The Reformer. (Kingfisher, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 10, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Mouf greenbacks.
Stand by your home paper.
Mode greenbacks and less bonds.
Down with the banker's rebellion.
BALANCE OF POWER.
THE POPULIST PARTY A POWER
IN THE LAND.
No MORE bank notes or bonds for-
ever.
(i keen hacks ure true American
money. ______
More greenbacks and less monkey
business. ______
Where there are so many wildcats,
there must be a rat.
Noend the alarm! The bankers are
Rdvnncing on our homes.
The eighth financial conspiracy is
Worse than tin* other seven combined.
1 ’i:ri*i:11 \i. prosperity is what the
principles of the Omaha platform pro-
vide for.
Twist it and turn it as much as you
can—still the banker's plan i*> one of
rebellion.
IVlitocrAcv will pull the other leg
as soon as the republican congress
con venes.
Letts have more greenbacks, with-
out any exception, ands, ifs, huts or
bank notes.
Indei i.mh \ r free coinage of both
gold and silver, and independent issue
of legal tender greenbacks.
The life of the nation is threatened.
The bankers are about to capture the
most sacred right of government.
Wim i; putting down the rebellion
of bankers against government money,
let us free the debt slaves of the
cou n t ry. _
Tiie rebellion against government
money must be put down—and the
only way to put it down is to issue
more greenbacks.
The present banking system may
not be the best in the world—but the
one proposed in the Baltimore plan is
certainly the worst.
The hankers' plan is too outrageous
for cool argument. It must be de-
nounced in the hardest words the En-
glish language affords.
China is about t«i jump out of an
elegantly Japanesed frying pan into
the tire. She contemplates borrowing
money from the Rothschilds.
Of course the grecnbacker's talk is
all “fiat lunacy"— and yet the* bankers
can't issue money even under the Bal-
timore plan without the aid of govern-
ment fiat.
The attempt of the democratic Pres-
ident, aided by the republicans, to
destroy the greenbacks, will drive lots
of honest workingmen out of the old
parties into the new. *
Xorody will now deny that the
money question is the important one.
A plan is proposed by (irover ami John
and the bankers to destroy this great
function of tin* government.
We believe in paying all honest
debts—and do not consider it incon-
sistent to say that the first, and the
last, and the next issue of bonds to
keep up a gold reserve, should be re-
pudiated.
It is all right for the government to
furnish money to the bankers without
interest on 30 per cent security. But
it would be awful to furnish money to
the farmers on 12ft per cent security at
a low ratS Qf interest,
rm r~
The bankers will force congress to
.pns^thc new currcEvv bill by drawing
all the gold out of the trcn.fliry, while
outwardly pretending to be opposed to
the bill fooling the people with one
hand and forcing congress with the
other.
A hill has been passed by the house
allowing all the railroads to pool their
profits, thus making them practically
one corporation. Whoop or lip! The
next step will force the government to
take charge. Corporation socialism
hath a tendency.
If the1 Vote* Cast for ItM CandidateN
Were Thrown to Any One of the Old
I’artlrs the Other Would Oo Into
OldKIou—Will On <>ro\vlug.
The .Minneapolis Tribune to off set
the wonderful gain of COO,000 votes
which it now admits the People's
Party made in two 3 ears has the fol-
lowing to say:
But the probability of continuing
such a percentage of gain is as tenu-
ous as most of the Populist theories.
There is much less significance in a
largo percentage of gain by a now
and small party than our Populist
friends imagine. If a newspaper
starts out with one subscriber and
gains another, its circulation has in-
creased 100 per cent, at the same
time it has not receved no positive ad-
dition. A gain of 000,000 votes in a
great country of about 70,000,000 in-
habitants is a mere bagatelle; it cuts
very little figure. It shows up well
in the vote of a party that had only a
million votes all told in 1892, but as a
positive gain it is not important. Six
hundred thousand votes might be
taken off or addeu to the aggregate
of republican ballots without produc-
ing any more effect upon the aveatro
results than a single 11 y bite produces
upon a cheese.
The returns are not in sufficiently
for us to note what changes 000,000
taken froai the republican vote would
have had this year. But a few figures
on the election of 1892 as to the effect
000,000 taken from the democratic or
Populist column ami added to the re-
publican column would have had.
The electorial vote as cast stood rep.
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS.
1 lft, dein.
I’op
22.
Uhnngo |
Would lm\ e given |
Klectorial
of votes |
the republicans I
votes
20 47ff
Arkansas with
8
20
(’aliforuia
1
7 480
(’olorado
4
2 (185
”
< ’onnectieut’’
6
2.70
’’
•*
1 Delaware
’*
8
12 651
>»
Florida
it
4
961
Idaho
it
3
12 497
Illinois
i»
24
ff 56ff
M
Indiana
>i
lft
2 938
M
Kansas
»*
10
20 011
”
*•
Kentucky
ii
Iff
10 ftffft
11
Maryland
ii
8
14 953
”
M ississippi
ii
9
21 740
Missouri
’»
17
2 270
1*
»»
Nevada
ff
7 4*8
11
New Jersey
II
10
27 760
11
»*
New York
1>
16 805
11
”
N.l arolhm
’>
11
119
”
N. Dakota
II
2
20 674
11
11
S. Carolina
11
9
19 272
”
Tennessee
11
12
29 858
”
Virginia
”
12
2 088
11
W. Virginia
”
6
ff 273
”
•1
Wisconsin
12
69 731
”
Texas
”
15
26 480
Alabama
11
40 530
”
»
Georgia
Iff
29 *60
Louisiana
8
540
”
Ohio
1
A lilll Before ( on|rm Which Means
Mach to I’nbllsheri.
There is now in the hands of the
house committee on postoffines and
postroads u measure <*f extraordinary
character, introduced last summer by
Congressman Weadoek of Michigan.
The bill purports to amend and re-en-
act section 3,877 of the revised statutes.
This is the section which defines
second class mail matter, that is to
j say. all printed newspapers and other
I periodicals regularly issued at stated
periods from a known office of publica-
tion. The Wcadock bill adds to the
existing definition the following pro-
vision:
“Any newspaper or other matter of
the second class which advises, abets
or suggests the commission of any of-
fence against any law of the United
States, or any state or territory, or
any country with which we are at
peace, shall he excluded from the
mails.
Congressman NVeadock is a democrat
and an Irishman born. We suppose
his bill was intended to prevent the
dissemination through the mails of
dangerous anarchist literature. Its
effect., however, would be to establish a
censorship not only repugnant to
American ideas, but also violative
of the first amendment of the consti-
tution, which provides that “Congress
shall make no law abridging the free-
dom of the press." The freedom of
the press would not necessarily be
abridged by a law excluding from the
mails newspapers which advise, abet
or suggest the commission of serious
offences against the laws of the United
States or of the states or territories.
Whatever may be thought of the
impolicy of such a system of censor-
ship, or of its possibilities of mis-
chievous and oppressive misucs, the
section of the revised statutes, for ex-
ample, which excludes from the mails
periodicals publishing obscene matter
can not be held to abridge the freedom
of the press, and therefore to be un-
constitutional. But to deny, as
Wen dock would deny, the privileges of
the postofliee to any journal which
shall at any time advise or suggest the
commission of any offence against any
law of any country with which we are
at peace is so clearly unconstitutional
that no argument is needed on the
question. Legislators who try their
hand at establishing in this country
any sort of press censorship, no mat-
ter how well intended, usually makes
themselves ridiculous when they come
to specifications.—New York Sun.
Or a rlmngo of 427,040 to the republi-
can tickets would have given them !
the entire vote in the electoral college,
and yet the Tribune editor asserts
that the change could be made “with-
out producing any m< re effect upon
average results than a single fly bite 1
produces up jn a cheese.
I( lie meant average results to the
party he is away off'.
If average results to the people then
he is no doubt right ns between the
republicans an 1 democrats - Dakota
B ura list.
Thf.he would be no currency at all
under the Carlisle plan. There would
l>e a worse panic than the world ever
knew. The “safety fund*' is to be ac-
cumulated gradually on a small per-
centage, and it would be ten years be-
fore the fund would he large enough
to issue the bank note proposed.
Article 1, section 3, clause ft of the
constitution, says: “Congress shall
have power to coin money and regu-
late the value thereof.’’ Will some
one please point out a clause in the
constitution authorizing congress to
delegute that power to the bankers?
The opposition to free coinage of
silver is that it would increase the
amount of money in circulation. Do
you think the fellows who want to
demonetize silver will expand the cir-
culation under the Baltimore plan ex-
cept for temporary advantage to the
bunkers to get hold of more to
t\ueeze?
In Haverhill, Mass, tlie Populists, i
prohibitionists and socialists formed a
triple alliance, on a “municipal re-
form" platform, and the two old par- j
ties united against them. Money was
used as free as water by the demo- j
republicans—but the reform forces j
won over both old parties and the rum !
power by a vote of 2,560 to 2,149.
Tije only objection the hankers find |
to the Baltimore plan is that it docs
not provide to pay them interest on
the 30 per cent security they deposit.
Think of it —a man borrowing a dol-
lar on 30 cents worth of security and
then kicking because the man Le bor-
Vqws from don't pay interest on the
security.
The bunks offer to pay only one-lmlf J
of 1 per cent interest for the privilege |
of destroying the greenbacks and is- 1
suing hank notes to loan. The people I
are willing to pay 2 per cent direct to
the government to destroy the bank ,
notes and issue more greenbacks.
The republicans will now probably
be a little more lenient toward elec-
tion frauds in the south, since it ap- I
pears that a free ballot and a fair
count would insure Bopulist success.
The senators who re tin* next March j
from the service of the sugar trust j
have not even the sympathy of the j
men thrown out of employment by the j
closing of the works.
The bankers probably don't want
any depositors under the Baltimore j
plan—at least they offer them even
less security than the present system
gives. _
The president wants unconditional
divorce—something similar to the re-
peal of the Sherman law. Then let
the bankers provide.
Remember the Hazard circular, to
keep it before the people. The out-
growth of that scheme is the improved
Baltimore plan.
Think of it. The only power in the
country that can create money, bor-
rowing money.
COUNTERFEITING.
England Find a Our Cheap Silver » Ver-
itable (iodfieiid.
Some time ago we published an an-
onymous letter from California, claim-
ing the writer held indisputable evi-
dence that American dollars were
being coin el in England.
At the time we placed very little
confidence in the story, but since then
Mr. Gordon Clark of Washington, who
has lived in England and has friends
there on the inside of affairs, lias
lately received a confidential com-
munication stating that “certain Lon-
don banking houses are striking off
American ami Mexican silver dollars
and sending them abroad. The Mexi-
can coins go chieffy to Asia and the
American dollars to the West Indies.
From there the latter goto the United
States in place of gold, to settle bal-
ances between the West Indies and
the United Slates.*’
Thus counterfeiting has become a
regular part of the monetary war
which England has been waging
against this country since the demone-
tization in 1*>73. But the Loudon
counterfeiters can not be punished for
buying American silver at its com-
mercial value and turning it into full
leLral tender dollars equal to gold.
Sherman, Cleveland and our other
statesman (?) have arranged things in
that way.
1*. S. As I am well acquainted with
Mr. Clark—at one time acting editor
of the North American Review, and
whos^ recent book, “.Shylock,’’ has
caused such a stir—entire credence is
given here to his statement and to
that of his correspondents
II. E rl'A 1 BENICCK,
Chairman National Committee l’cople's
Party. _
ARE YOU AN HONEST MAN?
Then .loin the l*urty of the Common
People ami Let Cm Work Together.
We believe the voters of both old
parties are honest and will not be
found voting with dishonest parties
any longer than the time when they
learn the truth.
The People's party has heretofore
been largely built up from tbe repub
lican party. That party being in
power its dishonesty was more ap-
parent than that of the democratic.
But now that the democratic party
has had a chance and its lead-
ers huve shewn themselves even
worse than the republican lead-
ers, the people are leaving
it Honest men will not longer vote
the ticket, and they know that the re-
publican party is against the people,
so that they cun not honestly turn
any way except toward the new party
of the common people.
The People's party has no prejudice
or grudge against a man for having
voted with a party that he thought
would serve the interests of the peo-
ple. But now that he knows the true
disposition of democracy, if he does
not cut loose from it, he deserves not
even sympathy in his misery.
As men, we receive you into the
People's porty. If you believe in
our principles work with us. That
is all The party does not reward you
for this; you reap the reward your-
self, and wc shall nil be benetitted
together. It is as much to your in-
terest as to ours that you should join
u*k If you are not honestly seeking
the good of the whole people, you are
not worthy of our consideration.
The general good is the object of
the People's party. If you are an of-
fice hunter, tetter stay in the old
party a little longer, until you be-
come humble enough to accept a
place in thi ranks as a worker.
Workers are what we want We
will make officials of some of them, of
course, but if we could secure the en-
actment and enforcement of the
principles of the Omaha platform into
law, without electing a single official
our purpose would be served.
We invite you for justice and hu-
manity—not for spoils.
If you are an honest man you can
not take offense at the terms of en-
listment
FREE COINAGE.
Tin* Trunsmlgslppi CongregH Declared for
It bv Vote of H14 to (>?.
The Transmissippi congress declar-
ed its opposition to the Baltimore
plan, it being the sense of the con-
vention that all the issues of paper
money should be by the general gov-
ernmeu t.
The resolutions passed, were as fol-
lows:
“Resolved 1. That in direct oppo-i-
tion to the plan known as the Balti-
more plan the sense of the convention
is that all issues of paper money should
he by the general government.
That it is the tense of this con-
vention that the pending proposition
for a reformation of our paper cur-
rency is one that in our judgment
would create additional and insur-
mountable difficulties to the return to
bimetallism and that wc are oposed to
the same.
“3. That in any currency reform
acted upon we demand that a constitu-
ent part thereof shall be the remonet-
ization of silver or that it shall be of
such a character a* to he no impedi-
ment to oar return to bimetallism as
it existed prior to 1873.
“Whereas, An appreciating money
standard impairs all contracts, bank-
rupts enterprise, makes idle money'
prolitable by increasing its purchas-
ing power and suspends the product-
ive forces of our people: and,
“Whereas, The spoliation conse-
quent upon the outlawry of silver in
the interest of the creditor class by
constantly increasing the value of
gold is undermining all industrial so-
ciety;
4 Therefore, We demand the imme-
diate restoration of the free and un-
limited coinage of gold and silver at
the present ratio of Iff to 1 without
waiting for the aid or consent of any
other nation on earth.”
These resolutions are all right, but
* ivsoluting” without voting is use-
less.
The proper thing for the members
of that congress who favor the restora-
tion of silver would be to join the only
party that favors the free and un-
limited coinage of silver ana help us
to down the traitors who have be
trayed them in their old parties.
A single resolution to join the I’opu-
list party in a body would have cov-
ered more ground than all the above
resolutions, and would have been a
step toward accomplishing some-
thing.
Remember the story read in yoijr
school days that when the farmer and
his sons decided to do their own mow-
ing the meadow lark knew it was time
to move its nest.
The cuckoo will be driven out just
as soon as the people decide to do
“REPUBIICAN TIMES.” |R|lnSI Hiadachll
THE C. O. P. IS
TRIAL.
NOW ON
With the Ortnlntv of a Republican
House anil Senate After March, llusi-
****** Fven Crow* Worse Than Democ-
racy Ma;le It.
their own mowing*
Notes by tho Way.
<?: i •
AiNT these royal times?
Landslides always go down hill.
Is the banker's fiat better than gov-
ernment fiat.
Only traitors hate greenbacks issued
by the government.
No; the Baltimore plan is not pater-
nal. It is simply infernal.
The President’s recommendations
were all for plutocracy's interests.
Where will America “dump" her sil-
ver, when the Baltimore plan is
adopted.
THE People’s papers are the educa-
tors. You should help increase their
circulation.
Yes; the two old parties are still en-
mies—common enemies of the com-
mon people.
AY 11 at would ho the “intrinsic value"
of the kind of money proposed in the
Baltimore plan.
It costs Uncle Sam a hundred mill-
ion dollars a year to maintain his
“credit” with the bakers.
Now rurt bankers want the green-
back destroyed to secure the parity of
bank note*, bonds and gold.
WILL the yople consent to destroy
the kind of iiipb** that put down the
rebellion, and allow rebel bankers to
issue the money?
The way to bring greater prosperity
to the bankers is for congress to adopt
the Baltimore plan. The way to bring
prosperity to the whole people is to
abolish the present banking system,
issue more legal tender government
paper money ami institute government
banks.
[Oklahoma Stated
The following is the sweet refrain
that comes into the office of the State
every afternoon. Going, going, last
call, “fine span of mules. 826, going,
last call, sold for 820’’! These are
good honest republican dollars,
twenty-six of them buy a pair of
mules. “Going, lust call, horse, har-
ness and cart for 813.2ft, going, going
last ca'll, and sold for 813.2ft.’* Honest
! dollars; thirteen and one quarter of
’ them buy a horse, wagon and har-
ness. Vote the republican and demo-
cratic tickets you whelps; “going, last
! call, a fine 2-year-old tilley, all sound
1 and going for 87.
“Last call and sold for 87.’’ It takes
a 2-year-old filly to get seven of them.
Which way did you vote at the last
election you pc or devil of a fanner
who exchanged the 2-yecr-old lillcy
for seven honest dollars. “Going,
going, third aud last call, a fine horse
and saddle sound in every limb and a
good riding pony. Going, last call
1 nnd sold for 89.7ft” good honest dol-
lars: none of your silver basis about
them- It is only the horses that are
on the silver basis. Vote that way
you whelps: vote for an honest gold
dollar and put your horses upon a sil-
ver basis.
And the above scenes can be seen
every day. and are seen by 260 farm-
ers of Oklahoma county, and the poor
devils look on us though it was a huge
joke on the poor devil who is com-
pelled to make the sacrifice. The
other day a mule sold for 8i7 ana
dropped his ears in shame to think
♦hat ho was worth so little. But 200
farmers stood by and it did not cause
a blush of shame to come over their
cheeks. The mule had sense enough
to know that tlie transaction was a
devilish shame. The poor dupes of
farmers had not sense enough to
know it. They belong to the yellow
dog crowd that “vote the ticket
straight;” one of them voted as he
shot; another one of them was born a
democrat, his father was a democrat,
and his father’s father was a demo-
crat and lie sucked democratic milk,
und to tell the truth he was still a
calf: and when night caine they all
went home to raise mules to buy
honest dollars, the kind of which it
takes a mule to get seventeen. And
when election day comes we have to
pit our intelligent votes against an
; animal of that kind—not the mule
! but the man—and they call this popu-
lar gov< rnment
Ah to the Future Policy.
Tiie follow ing are {Senator IVffer’s
views as to the future policy of our
party.
“Populists wisely placed the money
question first in their piatform. The
money power now agrees with us that
this is the leading issue of the time.
Its representatives in high places have
removed from the statue books the
last vestige of law r quiring the coin-
age of silver dollars and the issue of
paper money. They have brought the
! business of the country to a gold
| basis; they have stopped the coinage
of all orher kinds of money and now
they propose to withdraw from circu-
lation our government paper and sub-
stitute bank hotes in its place, thus
placing the people’s business affairs
at. the mercy of the speculators. Wo
can not escape the issue if wc would.
It is upon us. The practical question
for us to determine it, how can we
best concentrate the voice and vote of
men who take the same view that we
I do of this great and pressing issue? A
proper discussion of tiie money ques-
tion involves every idea in the Popu-
list platform. We need not and ought
not to abandon a principle we hold
dear, but wc can press our leading
idea more boldly, more aggressively
aud more exclusively than we have
done, and with this key solve the
problem yet to come.
Where the Hnunty Went*
Under the Cleveland sugar tariff
one great trust gets all the tariff and
the republicans boast that it was not
so under the bounty system.
How much better was it?
The records of the treasury depart-
ment show tiiat during the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1894, the payments as
bounty on sugar aggregated 812,099,-
8.1.1, of which 811, lit 290 was on cane
sugar, 88)3,1 <4 on beet sugar, 817,312
on sorghum and 81 Iff, 121 011 maple.
Of the bounty on cane sugar 810,8 is,-
800 was paid to producers of Louis-
iana, 8.23,106 of Texas, 827,113 of
Florida and 8lft5 of Mississippi.
The records also show that 811,-
314,200 bounty on cane sugar was paid
to ftTS producers, an average of 819*
10ft.00 to each producer. The umoant
paid as bounty on beet sugar was di-
vided among seven producers or fac-
tories, making tbe average payment
to each 8’. 21.7 30.
Weil, suppose that silver should
take the place of gold in the treasury
- one is as useless there as the other.
We don't cure whether “foreign in-
41 For four year* I have been a constant suf-
ferer. My head ached from morning till
night. - After trying everything 1 could think
of, the only thing that gave me any relief wri-
te* keep my head
bound with a cloth
to keep the air from
striking it. The uasu.
passages of my head
and my throat were
very sore and gava-
lue intense pain, ex-
pectorating much
corrupt matter. 1
was told that t h e
weight of my hair
was the cause of my trouble, and I had it cm
off; but this gave me no relief. Reading about
a lady similarly afflicted who was cured by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla’, I began to take it. Br
fore I hud taken one bottle I felt gr tly im
flood’s?®1* Cures
proved, and at the end of three bottles was en-
tirely well. I now weigh 240 pound*, whirl
is a gain of 10 pounds in three months.’*
Mas. Mart A. White, Franklin, Indiana.
Hood’s Pills do n v
tion and tone the stomach. Try them. 25c.
n.LJ. HIGDON ft HIGDON,
r HlPril v Patents, i
I aiblllO Mo.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination ami Advice as to Patentability of
Invention, send for “ Inventor*' made, <>r Ho»» •<> m /
u Patent " PAT2ICK O’FAIUUBLL. WASHINQTiSt, D. CL
, “ COLCHESTER’’
Jg SPADING
If BOOT.
BEST IN IWAE1CCT.
IIFSTIN FIT.
DEM’ IN WEAUING
QUALITY.
Tiie outer or tap sole ex-
1 i tends tin* whole kuigtli
'A'tfdown to tiie heel, pn»-
“tectlng the Loot In dig-
ging and in other l,;.nl
work.
ASK YOUR DEALER
FOR THEM
and don't be
with Inferior
put. off
foods.
COLCHESTER KlIlHKIt CO.
WALTER BAKER & GO,
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
^ COCOAS AND CHOCOLATE?
On this Continent, hevi receives*
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
Industrial anc! Food
il EXPOSITIONS
,; lii Europeans America.
' L t'nliki-tho iMiti^i 1‘; com no \lka-
li' 1 r < tin r l 'Ijoinic i - t>r_-
um-'I in ony of their j r, | :,r:■ i.. r.a.
Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA iam KUcij
pure and soluble, aud <orf» btt tha.i otic c> .t a i•../<.
SOLD DY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
'.VALTER BAKER & GO. CORCHESTER, MASS.
W. L. Douglas
' 1C THE liEST.
, FIT FOR A KING.
CORDOVAN,
FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF
(£4*3 sc Fine Calf & Kang ARoa
*3.S0 POLICE,3 SOLES.
BOYSSCHQOLSHOES.
•LADIES*
^3-$2?'OBEsT0n°NGQl-A.
r SEND FOR CATALOGUE
>W,L,DOUGrLA
DRO C KTON, /•'LAS 5.
Over One Million People wear the
W. L Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the best value for the rr
Thev equal custom shoes In style c
Their wear'lag qualities ore tin
The prices are uniform,—-stun
From
earing qualities are unsi
uniform,—-stu
ram J*i to 93 saved over othc. _______
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
urpassed.
-stumped cn sole.
$i to $3 saved over other makes
Cole’s New Domestic
Coffee Berry.
\pUbi w
Roller Than n CSoId Mine.
Ha'se v M.r m.\ n . • : .* ;it !• ss Hiatt i.r t • nt a
Let hVh lurid stnro < -1.- an Thn
pound
t hVh tar
poor mini's !i lend and rich man's tit-light. Mtv
1 tures nor ill t>
up to th
and r
(V) bushels per
store coflcc. Produces two crops a year in
the south. Large packet postpaid 20cta: or
enough to plan! 2u;t hills, .'si cts or stumps. Will
mirili or • I'.ith in f- u ■ months. 1 hunt any
n of .hu-
ll us pro
aero Some prcler it to
lime up i" i i- -j* it li of .hum: •ju.tKKi farmers sup-
plied and fiery • n<* praises it. 11a- produced
ovor IV) bn:
aoutfli to yuan* 200 hills. ;>o cts or stamps,
mke 200 pots of most delicious colter, pood
enough for a king. 1- superseding store coffeo
as fast as .ts merits t eeomo known. I.urge
catalogue Of n() r.ew varieties of serais and testi-
monial' ;ii-::. n : i over the Union sent
free witl
i. L. (1)1.r. NiWMlHinutl.
lluokia-r. Wo.
vestors" arc alert, or inert,
bottom of the sea.
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Tousley, J. C. & Tousley, C. C. The Reformer. (Kingfisher, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 10, 1895, newspaper, January 10, 1895; Kingfisher, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1077067/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.