Passenger Traffic Department,
Commercial Bvjtldlng,
Saint Louis.
east BorNft.
Il'J Ea.t.-rn Kipren.
414 M.leor......
444 Local Frleght......
/ \
I 418 Meteor u'Jn/vn
,411 Oklaeontit Kijm****..................f>:3M pm
44.3 Local Frleght........................12:05 p m
..T2*.05 pm
.... 7:1 ft p mi
..12:0ft p in
SOUTHWESTERN DIV— GUMHIUE DlST
Leave Daily
4"1 Guthr1»*!’a**4*fiiKrr..............—6:30 am
453 Mixed Train ..................... f?iV» p m
EAST BOUND
Arrive Daily
4K* St. I.on1*arwt K (\ Expr^M — i6:V» pm
Mixed Train . »*«•«« - —
? i
> i
- — ~ — s - “■ --..• ■ • ■........ 11 ,.40 A lit
Through Poll-man and chair car t<* M
Iwonl* Mo . maklnir cloe**-connection tor ap-
pelate L<irx4>ui ead^onib
Far Ertaer*partieTTtupoo or com*
pond rrUh,
A J JUrnnWf, I a*. «l Aneirt
( haanrrr..*>fe1»>
f
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French, Mrs. W. H. Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 293, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1905, newspaper, March 15, 1905; Chandler, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911534/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.