The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 305, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1895 Page: 2 of 4
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I
The State Capital.
By l> « Stata Capital Printing Ca
prank ti. aeeeR. ediur.
iE.sday, april r, i ;
OFFICIAL PAPER OF OKLAHOMA.
Hy EoK tmfDlof the Legislature.]
THAT CLEVELASI) LETTER.
People expectedsomething profound
in the Chicago fioaocia. letter of Mr
ClereUnd He is the head o1 the
go'.d party. th* creditor e • h* mon-
eyed aristocracy, and tr > etter was
expected to offer nev- te i.«w shib-
boleth*, for the enernh- of the com-
mon weal If Mr. Cleveland knew oi
a financial plan which • ou crate
__ | the country from ita present deplora-
THE TERRITORIAL REPUBLICAN e '--u.
LEAGUE-OFFICIAL CALL. ■' the « t, .
, ... >.— ,J;__ stump
We Make
Competition S1
Hump
The %unu
.V Ifj +■ 1 . iu u . ;<* _ _ .......
U e eily of <* rrield routx'.jr.
T\t* I«ti4 o? repr«--.*-ctaU&n will be one dele
rate for ei-er> t rnty o. -inlrf-r «.f cx-al league*
au«J one «j<->fat« fur e>er> fraction of let cr
o*er. Hepubiicaa* are gruerm y lovlted.
By order of
r P >f < A , T B. raaauBow
kM-<rei*ry. Pre«idei
[Kepiibiieao p*p -r pie
tcopj]
Thk newspapers should sort up on
,4IV and "mj's.'* Cleveland's letter
ia out.
Clark sox's boom for ex-President
Harrison will not work. The republi-
can party has gone out of the ice bus-
iness.
Ir Oscar Wilde had read up on the
fate of Sodom he would have known
better than to have patterned after
that ancient lot of beasts.
Now. if ( and will explain what
kind of money he considers "sound
money" he will tell what the people
looked for in vain in his wonderful
financial sledge.
If a township politician not known
three miles around, couldn't say more
in one-third the space, on finances,
than Cleveland did in his "letter" he
would be a disgrace to his neighbor-
hood.
looked for its heralding .n t
eet.rii of the Territorial Repuf/- / . . . .
•f Oklahoma win be held oa i ®P«®Cn to the Chicago m . : >na "
Freeing the mind from political pre-
judice, the verdict will be that no pa-
per ho obtuse, stilted, prolix and dis-
appointing ever emanated from a pres-
ident of thia nation. There are a
hundred constables in Oklahoma who
could write a more able financial
treatise; and if there is a sheriff in
the territory who couldn t put more
meat into a column and a half on this
subject, we would help the people
kick him beyond the territorial
boundaries. Had this letter e.uanated
from any other than a president, it
would hardly get a comment, unless in
ridicule.
The head of the gold party, Mr.
Cleveland says not a word in favor of
gold; the arch enemy of silver, he
only mentions the word silver once.
He makes no argumert; pre^nts no
facts; g'ves no plan; in fact, it is as
barren of fresh thought as a spanked
baby's face is of hirsute adornment.
The -burden of the drawling sen-
tences is "sound money" —but nobody
can tell from this letter what the
president thinks is "sound money."
This is fatuous palaver, thi- ound
money" cry: nobody wants other than
'sound money;" the country since
the republicans inuugurat« <t
ent financial system, has had none
but "sound money:" we have none
but "sound money" now. It is not a
question of how to get sound money"
—that we have: it is a question of how
to get enough "sound money"—th«
kind we now have—to do the business
of the country on. Mr. Cleveland,
having 32,000,000 of his own, and be-
ing the mouthpiece and zealous repre-
sentative of the men down east who
own the money, is interested in en-
hancing the value of money and
cheapening the value of those things
the producer sells for money. To
make dear money, Cleveland knows,
is to have less of it; therefore, he
wants all greenbacks and treasury
notes retired and silver kept outlawed
as primary money. Thus debts would
enhance because of the curtailed
amount of money to pay them in: and
cash being scarce, how else could the
business of the country run except
upon the credit system
1 he only semblance of an argument
In this Cleveland letter is a warning
to the farmers that if a "redundant
currency" did raise the price of their
products, it would also raise the pri
of all they bad U buy. The farme.
are not thinking of buying, they have
nothing to buy with—and, besides,
lothing were never so high as now,
since it takes 33 bushels of wheat to
buy a 812 suit of clothes, whereas, be-
fore the democracy got full power, it
only took 15 bushels of wheat to buy
the same suit. So the democratic
price of wheat has doubled to the
farmer, the price of what he has to
buy.
Mr. Cleveland does not understand
that this is a debt-struggling era—a
time when it takes about all the people
earn to pay the interest on their debts
held by the men of whom the presi-
dent is the partner champion and rep-
resentative; and the face of these
debts will remain stationary, if the
prices of the products of labor double.
\N hat the people want now is to get
the prices of products at least to where
We Sell For Cash!j
•
And give our Customers the Benefit of the *
Discount. We are here to stay. 2
COME AND SEE US !I
•
We are prepared to furnish you everything kept in $
a first class grocery. Our Quecnsware and glassware S
has been bought so low that we are not brought in {
competition with the retail trade. We sell you every- I
thing at lowest living prices. •
Our -- Meat -- Market!
Is unequaled by any in the city, and supplied with J
the choiccst meats, fish, and fowl; fresh oysters, pick- S
led pigs feet. Prepared soups, (various kinds). Every- J
thing as represented. X
Yours to please,
♦ JOHN MASSEY, Prop.
Cor. 2nd & Harrison. PROMPT DELIVERY.
Mil. « |.K\ ki \m want- to e,lu. at.
the people in "prudent ideas of
finance.'' The people think it is
Cleveland who needs the education—
and he will get it in great gobs in the
next few years.
Ci.k vki. \ m and his cabinet had bet-
ter keep off the stump if they don't
want the democratic party to stump its
tje on the gold brick and—break its
neck. However, it is too late to save
it anyhow.
"Coin's Financial School" is a rev-
olutionary document. Cleveland and
bio cabinet will effect its influence
about as much as the fly annoyed the
elephant. That book is daily con-
verting thousands.
C. F. Baiirktt couldn't shake off
the disease. It had "struck in" too
deep. tie was a lawyer only a week.
He is now associate editor and busi-
ness manager of the Norman Topic,
11. T. Miller's paper.
• Tub I'onca City Democrat says I'on-
ca and Cross have consolidated. The
Cross Resident calls it a son-of-Anna-
nias. that they have not joined and
never will. A half iflile apart is too
close for harmony. Close the gap,
boys.
Cleveland's letter as ail awe-strik-
er, will prove a dismal failure. It
will take the people a year or two t(
look up the meaning of his big, pedant
ic, platetudinous words—and as t<
what he is trying to get at, they never
will find out.
Thk government, being hard up,
comes down to Oklahoma and gets
Judgment for *7,000 paid out for town-
site board expenses, on order of the
government. Hoke Smith spewing
out what Noble ate two years ago, is a
novel scheme.
Ci.kvki.am>, in his stump speech to
the Chicago creditors, uses the word
silver just once and the words "sound
money" twenty-five times. Silver ap-
pears to be able to make plenty of
'sound"—enough to about drown out
the voices of Cleveland and his
cuckoos.
Ik Dr. Neal has about him enough
of those "scolloplike formations of a
light gray color on the margin of a
storm cloud of darker hue, or ball-
like clouds covering the western or
southern sky," he might send over u
few. Anything would be preferable
to the present atmosphereic condi-
tions.
emiJf
13 TflH PhflCE
MOVING
DAY
May 1st, 1895.
Oil the above mentioned date we
will remove to our >'e\v Store on Okla-
homa ave., next to Spengel'g furniture
store. This room is erected expressly
for us. Our constantly increasing trade
lias compelled us to secure more spac-
ious quarters than we now occupy. In
our new home we expect to still further
increase our business, and bv the same
straight toward methods that we have
used during the past four years that we
have been with you. It never was, and
never will be with us as with many
competitors "How much we can get tor
goods. " Its always our way to give the
most reliable ciualities for the least pos-
sible money. Until we move we will
inaugurate a
Great Removal Sale,
TO THE FRONT AGAIN
CAN T KEEP A GOOD
MAN DOWN.
But prices I Always Keep
DOWN.
See me for your New and Sec-
ond-hand Goods at Rock Bottom
prices. I buy sell or trade. Cash
paid for all Second-hand goods.
0.1. KICHM0ND
309 W. Oklahoma ave.
Outlirie Okla
This Spring, Clothing is cheaper
than ever. We have bought an im-
mense stock of Clothing, Hats and Furn-
ishing goods for this season's business
and we bought them cheap. We can
aflord to sell 'em in the same way. So
we are going to do it. We are going to
make prices this whole month that will
astonish the closest buyers. Your money
back for any article you buy in our
house that's not cheaper than elsewhere
We have not space to quote prices on
paper. See the goods, the price will be
low enough to suit you.
Now at 107
and St.
The Bee Hive.
After May 1st
Okla. & 1st.
11' irst Published in i(Ulahoma State Capital, April uh, 18(5. |
PUBLICATION NOTICE
Statement for Trademark:—Comes now N P. Cheadle, a dealer in carbon-
ated goods, soda waters, mineral and aerated waters, requiring the use of
kegs, casks, barrels, boxes, siphons, bottles and other vessels used as contain-
' rs* on which he hus names, brands, marks and trade-marks and other desig-
nation of ownership or proprietorship is stamped engraved, etched blown in
impressed and otherwise produced upon such kegs, casks, barrels, 'boxes si-
phons, bottles and other vessels used for containers, and tiles in the office of
the Secretary of the Territory of Oklahoma a discription of the names and
C.hV,dealer in such wares herein
K. C. STABLES.
3KM50 HEAD oFmim
HORSES AND MULES!
vith
not
N:nck tiie word gold did not appear
at all und the word silver only once
In. his Chicago letter, what does the
tirst and last democratic president in
thirty years mean by ''sound money?"
Does he mean the Carlisle state bank
variety, based on corporate greed and
democratic wind? Cleveland, you re-
member, was for the Carlisle fiat plan!
Thk meat packers have got a com-
bine ou which bus raised the price of
meats to a figure which will add #:iI. ,-
000 this year to the eobt of the people s
meat. 1 he oil trust has also raised
the price of oil. It is about time that
old trust "In Ood We Trust" comes to
the people's rescue. The an ti-trust
law, in democratic hands, is useless
they were when these debts wer
a ted.
1 he president need not worry about
'the masses" needing education on
'sound money;" they are learning re-
markably fast. They begin to know
that supply and demand has as much
to do with the price of money as '
anything else—and they want to
crease the supply. And they <1
want it increased by the Carlisle-
Cleveland plan of state bank paper
with nothing behind it but commer-
cial greed—money more purely fiat
than any the populists ever advocated;
they want an increased supply
tiken fiom nature's nutionul banks,
the silver mines, the same "old uollars
of our daddies" which have been in
the nution s financial blood since lT'.rj,
and never made a taint of trouble un-
til Cleveland forced the silver dollar
from our primary money system and
declared that gold, instead of gold
and silver, should be the basis «,f all
our 11 nances and our only money
ultimate payment.
marks and dL wlt,aQ,ei „e
enumerated, which said description is as follows to-wif
Soda bottles used and owned by N. F. Cheadle in Oklahoma Territory i
V.m i^SriW ! th,® words "blown in" to sui.l bottles:
N. K Cheadle, Outline, O. K." blown in.
"YV. A. Taylor, Marinette. Wis." blown in
"Hoffman llros., Chicago, 111." blown in.
"P. U. Lang, Chicago, 111." blown in.
'•l'omcy & Segelkee, Omaha. Neb." blown in.
Siphons with the following etched thereon-
"N. P. Cheadle, Guthrie, O. K."
Soda eases with the following stencil
"Guthrie liottling Works."
"Perry liottling Works."
, '7. FD, 1!e "lso "ses the following label on his bottles de-
scrlbid Hokey-I okey. That a fae simile of said design of llokev l'okev is
produced on a portion of said bottles, as follows, to-wit: y
W r<iW '<u# WW W"W1
Drivers and
Dratf. Also
Four Stallions
Sell For
CASH
And On
TIME.
All Stock: Must be as Represented or no Sale-
y haS reCe,Ved hlS P°wer horse dl'PP"* and will Clip horses at $2,„0 a head
218-224 S. Division St., Guthrie. Haat mir „
COPLEY & RKISEK.
Osiah W11.1,1 was the aesthetic,
high toned, "too-too" representative
of eulchawed HingUmt. He is now
convicted of a crime so beastly that
the J.ord continued a whole town with
"Are and brimstone" some 5,000 years
ag", for this same brutality. Oscar
has some brains, but he is a beast all
the same.
IIaii hoiiio Oklahoma ■ lodhopper'a
name appeared under the ' lev, land
Chicago letter, It would have been a
aource of local ridicule; as It la, the
people can only cogitate on what a
little a great man can get in a sup-
posed great letter. There is not a
new Idea scarcely an Idea of any
kind—In it; ills nine-tenth*word anil
the balance very windy wiud.
Mn. Ci.KvKi.ANti says if a freer and
larger volume of money did appreciate
crop products, the farmer would have
to pay more for all he buys. What
the farmer buys Is the pro,In i of la'
bor, M wall as what ha sells. ;,|„| is
not anything good which will enhance
the value of the products of labor.'
The debts the laborer has to pay can
not raise and soon it would take only
half the labor It now taU. . to pa\
them. Dear debts and cheap products
the wish of Cleveland and his
money bosses—but the common people
want a chance to pay their debts, and
they don't want to pay them lu r.o
cents a day labor and 40 cent wheat.
Dick C'iiask begins to regret that hi
didn't get out of the Kansas pen whei
ho had a chance. Stealing kissel
from l,ou Williams and stealing
for the state may keep him at I.ansi
quite a while after his wardenslilp
uses.
oul
f f1'*' >j jm,
in the'otHci1! j',i' 'l,,hir>'s v> fil(> o^'1' above description and fae simile
on, r J J , t ie 'Sl'l'reiary of the Territory of Oklahoma, that the same may
operate as trade-mark, entitling the said X. P. Cheadle to toe sole and exclu
sni use in Oklahoma Territory of the above-named marks, names and devices.
TERRITORY OF OKLAHOMA, i N" ' CHEADI-E'
, Sfl.
COUNTY OF LOGAN, \
and™™ I,'of la"'1f"!s*e,' b,'in«f first duly sworn, upon his oath,deposes
malS,! ^ i f?'1 description of the names,
hit I, C" " y "" boUl, h other containers, and asking
knows 11 ic""'n'"7"t'i ttS t,',c e-'"urk Oklahoma Territory, and that hS
Ilo>r on , contents thereof and that each, all and every of the allegations
therein made und contained are true.
u . ,, , , N. P. CHEADLE.
I SEAL] , subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 4th day
of April, A. I). lMit.V J
i .. E- L. Db VERB, Notary Public.
My commission expires May 10, 1898.
That the above and foregoing was tiled in the office of the Secretary of the
M further"/. '.H ST'8!0" V"' Uh <lay °' A,,"il' IV''1' 48 r,"<"ired by law, and
,™hr by law I now cause the same to be published for two suc-
in liifteanlta? f', i",K ""■A,'VM Vs ' *tk < ai'|tai.. a public newspaper published
In the capital of Oklahoma Territory, as required bylaw. Having comnllcd
accordl'nfflv* * ' a" I"'rso"8 " 111 ul"' '' K"'ern themselves a.-
accordingly. X. P. CHEADLE.
Remington R RacerSlOO
" Model M
'' Bov's Wheel 50
Pastime Special
Westminester
Little Scorcher
Haseball Goods, Lawn
Tennis, Croquet, Ham-
mocks, Guns and Ammu-
nition, Fishing Tackle,
Seines and Nets, Bicycle
Sundries, Wheels to let.
OLSMITH ARMS CO.
BEAR IN MIND THAT"THE CODS PELP THOSE
WHO HELP THEMSELVES." SELF HELP
SHOULD TEACH YOU TO USE
SAPOLIO
Guthrie Machine Works
and Jewelery Shop.
Reparing done on all kinds engines
and boilers, steam pumps, printing
press bicycles, sewing machines, gaso-
line stoves, guns, pistols, etc. First-
class repairing on watches, elocks and
jewelery, have most complete set of
tools for such work in the city. Will
soon be prepared to do all kinds of
plumbing, and steam and gass fitting.
First-class work and satisfaction guar-
anteed, for reasonable prices give us
a call at Tobies'old place, next door
Fire hall on 1st street. Work done
promptly by first-class workmen.
GUTHRIE MARKETS.
Wheat bard 50
Wheat soft 85
Oats 30
Corn 50
Uay 7.00@! 00
llogs 4.00
Sheep 3
Cowb 2.00(32.50
Steers 3.00®3.J5
Chickens, old 1.78&2.00
Spring Chickens 1.80(91.78
Turkeys 4 <96
Dueki Ulf 2.00
6(97
10918
1.00(91.28
I B#4.1
r MCNKAL' w"i.HORSFA,.L.cfh,i.SEAV'
Guthrie National
SumlnL ~ ' " «50,OOO.OO
Surplus ' 10,000.00
FIRST NATIONAL BANK ORGANIZED IN OKLAHOMA.
0'"lll,'c' • Oklahoma,
(ll<
Kggs
Butter
Seed Cotton.
Hal* Cotton
WICZER& FAIRFIELD
it-
Prompt attention j-iven to Moving House hold OoocIb. I'ians an.! Safe..
Coal Delivered to any Part of the Cltv.
Boa IJ I a ... . - *
Telephone No. 80'
OUce sue Harrison A.enue West of Depot.
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Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 305, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1895, newspaper, April 17, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103452/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.