The State Democrat. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 7, 1895 Page: 1 of 4
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WE PRINT THE PROCEEDINGS
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SI.OO PER YEAR
PUBLISHED
TWICE. - EVERY - WEEK
VOL
NOHMAN, CLEVELAND
I'UBIASIIKI) SKMI W'KlKl^ .
< )()UN I'V. OlvLAH )M \ W . )N Ksl) A V AlhU'ST 7. 1S1>.>
NT0. S.
13<30®3QXD(3QXiXiX93XDQX9Sffl®C0®BQ)0®®ffl©®®ffl®®5®®ffl®0OiiX5XDQ<!XS<DGX3<SQCDC9®GX33GXD©3®G)G:CXS0O3(iX3©S
NIC' GIN LEY
Is Still Doing
Business
AT HIS OLD STAND
jWHHJWMtttttMtW'OWHHHKHWWpOtHKWttttttttttttttoWHHHMHWtHW
The Most Complete Stock ofss§r---
LARGEST STOCK.
« LOWEST PRICES.
FAIR DEALING.
In Southern Oklahoma.
..v:WHHKKJ{K>mK;<. nH, = .
jattttO'WttycHraoattwauttuainMttaatKKmwui
By trading with McGinley you Save Money,
keeps the best and fair dealing is his motto.
because he
a £ —it (gi •
03IX3W
Ij-g uS? z'iS g S
l-s-i'S §-g S"5 3
sa= I
bo O 'r >, o « . i o 0-3 #5
^isssswHiis
v "3 _ t>z
*■£ -<£ °5'Ji £c he""~ 2
s^=flsl-=l& ;ip
?-2| sSi-Sf 8g=g6c
• O.S -.5 gLjE« O^Q
2 I'Jj* § gif t k £ *7 2 *£
We would be pleased to have you
call and inspect out samples of Job
work, which are second to none in
the territory, (lood work done on
short notice.
STOCK MA11KKT.
Hogs, live
I Cattle, live
Fat Calves 2.00 to 3.50
Hams 10
Shoulders dO
Bacon l-'u
I Dried Beef 10
I Hides M
! Calf Skins
GitAIN MARKET,
Winter
Wheat,
Corn,...
R>--
Oats,..
Hay,...
$0.00
provision m \ uk i:t.
a C a h *r rt O o B.w
= Mi 5 UuZ
THE FARMERS
LOYAL FRIEND!
Flour, 11 igh Patent...
Flour, St. Patent —
Flour, Bakers
Corn Meal,
Butter, $?lb
Ktfgs, # doz
Sugar, A Coffee, $ 11).
Sugar, C Coffee, $ lb..
Coffee, Java, $ lb
Coffee, Rio, lb
Potatoes bu
Salt, $ bbl
Kerosene Oil, gal..
$2.2T
wt.
2.15
2.05
1.30
12to 13
8%
18 lb $1.00
20 lb $1.00
$1.70
.20
Oklahoma's Agricultural
. . One Your Free!
a per,
The HOME, FIELD AND FORUM-
Is the only journal devoted to the interests of tbe
Farmers aud tbe material resources of Oklahoma and
the Indian Territory. It is ii roliable, blight, clean
and well printed 1(1 page magaziue, aud deals with the
special wants of the agriculturalists, fruitgrowers and
stock raisers of the Territory, aud ha < special depart
meats devoted to agricultural matters, live stock,
horticultural, dairying, poultry. A piculti * «•' '*na
ry, reliable market summaries, borne c
folk, farm organizations, correspondence,*.
The muuiigement and editor have had many years
of successful experience with this class oi papers in
the west and have selected this fertile and heautifrl
country as the best possible location for a high-class
Agricultural journal. They are making it truthfully
represent the interests of tiie ureat industrial class to
which it is devoted, and there is not a farmer in al
this country that can a fiord to do without it. It is
issued monthly at Guthrie, and is only 50c a year.
OUR PREMIUM OFFER.
iiculi/Jng that we could not furnish our fanner readers with a moro valuable
Premium, we havopurchased one hundred yearly subscriptions of the Home,
Field ami Forum, and will furnish each of the first 100 new yearly subscribers
t<> the State 1)i m<>< hat with a years subscription to that valuable journal free.
All old subscribers securing lis two new yearly subscribers will also receive a
subscription to the Journal. Evorv farmer should avail himself of this liberal
olTor at the earliest possible moment.
G
OING TO
PROVE UP?
are, come to the
11 you
STATE DEMOCRAT.
11 has already saved the farm-
ers of Cleveland County
Several Hundred Dollars on
theit final proof notices, and
is still saving them money.
IT WILL
PAY YOU TO
CALL AND SEE
LUS. . . .
Kfife 4R
EliLC l K./v L 1 id).
Richard Leach SufVars the Penalty for
Murdering His Wife.
A SKinors CONTLVrKATI0N.
The 11 iihIih* h Portion of llerllii, md , De-
stroyed by Fire V Cow Wrecks n
Train Tim Kmjtneer Killed
and Others Injured.
Sing Sixo, N. Y., Ah?. 0.—Richard
Leach was electrocute.1 to-dny for the
murder of his com ram law wife, Mary
II. Leach, wlreh occi
1804. Leach was a yo
by occupation. The
to have nn uns ivon
were no se: - itiou
nected with theelci
met death as calmly
a common phi -e a fT.t
occupied about t
was completely
current was tunic
A convulsive strni jditenin
limb nnd body followe
heightening color of i • f.i«■
only external in lie.,t i" i o
of the electric ilui.l Tho
was lit the full inten d!y of
nnd at the end of seven :
currcnt was reduced to '• •<) '
it remained forty-c ght s,-
was shot up a rain to 1,7 > > v
instant and reduced '«>•'? • >
by
t shock
)0 volts
• ndsthe
s where
Is, then
f for an
iin, and
when Dr. Glbbs gave the signal to turn
it olT it was increased suddenly to 1,701
again and turned oil' at at once. The
total period of contact, was 1:" 7.
A Kerlons Co <ll i-.rratlo'i.
Haltimohi:. Md., A ig. fl. -All the
business portion of
residences, was con. >
by fire last night. L
sura nee, 9")0,000. T i
ably caused from a ci
thrown in some stra
of buildings were swe
Haines were only cl ■
was no structure ch
to reach. '1 lie losse;
small, the greatest in
ing 810,000.
Air A ino L) 1>A. j
Insurgents Defeated by Government
Troops in Two Engagements.
A PRICE SET ON CAMPOS.
Macen Offer* V.1,000 for llie C nature of tlit
S|iiiniMh Commaiulor llie I o nil on
Tlnien on Silver -Failure of
.lapiinese lllee Ciuip.
A C«
U r
rks i
I'llCKNIX VI U.K. l\l . A
on the track of the l'.cUi-rin ,r Valley
railroad caused the wive < of a pa sin-
ger train near Pemlvr:on last ni.ht.
Engineer Crow wa« killed and Fire-
man Major was fatally injured and
several passengers were severely in-
jured. Engineer (Jrow was .V. years ol
age and leaves a widow an I flv • chil-
dren. He had been in the servico oi
the railway company t went v-five year's.
Havana, Aiv Lieut -Col. Mo-
lina, at the head of a force of auxiliary
troops, had a skirmish to-day with the
I December 11, insurgents, commanded by the well
man, a il cist known leader Matagas, at Sabana
known Torres, near Rosario Vieja, in the
ntation. Tli ire province of Santa Clara. The insur*
'features con- gents attempted to surround the aux-
•ution. Leach iliaries, but the latter, reinforced by
as th >u_rh it were forty infantry soldiers, charged thoen-
1".. • execution emy, who numbered 200, and dispersed
minutes and them. The insurgents left five dead
fill. The upon the field and retired with many
nt 11:10:10. wounded. The troops captured ten
saddle horses, carrying provisions, and
during the engagement twenty saddle
horses, carrying ammunition and other
supplies for the insurgents, were killed.
Among the killed was ('apt. .lose Keyes
Cnderera, of the insurgents, whose
body was fully identified. On the side
of trlie troops one corporal and one
guerilla were seriously wounded.
Coverniiienl Troop* Dnfe.it Insurgent*.
Madiiid, Aug. r .— According to a dis-
patch received here from Havana, the
government troops have defeated the
insurgents near Matan/.as and, in ad-
dition, the insurgent forces command,
ed by Maeco have been defeated in the
province of Santiago do Cuba. Several
Hi i. with some insurgents were killed ill both engage*
jtely destroyed meats,
A l'rlce Met on Campos.
. ( ^ , I Tampa, Fla., Aug. 0.-— According to
, , steamer advices from Cuba Gen. An-
toni,, M«cco, th. 1™.^, i.M
offered 95,000 to the soldiers or band of
soldiers who will capture (ion. Mar-
tine/ Campos, who is now reported to
be at Huraeoa.
The I nnilon Times on Silver.
London, Aug. r .—The Times, dis-
cussing bimetallism, says: France is
not likely to accept any ratio but 1.11 a
to 1. A ratio of 3.") to 1 would not re-
ceive attention from the silver men, or
the so-called biinctallists,who are real-
ly persons with silver or silver securi-
ties to sell.
I nil are of the Itlee t'rop.
Yokohama, Aug. fl.— Heavy ralm
throughout Japan have ruined the
crops. It is feared that failure of the
rice harvest will cause a famine.
I the
A
neon 1 in ironists at
tin:
\vi< 11 IT A
the
Hi: si; K\" AT I ON.
DKCATIH.
it at the ( loss
Answer ' Ueil
and Chickasaw* V
Washington. Ai
M. Vale, of this ci
court of claims an
.ill of I In* ( hoctaw 1
11I the WIchil-iH.
0 Attorney J.
,, has filed in the
mswer in the suit
• against |
Ten Thousand People Present al
of tlie Cntnp !>leelinjf,
Dk< ATt'U, 111., Au,r. 0. —The attend-
ance at the national prohibition camp
meeting, which closed here yesterday
evening, was about 10,000. Nine ox-
of the Choctawsand t hie ;a 1 w> a-jainst eursion trains came in on various rail-
thc Wichltas, demanding the |800,00( roads. Roligions services were held in
to be paid Vy the govcrninent for the (]u. tent at 11 a. m.. with a sermon
Wichita reservation. The Choctaw* i(V i ov, .|,lSjMM- L. Donthlt, of Shelby-
and Chickasaws claim that the land ville. In the afternoon addresses were
really belongs to tliein, and that the made by Col. Eli F. Uitter.of lndlanap-
Wichitas hav^ only an occupancy „lis, and Col. Nate A. Reed, of Chicago,
right in th® land forming the reserva- c,,] Ritter, who UoomldoMd the best
tion. The answer is a review of the available candidate of the prohibition
title of the land, giving au abstract,: party for president, made an argument
as far as can be gained, showing who that the rights of the individual are
has occupied and al?
title appears to have
far back as the record
mation.
10m the
Dated
I r 11.1)1 Mi wi -TU
subject to the public welfare and on
that basis hopes to secure national pro-
furnish infor- hibition througli the federal courts by
having the granting of dramshop li-
censes declared unconstitutional. A1
night Mrs. Helen M. Parker,of Dakota,
national treasurer of the W. ('. T. U.,
delivered the closing address of the
11 j > 11111
bacco with BAC<
dettirc for tolnieci
ii- 1 be (hi) before
written .uiuiliiiitee t
or money refunded
aud n'liiirante
iiiiii 1 upon receipt
box. 1 lookletw am
crwt). it
will ceilne.
>011 took yo
Yimii
d lite! \
fri.m 1
i m*rious Tosror sr ddknlv
1 m't be imposed upon by buying a
r that reqiiiren you to «lo ho, an it
t iini>; more than a .substitute. In
•4*1 < 1<|«-ii stoppage of tobacco you
ne Home .stimulant, aud in moHt
< the effect of the Hliniulant, be it
uorpbine, or other opiates, leav
i p far wornne babit con-
u in ti d A k ) our drug^is
about BACO-CUR O I
purb le. You do
110 t top lining: to
• v you when to stop and your
41cm will be an free from nicotine
hew or Hinoke. An iron-clad
u> tobacco habit in all itH form.-,
• ( or 3 boxes (510 days ti eatment
nv jill druggists or will be sent by
ISix Two-cent stamps for namplc
n Cbein iV: M'fgCo , I.uCrosse, Win
STOCK !
If you do you need the
Live Stock Inspector.
It is a sixteen page
monthly journal, de-
voted to Oklahoma
stock interests, and if
you want to be
eilie.
-A dis-
that meeting, which has been
The C, It A. O I* Survey im; It ft
I 11 ion Paeilic and Non hern I
Kansas City, Mo.. Aug. H
patch from Spokane, Wash., e „
the Burlington railroad is extending eleven d«yS
wesL A new route running nearly , onVentlon« for Oood Honda,
midway between the Northern l'acitiu Si.daua. Mo., Aug. 0.—lion. Levi
and the Union Pacific railways,through Chubbuck, president of the Missouri
a wild and unsettled country, is now state Roads association, in a lettc
1 by the Thomas Stanley, vice president of the
association.
isettled
being explored and
burlington engineers with all possible association, advises the calling of four
haste. It is lcarne I that they propose district conventions this fall in the in-
to locate a line up the valley, working terest of good roads, to be held at Ma-
east toward the Wyoming line, proba- ,.on city, Springfield, Maryville and
bly crossing in northern Fremont coun- Sedalia, the first to lie held at the lat
tv opposite the National park, unless ter place on September 15. Vice Prcs
a better route through the Rockies can ident Stanley states that the conven-
be secured by crossing into southern tions will undoubtedly be held as di-
M on tana. rected.
v' l I'll:.::, \ % ■«• Central American Kepuhlle
City ok Mexico, Aug. 0.—The new
republic proposed to be formed of
Nicaragua, Salvador and Honduras is
ener.il Die hell a named Ilepubllca Mayor de Centro
morain ;iu.l decided America, or the (Jreater Republic of
it p i ce e unmission ol Central America. Many persons con-
be 1 tained and au versant with Central American affairs
icy- 11 l.c appoint- look to a partition of Guatemala, her
m in enforcing the northern provinces seceding to join
It is understood Mexico and her southern going into
dntment as a. -is ant the new republic.
WI III I A
and Attorney-l
conference thi-
that tlie prese
Wichita shoal:
assistant attor
ed to ail th
prohibitory la
that the app<
attornc
t lie
ni l <
Campbell. ex*depar
of the C. A. R., but
that matters were so
Could not say who tlit
ncy-general would be.
nscttled that he
assistant attor-
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report
MMa Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
SK.
:ni)EI).
KilS.
The Police Give Up Hunting Bones
in Holmes "Castle."
WHISKY STARTS A FIGHT.
Everybody lleeomes Drunk ill mi ludlnii
Nun Danee Man Killed liyn Deputy
lUnrNliiii A. P. A. in Control
at Perry. Ok.
Ciiic.Uio, Aug. Ci. - The search for hu-
man bones in the basement of II. II.
Holmes' "castle" was abandoned to-
day and a small force of men
The Intcrnati d
gress - nds Its
(JlllKT AT .1 '
Ill«l ill 11 I 1
Trouble w 11 Ii nil in
London
meeting of th
graphical con
pcrial institn
Mr. C. R Ma 1
had been ilei
mcctin
Aug
o-d
was put to work smoothing up the
basement Hour, filling up the hole meeting a: I din ii
and repairing the breaks in the ma- gress approved tlie
aonry made by the detectives in their world on the c tie 1
search for clews. The house will and charged the e\
shortly be vneated liv the police and with the earn 1/ out
turned over to its owners. The work congress ul adopt
of the detectives hereafter will bo eon- meridian in il m
fined to a hunt for witnesses who can disapprove 1 almost
directly eouncct Holmes with some of the proposed intern
the numerous murders with which ho ^eogrupliv as altoget
is charged. Was a 1 ce I to cull t lu
aphical Con-
f.ic :ting.
.'S HOLE.
rownltiqr I'liiuks the
> * i * I '.tided He-
if ChrUMiiii*
concluding
ia t iti: 1 :i I gci>-
! I in the lut-
ie president,
mice I that it
DXt
geogra p!
Hrownin : t hi i;s t
son's Ilole is at an <
Sua no 11 a 1, Aug.
prints a
L. Conner, husband of Mrs. .1 ul ia
Conner, who is suppose 1 to have been tion of the dc« i
one of Holmes' victims at the lCngle- | angles, the soeiet i.'
wood "castle," lias decided to swcai report upon the 1
out warrants for the arrest of Holmes congress,
and Quinlan, lie claims that lie has Alt tjuiei nt .1
discovered considerable that the police Wahiiinuiov. Au
know nothing about and that lie iscon- telegraphed lad
vineed that Holmes murdered his wifo Hrownin to- lay f
and little girl and that Quinlan was an Ida., stati.ig t 1 at h
accessory. ' from Jackson's llol
While searching through a collection thing quiet the
of rubbish in a dark chamber in
Holmes' castle yesterday. Detectives
Fit /.patrick and Norton found, un-
der a pile of dirt, a pair of
bloody overalls. They could not de-
termine to whom they belonged and
they were taken to the central station.
A part of a dress or a wrapper
belonging to Mrs. ,1111 ia L. Connor has
been found and identified. An effort I
will be made to prove that it was the
gown worn by Mrs. Connor on Christ-
mas day, 1801. when she was last seen
ulive.
WhlHky Star:* u Fifftit.
(ii'THiHK, Ok.. Au". 0.—At an Indian
sun dance near Chelsea sixteen gallons
of whisky were brought in under a
load of hay and everybody became
drunk and a fight ensued in which sev-
eral were badly hurt. Henry Co*
Childers attempted to escape with a
gallon jug of whisky in each hand and
was shot and killed by a deputy mar-
shal.
The A. P. A in Control at Perry.
Pkhhy, Ok., Aug •">. The council,
which is controlled by the A. P. A. or-
ganization here, refused to-day to con-
firm Capt. Dwyer or .1 K. Patterson
for chief of the fire department be-
cause of their supposed Catholicism.
When chief and other policemen and
all other city officers were appointed
the A. P. A. knocked out every Catho-
lic appointment.
1 il I the l
-h i The con-
-c I m 11> of tlio
:o .1 nil lion
v cm mit too
• w..rc The
lie 1 i reenwich
ure neat and
li.nously of
1 ins? itute of
iii-edUss. It
ution of tlio
> the applica-
1 ti> time aud
,r r I lo
r at the next
Agent Tetcr
d j id
et Lake,
returned
cxpn
(how
intr a fri litfnI mass
in Kuchetiin the |
Si 11k ia ng. . , :i"
were live foreign la
jf the report
ccived.
NO i.wv \<;
011 >le at .lack-
, .<• langhai
in from Fon
11 «t :t, report-
ed fhristians
• of Kansu-
unirdercd
No eonlirma-
, t been re-
A New ,ler««
■V VJ 1
ti i'... .•<■
10 .111 It.-ller
from i
Pa ! ..i:.<o>
i \\ if.
I., A 1
l V. J. iivei-
son. of llavvtliorne.
■nt to tiie law
office of U
ihar
I ltiii 1
ill a 1 1 sought
his legal ml
vice
as to m
•ins lo prevent
Mrs. Kverson fr<
nn vvt*.!
ring bh . m T .
He said th 1
t siie
hail
1 wearing tho
divided skii
!!''
a t
11 a day or
1 th • street, to
the anrprls
• Oi i!
er hush
an 1 ind ir\ red
bloomers.
I'll
,va > > >
much for him,
ami lie pi-
it' .11
i. 11
iiis objections
had no we
4 it
with 1
wife, and she
continued
to VV
ear t •
; 1 lomers, al-
thou .' h her
refit
sed t .
ii out with her.
The lawyet
• told him he
could not stop
it, as the
"new
wo m a
u" was here to
ul if the husband <
I bloomer
| the legi
mid wait a
would not only see red
le roa I, but se 1 them iu
hulls at Trenton.
1 Slirevi'port.
lo., Aug. 11
o. met to*
I capital
UFT
To ituHU
Kansas City. Mi
stockholders of the
initial Construct ion •
voted to increase tli
the company to TI
ceeds of the increase will be u
build the cxt nslon of the Kan -:
Pittsburg iS (lulf roi way, t hat
being pushed from the vicinity
loam Springs, Ark., to Shrevep.
1 our Attempts n( Ku'c do.
I Wichita, Kan., Au r < . This
ing Mrs. Aquillii Dev 11 • went
Second street bridge at. 1 was a
I throw herself into the Arkausa
when a bvstandcr sci/.etl he
Kan Mil < tiraud Army Veterani.
Topkk v. Kan., Aug. 0. —The Grand
Army veterans of Kansas will send a
train load of products to the Louisville
encampment. It will be called the
"foraging train." It will be elabor-
ately decorated with corn, wheat, oats
l'he and other grains and grasses, ballasted
I'er- with big potatoes, cabbages and other
tables, and adorned with stuffed
tens and other fowls, and there
be a ear load of fruits of every va-
a nd
:k of
pro-
■d te ricty.
' itv, Desperate Pl^iit in a Mini'.
. now Lka\ i n wohtii, Kan.. Aug. 0.—-Henry
>f Si* Johnson and Mathew Jordan, miners,
1 La. fought in the Home coal mine this
morning and the former was fatally
hurt, Jordan sticking a pick through
his neck. Tlio fight occurred 800 feet
below the surface. Officers later went
into tlio mine and captured Jordan.
morn-
to tlio
' out tO
liai
t familic-
C1.1-:vki.aND, O., Aur. 4. The new
steamer Yale was launched at the
yard of the Cleveland Ship building
Co. to-day. She Is the largest boat
ever built at this port and will be the
best equipped freighter on the great
lakes. She is owned by Robert Rhodes
and others, of this city. She is :t00 feot
over all, 4." feet beam. 18feet deep, con-
structed of open hearth steel through-
out
Another Claim AciiIiihI Spiiln.
Nrw York, Aug. 4. Charles Lynn,
the "Cuban cattle king," who arrived
from the scene of the Insurgent fight-
ing in Santa Clara province recently,
proposes to push a claim of 91.*>0,000
against the Spanish government for
the destruction of his father's property
and the imprisonment of his mother
jail at Trinidad,
rant of law.
To l-'iiflii the Hell < onipnny.
Nkw York. Aug. t Telephone man-
ufacturers and makers of telephone ap-
paratus throughout the Unite I States
have arranged for the organization of
a corporation with a capital of £10,000,-
000 to enter the field against the Hell
Telephone Co. The proposed organi-
zation will be known, it is said, as the
Kastern Telephone Protective associa-
tion. _
Solon o Thaeher Seriously III.
Lawrknck. Ivan., Aug. i Judge
Solon O. Thaeher is lying seriously ill
at his homo in South Lawrence. He
returned a week ngo from Colorado, i
where he had gone for his health, feel- 1
iny much worse, and continued to de-
cline. Mrs. Thaeher. who has been j
visiting at Ucnesee, N. Y.. is expected
home to morrow.
n.. linn* 1- llUplm- a! Itlnnl ••
Lawrknck, Kan., Aug. I. < ol. <>. E.
Lenrnnrd, president of the Kansas
commission appointed for the Atlantu
exposition, announced that there
would be no exhibit from Kansas as a
state owing to the inability of the ex-
position management to give room
necessary for a Kansas display.
The (ierinaii Tide to Xmei ra
Washington, Aug 4.—A report by
Commercial Agent Stern at Ii mberg,
Germany, to the state department,
shows that in I*04 Germany stint to the
Unit ul States ; I,L* 10 emigrants. The
1 irgcst emigration was in 1881, num-
I berintr 20(1,170 persons. In ISM there
were 7.1,102- During the twenty years
' covered by the report the German mi-
i gration to the United States amounted
I to 1,781,340. more than ' > per cent, of
■ the ♦otal from tlie em • •
WANT Till l.fNK t.|t UVN.
Priinlouer* at i'opeka Culli d I'pon to He-
rune to Aerept ' nv Currcney.
Topf.k a. Kan . Au r. ' This is pen-
sion day and checks for several hun-
dred thousand dollars arc being paid
out by United States Commissioner
without war* ! Glick. The following circular was dis-
; tributed among the old soldiers of To-
la and Shawnee
pension office:
imrnricv halt You :
•ountv who visited
checks
ire entitli-i!
Demund i
Ofllce of IDI vionKBR IMU
y v *' My whole
nI , t • of tobacco for the
1 t VHl'ioil* other reiin -ti
11 I ..V.-'t Iv'cineil; t on
4 o-to smoker full> i| i-i
id cnui nd can fully recr.oni
Your* Truly
i
In the stock business
you need it. The reg-
ular price is one dollar
per year. We have
made special arrange-
ments with the pub-
lishers to furnish the
STATE DEMOCRAT
and Stock Inspector
for $1.25 per year. ''
begged to be permitted to tlr
elf. Mrs. Dewing l.a
ul and hi
> hope f
iir arrive
• 1 the re1
0«0 yards
'iptoil -
-Judge S.
still un-
til y there
ry. Mrs.
Dijon by Lesna
1 !< .1 Ide d ist a in (
11. hill the til
pts at the Kansas City stock
January 1 aggregate 780,-
11,177 cal ves, I. *iOI,:tl4 hogs,
ep and .'1.horses and
1 pared tv itli t iie eorrespond-
1>H the increase is - .7I2
\ sheep, and a decrease of
Lie, 'J0,07.*i hogs and 1,."150
• by the postal nuthor-
of hi
>f 50 per ci
rs, besjiilc->
l 1
Di s Moinih, la
that off
tion to
I lob* *
civ de
•in, all lines, 1
1 July l. Mil. to
otniuation foi
nominated foi
•ratic conven
lialltovvn next1
the Santa Fe
ho fiscal year
1 fron
•viou.s
1
ueerpt depreciate'i curreiiev.
J The pensioners are paid by checks
J w.iichare cashed at the Topcka banks.
It is claimed the circular was prepared
by a bimetallist who wants to show
that there is not enough gold iu the
banks to pay the pensioners alone,
aside from doing the other business of
the country. It has also been suggest-
ed that this may be part of the Sove-
reign boycott, of national bank notes.
It is not known who distributed the
FAIR FACES
Disfigured by Eruptions
ARK (TRKD MY
Ayers Sarsaparilla
01
terrible coiuli- Oj
tion w ith a liu- ?!
inor, or erii| - oi
t i.>ii, wliL li OJ
I t• >Ke out all
o\
g!
inoity of others o|
tlio cm Oj
ea« y of Ay 1 ~ q-
ps, I coiiolutletl oj
trial, and the Oj
result v\,: j a thorough cure, no -iu11 ol 0j
BppB iran< a oj
•Imo. 1 b v< no bo tatlo in recom* g;
tncii.Iiiig AVI IN ! ;||I> o:
_J. W. DEAN. OS
Sarsaparilla In lik«'
to give this medicine
over the
ch better
kind of skin
Moss Point. Mis
Ayer'Son.y.
Admitted at tho World's Fair
Sarsaparilla
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Bixler, Mort L. The State Democrat. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 7, 1895, newspaper, August 7, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116734/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.