The Washington County Sentinel And The Weekly Enterprise (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, June 28, 1912 Page: 3 of 4
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FRIDAY. JOE as, 1012,
fine WASHINGTON ODtJXTf SENTINEL.
HH
PAGE THREE.
J| SNAP SHOTS11
Tho Democrats have been laughing
at the Ilepubllcana since the Chicago
convention, but it things at Balti-
more continue to go as they have
started, the Republicans will have a
chance to laugh.
This “colyuni" ought to be big
enough now to till the space under
the Boston Store's ad.
The Enterprise has a list of travel-
ing story tellers who drop In with a
new one every now and then. One of
these is A. T. Anderson of Carthage,
Mo., who travels in this section for
the Pennsylvania railroad. Another
is “Duke” Hodgins, who travels for
the Topeka Paper House. “Duke”
brought tiiis one in this morning. A
Kansas sheriff took two crazy men to
the state Insane asylum the other
<!h.v. The superintendent asked about
them. “That one,” said the sheriff,
“is crazy about religion. He talks it
all the time." The superintendent
sent the man to a ward and asked
about the other. “He is crazy about
politics.” said the sheriff. “He just
yells all day long, ‘Teddy is our man.
Teddy is our king. We want Teddy,’
and he has been at that for a month.”
The superintendent looked the man
over and said: “Turn him loose. He
isn't crazy. He is just a damn fool.
He’ll he. all right in a couple of
weeks.”
Two Bartlesville men were going
home last, night and both had had too
many drinks. Fearing trouble with
his wife, the first said: “Now, I’ll
walk ahead of you and you tell me
whether I’m walking straight
enough.” The speaker pulled himself
together and after making an effort
to walk straight asked his friend his
opinion. “Oh, you walk straight
enough,” said the friend, “but who's
that drunken loafer with you?”
new location. The reader may use his
own judgment in believing this.
The Dewey celebration is getting a
lot of free advertising over the coun-
try about its "bet” with Lloyds on
the weather that will prevail July 4th.
John Flinn says he wishes he had
thought of it first and he would have
used it for the Guy Hickman opening.
Spreading reports calculated to in-
jure others and do you no good isn’t
going to make you sleep any better at
night and isn’t going to hurt the vic-
tim of your stories if he is the right
kind of person.
Every woman likes to think she is
a light sleeper even if it does take a
“Big Ben” to get her out in time to
get her husband's breakfast in the
morning. % jII!ilVIV
A person who hasn’t the best past
in the world always takes comfort in
thinking there is a skeleton in every-
body else's closet.
If Literary Digest ever has any
thing in it worth stealing, this de-
partment is going to commit theft
by way of getting even for the Snap
Shot the Digest printed without
credit. ,
Fighting the devil with fire Is a
losing game unless you have as
much ammunition as the devil.
Yes, Maude dear, there Is a differ-
ence between honest toil and swindl-
ing your neighbors, but some people
don't seem to understand it.
Col. Priestley better bring the re-
mains of his “houn’ dawg” home and
let us see how badly he has been
kicked about in Chicago.
You can forgive the man who
makes a fool of himself, but never
the man who makes a fool of you.
If you would enjoy the diversion of
fly-swatting keep plenty of filth
around you so that you will not have
to go away from home for the pleas-
ure.
With mud ready mixed and so
handy it seems that a new brick
plant ought to he organized to take
over the Bartlesville waterworks.
The new party gives promise of a
strong organization with I the can-
didate for president and Mo for vice-
president. While no announcement
has been made of the slate for cab-
inet members, it is conceded that both
ITs and Me will have important port-
folios. A local man is also pro-
minently mentioned for a cabinet
position.
Since the Chicago convention set
the precedent of stealing before the
very eyes of the public, it was “up to”
the burglar in llaupt’s jewelry store
last night to be “regular,” and he was.
He did his work with the public look-
ing on, and should be excused because
of the Chicago precedent.
It is said that a local physician has
effected an almost miraculous cure of
one of his patients who was for
several years afflicted with love sick-
ness for her husband.
Fisherman are famed for the won-
derful stories they tell of their feats,
but there was never a fisherman liv-
ing w ho could relate a tale that would
have anything on the up-to-date bear
stories told of the freaks played by
cyclones. The latest prank to be play-
ed by the wind comes from Greeley,
Colo. The nest of a hen made In
an empty cracker box was lifted by
the wind and deposited, with hen and
thirteen eggs, on the top of a rural
mail delivery box, a quarter of a mile
away. The nest was lifted from the
ground and blown thirty feet In the
air. aud finally dropped on the mail
box nndisturbed. It is said that the
hen is very well satisfied with her
The toughest, buckingest, falling
backwardest and rollingoverest darn-
ed bronco that will be entered in the
contest at Dewey is named Bill Taft.
If Roosevelt attends and participates
in the contest, as is expected, it is
planned to have him ride this famous
bronco, and the cowmen arc betting
that Teddy can do it; provided, that
the bronco will bo “plum regular and
honest" and not lie down and roil
over his rider.
/ —..I. i. I
If Bryan does make that speech be-
fore the convention at Baltimore—
(Continued in our next)
The government booze sleuths have
reason to be jealous of the local of-
ficers, who keep the town so dry that
upon every visit here the government
fellows can find nothing to seize.
You may have observed that the
busiest man never has time to com-
plain of the monotony of existence.
It is always the man with the most
money to spend seeking a variety who
complains loudest about the monotony
of his life. Pursuit of pleasure as a
steady job seems to be about the hard
cst sort of drudgery. The man who
runs a wheelbarrow at the smelters,
pushes a pen or does some of the
other hard work for ten hours a day
never has to worry about the monot-
ony of life.
“We had intended spending this
summer in Europe,” said the town
loafer, “but my wife is so afraid of
water since the Titanic went down
that l almost have to chloroform her
to get her into a bath tub.”
pede the Chicago convention for Roos-
evelt could not be heard when she
tried to talk. There Is no necessity
for a pretty woman to be heard. Her
good looks generally aro eloquent
enough.
Besides if the pretty woman in Chi-
cago could have been heard site prob-
ably wouldn't have said anything
worth repeating.
If a girl who is on the. market has
a skinny, run-down-at-the-heel look-
ing mother, she always explains to in-
quirers that she lakes after father.
A mother can train up iter son in
the way he should go, but he gener-
ally goes Romo other woman's way a
few years later.
We have no objection to a man be-
ing Good and Pure until he has been
at it so long that he begins to Inti-
mate that he is the only one in his
class.
“The peach crop is going to be
large,” declares a government horti-
culturist, who has investigated. We
prefer 'em not too large. Say about
a 22 waistline.
There are people who declare that
the Republican party is about to die.
If that racket 1n Chicago was being
made by a bunch of cats In your
back yard you wouldn’t think the cats
were about to die would you? Well,
then.
Senator Dixon sprung, “humanly
impossible” in Chicago the other day
and that seems to be about the new-
est thing pulled off there.
Confession: I was afraid of the
school teachers when I was a boy
and have never gotten entirely over
It.
Blihu Root told the Chicago con-
vention that he was the friend of both
parties. He better look out. because
a man who stands between two gangs
like those in Chicago is liabie to lose
an ear or two before the case goes to
the jury.
Friends of a local candidate say he
Ir just running for office because he
feels that he needs the exercise.
A Bartlesville Democrat is opposed
to amending the Oklahoma constitu-
tion. He says he used to have a good
constitution, but the doctors amend-
ed it until it is full of holes.
Practically every man in town at
some time during sessions of the na-
tional convention appeared in front of
the Enterprise office to road the
bulletins, and not one of them but
could tell in advance just what the
convention would do and then what
the people would do at the fall elec-
tion, except one man who spoke
Polack—and he had no one to talk to.
But that’s all right; it is the con-
stitutional prerogative of overy Ameri
can to know cverthing.
The following ad. appears in the
Elcctra, Tex., News: Wanted—a wife,
by a “rough neek.” Must be good
looking and willing to loan the price
of license. Address X, care News.
program to the visitors of Dew'ey on
July 3. 4, 5, ti.
B. R. Greene and R. W. Porter,
special edition men, of Kansas City,
arc managing the special.
They Aspire fo Office.
Six more candidates for county of-
fices filed yesterday with tho county
election board. They arc as follows:
J. G. Gunter of Oohelata, Democrat,
for township clerk of Lincoln town-
ship. Roscoe Hayes of Oohelata,
Democrat, for treasurer of Lincoln
township. N. H. MeClarney of Ooliel-
ata, Democrat for constable. C. L.
Kshelman of Dewey, Reublican, for
precinct committeeman. J. M. Couch
of Vera, Democrat, for treasurer of
Vera township. R. A. Dunlap of Vera,
Democrat, for Justice of the peace.
A parrot can say “Polly wants a
cracker,” but no satisfactory evidence
has ever been produced to show that
Polly knows a cracker when she gets
it. Many men talk about things they
know nothing more about than the
parrot does about a cracker.
When the whole blame world seems
seems out of plumb,
And business on the bum;
A two cent grin and a lifted chin,
Helps some, my boy, helps some.
ADVERTISED LIST.
Letters remaining uncalled for at
Bartlesville, Oklahoma postofllce for
the week ending June 22nd, 19I2.
1 Abott, Henry
2 Alien, J. E.
3 Bailoy, Tom
4 Blair, R. E.
5 Carpenter, Arthur,
ti Carpenter, Arthur
7 Davis, Lloyd
8 Davis, William
9 Denham, L.
10 Floury, F. F.
11 Fullhar, Mrs. I .aura
12 Greenwood, C. F.
13 Harroll, Miss Lena
Harrison, Mrs. Mammle
Hollingsworth, Mrs. Alice
Jones, W.
Steel, Mrs. J. W.
Killian, Will
Kiser, Frank M,
Larry, Mrs. Bertha
Lemmcr, Miss Emma
Levan, C, C.
Maynard, C. J.
Meador, Author
Owens, Marvin
Robinett, E. J.
Ross, E. G. F.
Soott, Author
Stewart, Mrs. L. G. W.
Stone, Mrs. Emma
Williams, Corry B.
Williamson, Thomas
Young, Sophia Mrs.
Please mention “Advertised List”
when calling for mail on above list
and also give date of list and number
of letter wanted.
Respectfully,
MILLARD T. KIRK, P. M
filed In the office of the Clerk of the
District Court.
Now therefore, the undersigned
Clerk of said court hereby gives not-
ice as ordered by said court to all
persons Interested, if any, opposing
•ucli final dissolution of said the J.
D. C. Oil Company, a corporation, and
that they must file with the Clerk of
said court their objections if any in
writing, on or before the expiration
of thirty-five (35) days from and after
the date of publication of this notice,
or be forever barred from making
any objections to any order so made
by the said court in said matter.
After the expiration of said time,
the court will make such other and
further order in the premises as may
be necessary.
Witness the signature and senl of
the Clerk of the District Court of
Washington County, Oklahoma, this
28th day of May. 1912.
L. C. POLLOCK,
Clerk of the District Court of Wash-
ington County.
tlon, and that they must file with the
Clerk of said court their objections
if any in writing, on or before the
20th day of May, 1912, the Rhlnehart
expiration of thirty-five (35) days
from and after the date of publica-
tion of Uiie notice, or be forever
barred from making any objections to
any order so made by tho said court
in said matter.
After tho expiration of SHid time,
the court will make such other and
further order In the premises as may
be necessary.
Witness the signature und seal of
fbe Clerk of the District Court of
Washington County, Oklahoma, this
28th day of May, 1912.
L. 0. POLLOCK,
Clerk of the District Court of Wash-
ington County.
A monkey haB got a lot of evolut
ing to do before he has pants pockets
to hold peanut and things.
The female aviation business
doesn't seem to be very popular. Un-
til the beginning of this week there
were only three licensed female avi-
ators in the country. Now there are
only two.
There is a w'ise looking, fat gazabo
stopping in Bartlesville just now who
just runs the Enterprise bulletin
board from in front of the window.
He hears on the street what some-
body has read in the bulletins, then
comes to the office and glances at the
window, and says: “I heard on the
street that a man up town got a tel-
egram about that just a while ago.”
Then he explains the whole gist of
things to the crowd. You can always
find this sort of a public instructor
everywhere you find a crowd.
The dispatches say that the pretty
woman In white who tried to stam-
A Mighty Good Horse.
Col. Amos McCampbell, of Harrods-
burg, Kentucky, while at a race track
was approached by a negro tout who
strongly urged a horse to win the
next race.
The colonel is short and very stout.
The tout was enthusiastic, but col-
onel did not appear to be impressed.
Finally, in desperation, the tout
said: “Why, Cunnel Amos, look
hyah. Dis boss is so good today yo’
yo’sclf could rldo him an’ win wif
him.”
And the colonel put down a bet.
Jilted Married Man Kills Self.
Loa Angeles, June 26.—Within a
few hours after his attentions had
been rejected by a young woman
whom ho had Bought to marry, not-
withstanding he had a wife, Lewis
Corey, member of a Lima, 0., family,
committed Buicide in a room at the
Hotel Hayward last night by drink-
ing carbolic acid. In an adjoining
room sat Corey’s wife entertaining
several friends.
Miss Gertrude Balke, who is said
to have furnished the motive that led
Corey to kill himself, lives at the
Florence apartments here.
“I once was engaged to Corey,” said
the girl. “We had set June 1 for our
wedding day. Mr. Corey told me
he had never married the woman
with whom he lived. The night be-
fore our proposed wedding he called
on me. I told him 1 had.changed my
mind and would not marry him be-
cause he had been drinking too
hard. He then threatened to kill
himself.”
Corey had been in Los Angeles
throe years. He is the eon of C. H.
Corey, formerly superintendent of the
C., H. & D. railroad at Lima, 0.
A BQ1I0UPJ01VENIR
Dally News of Dewey Gets Onf Spec-
ial Edition.
The most complete edition that has
ever been published by a Dewey
newspaper is now on the press in the
office of the Dewey Daily News.
This special edition, when com-
pleted, will contain from sixteen to
twenty pages and is very nicely illus-
trated, showing a great number of
business buildings, and residences of
Dewey, and also a number of scenes
from the oil fields of Northern Ok-
lahoma. Bartlesville is also well rep-
resented in this edition, a number of
business men having already reserv-
ed space.
The sperial edition is devoted to
and contains the official program of
the KarlyDay Amusement Association
being distributed as a souvenir and
Marriage licenses have been issued
to the following: C. B. Crane, aged
23, and Ruth Cartain, aged 18, both
of Bartlesville. David Jones, aged 27,
and Mrs. Leon C. Jones, aged 21, both
of Ramona.
(Published in the Bartlesville Weekly
Enterprise and Washington County
Sentinel May 31, June 7, 14, 21 and
28, 19l2.)
In The District Court of Washington
County, Oklahoma.
In the Matter of the Applieation of
The Kannkn Oil and Gas Company,
A Corporation, lor Dissolution.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that on the
20th day of May, 1912, the Kanaka
Oil and Gas Company, a corporation,
duly presented its written applica-
tion to the District Court of Wash-
ington County, Oklahoma, requesting
that said corporation be dissolved,
and that Its affairs be closed up ac-
cording to law.
Notice Is hereby given therefore
that said application has been receiv-
ed by said court, and ordered to be
filed in the office of the Cleric of the
District Court.
Now therefore, the undersigned
Clerk of said court hereby gives not-
ice as ordered by said court to all
persons Interested, If any, opposing
such final dissolution of said the
Kanaka Oil and Gas Company, a cor-
poration, and that they must file with
the Clerk of said court their object-
ions if any in writing, on or before
the expiration of thirty-five (35) days
from and after the date of publication
of this notice, or be forever barred
from making any objections to any
order so made by the said court In
said matter.
After the expiration of said time,
the court will make such other and
further order in the premises as may
be necessary.
Witness the signature and seal of
the Clerk of the District Court of
Washington County, Oklahoma, this
28th day of May. 1912.
L. C. POLLOCK.
Clerk of the District Court of Wash-
ington County.
Published In the Washington coun-
ty Sentinel and Bartlesville Weekly
Enterprise June 7, 14, 21 and 28, 1912.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. __
In the matter of the estate of Mar-
garet, Swooney, lato of the County of
Washington, State of Oklahoma, de-
ceased.
All Persons having claims against
said Margaret Sweeney, deceased,
are required to exhibit the same, with
the necessary vouchers to the under-
signed, duly appointed am! qualified
executor of tho will of said deceas-
ed, at the office of H. H. Montgomery,
Room 22, Johnstone Bldg., Bartles-
ville, Okla., county of Washington,
and State of Oklahoma, and that four
montliB after the first publication of
this notice has been limited, as the
time for creditors of said deceased,
to exhibit and prosent their claims
against Bald estate.
Dated this 4th day of June, 1912.
JAMES SWEENEY, Executor,
Published In the Bartlesville Daily
Enterprise June 8 and in the Bartles-
ville Weekly Enterprise and Wash
ington County Sentinel June 14, 21
and 28.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
State of Oklahoma, County of
Washington, 8S:
In the District Court of said county.
Idell Mullally, Plaintiff,
vs.
Michael D. Mullally, Defendant,
Said defendant, Michael D. Mullally
will take notice that he has been
sued in the above named court by
Idell Mullally, that upon this date
she has filed her petition against you
in the above entitled court and cause,
praying that she may be granted a
divorce from you, and you must an-
swer the petition filed therein by said
plaintiff on or beforo the 19th day
of July, A. D., 1912, or said petition
will be tak$M aa true, and a judg-
ment for said plaintiff in said action
for divorce will be rendered accord-
ingly.
Dated this 7th day of June, 1912.
W. D. COPE,
Attorney tor Plaintiff.
Attest: L. C. Pollock,
Clerk of the District Court.
(SEAL.)
(Published in the Bartlesville Weekly
Enterprise and Washington County
Sentinel May 31, June 7, 14, 21 and
28, 1912.)
In The Dlr.rict Conrt of Washington
Pmnty. Oklahoma.
in The Mater of the Application of
The J !V C. OH Company, a Corpor-
atlon, for Dissolution.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that on the
20th day of May, 1912, the J. D. C.
Oil Company, a corporation, duly pre-
sented its written application to the
District Court of Washington County,
Oklahoma, requesting that said cor-
poration be dissolved and that its af-
fairs be closed up according to law
Notice is hereby given therefore
that said application has been receiv-
ed by eaid court, and ordered to be
(Published in The Washington Coun-
ty Sentinel and Weekly Enterprise
June 14, 21 and 28, 1912.)
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
State of Oklahoma, County of Wash-
ington, ss.
In The District Court of 8»ld County.
Bertha Harris, Plaintiff,
vs.
Guthria Harris, Defendant.
Said Defendant Guthria Harris will
take notice that he has been sued In
the above named court upon the petl
tlon of Bertha Harris and must ans-
wer the petition filed therein by safd
plaintiff on or before the 25th day of
July, A. D.j 1912, or said petition will
be taken as true, and a Judgment for
said plaintiff in said action for di-
vorce will be rendered accordingly.
Dated this 8th day of June, 1812.
W. B. Allen,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
(SEAL.)
ATTEST:
L. C. Pollock, Clerk of the District
Court.
which Is July 1st, 1912, at which time
any and all persons Interested In any
of said eslates may appear and be
heard as to any objections they have
to the allowing of the final accounts.
Dated this 1 Oth day of June, 1912.
James T. Shipman,
County Judge,
(Published in the Washington County
Sentinel and the Bartlesville Week-
ly Enterprise June 14, 21 and 28,
1912.)
Ill The District Court of Washington
County, Oklahoma.
The National Supply Company of
Kansas, Plaintiff,
vs.
S. E. Bell, C. F. Whitehall!, R. V.
Myers, Octo Oil Company, Beeler.
Campbell Supply Company ami Oil
Well Supply Company, Defendants.
PUBLICATION NOTICE.
No. 1897.
STATE OF OKLAHOMA. To whom
may concern and especially to S.
E. Bell and C. F. Whit shill, defend-
ants above named, GREETING:
You and each of you are hereby not-
ified that you have been sued by the
plaintiff above named, In the above
entitled court, and that said above
named plaintiff upon to-wit, the 22ud
day of February, 1912, filed in said
court its petitiou against you and
each of you and that you must ans-
wer said petition on or before the
25th day of July, A. D., 1912, or the
petition will be taken as true and
Judgment rendered against yon and
each of you in favor of the plaintiff,
as prayed for in its petition, for the
sum of $759.40 with interest thereon
at tho rate of six per cent per annum
from the 26th day of July, 1911, and
for the costs of this action and for a
further judgment, order and decree
of said court foreclosing its material
man’s lien upon the following des-
cribed lands situated In Wasington
County, Oklahoma, to-wit:
South Half (S%) of the Southwest
Quarter (9w(4) of the Southwest
Quarter (Sw*4) of Section Four (4),
Township Twenty-Soven (27), Range
Fourteen (14) East, and
Northwest Quarter (Nw(4) of the
Northwest Quarter (Nw‘,4) of Section
Nine (9), Township Twenty-seven
(27), Range Fourteen (14) East, con-
taining in all Sixty (60) acres.,
and the material and property located
thereon used in connection with the
oil and gas lease owned and held up-
on said lands by you, the said S. E.
Boll, and for the sale of said proper-
ty as by law provided, and forever
barring and foreclosing you, the said
defendants, and each of you from any
right, title or Interest therein.
Of all of which, you will take due
notice and govern yourselves accord-
ingly.
Tho National Supply Company,
of Kansas.,
By W. N. Banks, Its Attorney.
(SEAL.)
ATTEST:
L. C. Pollock, Clerk of the District
Court.
(Published in the Washington County
Sentinel and the Bartlesville Week-
ly Enterprise June 14, 21 and 28,
1912.)
In The Dlxlrirl Court YYilhln And For
Washington County, State of
Oklahoma.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
Fred B. Woodard, as guardian of An-
na Anderson, a minor, Plaintiff,
vs.
Marguerite Harrington, A. R. Har-
rington, A. Lorenze, Hattie Lorenze,
Byron H. Smith, The Arkansas Val-
ley Oil Company, a corporation,
Joseph Stern and the Bartlesville
State Bank, Defendants.
Said defendants Marguerite Har-
rington, A. R. Harrington, Hattie Lor-
enze and Joseph Stern will take not-
ice that they have been sued in the
above named court, together with the
above named defendants, and that
said suit Is brought upon a promisory
not for $3,000.00 executed January 19,
1911, by A. R. Harrington and Mar-
guerite Harrington to the above nam-
ed plaintiff, due one year from date
and bearing Interest at the rate of
eight per cent per annum from date
until paid, and said defendants must
answer the petition filed therein by
said plaintiff on or before the 27th
day of July, 1912, or said petition will
be taken as true and & judgment for
said plaintiff in said action for $3000.-
00 and Interest thereon from the 19th
day of January, 1911, at eight per cent
per annum, and $50.00 attorney’s fees
and other costs of suit, and a further
judgment and decree of foreclosure
of mortgage executed January 19,
1911, by Marguerite Harrington and
A. R. Harrington to the above named
plaintiff, covering the south 25 feet of
Lot 2 In Block 27 In the City of Bar-
tlesville, Oklahoma, will be rendered
accordingly and said defendants will
be decreed to be forever barred from
any lien, estate, Interest In, or title to
said premises and said premises be
ordered to be sold to Batlsfy said In-
debtedness, Interest, costs and attor-
ney's fees.
Dated this 12th day of June, 1912.
H. H. Montgomery,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
(SEAL.)
ATTEST:
L. C. Pollock, Clerk of the District
Court of Wasington County, Oklaho-
ma.
(Published In the Bartlesville Week-
ly Enterprise and Washington
County Sentinel June 21, 28 and
July 5, 1912.)
Before Mark L. Hackett, a Justice of
the peace of Bartlesville Town-
ship, Washington County, Okla.
S. D. Reynolds, Plaintiff.
va.
J. G. Prather, Defendant.
Said defendant is hereby notified
that on the 12th day of June, 1912, an
order of attachment, for the sum of
$3.90, was Issued by the above Justice
of the peace against his goods, in the
above entitled action; and that said
cause will be heard on the 11th day
of July, 1912, at 10 o’clock a. ra.
J. G. PRATHER, Plaintiff.
Attest: —
Mark L. Hackett,
Justice of the Peace,
(Published In the Bartlesville Weekly
Enterprise and Washington County
Sentinel May 31, June 7, 14, 2i and
28, 1912.).
In The District C«nrt of Washington
County, Oklahoma.
In the Matter of the Application of
The Rhlnehart Oil Company, a Cor-
poration, for Dissolution.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that on the
Oil Company, a corporation, duly pre-
sented its written application to the
District Court of Washington County,
Oklahoma, requesting that said cor-
poration be dissolved and that its af-
fairs be closed up according to law.
Notice is hereby given therefore
that said application has been receiv-
ed by said court, and ordered to be
filed in the office of the Clerk of the
District Court.
Now therefore, the undersigned
Clerk of said court hereby gives not-
ice as ordered by said court to all
persons interested, if any, opposing
such final dissolution of said the
Rhlnehart Oil- Company, a corpora-
(Publlsed in the Washington County
Sentinel and the Bartlesville Week-
ly Enterprise June 14, 21 and 28,
1912.)
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS.
All persons interested in the fol-
lowing named estates, to-wit:—J. L.
Moore, deceased, Granville Moore Ad-
ministrator, Julia Fronson. deceased.
Maggie Bronson. Administratrix,
Mary Elliott, deceased, Wm. C. Lucas
Executor, F. T. Dienst, deceased, J. L.
Overlees, Administrator, Freeman A.
Gilkey, deceased. Olive Gilkey, Ad-
(Published In Bartlesville Weekly En-
terprise and Washington County
Sentinel June 21, 28 and July 5 and
12, 1912.)
NOTICE OF LETTING CONTRACT
FOB BRIDGE.
Linettfn Township.
Notice Is hereby given that th*
Board of County Commissioners of
Washington County, Oklahoma, on
the 22nd day of July, 1912, at the of-
fice of the county clerk of said coun-
ty, will open bids and let a contract
to the lowest responsible bidder for
the construction of a bridge over Fish
Creek, between Sec. 4 & 9, Township
Twenty-five (26) Range Thirteen (13)
In Lincoln Township, Washington
County, Oklahoma, according to said
contract and drawing, plans and spec-
ifications for said bridge now on file
in the office of the County Clerk of
said County at Bartlesville, Oklahoma.
All bids for the construction of said
bridge shall be sealed and Bled with
said County Clerk before four o’clock
P. M., on the 20th day of July, 1912,
and each bid ahall be accompanied
by a certified check in the sum of
ten per cent of the amount bid, made
payable to the Board of County Com-
missioners of Washington County,
Oklahoma, which shall be forfeited in
the event the successful bidder tells
or refuses to enter into a contract
for the construction of such bridge
or fails or refuses to give the bonds
or comply with any of the require-
ments hereinafter specified.
The successful bidder shall give a
bond with two or more good and suf-
ficient sureties to be approved by such
Board of County Commissioners,
which bond shall be given and pay-
able to said county and conditioned
that such contractor shall construct
such bridge according to said plans,
specifications, maps, drawings and re-
quirements of the contract with said
County, and that such bridge will be
constructed and completed within the
time specified in his bid.
The successful bidder shall also
give a bond with good and sufficient
sureties payable to the State of Ok-
lahoma in a sum not less than the
amount of the contract price, condi-
tioned that such bidder shall pay all
indebtedness incurred for labor and
material furnished in the construc-
ministratrix, Ivy J. McCay and Ben- tion of said bridge.
jamine F. McCay. Minora, Ida B. Mc-
Kay. Guardian. C’tariea C. McCay,
Minor. Ida B. MuGay, Guardian, are
hereby notified that final account of
Administrator and Guardian of each
of said cases has been filed in this
conrt and that said estate is now
ready for settlement and distribution
and Uiat said account in each matter
stands tor hearing on the first day of
the next regular term of this court
The Board of County Commission-
ers reserve the right to reject any and
all bids.
Dated this 11th day of June, 1912.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISS-
IONERS OF WASHINGTON
COUNTY. OKLAHOMA.
BY A. C. WARD, Chairman.
Attest: (Signedt J. C. Mitchell, i
Clerk.
(SEAL.) * ’v,!
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The Washington County Sentinel And The Weekly Enterprise (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, June 28, 1912, newspaper, June 28, 1912; Bartlesville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc951121/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.