Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 21, 1895 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WANTED
Country Correspondents.
We want a coirespondont from cver.v
County and Neighborhood in
Oklakoma for the
WEEKLY - STATE - CAPITAL.
We ore desirous of making a first-
class farmers paper out of the Wkekly
StatuCatitai ■ WefurnlshtheWeeklj
paper, stationary and stamps free to
eoraespondents. If there is no cor-
neighbo-*-"-J
send us
eoraespondents.
respondent from your neighborhood
write 11- a few items, send us your
name and we will put you on the free
list and send «">' stamps and station-
ary.
Static Ctpital.
ONE CENT A WEEK lor
a year, will get you the
WEEKLY <>K L A H () M A
STATE CAPITAL —Eight
pages—48 columns ot the
:est reading matter every
,-eek S«>nd it to your out-
hide friend and inform him
of Oklahoma. Fifty cents
one year.
ABOl'T REED AND McKlNLEY.
Incidentally with tlie meeting of
the national committee in Washington
on the loth inst. a crowd of enthusi-
astic McKinleyists descended upon
Washington and opened
ters for the purpose of pushing along
the boom of Ohio's favorite son, which
they consider not a good thing but the
best thing of its kind now on the road.
They found plenty of sympathizers in
Washington, as few men have more
REV. WATERS CAUGHT.
Rev. Waters of Chicago, has been
caught in a complete theft of a beau-
tiful third of a column of one of the
best of Dr. Lyman Abbott's sermons,
headquar- Waters preached on "inspiration" and
stole tlie inspiration and the words for
the theme. He calls it since he is
caught.
Attorney Levy Mayer put it about
right when he said in the Chicago
News:
personal friends in c ongress than liov. | "• have not read the so-called ae-
p count of unsconscious assimilation on
the part of I)r. Waters. You may
The American duck, with Grover
Cleveland, is a much bigger bird than
the American eagle.
Indian a democrats have launched a
presidential boom for liov Matthews.
This is cruelly inzitiug a man to de-
struction.
Tom Rkki>, the dispatches say, called
his respects to President
HE SLINKED OFF.
For a man who lays claim to more
than an average share of courage, Mr.
Cleveland has a queer—not to put a
worse construction upon it—way of
of acting. Althoug he knew that con-
gress and the country were deeply in-
terested in the answer to the adminis-
tration's request to know whether
(Ireat Britain intended to submit the
Venezuelan boundary dispute to arbi-
tration, and that the matter would be
in Secretary Olney's hands on Satur-
day, he slunk oft' on a duck hunting
trip, aboard of a government light-
house tender, without even setting a
time for his return, leaving congress
Durrant'h death warrant will be ; and the country to await his august
signed Friday, to be executed Feb. 21. , pleasure before being permitted to see
Is it possible we are to have no more j that answer, which is known to be un-
of that delectable Durrant serial in the j satisfactory. He may not be afraid to
papers? The public will feel lonely face the music raised by his unexpeet-
without it. I stand in favor of the Monroe doc-
I trine, but there aie people who be-
lieve he is, and that he went away
hoping that congress would take the
"to pay
Cleveland." As if Reed had any polit-
ical respect for Cleveland
The manager of the Arkansas City
opera house is going to innovate with
lady ushers. Of course they will wear
bloomers and be a blooming success.
Tuekb has been a Kansas reserrec-
tion. The Eagle has exhumed the "Do
You Know" column which so delighted
readers of country papers in the boom
•lays. —
McKinley, and tew of those friends
have warmer feelings for him than the
big man—in every sense of the word—
who presides over the house and who
is one of his rivals for the presidential
nomination. The two men worked
side by side in the house for a long
period aid fully understand each
other's worth, and, while neither
would probably say as much for publi-
cation, it would be a good guess to say
that each of them is the other's second
choice for president; but it must not
be inferred from such a guess that
either would sulk should the national
convention in its assembled wisdom
decide to nominate one of the other
capable and popular gentlemen who
have been mentioned. They are both
republicans of the tried and true kind,
who always work their hardest for
party success regardless of who may
head the ticket.
The senate populists who were I
formerly republicans will act with
their old party in all vital legislation.
You can't,even by a populist probation,
knock all the sense out of a man who
once had sense enough to be a republi-
can. ————————
Congress is about to find out that we
have people enough in this country
without the paupers, criminals and
tumultuariesof Europe. The "asylum
of the oppressed of all lands' issoover
crowded now that there are live hands
for every job.
bit in its teeth, demand the corres-
pondence of Secretary Olney, and dic-
tate a reply to Lord Salisbury before
he returned to Washington. That
may be putting the case a little too
strong, but there can be no doubt that
Mr. Cleveland's absence at that time
is disrespectful to congress and to the
American people and unjustitiable
from any point of view.
McAtee and llierer have locked
horns. The former says the court has
no power to suspend accused officials,
unless the grand jury has indicted
and in the indictment specially rec- day and portially agreed to introduce
ommends suspension. Bierer sus-
pended at Perry merely on informa-
tion filed by the probate judge and
A NEW COURT SCHEME.
There is a strong desire to have a
territorial supreme court which does
not sit below on the cases appealed to
it. The delegates of the territories
held a caucus in Washington the other
THEY WILL FAIL.
The hope that the "45 percent raise"
will be knocked out on a question of
law will prove a fruitless chase. The
equalization board is not restricted by
the law as to its intepretation of what
"equalization" means. The decisions
all uphold the state equalization boards
unsconscious assimilation." | as a question of law.
The only hope of annulling this
raise is on a question of fact. Did the
raise place your assessment above
actual cash values? If so, and if you
can, on the witness stand, prove that
it did you can have the assessment
fixed at what you can prove the actual
cash value to be.
If you had money or securities as-
POND'S
rnlrrr* Uy tined and recom-
mended for Cuts, liurni, Bruises,
Colds, Catarrh, Sore Throat, all
Tain, Tiles aud Inflammations.
say for me, however, that I believe in
calling a spade a spade. There is no
such thing as unsconscious assimila-
tion as an excuse for the imitation
both of words and ideas. It is a vac-
uous veneer. A chicken hiding its
head underneath its wing to escape
the haw k does not enjoy much protec-
tion. The unconscious assimilator is
as weak in his defense as is the chick-
en. He is a plagiarist and the franker
and prompter that he may be in ad-
mitting the offense and promising
never to do it apain the quicker will
the forgiving nature of the American
public forget the charge and tell him
to go and sin no more. Unconscious
assimilation! Rah! Hah! I guess we
all did it at school—but we knew who
we cribbed from."
Here is the plagiarism of Waters:
AllBOTT SAID
Man talkH to God;
that Is prayer. God
talkH with man; that
Is Inspiration. The
ancient Hebrews be-
lieved both in prayer
and in inspiration.
They believed that God
did talk with man.
In the close of the
seventeenth century
ami the beginning of
the eighteenth century
there arose—or per-
haps I should say re-
appeared iu England
a philosophy which
denied this altogether,
it is known In the
schools as the sensa-
tional philosophy. By
that is meant a philos-
ophy which assumes
all our knowledge is
derived from the
senses: that we know
onlj what Wc can
touch, taste, s*e, hear
or what by our reason-
ing faculties we con-
clude from what we
touch, taste, see and
hear; the philosophy
that seeing is believ-
iug. This philosophy
dominated the English
.speaking people:
awhile. Aud.altnough
it has largely disap-
peared and certainly
no longer dominates,
its evil fruits remain.
We are eating some of
the apples of Sodom,
the S'-ed of whlchlsa.
Hume plant- <• '(
Genuine In our bottles
only, butT wrappers. See our
name, Pond's Extract Co.,
New York and Loudon.
THE OTHER FELLOWS PILE.
Since the sale of the Santa Fe for
sessed at par and afterwards raised to ' Stic,000,(«K) the editors are trying to
per cent above par, on proper proof figure out just what there is in a pile
of cash that size. It would buy two
territories like Oklahoma in toto, at
assessed value—but of course thepeo-
the court would no doubt relieve you
of the excess assessment. .Some busi-
ness men have entered into the fight
against the 45 per cent whose $15,000 j p'.e would not sell Oklahoma for twice
stocks are assessed at less than S3,000. I that sum. It is about a dollar a head
How much show will they stand when j for every man, woman and child in
they try to prove the actual cash value this I'nion—but there is no hope of a
of their goods is less than the assess- [ division soon. One editor figures out
ment? I it would require four freight cars to
Some owners of business blocks haul it if the 800,000,000 were in gold,
known to be worth in actual cash In silver sixty million dollars woultl
double the assessment are also resist-1 make about 3,600,000 pounds, or 1,707
the raise. Uow will they prove by tons. It would require ten wagons of
in priiy.T, God talks to | neighbors and others that their prop-1 two tons capacity, hauling ten loads a
man—that is iuspira- . . , , . , , , . , ...
Hon. * * The Hebrew erty, in actual cash, is not worthy the day, nine days to get this pile of silver
race beUeve^parexcel j assessment? j to a train and eighty-eight cars would
The men entering this fight will be necessary to transport it. If the
spend more than the raise in their silver dollars were laid on the ground,
taxes—in the few cases where they touching each other, jthey would ex-
ire higher than last year—and accom- tend over 1,420 miles. If one person
ind so through them
ihe world has received
its deepest revelations
from God.
the close of the
teenth century
there arose iu England
a school of philosophy
hit-h denied this alto-
gether. This school of | foolishly on thi
thought, called the sen-
national,dom■ *ted the
English speaking peo-
ple for a long time, and
ts evil fruits remain
until this day. We are
ating some of the ap-
plesof Sodom, the seeds
hich Locke aud
Hume planted many
years ago.
This notion that there
is no vision, that there
is no invisible world, or
at least none that we
an kiio*•, takes all the
glory out of life. God
is no longer a divine
reality. He is only a
hypoothcHis * * And
so we hear one of the
disciples of this seJiool
cry; "The Great Com-
panion is dead," and,
having robbed the earth
of (iod, he goes on to
rob man of his soul and
plish nothing.
This paper is not advising the people
It has had the law
and the decisions thoroughly exam-
ined and got the opinion of some of
the best lawyers, and it gives its opin
should undertake to count them at the
rate of one each second of time, and
work ten hours each day, resting on
Sunday, it would take him tive and
one-third years to complete the job.
Sixty million dollars in one dollar
ion only after careful examination. | bills would make a pile five and one-
Court costs are voracious eaters and half miles high. Laid end to end,
The State Capital does not want to j they would extend <>,<>28 miles, or from
see taxpayers mulcted for costs in ^an Francisco too London.
fruitless efforts to knock out taxes j A dry goods man said yesterday that
which, however unjust many inay J 300,000,000 would buy every dry goods
think they are, are thoroughly legal, j store in Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas,
The people who are able and are ] Nebraska and Colorado.
Lockei
•The
rain se-
les thought
r secretes life
This philosophy that! Man does not think. I
there is no vision, that He is a machine. There |
there is no invisible is no longer a painter
world, or at least that who se s divine beauty
we cannot know it di-and puts it on
redly or immediately,'art is a simple kind of
promptly paying their taxes are using
good sense. Those who are not resist-
ing and yet not paying, would find the
struggle to pay one half their tax,
were the amount considerably less,
,. j falling heavily indeed, for the people I 8a^8: "so Person shall be compelled
have never been so barren of cash as jto erect or support any place of
worship." This is only the opinion of
Bible reading in the public schools
of Minnesota has been declared un-
constitutional, in contro^ention of the
clause of the state constitution, which
treasurer.
Tin st Lo lis Post Dispatch says
"Oklahoma should have the aid of
everybody in her statehood ambition
There has been some spurious calls for
"aid" from Oklahoma; in this it is
genuine and from a people who know
they are prosperous enough an I big
enough to make a great state.
In offering the resolution asking for
all correspondence in the Waller case,
Representative Miller, of Kansas, was
acting for the entire congressional
delegation of his state. This is the
first step in the tight that is to be
made in congress to secure for Waller
what the administration has failed to
yet for him—justice.
Waller is said to have got his appe-
tite back siuce he heard Kansas in
congress is pumping w'ind in his case.
3f Kansas don't release him it will
stir up a cyclone that will remind ev-
erybody that an American is an Amer-
ican wherever you find him and enti-
tled to the proper protection of his
country, no matter what the complex-
ion of his hide.
a bill, creating a federal court advanc-
ing the present chief justice to United
States judge, and having a new chief
justice appointed to the territorial
vacancy.
The dispatches say Judge Dale en
dorses the scheme. Certainly. He
would probably like to see the new
job, since he is to fill it, made for life.
Such a change would relieve us of a
very objectionable judicial condition,
district and supreme courts combined
and practically sitting on their own
appealed cases, but we are too near
statehood to have such a change now.
Statehood will put us where the other
states are—and this is all Oklahoma
wants.
SIX DELEGATES.
The giving of six delegates to Okla-
homa, in the next republican national
convention, is indicative of the belief
that we will soon be a state. Any
hope that we can come in in time to
have an electoral vote in '96 is a futile
anticipation. Congress will be to busy
with tariff and finance to give us an
enabling act before the fall of 'DO.
Oklahoma is one of the rousing re-
publican provinces and deserves six
votes. It will beat St. Louis several
thousand strong, with a headquarters
all will know early and late—and its
While it is probable that the repub- six votes will be cast for the winner.
3icans of the house will hold a caucus The people know that either Reed or
after the committees are announced McKinley would be invincible as a can
"before definitely deciding what shall j didate. The territory is perhaps a
be done to furnish the treasury with i little partial to Reed because of the
the money which Mr. Cleveland would j direct good he has been to us in con-
not ask for, although he and every- gress: and the further good he is like-
body else knows how badly it is j ly to be in this session.
needed, the expression of members
make it practically certain that the 1 hkhe is a railroad threat that
money will be raised by increasing the "rates between Chicago and the At-
tariff on a number of articles. ! iantic wil1 be cut square in two." The
west is interested in a war which will
It is regarded as probable that the ! permanently "cut the rate in two" be-
takes all the glory out
of life, (iod is no long-
er a divine reality. *
♦ * He becomes^ hu-
man hypothesis, iu the
words of one of th
representatives of this
very opinion:
"We have felt with ut-
ter loneliness that the
Great Companion is
dead." For the same
philosophy that robs
the universe of its (lod
robs man of his soul.
* * * To use the lan-
guage of another rep.
resentative of this
school: "The brain se-
cretes thought ai
crete
i bile.
Man does not think,
will, live. * * There
Is no longer a painter
who sees divine beau-
ty aud puts It on the
wanva-s. Art becomes
a simple kind of pho-
togravure. * * The
author is no longer a
man who pierces the
veil and brings the
realty out. He sees
the semblances and re-
ports them acurately.
You have, therefore,
realism hi literature.
♦ * * You did have
Victor Hugo, now you
have Zola; * * you
did have Shakespeare
uow you have Ibsen.
Now over against
this doctrine I want t<i
put today an expres
sion ofthe Christian's
faith iu the power of
vision. And I put it in
three propositions:
1. Ideals are reali-
ties.
2. Imagination I*
aeeiu g.
kepticism is ig
photograv
The author is no long-
er a man who pierces
the veil and brings ttie
reality out; lie simply
describes and literature
realism. You did
■e Hugo and now you
•e Zola; you did have
Shakespeare and now
you have Ibsen.
, over against
this doctrine I want to
put today as expression
of the Christatn's faith
In the power of vision
and I shall put It In
four propositions:
I Ideals are reali-
ties and not air castles.
2. Imagination is
seeing, not dreaming.
8. Skepticism Is ig-
norance not wisdom.
I Meals are the
measure of a man's
life.
nora
ice.
claims of the western senators for the
chairmanship of the senate committees
which have to do exclusively with
western affairs will be almost, if not
entirely granted by the caucus com-
mittee of republican senators now en-
gaged in selecting republicans for the
vacant committee places, hence there
are no believers of the silly story of
intended revolt on the part of western
republicans.
tween western points and the Missis-
sippi and from the west to the south.
The western farmer so far has had to
put up for all the eastern railroad
wars and he is tired of it.
Joe Wisby is not in Washington
alone lor Osage clients. He will find
time to remind Harmon that Hur-
ford's job ends in May and that Wisby
would be an excellent fit for it.
Waters appears to have very small
brains to preside over a big Chicago
church. It takes no wisdom to be a
parrot. The best parrots talk of those
things of closest association. Human
parrots should at least have more
sense. Ingalls took Massalon, an an-
cient sermon printed only in a dead
language. He had some basis to pre-
sume that he would not be caught.
Waters stole from the fresh thoughts
of a man read in every household.
The man who filches the thoughts of
others, should remember that this is a
day of broad information. It is use-
less to think you have found some-
thing no one in the audience has seen
and send it shimmering on the waves
of popularity for yourself. There is
always at least one person in every
audience who has read as widely and
knows as much as the speaker. \Va-
now. Resources are unconvertable
and the merest livelihood about all
anybody is making.
This is one reason that the people
are so ready to grasp at straws to
listen to the song of the agitator who
knows, but is not man enough to ad-
mit, that taxes for current county
expenses could not be a cent less, un-
der the present pay-as-you-go laws,
were the assessments but one-third
what they are.
the state superintendent,
has not sat on it yet.
The court
The State Capital has arranged to
have three Washington letters each
week from Mr. Conkling, one of the
best known of the special correspond-
ent at the national capital. They will
boil the doings of congress down raci-
ly, from a republican standpoint, giv-
ing glimpses of inside matters uncov-
ered by the dispatches.
Subscription Order.
Fill out the order below, enclose in an envelope, in stamps or postoffice
money order, 50 cents for one year or 25 cents for six months and address to
State Capital Printing Co., Guthrie, Oklahoma, and the best Weekly paper
in the Territory will go to you regularly.
************************
! STATE CAPITAL PRINTING CO.
C
' SIR:—Enclosed find cents for which
o
; send m© "The Weekly State Capital" for *
months, at
. County of *
*
********* ************ *******************************
A II A< ) FEATLRE. | Among the stories brought out by
One of the great features of The the death of "the old Roman," Allen
Weekly State Capital is the list of j G. Thurman, is this one: Senator
newsy correspondence from the lead- Roscoe Conkling was addressing the
iny points of every county in Okla- senate in an impassioned manner and
homa. This week's issue has a full seemed to direct his remarks to Sena-
page of these, giving farm and neigh-
borhood news of interest to everybody.
You can read these letters and have a
complete epitome of how the crops
are, what the farmers are doing anti
the chief things they are thinking
about.
These special correspondence are not
only of much interest to farmers, but
to the business man they are a con-
tinuous sodrce of valuable information.
Many friends and acquaintances
will regret tlie departure of Rev. and
MePheftters. The pastorate of
Mrs.
Rev. McPheeters, over the Presbyte-
rian church, has been full of energy
ters took his audience to be very igno- ant* thought, lie has great nulpit
rant indeed, and thus he fell from 11 ' Pow,'r; a novel and aggressive elo-
supposed man of original thought and \ 'luence- Some of his sermons have
construction to a common repeater of
the mintages of another.
Every man carries his own mint
marks, if he has brains enough to coin
anything, and the people can easily
discern when he is himself and when
he is counterfeiting.
been the equal of the greatest preach-j
ers of the nation. He is no "hedger," i
no "policy''man, and this is the rea-|
son he is not remaining in Guthrie.
tor Thurman. At length the latter got
irritated. "Does the senator from
New York," he roared, "expect me to
answer him every time he turns to
me?" For a moment Mr. Conkling
hesitated, and everybody expected a
terrific explosion. Then with an air
of exquisite courtesy he replied:
"When I speak of the law I turn to
the senator frcm Ohio as the Mussul-
man turns toward Mecca. I turn to
him as I do to the English common
law, as the world's most copious foun-
tain of human jurisprudence." The
usually decorous senate broke into a
storm of applause, and the Thurman
eye moistened a little. The two
statesmen were the best of friends
and greatly enjoyed each other's socie-
ty—when "off" duty.
The Perry grand jury "roasts Mc-
Master's" for saying in liis weekly
When a church gets such a preacher, about the presentation of a silk
nought to keep him. lie has done j brclltt to Unite(1 States Attorne;sr „ofr.
much good in strengthening the pul- man; „The recipient maybe innocent
pit in this (it\. it takes as much I Qf wrong even in intentions but the re-
bt.uns to m.ike a preacher as for any j ct.ption of presents by an official is not
other vocation—though the average ! only bad taste but bad morals... We
preacher is a cadaverous truckler who
seems afraid to say his mind's his own.
McPheeter's has the brains and the
The school girl cannot much longer
dilate that "the Puritans founded an
insane asylum in the wilds of America."
The ' asylum for the oppressed of all
lands" will soon be closed by congress
to all but those enlightened enough to | Physique to back them
appreciate American institutions and j ———
opportunities and who do not have to
be cared for by alms houses at once I famous. Hill Nye has turned his hu- j an appropriate testimonial in aeknow
upon landing. mor lose on our divorce business. ledgment of their mistake.
Maiieb appears to be entirely unfit
to wear the Corbett belt. He will
have to get a move on his mouth.
President Cleveland makes a duck
chase right on the heels of Hill's wild
goose chase. What fun great minds
do have!
Peffer and Horr threaten a debate
in Pennsylvania. If they do. may
heaven direct some altruist to cut the
wires. The country has stood enough.
The Minco Minstrel carries a map of
the Wichita country, under which is
this suggestive line: "A good laud, if
it is never opened."
A Crawfordsville, Ind., man de-
mands ooo damages for the report
that he had hugged a girl. Rumors
come high in some parts of Indiana.
Hayarp refuses to talk on the im
peaehment resolution fired at him. In
the meantime he reads in the London
Gazette that "did our embassador
make such impudent remarks abroad,
England would be less than just did it
not impeach him."
The renowned jurist and statesman,
Allen (J. Thurman, died Thursday.
His was one of the noblest of American
lives. His brain and heart were alike
great. He took an active part in the
nation's history for fifty years and
passes away leaving a record full of
enduring honor and example.
The enemies of Cy Leland, the Kan-
sas political leader, blew off in the
papers, while Cy slipped a knife into
them by getting on the national re-
publican executive committee. The
fellows who want to "down Leland"
had better try something easier, bray-
ing at the east wind, for instance.
Allen (j. Thurman, who died Thurs-
day, was 82 years old. The funeral
was preached by Rev. (trover, 8i> years
old. It was Judge Thurman's request
that if Rev. Mr. Grover was living and
in good health the latter should
preach his funeral. Mr. Grover is at
present city librarian, a position he
has held for twenty-two years and he
is still a very active man.
Prhlchntrr'a HnrfUh IHewonri Brand.
ENNYROYAL PILLS
v Original ami Only < t>nulnc.
6*rE- alwBvn reliable, laous a«
71 1 Alii "ruirciu for Chichettera /:«.;/.*/! Ilia .
I Brand In Hod ai..| >.-id metallic'
. 'ealed with blue rildwin. Take
no other. Nr/ust dangerout mhititw
* mi uikI imitation/. Ai Drufftixta, or tend 4« .
siampa for canicular*, lofttlmnnlali an 1
Itellef for I.ail Iin Irttcr. I.r return
Mall. 10.OOO Tt'ttimonialR. A'ume
rhlchc«li-r<iiinli'ultu.,MailUi n Suuaiv.
Local brugguia, 1'hllada., 1*
[Flrst Pub. In Stale Capital Nov. 21, 1895.]
Sheriff's Sale.
Territory of Oklahoma, Logan County, as.
O. R. Fegan, plaintiff * ^
Julian Overton and Henry Funsion, f
~ . . , Defendants.
Notice IS hereb.v tfiven that bv virtue of an
execution to me .lire,-ted arul delivere^ anS
now in my hand*, issued out of the clerk's of.
f'nul district court, Territory
of Oklahoma, in and for the county of Logan
Z'oM "lT"' rendered iu Kald'court in f^
vorofO. It-Pegan and against lullan Overton
and Henry Funston, I have levied unon ti., f i
io^Ftf '"''"'rib'"1 rra' estate of said defendants
,J,1',P„S0„Ut,h e"st'"winero' section thirty-five
west of r^M ln*r " '"1| n"rlh "Tee
west of i m., In LOijan county, Oklahoma Ter-
ritory, subject to a niortgair.' payable to s p
-0. sy-l. witJi interest at ten parent from d^
ami due in five y.-urs from date thereof.
And that I shall, on Monday, the 23d dav of
DeeemlM-r. A D. 1805, at the hm,r of 2 oVlo^k p
m. of said day, at the east door of the district
court house in Guthrie, O. T , In said count,
and territory, proceed to sell the right, title and
interest and equity of redemption of the above
named Julian Overton In ana to the above de
scribed property, to satisfy said judgment and
costs, amounting to ,*75. HUl t„ get her wlthi.1
acciuiug costs of sale, to tlie highest bl.lder
W. W. PAINTER.
rv it vc n. Sheriff of Logan County.
By H. w Paintkb, Deputy.
o. R. Fegan, Plaintiff's Attorney.
1895? """"■i"'thl" lay of November,
[First I^il). in State Capital Nor. 23, 1895,]
Notice by Publication,
In the Justice court, City of Guthrie townshit,
Logan county. Ok ahotna territory '
JatnesC. Flinn, plaintiff, j
Margarctt Flinn, defendant, i
viT,®n','ye, defendant, Margaret!
fn the Ti! ,, been*
in the Justice court of City of Guthrie town-
ship Logon .'.unity, territory of Oklahoma T.
i). Jackson, justice of tin- peace In James C
1- linn, fur the sum of one hundred dollars due
on account under contract, and that sh.> must
appear u, sa.d cour, and answer on the 28th
da\ of December, 18l>; , at ill ..'clock ;i. in. of
said day. or saul action for one hundred doi-
•irs, with costs, will be taken as true and
judgment entered accordingly.
Uiven under my official
20th day of November, 18ltfS.
T. D. Jackson,
Guthrie Township, Logan
signature this the
Justice of
County, i
>. T.
Frank O Purdy, plaintiff,
Cornell
In the <
of Oklahoma.
To tlie above i
Purd
M Purdy, defendant. I
urt, Logan county. Territor\
I can see nothing- wrong- in this presenta- \'j
| tion. The grand jury probably started s">d plaintiff,
in under the foolish impression that
Hoffman didn't "have sense enough to
come in out of the wet." Discovering-
Oklahoma has at last become re a1 ly I that lie did they simply desired to give
lined defendant, Cornelia M
herebv notified that you have
plaintiff. Frank < . Purdv. in
district court, wherein the
•ank O. Purdy, sues for di-
vorce, and that said ctuse i- set for hearinu
on the ti rst Monday in February, ImM, when
and where if you do not appear and answer or
demur to the petition tiled in this case tlie
same will betaken as confessed and jmlgmen
rendered therein in conformity with the facts
therein stated.
i ska 1.1 Louis E. Pitt*.
Clerk District Court Logan County. <). T.
C. W. Kerns and Fred R. Morgan, Attorneys.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 21, 1895, newspaper, December 21, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth352536/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.