Pauls Valley Sentinel (Pauls Valley, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1906 Page: 5 of 14
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Pauls Vaiiey Sentinel
SHAW 4PARHAM.
Editors and Proprietors
Pauls Valley, • - Ind. Ter.
...ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY...
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE. YEAR BY MAIL (IN ADVANCE) $1.00
SIX MONTHS " 50
THREE MONTHS " " *5
Entered at the Poit Office at Pauls Valley, Indian
Territory as second-class mail matter.
Sample Copies and Advertising rates free on appli-
cation. 'Phone 105
Hot Weather
OOfrMW #* CHSK1 Ottlf ao*." tHS*.' <
'*
Sh
If you want to see Pauls Val-
ley thrive and prosper it is your
duty to vote for the issuance of
the school bonds.
Democrat clubs are being
organized all over the country,
at cross roads, school houses,
church houses and court houses.
They are organized to win the
%ht.
The school bond election is §
Monday, July 30th, and it is the
duty, of every good citizen to
vote for the bond issue.
This fall, along in October,
the great democratic leaders,
William J. Bryan, will visit
South McAlester, Ardmore and
Oklahoma City. Look for a big
time for its coming.
What is a town without a
good school system. It's a dead
issue, therefore vote for good
school buildings for Pauls Val-
ley and we have the material to
do the rest.
Every good citizen should
turn out Monday and vote for
the school bond issue. Its to
your interest and your children,
and every inhabitant of this
growing city.
The black and Lilly white Re-
publicans had trouble at their
convention at Chickasha last
Friday. It finally resulted in a
split, and the "black" delega-
tion made threats of forsaking
the "grand old party." They
took their rolls of 250 colored
brethren and departed for other
quarters.
a party of Wynnewood enthu-
siastics chaperoned by Ira Mitch-
ell, came up last Saturday and
were pleasantly entertained by
our people. Wynnewood is ex-
tremely anxious to secure a
county seat in the final round up
in this country, and her people
are doing what they can on that
line, but they were assured that
in these matters Purcell will re-
tain friendly relations with all lo-
calities, enter into entangling al-
liances with none.—Purcell Re-
gister.
Now, Wynnewood, ar'nt you
ashamed. _____
Brer. Gibbs of the Mill Creek
Times remarks as follows:
"That pie that Jim Hum-
phreys has been feeding on for
almost the past decade, seems
to have had the effect of "Cea-
sar's meat." But he has an-
other "peep a-comin." The
s
k
k Tan Shoes are the proper and comforta-
vf
S ble Shoe for Summer Wear. Now is
k the time to buy them. See them in our
%
window at
$1.98
E.G. Hightower & Co.
■MH-M-W-M I I I I I I MH"M"
un-
veil of'statehood is thin. He
should have taken the pie down
from his face long enough to
penetrate it. No, Jimmie, the
area now encompassed within
the great state of Oklahoma is
not the same republican pasture,
where hundreds of your ilk did
feed to fatness under the domi-
nation of Lord Hitchcock. The
monkey is dead and the show is
over."
While many Republicans are
saving most emphatically that
Mr. Humphrey did not represent
the party views in bis speech at
Pauls Valley, some are inclined
to think that the real Republican
"kick" on said speech is because
Jim was telling tales out of
school.—Purcell Register.
The Democrats of Pawhuska,
Okla., carried the city election
Saturday by an overwhelming
majority, electing the entire
ticket. This has heretofore been
a republican city, but the Demo-
crats have it now. The Indians
voted the Democrat ticket
straight and will do likewise
over the entire new state.
The great Gold Democrat,
John P. Hopkins of Chicago call-
ed on William J. Bryan at his
hotel in London Friday last.
The two men propose to bury
the hatchet. "Gold Democrats
like myself," said Mr. Hopkins,
"are prepared to support Mr.
Bryan for the Presidency since
silver is a dead issue. We fought
the Nebraskan as hard as any-
body, but he has changed great-
ly for the better since 1896. He
seems to me to be the best man
in either party for the White
House and it is almost certain
that he, will be the Democratic
nominee. Roosevelt m a y be
forced to oppose him. "Of the
two men I much prefer Bryan.
Roosevelt's worst mistake, was
his deadly and unjustifiable blow
at the meat industry. The
farmers get $1,000,000 a day
from the packers and 70 per
cent of the crops leave the farms
on the hoof. Roosevelt has not
only ruined this trade, but has
damaged the canning business
as a whole."
Among the many candidates
for office in our new state there
are few, perhaps, who are more
deservedly popular with all class-
es than is Hon. Claude Weaver
of Pauls Valley, candidate for
congress from the new fifth dis-
trict. Claude is known, either
personally or by reputation, to
nearly every person in the 26th
recording district, having grown
to manhood in our neighbor
town, Gainesville. He is a
young man of sterling worth
and integrity, a lawyer of re-
cognized ability, and as an
orator is rarely equalled. He
takes with him into this cam
paign a thorough knowledge of
Indian Territory conditions,
with a n understanding and
capacity which peculiarly fit him
to represent in congress the best
interests of his constituents and
of the entire people of the new
state. The men who represent
us in tl^e National house should
be men thoroughly conversant
with past and present conditions
here, for only with such know-
ledge can legislative action be
intelligently directed toward the
betterment of all classes of our
mixed population. We believe
that such a man is more likely
to be found in the Territory end
of the fifth district than in the
Oklahoma end, for here we have
been face to face with these con-
ditions for years. While our
people are not constituents of
the new fifth district, the many
friends here of Hon. Claude
Weaver will be glad to learn
that his knowledge, ability and
sterling honesty are enlisting
the support of the people of our
neighbor district, and they will
wish for him that measure of
success to which his conspicuous
abilities entitle him.—Marietta
Monitor.
The Pauls Valley Sentinel
comes to our exchange table af-
ter an absence of "notellin' how
long.'' Strange to say we didn' t
miss it, but we would miss it
from now on, for it has changed
management and politics, too,
both marked improvements, es-
pecially the latter.—Mill Creek
Tin
Mill Creek
imes.
Thanks, Brer. Gibbs.
See my new line of wall paper patterns
Which I have just received. Prettiest
line ever brought to Pauls Valley.
Nick Fehrenbach
Money to loan on surplus or city
property. Good rates easy terms no
delays. Santa Fe Trust Bank, Pauls
Valley, I. T.
A fine drink, Hire's Root Beer at
Worley's.
when other medicines have
failed
Take Foley's Kidney Cure. It has
cured when eveiything else has disap-
pointed. Sold by C. P. Bruce.
8% Money and Only 8%
On surplus lands of intermarried cit-
zens, surplus lands of allottees of Inr-
ian blood whose restrictions have been
removed, also homesteads and surplus
of deceased Indians if the 'and i* still
in the hands of the heirs. Pauls Val-
ley Trust Co. with Pauls Valley Nation-
al Bank.
g
*
Avery SO'Hanlon's
Barber
Shop
J First Shop west of Bank cl j
| Commerce. Only Shop in ^
$ Town with Bath Rooms S
oQ*" £H5*."60 If 00*.' aa*." GOtf
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Shaw & Parham. Pauls Valley Sentinel (Pauls Valley, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1906, newspaper, July 26, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc110304/m1/5/: accessed May 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.