The Yukon Sun And The Yukon Weekly. (Yukon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 9, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1901 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Yukon Sun and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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| MULVEY MERCANTILE COMPANY’S 1
| Big Holiday Room = Making Sales. |
t We want more room, as we have ordered more goods. You want the goods and 2
sE we need the room, therefore if our goods suit you, why can’t we trade? Anyway 2
^ come in and look around and it will be a pleasure for us to make you prices. 3
Cloaks*
Late styles in Raglans and Automobile Coats for ladies.
A few Short Jackets at rut prices. Children's Raglans and
Box coats, rangihg in price from $1.25 on up.
Dress Goods*
Calicos, Outings, Binghams, Broadcloth, Suitings, Hen-
riettas, Silks, Satins, Velvets—in all the latest shades and styles
Groceries*
The skill of the cook is demonstrated by the food she
serves. If you want the best, the freshest and the cheapest in
Groceries yon will surely find them at Mu Ivey’s'.
Qu
eensware*
Our Queensware side is full to overflowing. There is noth-
ing nicer for holiday presents than something in lliis line
.Dishes, Stoneware, Glassware, Lamp's, Ac.
We want
to make
this
Holiday
•
month the
busiest of
the year.
WHY?
Because we
have the best .
goods, the most
goods, and the
lowest prices
we EVER had.
•
Overcoats*
We have a splendid line of Overcoats for Men’s and Boys,
ranging in price from $2.00 up to $lf).00.
Clothing*
Our Clothing and Furnishing Goods departments are now
overstocked ami we must get rid of soiye of these goods, -if
j not at our price, then at your own.
Hardware*
If you need any
. Now is the time you are looking for Heating Stoves. Wo
have them from $2.50 up, for either wood or coal. Our cook
stoves and ranges cannot heat. It will more than pay you to
.inspect these goods and get our prices.
* “Nick the Tinner” is always on hand,
rootling, spouting, eh', just give him a call.
Harness*
• .
We .have a full line of Harness, Straps, Buckles. Collars,
and so forth. A first-class harness man in charge.
I MOLVET MERCANTILE CO 1
E ■ YUKON, OKLAHOMA. I
TCT-ip N/T TTKQTsJ CTjkT the ^sidest-s message. lets keep santa claus.
AND WEEKLY ! ^ resident Roosevelt s first nies- Modern reformers have acquired
____ ' LY‘___ sage to Oongrose, which was read the habit of attacking dear old
Bert Maxwell, Editor and publisher, before both hrtmehes of that rep- j Santa Claus at the annual approach
resentutive body on Tuesday, is
not so “strenuous” ns might have
Entered at the I’ostottico at Yukon, Oklahoma,
as second-class mail matter.
SulMci'iptIon Hates:
One year.................. $1.00
Six mouths......................... 50
Three months........„.. ... 25
of Christmas. They say. he is a
myth -a lie, some of them de-
been expected; yet it deals with elare—and should be abolished.
Advertising iates:
Space.... twk
4 wks
13 wks
52 wks
1 col a mu i? 1.0(1
$5.00
#15.(K)
8 00.00
.76
2.fM)
T.'Kl
30.00
', “ .40
1.50
4.50
18.00
One inch. .15
.50
1.50
O.IKI
\ UKON, O. T.
FRIDAY, DEC. 6.
many of the important national
problems in a manner that leaves
no room to dqu-bt that the Presi-
dent has a will of his own.
Specific and definite advice is
taxes, the extension itf the merit
system, and other matters upon
which there is no party or frac-
tional division; but the President
We do i»ot seek to defend old
Santa as a model of truthfulness,
and we admit that tiis very exis-
tence hangs on the slender thread
of mythology. But what are the
given with regard to the Nicarau- reformers going to do about the
gua canal, the suppression of an-J thousand and flue other myths
arciiy, the reduction of revenue | that surround present-day religion
and literature?- Are they going
fo teach their children the mean-
ness and selfishness of this wicked
world from thevradle to maturity?
know that in the campaign of 18% J „f victory can we have under the
the Palmer and Buckner ticket | leadership of those'who conducted
earned but one'precinct in the j the Painter and Bn-kner part v to
I mtcl Stntna m.malw so disusterous a defeat ?
Anti-spitting ord'nances are
now becoming the fad in many
cities and villages. It i« said that,
it is tiie tobacco spitiers who are
aimed at. principally ouiyg to the
ladies' skirts coming iM contact
witn the destestable cum[ mind. It
is. indeed, a shame. No one
should unload his tobacco extract
United States, namely, Dudley
township, in Haskell county,
Kansas. The vote there stood:
Palmer and Buckner, fi; McKin-
ley and Hobart, 2: Bryan and Bew-
ail, 1. A render of the Common-
er sends in a statement signed by
the county clerk of that county to
the effect that Dudley township
'went democratic this year by a
majority of seven.
.1 o-.-mvw CAIHU'
The attention of (lie Chicago u.P°n the public walks, not-car
THE PRESIDENT DID RIGHT.
For some unknown reason the
.State Capital criticises President .................. ,.,0
Roosevelt for removing Governor j is somewhat evasive as to many I Do tuey propose to cast aside all
Jenkins and continues to defend j „f the problems upon which legis-; of the beautiful illusions of good-
the latter in his shady trunsac- lation is most necessary. He says ness and unselfishness and eon-
tions relating to the sanitarium. ' ' * * *
In its leading editorial Tuesday
the Capital said:
amt more so for Governor Jt
the trusts should he subjected to front, the child with the stern
investigation by the government— | spoiisibilities of life before it is
that publicity is the only sure old enough to grapple with them?
It is unfortunate for the territory remedy" for them -yet. he insists We hope not. As children grow
"'s' V.l that the h iuli tariff wall sluill not *1..... i.....
I t ---- ' *•**•-*
President Roosevelt took the .view hr ’ *,ilt 1 l»e l'itglt taritl wall shall not into then and women they learn
did of the charges filed against the gov be tampered with. He says the soon enough aye too 'soon_the
li;hi,ii.v,:i"0 '■l;.....■,..............
cut motive in lii* sanita/ium action. I* 1,1 1 ls# 1)111 1 11 tlieuf. world. No wonder they cherish j
They think he Tiriuly believed he was yet he does not say whether it is t he days oftlieir childhood as a
au«DK for the hostel oft he territory the governments policy to keep happy dream. Old Santa Claus
them as dependent colonios, or to is one of their happiest recollec-
give their inhabitants the rights liunH. Let the reformers turn
Chronicle, the New York World,
tlie Louisville Courier-Journal
and other gold standard papers is
called to this fact. While they
are “pointing with pride” to vic-
tories won by the re-organizers,
let them "view with alarm” the
recapture,of this gold standard
stronghold, which became so .con-
spiciuus five years ago.
The gold standard papers have
magnified every victory which the
re-organizers have won since
now let them bow in humiliation
over the sweeping defeat that lias
robbed them of the only precinct
ticularly on account of its nasti-
ness. The question of befouling
the ladies’skirts ought not to en-
ter into consideration. There is
no more necessity for women to
wear skirts which will drug on the
walk.than there is for men to
chew tobacco. If their skirts are
not mopping up tobacco juice tliflv
are brushing up sorjiethuig else
equally as objectionable from a
sanitary standpoint.—Exchange.
The Cherokee council protests
against statehood. Of course.
Every councilman lias a job with
and tilt wards of the sanitarium.
Just why “it is unfortunate for
ronneu mem or tiie only precinct , ‘ ......... 11 "ii
which their party has ever carried [a S” '^ached Jnst ,,s Hie Dawes
Ordinarily the change of a pro- il1 have. State-
...... ......." not be i7 matter of |'vmiid end the political exi#-
cinot would
national significance, but the
change of the only precinct that
the Palmer and Buckner ticket
the territory” ye cannot under- ... • , *........................... *«*»
stand. Furthermore,, the people V7 ‘77 ‘"'T7 ('ons,,lu',.u" their attention to the immortality carried is certainly a serious blow
who know the details of the sard- , . n in in . >u sonu I ung of the soul, or the evils of oscula- j to the men who carried on that
tariura steal do not believe Jen- i * ‘H'“udate our morcha.it tion, or some other harmless sub-'
kins was innocent. Ho simply 1 "'•l 1 "* • ' 1 " ‘ l'’1 hl,0‘'ly jed; but lets keep old Santa
used the power of his high .dlel" r‘' '-V ° ”7- 7 ^
to put money into his own pocket. ^7"^ ."".““T™ slupl,u,lller,i
and this at the expense of the peo- h-V rodoc.ng the tariff and in-
;(*roAKing commerce.
pie. Perhaps il would be "unfor-
tunate” if the dealings of some ,77 '“lviBal,ilit'V a,lmi"in*
more of the high officials of (Ikla- 7 " *'"7 "r a,,*v mr ,Bnitor>’
statehood was not discussed. Afr.
high
iioina were investigated
We believe the President did
exactly right in removing Jenkins
and in frankly stating his reasons
lor doing so. It may serve as a
warning to other politicians* who
are “feathering their nests" at the
] ublio crib.
imique campaign offramp and do
ception. The men who did the
most talking for Palmer and Buck-
tier voted'the republican ticket,
as did all whom they could se-
cretly influence. The reorganiz-
ers are being led by those who
tenoo of ninety-nine out of every
hundred of the officeholders now
in the Indian territory. It might
do more for some of them; it
might give them the benefit of (l
course of instruction at Leaven-
worth or Coin in bus on account of
grand larceny of Cherokee funds.
\ iixitia Lender,
RUBHING IT IN.
In view of the fact that “re-
organizers” of tiie democratic
party made a failure at the recent
............................. elections in several stales, W. J , . .. --------^ Al„ asunuming announce-
Roosevelt says, however, that the Bryan has been saying some pretty •" mippoit it while they voted the ment is matte that the aimnxl
■ .41.1______,.i ... .i remit) bean ticket \Vh«i u-m»iwJ.i ... ., uum
(f Great Britain can keep .her
“reconcentrnt.ion” camps in South
Africa tilled up, she will, event-
either voted for the ticket that car-1 ually, be able to'conquer the com,
ned but one preymet, or pretended J try. The astounding announce
time hnsarrived for the
cutting things about tiie re-organ-
govoru-
an .
individual and not an a ntemlier of j '^trt)l>ghold Cajitured,” he rubs
a tribe. Some interpret this to ‘saH >" their wounds tlirough this
mean that the President favors editorial in last week’s Com-
the admission of Oklahoma and 'moner:
1 The readers of the Commoner
merit to deal with the Indian as an I *ZH1S- I mler tho heading, "Gold
Indian Territories as one state.
republican ticket What will the death rate in ........ camps • mom,
democratic party he it they secure | U.e adults is 2d I ,-er thousand’
control of the organization? What while among the children it reach ’
promise of relief can the party
give to the people nt large if the
politics of the party are controlled
by bolters who have shown no re-
pentanco since 18%? What hope
es 4ii;i per thousand! It was on-
account of this atrocious practice-
upon the part of the Spaniards in
Cuba that the United States fin-
ally interfered Exchange.
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Maxwell, William Albert. The Yukon Sun And The Yukon Weekly. (Yukon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 9, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1901, newspaper, December 6, 1901; Yukon, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911779/m1/4/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.