The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1899 Page: 2 of 8
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The experiment stkj* ♦ Ktiliwa- Karmen. are all busy with their
THE PEOPLE'S VOICE, tar it encouraging the culture of sugar spring work.
,j tx>et4 A local company at Guthrie will or-
^ Greer county had a biff wolf hunt ffanize for the purpose of boring for
NORMAN,
nnMi : la*t week. It wai tbe hunt tnat waa gas.
OL^AlIUMAi J big>__not the woif In western Oklahoma, south of
J>! Oklahoma has ir. the Kansas state Woodward, . prairie Hre laat week ran
OKLAHOMA AN1 INDIA MKBIToK* [H-nitenliary 1HU conricU, and it pays
thirty-five cents a day to keep each of
The corn is coming up in Oklahoma
territor}'.
Territorial Treasurer Thompsons
trial does not begin until November •
next.
In the case of that wheat in Oklaho-
flfty miles before it died out.
The old story of 5,000 Indians leav-
thein* 'or Me*tco ia again dragging its
Oklahoma was ten years old April weary length through the unsu.pect-
22, but it looks much older. While its
fields are fresh and green its politi-
cians are neither.
The berry crop in the Indian terri-
will be an
this season.
exceptionally heavy one
ma that will be poor, the trouble was tory is all right this year, and the
hilt ieirin|. J present indications are that tbe crop
There was some better way of open-
ing a country to settlement than by
the high noon method, but no one ever Recently Governor Barnes issued
suggested it. i pardons to F. II. Cantrel and Alfred
Wheat is coming out In fine shape Burgdort ltantrel was sentenced
under the influence of warm sprinp from Noble county for horse stealing
rains. Very few fields are injured ser and Hurgdorf. who is only sixteen
iously and many are in prime condi- years old. from Lincoln county for
tion. says a prominent territorial pa- grand larceny. Both pardons were
recommended by the respective county
In Woods county is a neighborhood attorneys.
consisting of fourteen families who j A T Hiley of Clutlirie. manager of
ing newspapers.
If the hot weather clings to its pur-
pose to stay away. Oklahoma towns
will blossom out as much attractive
summer resort&
The Indian family does succumb to
civilization, as was shown when Mad
Wolf the other day permitted his wife
to be buried in a cottin.
According to the report of Secretary
Jenkins, there was written in Oklaho-
ma last year $8,830,550 of fire insur-
ance. The premiums on this were
8167,080; losses incurred 854,037. Losses
paid, $18,001.
It is reported that the Texas legis-
lature has passed the Greer county
teachers' relief bill, or the bill which
all moved to Oklahoma together, from
Kansas, five years ago. In that time
death has visited all the families but
four.
In Lincoln county a woman shot a
dog which was chasing her cows. 'I he
owner of the dog had her arrested, but
the jury acquitted her in about two
shakes of a ram's horn. She should
be given a chroma
provides for the payment of the school
the Oklahoma & Santa Fe Immigration , teachers who taught in Greer county
company, has returned from Topcka, in 1805-6 Much effort has been ex-
where he has been to confer with W. 1 pended to bring this claim properly
J. lilaek, the general passenger agent before the Texas legislature both at
of the Santa Fe. While there he had the last session and the preset one,
three more traveling immigration the teachers realizing that the claims
agents appointed, and arranged to would pass upon their merits when
have more appointed later on. Mr. properly shown. If the report is true
lUley says he expects a heavy iinmi- a just claim is canceled and a number
! gration to Oklahoma from the north of worthy servants of the people will
Out in Blaine county, near a coun-
try road, some one has set up a fake !
coyote. Hunters going that way shoot
at it and as it does not drop, investi-
gate, laugh at themselves and pass on,
leaving it to the next sucker.
The Oklahoma division of the Santa
Fe received thirty trainloads of stock
from the Gulf. Colorado Santa Fe
on April 18th. The stock all came
from the north and were turned into
was found in a canyon with six bullet
holes through the head. The coroner's j
inquest failed to fix the crime, but sua- J
picion pointed to the son. who had left j
the country. Officers were put on his ;
trail and he was arrested at Gaines- (
ville, Tex. The father and son had
had a falling out on account of the
general worthlessuess of the son.
i this season.
Woods county, which is one of the
big wheat counties of Oklahoma, plant-
! ed about one-fifth less this year than
j it did in 181*8. The late rains have
done more to push forward the fields
in the eastern part of the county.
which are now in good condition, the
! blades being about four inches high.
j In the western part of the county high
! winds did great damage and the most I <lo so as a matter of self-defense if for
the feed pastures. Several trains were J ,,f fields are being plowed up and no other reason. Over in the Chero-
sent to Davidson. sowed to kaffir corn. j kee nation the matter is reaching such
Tbe Tulsa Democrat says: "Some-
thing like 40,000 head of cattle have
been turned out on the grass this
week, and while it is rather short
browsing, the stockmen say the steers
will get along. The late spring has
cost the stockmen thousands of dol-
lars for the two extra weeks of feed-
ing necessary, but a corresponding
benefit recurs to the men who had
corn to sell. As a rule cattle really
look better now than they did at this
time last year.
The smalipox situation at the Indian
village near Cushing is much improved
according to the reports received from
there. There have been thirty-five
deaths and there are now twenty-one
cases in the hospital. Thirty patients
have recovered, while forty-one of the
village residents have escaped the dis-
ease. On the allotments in the town-
ship are ninety-three Indians who
have not had the scourge. These are
kept away from the village. All of
the Indians have been vaccinated and
if any new cases develop it is believed
they will be of verioloid.
A number of Pottawatomie and
Seminole Indians, while drinking at
Wince Mareum's saloon, on the Semi-
nole line near Meanko, formerly Vio-
let Springs, got into a quarrel which
ended in a general light. At daylight
on the morning of April 10 Indians
were strewn all over the ball ground
and it was after 10 o'clock when
friends came for the last warrier. It
is reported that two of the Indians
may die. The ball ground was cover-
ed with blood and evidences of a hard
battle were plentiful. The Indians
believe that whites had a hand in the
row and it is said that more trouble
may follow.
The trees that were recently planted
in Oklahoma are coming out nicely and
in a few years will add value and
beauty to the property. Many fruit
trees were planted.
The territorial board of education
has decided to hold no summer term at
the Edmond normal school this year.
When the members of the board met
in .January they took initial steps in
the preparation of a summer course of
stud}', but they have decided that it
not be advised to keep the school in
session all of the year.
It may interest many Oklahoma peo-
ple to know that spinal meningitis
always follows wars, the beginning of
the disease seemingly coming from
aggregations of large bodies of men.
The Shawnee Quill says: Would it
not pay the farmers of this section of
Oklahoma to give some attention to
the raising of broomcorn? This arti*
cle. which is indispensable, is becom-
ing scarcer each year, and it now
brings a good price on the market and
would pay a farmer remunerative
price for his work.
A territory editor has discovered
that in Oklahoma in every instance
widows outlive their husbands. dom of the coal man: but won't be
A two year old Jersey Duroc cow al ! s;'fe lo make faces at him unti! about
theOklahoma experiment station made '*1<: 'ourt'1 ''ay °* next ''11''.v
again of 135 pounds in six week, an A docket <>f 100 criminal cases at
average of 3.3 pounds daily. During I Ardmore is astounding. The reason improving and beautifying their prop-
this time she was fed 708 pounds of for this may be found in an increase erty.
Kaffir meal, making gain of one pound of crime, or in the number of case-* Reports from Missouri and Nebraska
for each 5.-4 pounds fed. In 31 days that have been continued from one state that as soon as the heavy storms
following she made a gain of GO pounds term to another or in the efficiency of of snow and sleet have ceased there a
reaching a weight of 550 pounds, the deputy marshals and their ability great number of farmers from those
This is a daily gain of n. little more in apprehen i ng law breakers and sections will visit Oklahoma with a
than two pounds. . criminals. . view to locating.
get their just reward.
The opening of the Creek land office
and the rapid selection of the public
domain by the citizens of the Creek
nation seem to indicate that the In-
dian question is rapidly settling it-
*elf. The fact that over one-half of
the Creek population has already ap-
plied for allotments makes it appear
that the remainder will be forced to
1
. a stage that lot jumping is attempted
The recent heavy rains in the Indian , .. . . ,
and it appears certain that wherever
territory have swollen the rivers and .. , . tt. , , . 4. .
the land office is opened in that na-
creeks to bank full. The Katy and \ . . .... . n.
, tion there will be a rush to file.
( hoc taw railways are running trains
nearly on time and have large forces j Under the new game law sportsmen
of men at work keeping tracks in good will have to adjust their fowling pieces
order for the safe passage of trains, j to ^10 following dates, to keep the
The new channel on the South (.'ana- | strong arm of the law from overtaking
dian river cut by the Katy road at an 'hem Quail may be killed from Octo-
expense of over $100,000 has proven en- 1 l>er 1"« to February 1; prairie chickens
tirely successful and controls the wa- wild turkey, from September 9 to
ters within the desired limits. j January 1: plover and dove from Aug-
. . . . . . ust 1 to December 31. The penalty
Martin Christian is in jail in Dewey . . . . . . . , . .
J . for the violation of the law being from
county, suspected of the murder of his _ . , . , . ..
1 , , , 810 to 8100 in each case, and in default
father, a cattleman, about two weeks . ... ,
. .... of payment committed to prison. The
ago. The body of the elder Christian , , .„ .. , . .
_ t , . «4U • ii 4 I v ma*ces ^ the sworn duty of all
county and township officers, when
such violation of the law comes tc
their knowledge, to file complaint
against such parties before some com-
petent trial official.
The law passed by the last legisla-
ture, regulating the inspection and
sale of oils in Oklahoma is no less
; ridiculous than the old law about
The Guthrie Leader saj*s: It is now ; which there was so much complaint-
pretty safe to predict a fair crop of f This has just been brought to light by
fruit for Oklahoma. In this part of the rejection of a large quantity o:
the territory the peaches, except the ' gasoline by the territorial oil inspec
Klberta. which were nearly all killed | tor. The defect in the old law was th«
by the late cold spell, will certainly 1 absence of a penalty for selling oil;
produce an average yield. The plum that had been rejected by the oil in-
erop. with the possible exception of j spec tor. This defect was cured in the
the Burbank, is most promising. Cher | new law. but another blunder almost
ries are all right, and tho same may be j as greut. was allowed to creep in. The
said of the pears. The apricots, how new law says that ' illuminating oils
ever, did not escape the last frcoze and j shall have a flash test of 120 degrees,
sleet, and as the trees were in full Fahrenheit, and a specific gravity of
bloom when it came they suffered j not less than 46 degrees. The Hash
greatly, and the crop will be light. j test shall not be applied to gasoline,
Generally speaking, apples, grapes, j but the specific gravity of the latter
strawberries and other varieties of shall not be less than 70 degrees, at a
berries, are all right and bid fair to j temperature of 00 degrees. Fahren-
II ' I -4 tt
THE RIGHT TO LIBERTY. icn*coUDlr? e°Tpriieti wilh ai,.v j
* j ble success without a ftJStern of eoa-
DENIED BY THIS COUNTRY TO lrmct labor.
A STRUGGLING PEOPLE. "Fourth, the trade tdvanUgi* of 1
the Philippine Islands, if there be any, j
til. 111..,.,I Of th. Slaughtered N«tl *. must be opened alike to all the world, j
■lid «f our own Nuldi.r. l> I'pon ibr and that our share of them will never
llrail. of Tho.* who Have I udrriak- j begin to pay the cost of subjugating
.11 lo buy a raopw I.Ik. Mm*. them by war or holding them in sub-
_____ jection in peace.
A letter bearing the date of Febm i ** *. that the military occupation
ry 4, and signed tv 100 or more of the j thefce tropical regions must be kept
most prominent men in and around at 00 « '. l>°th to the soul.
Itoston, headed t.v ex-llovernor George ' l ",e to'1""* °ur soldiers.
K. Houtwell, commending the attitude I "si*th- *' «■ "'e declaration as to
in Congresa of Senator Hoar and invil- Coba by the President and by congress
in j him to address them at a future ] PPlie" with stronger force to the eas.
date, has been made public. Aecom- of ,lie 'hilippine Islands.
pauviag it is the letterof acknowledge- | "Seventh, that Aguinaldo and his
men't from Senator Hoar, bearing date I followers, before we began to make
of .March -U, in which he savs: i uar uPon them- haU conquered their
"1 do not think there is anv reason !onn territory sod independence from
personal to me for holding such a pub- sI'a,n- wi,h the exception of a single
lie meeting. I ndoubtedly there should city, and were getting ready to estab-
bc and there will be many public 0 free constitution.
meetings the country over to protesi "Eighth, that while they are fighting
against tramping underfoot the rights f"r freedom and independence and the
of brave people struggling for their i doctrines of our fathers, we are fight-
liberties, the violations of the nrinci- j ,nS for the principles that one people
pies of our om Constitution and of | maf c°Dlro1 aDl1 govern another in
the Declaration of Independence, anil
the continuance by the American peo-
ple in the costly and ruinous path
which has brought other republics to
ruin and shame, which will dishonor
labor, place intolerable burdens upon
agriculture, and fasten upon the re-
public the shame of what President
McKinley has so lately anil so truth-
fully declared to be criminal aggres-
sion.
"Hut I think it will be wiser to have
meetings of that character a little
later rather than just now. We do
not yet know whether the present war
for the subjugation of the people of
the Philippines is to continue indefin-
itely, or whether there is to be a
speedy submission to the overwhelm-
ing power of the United States.
"If the war shall shortly be ended,
we shall then be able to discuss the
spite of its resistance and against its
Will.
"Ninth, that the language and argu-
ment of those who object to this war
are, without change, the language and
argument of Chatham, of Fox, of
Burke, of Barre, of Camden, and of the
English and American Whigs, and the
language and argument of George III,
of Lord North, of Mansfield, of Wed-
dcrburn, and of the English and Amer-
ican Tories.
"Tenth, no orator or newspaper, or
preacher being a supporter of this
policy of subjugation, dares repeat in
speech or in print aujT of the great ut-
terances for freedom of Washington,
of Jefferson, of John Adams, of Abra-
ham Lincoln, or of Charles Sumner.
"The question the American people
are now considering, and with which
they are about to deal, is not a ques-
question of our national duty free tion of a day, or of a year, or of an a<l-
from the disturbing influences which j ro^H^tration, or of a century. It is to
exist always when the country is at | affect and largely determine the whole
war. If, on the other hand, the war
future of the country. We can recover
Khali long and indefinitely continue, i *rom n in regard to other
the people will begin to feel the bur-1 m*tter« which have interested or de-
ien of increased debt and increased c*ded the people, however, important
taxation, the loss of life and health of j or se *ious. lariffs and currency and
Dur youth, and the derangement of Irevenue laws, even foreign wars; ah
irade and peaceful industry.
"An attempt has been made to per-
suade the American people that the
resistance to our arms by the people
Df the Philippine Islands has been due
these, as Thomas Jefferson said, 'are
billows that will pass under the ship.'
"Hut if the republic is to violate the
laws of its being, if it is to be convert-
ed into an empire, not only the dircc-
to those who opposo the attempt to ^on °' voyage is to be changed,
subjugate them and who oppose the ! chart and the compass are to
ratification of the treaty by which
sovereignty over them was purchased
and paid for as an article of merchan-
dise. There was never a more un-
founded or a more foolish calumny. A
strict military censorship as exercised
Dver the cable to the Philippine Is-
lands during the whole period. 1 have
!n my possession one of the original
circulars of the cable company warn-
ing all persons that no dispatch would
t>e transmitted having the least rela-
;ion to politics, without the assent of
.he military authorities of the United
States."
After quoting some personal experi-
ences growing out of his position, Sen-
itor Hoar says
be thrown away. We have not as yet
taken the irrevocable step. Before it |
is taken let the voice of the whole peo-
ple be heard. I am, with high regard,
faithfully yours. George IIoak."
Do Von Like II?
If you send a package by express to
a friend, you pay 1 cent over and
above the company's charge for a war
stamp—that is, the corporation acts as
collector of the war stamp for the gov-
ernment and the government furnishes
the stamps and the corporation gets
credit for paying the tax, and the pros-
pect is that with a deficit of $200,000,-
000 a year you will continue paying the
tax while the capitalists scramble for
'The blood of the slaughtered Fili- . franchises and the government at
yield well. j heit.
At the Oklahoma experiment station Thousands of trees are being put
two Shropshire lambs made a gain of j out over the territory this spring. A
thirty pounds in four weeks, eating grander improvement could not be
two pounds each daily of Kaffir meal. made.
aside from hay. One of these lambs The Oklahoma "sooners"' who have
was quite fat at the beginning of the | gone to Colorado to help open up the
trial, and made a gain of only ten i lite reservation, will move on to Haw-
pounds in a second period of seven
weeks. Three grade wethers, thin in
flesh, made a gain of u trifle over one-
half pound daily. They ate ,'3T pounds
of Kaffir grain. Sheep digest unground
aii when the crown lands are open to
settlement.
I\ A. Harvey was elected mayor of
Wyandotte recently, receiving twenty-
two out of the forty votes cast. He
Kofflr grain better than do horses, cat- wa(j thc fipst delegate to congress from
tie or hogs. | oklahoma territory.
During his imprisonment Clyde Mat There ar>' mighty few people in Ok-
tox probably studied out a plan to lahoma who would vote to live the
And it seems
make escape effective.
to have worked.
There is a movement at Pawnee to
erect a monument over the grave of
William Pollock, the Rough Rider.
His portrait appears in this month's
Scribner's.
Mrs. Reynolds, a farmer's wife living
in (irant county, sold during the
month of March, $20 worth of eggs
and hatched in her hennerioa 100 little
chicks.
past ten years over again.
At this season of the 3*ear the Santa
Fe is taxed to its utmost capacity to
handle the immense numbers of cattle
which arc being shipped to the Strip
for feeding. An average of 25 train-
loads of 20 cars each pass through Ok.!
lahoma daity. Thirty head of cattle
to the car amounts to 15,000 head. The
cattle look as though they have u*t
eaten since last fall and are nothing
more than living skeletons.
It looks now as though Oklahomans Much building is being done over
were about to escape froia the thral- ! the territory.
Genuine prosperity is indicated by
the vast amount of improvement go-
' ing on over the two territories. Each
one is trying to out-due the other in
pinos, the blood and the wasted health
and life of our own soldiers, is upon
the heads of those who have undertak-
en to buy a people in the market like
sheep, or to treat them as lawful prize
and booty of war, to impose a govern-
ment on them without their conseut,
and to trample under foot not the peo-
ple of the Philippine Islands, but the
principles upon which the American
Republican itself rests."
Continuing, Senator Hoar refers to
the pledges of the country toward
Cuba and the President's declaration
that any other conduct on our part
would have been "criminal aggres-
sion," and continues:
4*The law of righteousness and jus-
tice on which the great and free Amer-
ican people should act, and in the end,
I am sure, will act, depends not on
paralellb of latitude and meridians of
longitude or points of the compass. It
is the same yesterday, today and for-
ever. It is as true now as when our
fathers declared it in 177G. It is as
binding upon William McKinley today
as it was upon George Washington or
Abraham Lincoln. The only powers
of government the American people
can recognize are just powers, and
those powers rest upon the consent of
the governed.
"No man during this whole discus-
sion has 6uccss6fully challenged, and
no man will successfully challenge:
"First, the affirmation that under
tho Constitution of the United States
the acquisition of territory, as to other
property, is not a constitutional end,
and that, while the making of new
6tates and providing national defense
are conditional ends, but only a
means to constitutional end, so that
we may acquire and hold territory for
those purposes, the governing of sub-
ject people is not a constitutional end,
and that there is therefore no consti-
tutional warrant for acquiring and
holding territory for that purpose.
"Second, that to leave our own coun-
try to stand on foreign soil in violation
Df the warnings of our fathers and of
the farewell address of Washington.
Washington is debauched and forced
to create a great array to put you
down if you whimper. And that's the
kind of government some of you like.
So does every enemy of the best inter-
ests of humanity.—Social Democratic
Iierald.
Some of the republican papers are
becoming uneasy on the subject of
trusts. They don't care how much the
trusts pillage the people, but they are
becoming fearful that these unholy
combinations may sound the death
"knell of the republican party. The at-
torney general says he can do noth-
ing; that the Sherman law is a dead
letter, and the trusts are above the
law. Some of the party papers are
asking for additional legislation and
declare that if something isn't done,
and that right off, that the grand old
party will be in the soup. Resides the
paper trust, is actually squeezing the
republican newspapers and they don't
like to be. squeezed. They saj* the tar-
iff ought to be taken off of print paper
and wood pulp, but don't say a word
about taking the tariff off of a thous-
and other things by which somebody
else is robbed. The president can kill
off nine-tenths of the trusts in sixty
days if he wants to, but he don't want
to. Let him call congress together and
tell his fawning followers that the tar-
iff must go. Tho tariff is the father
of the trusts and if it is killed the
children must die also. Very few of
the combinations in restraint of trade
could live a month without tariff pro-
tection. They would go down as if
prostrated by a mighty wind; they
would disappear as if they were struck
with consuming fire. The price of
their stocks would sink below the level
of the embalmed beef market There
is no use in the republicans talking
against trusts so long as they con-
tinue a protective tariff in force. All
they say on thc subject will be dishon.
est and insincere. The trust is the
child of the tariff, the tariff is the
child of the monopolist, the monopo-
list is the child of the republican par-
New fngiUh RMraUfr
The illiteracy of tbe new recruits
of the English army U commented up-
on in the report just published in l«on-
don. Only 41 in 1.000 are well educat-
ed. and 18 are utterly illiterate.
Thirty-five per cent of the applicants
are rejected for physical disability, and
this proportion is said to show a slight
improvement over former years
An Ohio genius has invented a chair
that can be adjusted to one theusani
different positions. It is designed foi
the small boy to sit in when he goe*
to church.
" Courage and Strength
in Times of Danger."
the <warning between
the lines. What is that warn-
ing? It is of the danger from
accumulation of badness in
the blood, caused by the
usual heavy living of the
Winter months. Spring is
the clearing, cleansing time
of the year; the forerunner of
the brightness and beauty of
glorious Summer.
Follow the principle that Nature layf
down. Start in at once and purify your
blood with that great specific, llood'
8ar«aparilla. It never disappoints.
Poor Blood " Tha doctor Mid there
were not seven drops of Kood blood In my
body. Hood's Sarsaparllla bnill mr tip and
made ine Htrunu and well." Si Ml: E. 11 Ho W.N,
16 Astor Hill, Lynn, Mass.
Female Troubles " I mi happy to
say that I was entirely cured ot
troubles by Hood's Sarsapnrllla. It helped
tnv husband's catarrh greatly." Mas. J. K.
Wriooink, 7U3 S. 0th Street, Camden, N. J.
aUabawfc
Hood's rtMfl cure llrerllls; the non Irritating and
only inhartV to take I - -.r^ u ...
%
POMMEL
SLICKER
The uest
Saddle Uat
Ketrps both rlJi-ranJ siddle r«
fectly dry in the hardest storms
Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for
1807 rish Hrand Pommel Sinker
it is entirely new. If n. >f f r snle
your town, write- for catalogue to
\. J. TOWER. Boston
DEALERS
Spalding's
Trade Mark
Athletic
Supplies
should carry a complete
line of
Base Ball
Foot Ball
Goli
Tennis
tdshit
Croauct
Boxing
Athletics
Uniforms
Sweaters
Always a demand for them.
Write for our catalogue.
A C. SPALDINC A. BROS.
New York Chicago Denver
Unit and Red K:iK.
The reason rerl infuriates the mem-
bers of the cx family Is fouud in the
fact that red i3 the complementary
color of the green, and tho eyes of
cattle being Ions; fixed on herbage
while feeding, when they ospy any-
thing red it impresses the sight with
greatly increased intensity.
KIDNEY DISEASE,
r«n.i«'d
tTual Catarrh, Promptly
Cored by Pe-ru-na*
Hon. J. II. Caldwell, a prominent
member of the Louisiana State Legis-
lature, says ihe following in regard to
Pe-ru-n«t for catarrh:
"I have used Pe ru-na for a number
of years with the very best results for
catarrhal diseases. I shall never be
ty and the republican part,? ia the
Third, that there was never a iror^ ehild of the devil.
Hon. J. H. Caldwell
without it. I never fail to recoimncnd
it when an opportunity presents it-
self."—J. H. Caldwell, Robeline, La.
Gilbert Hofer, Grays, Ky., says in a
letter dated March 7th. 1894: "I have
used four bottles ol Pe-ru-na and I am
weil of my catarrh, and it cured my
Bright's disease. I had been troubled
for two years. I weigh twenty pounds
more than I did before 1 was taken
sick. I shall never be without Pe-ru-
na."
Send for free catarrh book. Address
Dr. Hartnian, Columbus. O.
You can c.sual y uy < f ft young man
In debt that lie is. also in love.
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1899, newspaper, April 28, 1899; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115873/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.