Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 255, Ed. 1 Monday, January 23, 1905 Page: 1 of 4
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POUR O’COCK Et3ITIOO>
ouaivm p.R Daily Publicist
VOLUME 3
PRETTY GIRLS.
Mush Candy at Sheriff Martin s
Expense.
CHANDLER, OKLAHOMA TERRITORY MONDAY. JANUARY 23, 005.
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
- - A ~ ^ ^ m mw+ A /T V
“We want a dollar, Mr. Martin.”
The genial new sheriff of Lincoln
sounty looked somewhat perplexed.
“Why-—er-—”
“It's the rule, Mr. Martin,” and
Miss Ellliott showed all of her ivory
teeth in a merry laugh. "Every new
man at the court house has to treat
the crowd. ”
Martin jerked out his check book,
wrote a check for the amount and
made his escape. A few minutes later
Misses Wolf, Reed, Holcomb, Barns,
Riner and Elliott were in the vault
Mustered around a box of sweets
which Uncle Joe Baxter had brought
in, while some of the men were there
too, helping to demolish oranges,
bananas, gum drops; etc
Judge Wagoner was the first that
the girls got after and Col. Rea got
"stuck" Friday.
This completes the list of new
stticials. The outgoing officials will
probably take the cue and make the
girls set up the cigars.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy the
Best Made.
“In my opinion Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy is the best made for
aolds,” says Mrs. Cora Walker of
Porterville, California. There is no
doubt about its being the best. No
other will cure a cold so quickly. No
other is so sure a preventive of pneu-
monia. No other is so pleasant and
safe to take. These are good reasons
why it should be preferred to any
other. The fact is that few people are
satisfied with any other after having
once used this remedy. For sale by
A. D. Wright.
HAS COME AT LAST
✓
St. Petersburg, Jan. 23. This has
been a day of unspeakable horror in
St. Petersburg. The strikers of yes-,
tprday, goaded to desperation by a
day of violence, fury and bloodshed, j
are in a state of open insurrection j
against the government. A condition
almost bordering on civil war exists
in the terror-stricken Russian capital.
The city is under martial law, with
Prince Vaellchikoff commander of
over 50,000 of the emperor’s crack
guards. Troops are bivouacking in
the streets tonight and at various
places on the Nevsky Prospect, the
main thoroughfare of the city. On the
island of Vaisilistrov and in the
industrial sections have thrown up
barricades which they are holding.
The empress dowager has hastily
sought safety at Tsarskoe-Selo, where
Emperor Nicholas II i9 living.
Minister of the Interior Sviatopolk-
Mirsky presented to h.s majesty last
night the invitation of the workmen to
appear at the winter palace this afer-
noon and receive their petition, but
the czar's advisers had already taken
a decision to show a firm and resolute
from and the emperor’s answer to
100,000 workmen trying to make their
way to the palace square today was a
solid array of troops, who met them
with ritle, baytnat and sabre. The
priest. Gopon, the leader and idol of
the men, in his golden vestments
Passions of the People Finally Aroused-
Peaceful Presentation of Petition Met
With Bayonets—Streets of St.
Petersburg Barricaded-Sebas-
topol Ablaze..
Ask for tickets. They are worth
saving. Every *1 worth is good for
sc on the purchase price of any the mBtll ln ms gum®.,
queensware in the store. J. W. Feu bmdinl, aj0ft the cross and marching
quay & Co. • w28tf l _
St. Petersburg, January 23-Special—Tearing up Ban
saw & Baltic R’y confirmed. Father Gopon, Revolutionist
leader, stands firm for overthrow of autocracy. Reports
from Vatican Rome say, notwithstanding efforts, Catholics
stand for revolution. Impossible to keep them from joining
popular movemet.t.
St. Petersburg, January 23—Special— Conditions in
St. Petersburg at highest tension Rioters entering center
of the city singly and in small groups. Fears are enter-
tained for conttagation. Troops man all bridges. Sebastopol
ablaze.
Moscow quiet. Undercurrent sentiment against gov-
ernment intense. Government ordered headquarters
National Labor Union in St. Petersberg closed- Order was
complied with voluntarily by the strikers.
1 authorities, while they seem to realize
j ihe magnitude of the crises with which
! the dynasty and the autocracy are
j confronted on account of today’s
movements, are paralyzed for the mo-
. incut.
A member of the emperor’s house-
hold is quoted as saying today that
i this conflict will end the war with
j Japan and that Russia will have a
’ constitution or Emperor Nicholas will
1 lose his head.
The fashionable hotels on either
side of the grand Morskaia were
crowded hut the doors were locked
except to well known visitors. An
orator addressed the impromptu meet-
ing:
“Comrades: We came humbly and
peacefully to meet the emperor and
lay our grivences before him; hut the
emperor refuses to see us, and instead
soldiers were sent to shoot us down.
Then all I can say, is, he is no era-
peror.”
“Down with the emperor,” shmited
the crowd.
We have Buffered under the sway
THE MODERN PIED PIPER
[Kate Rk hartlN O’Rare.]
CHAPTER III
THE CANDY MAKERS.
(Continued from yesterday.)
On one of those rare, sunshiny
mornings so beautiful as to make even
New York look less ugly and the long
rows of tenements less like prisons, l
walked the narrow cross streets of the
west side looking for employment. I
could see the beautiful waters of the
Hudson dancing and glistening under
the warm rays of the morning sun,and
each gleaming ripple seemed to call to
me to forget the wrongs aad sorrows
of the working girls and come and
play. The old instinct of my pioneer
ancestors surged o’er me and for the
time made me loug to cross the placid
river, plunge into tho woods on the
other sho -e and be once again a care-
free chil' of nature; to forget if only
for a day the wrongs, the crimes, the
deadly grind of our civilization'
Crushing down the longing for free-
dom, for the woods and the gleaming
river, I turned and entered a great, new
building,at the door of which was dis-
played asign, “Young Girls Wanted.”
1 walked down the long factory to the
office in the rear, and asked a little
man, who sat in a queer box-llke desk,
for. the superintendent. He replied
that he was the superintendent and
inquired what I wanted. On being in-
formed he questioned me as to ray
J UHUVl »“v ~ -—J , _1
. . I fix noricncp. ftblllty uml so forth unci
°'"Down' w'ith'the'Chinovnfk*" & j «»»* J
, , , . lied that l supposed that what
“We hoped for redress, but hope is. let,lleu ‘T, . ...
waffes he paid would be more to the
! iw) looser possible; we can win our j _ «i
~ M point than what 1 wanted. He apol-
rights on J 'S 1 ogetically stated that they were paying
! "Down with the autocracy, yelled o«e.....^...... ^ l() lhe t)e9t
the crowd.
California Fast Mail
VIA SAN gA FE
Another new fast passenger train for Cali*or“ap
Speedily, certainly, comfortably—the way Santa
PreedTair Tars and toarist and standard sleepers
„a this train. Tis for you to say which tram you
take The time's just the same.
Leaves Kansas City a. *40 p. m. Arrive California
less than two and a half days. Tis also a good
train for Colorado.
j ■ u-t HI“ t-H #>ti about our service. I b< re ar n
■ • oSieTsanVt 1A- trains for California perha| > you I
fiVe to hear about them. Call •. or write me. U-
; lost rated descriptive literature free.
but four dollars a week to the best
girls; if 1 cared to go to work for that
lie would be glad to put me on. I
replied that I was ready to go to work
at once, and he called the elevator
hoy to take me up to “Miss Ella.
Continued tomorrow )
____ i “Our only chance of redress is from
at the heads of thousands of workmen created the frozen river and canals j resen,ative of the people. (“Long
miraculously escaped a volley which on the ice by twos and ilirtt s burn i ~ lhe constitutional assembly”),
laid low half a hundred persons Tl.e to the palace square where they were ^ ^ f ^, t() say ^ to arm8i
j total number killed or wounded is 500, sure the emperor would he present to j w arrag.„
although there are exaggerated figures hear them. But the street approaches--
placing the number as high as 5,000. , to the square were cleared by volleys
have .laid down its arms, obeyed ’ . , j Hunt’s Lightning Oil is an exception j paz0 ointment fails to cure in any
orders. But the blood which crimson- while they retreatet . i >.n r j ConidenCe in it is nevsr misplaced— QO malter 0f how long standing,
led the snow has fired the brains an i the crowds, telling them the emperor 1 dlgappointment never follows its use.: (! to 14 daV8. First application
1 paigloni of .he Strikers and turned' had foiled them and they had come to j U is surely the grandest emergency ^ e##e a„a re9t. 50c. If your
P „ • , m heaars ' act Men began to build barricades. | remedy now obtainable. For outs,
women as well as men into wild beqsts, | act. g burns, sprains, aches and pains, I
and the cry of the infuriated popu- | using any material that cams to hand, I
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protud-
r SAMUEL LARIMER, —
Travline Passenger Agent Atchison, Topeka & Santa he R y.
TOPEKA, KANSAS.
Begin the
New Year
Right.
$1,00000
The One Thousand Dollars represents
the amount you can have m Sixty Months i
you will invest $10.00 a month in the
Chandler Building and Loan
Association
—33 cents a day—
You can have $1,000 in *4 months by in-
vesting $0.00 per month-20cents a day. You
-an have *500 in si months by luvesting 10
cents per day. Open an account NOW witn
the Chandler B. & L. Association.
The Association was organized for the benefit of the public.
„ I and even chopping down telegraph
lace is for vengeance. | e 1 K
The sympathy of the middle classes j poles,
is with the workmen. | It is rumored tonight th:V M. Witte
If Father Gopon, the master mind | wm ne appointed dictator tomorrow,
of the movement, aimed at open revo- j bul the report is not confirmed. The
lution, he managed the affair like a _________
geniu6 to break tne iaith of the peo-1
pie in “the Little Father." who they
were convinced, and whom Father Go*-1
pop had taught them to believe, would !
right their wrongs and redress their J
grievances. ‘
Gorsky, the Russian novelist, ex-
presses the opihlon that today’s work
will break this faith of the people in
A*emperor-, , - .
’’ He said this evening to the Asso-
dated Press:
“Today inaugurated revolution in
Russia The emperor’s prestige will
, b) irrevocably shattered bv the sbed-
| ding of innocent blood, lie has a:ien- j
j ated himself forever from his people. | A
I Gopon taught the people to believe j
I that an appeal direct to the 1'Little,
j Father” would be heeded. They have
been undeceived. Gopon is now con
vinced that peaceful means have failed
i and that the only remedy is force
I The first, blood has been shed, but
more will follow, it is now the peo
pie against the oppressor, and the
battle will he fought to the hitter end
l The militarv authorities had a firm
grip on every artery in the city. At
daynreak guards, regiments, cavalry
and infantry held every bridge acros
the frozen Neva,the network of canal
which interlaces the city and the ga
leading from the industrial section,
while in the pala e square, at the
stn'-i c uter, were massed dragoon
regiments, Infantry atul CossaiAs of'
lie guards. Ban . d from the bridges
and gates, fben, wniffw and rbiMi-*,
know no equal
Geo. K. Hadilocl,
Doniphan. Mo.
“tlu'."* Early Risers
The famous little pills.
.druggist hasn’t it send 50 cents in
stamps and it will be forwarded
post pail by I’trU Msilolns C > , 3
| Louis, Mo.
I Lunch 5c. Bottled beer 10c at the
Club Saloon. 4
If a daily paper is worth anything fo the
town and community, patronize Jit.
Phins aro un foot to improve the Daily Publicist in all do I art.m-nts and to
(.xtend its cii uniat ion until it goos into -very borne it. th- city. A band
some illustrated monthly magazine, the Pictorial Review, will be fursish.rl
new subscribers to the Daily, at the price of the Daily alone.
Aiiti Your Name to Our List While I his Offer is Open.
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French, Mrs. W. H. Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 255, Ed. 1 Monday, January 23, 1905, newspaper, January 23, 1905; Chandler, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913658/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.