The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Abstracting . .n^litv by Ne^ltt. Mc^land tt Brewer. tn,v 111 bo.0 ,ou In The American Surety Oompanfc
u ► mmmm* . ... _ .
Ti,e Paopie's Voice
KT.K..iJ- A.
4Ut«AN & mXSB. NW' Hw*
~~ CITY OTFIOIAL PAPEK
JOBiOtlPTlON *1.00 p*l; vbai
If the plutocrats keep on giving
money back to the public, we may
yet call this, the new rge of restor
ation.
Judging Iroin what we hear of
his new
heart as
Mr. Rockefeller's conduct,
wig must h«v vanned 1
Ills head.
E idem!) tut republic
ng t.' > . a tii k 11
' .*
v ■ ••
•as# J
hP->fo£n;
->m*+
i~ , • J •
'.pJXjfi&w
<3^
' - *: V" ft?/ y.y
rhi
iarty
41ft >
JO!
wilt ti
Oil ■
comt ; to
• - insuratM'
• A br.
IV l.^c V Ex Hi I' fa.) 1 E/a
Everything
i n rl
A.1
.... .EDITOH
yellcw ft ver
rough
Jsii v they l.ave ill
mo juito on the run with a
rider in hot pursuit.
It begins to look as if the next
sensation might be an investigation
of football brutality.
Roosevelt's special car will enable
him to avoid all Jim Crow difficul-
ties on his southern tour.
All of the western crops have been
harvested and New York is just
gathering its straw vote.
"Graft" is the full dress name for
what we call "bribery" and "theft'
when it is in shirt s'eeves.
The world is not growing worse
but the graft investigators are just
finding out how bad it was.
Recent test voles in the Wabash
controversy, would indicate that the
Hon. (ieo. Jay Gould is the man for
chairman Odell to stark up against
Mayor McClellan.
While the Tokio brass band and
fire department did not turn out to
welcome him at the station, Komura
finds he is solid with the Emperor.
And he is the man who bands outl
the jobs.
i he Standard Oil Co. i •
>" per cent a year. 'I lis
No iSore Neck
I on the horse when the Collar is u -
on-rruct. , ii ..:i entirely
led. It la
paying
Rock-
| efeller Sunday-school choir can sing lu,„ principal. Will not only pre-
1 with gusto "gathering in the j vent sore necks but cure those caused
I sheaves." by olher collars.
Made of line leather stock, thong
sewed. Will outlast any other collar
and give satisfaction up to the last
According to the program, Mr.
Bryan will spend two weeks in Jap-
an but deliver only one speech.
Still, there is no indication "how
long" that speech will be.
One of the life insurance presi-
dents who was authorized to fix his
own salary, drew the line at $400 a
day, Sundays included. This mod-
eration is tempered with the idea of
a frequent raise.
Three burglars in New York
claim to have robbed 400 homes
It's a great record, but it looks dim
besides the record of three insur-
ance companies who have touched
about 4,000,000 homes.
A wealthy doctor, after a club
dinner, was discovered, far from
home, nude, on top of a N. Y. Cen-
tral car. Probably had a Welch
rarebit dream and started to dodge
the pullman porter who insisted on
brushing him.
minute
W. H. STUBBEMAN,
The Old Reliable Harnessman.
NORMAN, - - OKLAHOMA.
(1
The campaign in Ohio seems to
have resolved itself into an old time
bout between rum and the home,
with the curious turnabout that the
Democrats are appealing to the
home vote, and the republicans to
the saloon influence.
Judge Flannery of Independence,
Kansas, has postponed the sentenr
ing «f twenty-one men convicted of
violation of the liquor la«v "because
the county jail is already full. ll'.e
sentences will be imposed as soon
as the jails"sobers up."
LEMENED BREAD
If the President of Georgetown
j University knows of conspiracies
among football players, to commit
feloneous assaults on their rivals,
and decline to expose the guilty
men, it it is up to him to show why
he is not guilty as an accomplice.
Last week the editor of this paper
spent time visiting the cities and
towns along the Frisco from Ard
more, I. T., east to Hugo, I. T. and
we found the whole country along
this line of road alive with Farmer's
Union men. The Farmers Union
in the Chickasaw and Choctaw
nations is very much awake and not
| only talking but doing business. At
j Durant the farmers are selling cotton
j direct to representatives from cot
! ton mills and cotton brokers. The
| merchants are not buying cotton.
! On Monday lint cotton brought as
much as $10.50, the price ranging
On Tues-
Han Bern Man's Constant Mainstay
From Tln ® Immemorial.
Some writer liu* sai-t that "The first miller
emerging from \m ravage slate, with no from $10.30 to $1050
thought save hunger, plucked the wheat : day the price at Ardmore where the
from the stock, and, using his teeth for mill- j rotton is handled very much as in
stones, ground the first grist for a customer
who would not be denied—his stomach.
I'lius gaining experience by test in the fool
tin-., it would he only naturiil for this miller
to lay up a quantity of grain against an hour
it" need. Just when he commenced grinding
Ii j-* wheat in the rude stnao mortar and
moistening the flour preparatory ti baking
it in the ashes of hia enrap fire, ami just
when it was found that an old pieer of dough
m a fresh hatch made it better or "leavened"
it, is beyond the reach of historians. Cer-
tain it is that though the principle was the
me thousands of years ago as it is to-day,
it has remained for the makers of \east
Koam to supply a yeast with all the true
leavening powers minus the properties that
pioducesour, "runny"or oggy hread. This
ii the yeast that took the first grand prize
at the St.-I.olii.s Exposition, and revolution-
i/.ca the bread making in every home where
it is used because much better bread can be
Durant, the price went up as high
as $10.75 in the lint. I he mer-
chants in the towns and the busi
ness men generally are doing all
they can to assist farmers in getting
the highest price possible for their
corn and cotton. The merchants
ave cut the business of buying
■ otton almost entirely out and have
j nined the farmers in an effort to
' s r ure better prices than if mer
. bants were bti)ing. It costs mer-
' ' hatits money to buy cotton and
In reply to a challenge to meet
the repudlican candidate for mayor
of New York in joint debate, Hon.
W. R. Hearst, the municipal owner-
ship candidae, replied: "If you
will pardon me for being frank, I
think a contest between the candi-
date of the democratic machine and
the candidate of the republican
machine, as to which could promise
the most and perform the least,
would be highly edifying and di-
verting.''
The ginnera' report of bales of cot-
ton ginned up to the 18th of this
month compared with like report of
last four years would indicate less
than a 10 million bale crop for this
year and the killing frost of last
week has greatly reduced the prob-
able yield for it is estimated that the
forst blighted from 10 -to 25 per cent
of the prospect. The estimate put
on crop by the Farmers Union was
not to exceed a 11 million bale crop
and that in all probability crop would
not be over 9 million bale. It was on
this estimate they based calculations
that farmers wou'd be safe in hold-
ing out for 11 cent cotton and the
farmes who hold their cotton, we
have not the least doubt, will get 11
cents or better for it. But for the
influence exerted by Farmers Union
we believe 7 and 8 cents would have
been the prevailing price paid for
cotton through October. The Farm-
ers Unian, we believe we are safe in
asserting, caused the cotton growers
to reap about $10 00 a bale more for
their cotton during October and it
has caused a vast amount of cotton
to be held back and on this the in-
d cations are good that upwards of
$10.00 a bale will be garnered by the
Farmers, more than they would have
received had no Farmers Union been
organized. Farmers can well alTord
to be to some little expense and
trouble to keep alive the interest in
their local and state unions.
SCHOOL BOOKS
For anything in
Books, Office or School Supplies see us.
A Fine Line of
Ball goods, Stationery, Cigars, Candy.
Subscriptions taken for any Magazine or Newspaper.
Kingkade's Book Store,
POSTOFF1CE BUILDING. or NORMAN, OKLA.
HP
3?
('
TI"' > I 1 ' J I 1 1 J y*
Plenty of Wood, Water and Feed
AT THE
oklahoma wagon yard,
Phone 264. M. W. Alexander.
Here is the way I am surrounded.
<>
O
.V
\
\
%
/
p monitor drills ^
V/
Qj
YATES
%
HOW TO CUKE COiiNS AND BU
NIONS
First, soak the corn or bunion ir
warm water id soften i•; thou p.ii-e it
down as closely as possible without
drawing blood and apply Chamber-
lain's Pain Balm twice daily, rubbing
vigorously for livo minutes at ei ch ap-
p'i ation, A corn planter should be
\
Q
gale plows
❖
4
%
J
J?
❖
4^
cP
Two Doors East Postoffice.
- Norman, Okla.
THE BEST DOC TOR.
J5000 Telegraphers
Rev BO Hoi-ton, Sulphur Springs
Texas writ.pn, July 19th, 18Vh): "I h?iv« | MnuMKtguB NEPDED
Med In my family Ballads Snow lini- , ^ ^„„„ |108lUoI)„creBto<t bv
ment and lloi e ouni .>,i|, • | Hallroad ami Telegraph Companies'. We want
hnv, proved n-rtniniy Voun„Me , lin„ i,u,i'l „r go.'u to
i Ti e liniment is the best we have ever ] ** B
worn a lew days to pro't.et it sroin the „tt:j f,,r headache and pains. The j Leafll Telegraphy
shoe. As a avneriil Imminent (or | eouuh syeun has been our doctor fori
iht years." 2o
i d Heed.
ode, $1.00
J they must necessarily buy it at a jsaleby Fred Hood.
; price to cover the expense they are to j Marriage Licenses;
u buy ing. This the producer mint clias. A. Uelepbord
i pay or the merchant lose, and there Maggie Mitchell
are few if any merchants who want John J. Pa^e..
Emma Short
| sprains, bruises, lameness nnj rheu- j tbi last H
mutism, Pain Bairn is unequaled B'or ^
Holliness Convention,
For Oklahomaand Indian Territory
made with it from any flour.
Yeast Foam is purely vegetable, beiug ^
made of the best malt, corn, hops an 1 other j to lose. I he cotton
liealthfal ingredients. The faetory i l o j r ,n( were there to buy cotton
ilie eleancet and heat equipped in the world, j
This yeast is the only kind that preserve!
in the hread all the delicious tlav.ir and |
nutritive value of tin: wheat. The hread
made with it is alivaysswer. and whulosoine
and stays moist until used. Forty loaves of
|,read can he made fr.rn etie ' package.
The makers of Yeast V.ku.i " re rfi eing out a
new hook called "Good liri ld ; i!ow to
Make It." This little hook, invaluahle in |
AND R. R. ACCOUNTING
We lui-ntsli 7S per cent, or the Operators ami
Station AKintiiii Ainerlcii. Our six schools ar
the lsrgoH* exclusive Telegraph Schools in the
\Vorlil. KftalilNheil iOyears and emlorseil by
nil Untlway uitletals.
We execute a llond lo every stuileni ir
f'l'ir-li tilo or lo:r a po lllon paying troin * >
lo iftlua month inHtiiiiwuaftol the Rocky .«oiu>
buyers in Du i , ,,
I Cbas. E. Tar.tier
for I bailie Ahel
t'leir respective firms and they ] Archie F Garber
j were hungry to get it, and competi .Coial-. t-ill .. ..
! lion was brisk Much the same
1 condition prevailed in Ardmore. .
The Farmers Union will put an end Caru of Thanks
will meet Tuesday November 7th
211 Cumberland I'resbyterian church in |
.... 18 | Norman preachinp at night (Hirinif m niuHiinimii
•r t ... siv rlavs of convention to which «" from f75 to t icon month In States wwi
.. ttie MX da} 8 OI convention. 10 which k,k.U|IS,, u.onw.Untoly upon K,a,tnation.
....HO eyorvbody is especially invred. He- s|llll).n,H(.„11 No
vival services will becontm ea alter ;,r,,ii |>miic-uihia n-^uvding anv or
Convene ion adjourns. 1 onr Helmo h write Itlrin-t lo our executive oihe«
-— — 1 Hi Cincinnati, O. Ciitalojjile free.
A JUDICIOUS INQUIRY
,lno. M. Fischer
| Cecelia Tu litis..
.32
.so:
.17
.21
21
i I wish to thank mv friends and _
neighbors aUo the employees on the j adnli, hikI if f r a child the> almost ^5 CALIFORNIA $25
I railroads who assisted me so kindly in invariably recommended Chamber*
my deep bereavement and burial IhinCouoli Ki midy. Tlio reason
niv son. VYintleld. .
its way,has twenty-six illitstratious in colors,
and tells how to ninke all kinds of hread,
biscuits, buns and rolls, nt well as contain-
ing other i wipes which will l>e found in-
valuahle in the home. The way of prepar-
ing the dith rent recipes is very clear and
comprehensive. The hook will he sent fr.'e
to any one sending their nam • and uddrftfs,
with a request for same, to the Xortllu "~te n
Yeast Company, Chicago, 111. 1.very wo
man who hakes should secure « copy.
' to this merchant buying cotton
proposition and will also in time put
the cotton broker out of business
and cotton will be marketed direct j
to the users of the raw material.
When this condition of affairs is t
brought about the producers will re- j
ceive many million dollars more for at this ollice or see,
the cotton they produce than nnder j |_a(iie8 frL.e
i the present system of handling the J talne.1 before
'cotton crop. evening Oct. :
A veil known traveling uitiii who
visits the drutf trade snys he li-is often
Ii. ard deugkil-ts inq lire of enstomeis
who asked for a eoualt ii edicine, whet-
Iihi it, win. wan'ed for a idilld or for hii
me Moisa sc
Cincinnati, Olito.
AUniiix, (in
Texttrknnti, Tex is*.
oi leieofootiy.
Hntiulo, Y
I.HCiow, W if*.
Han h ianelneo, Cai.
F. Hakstekn.
For Sale.
Will sell at a bargain good work hi glv ngit, and for coughs,
horse and mare. For particulars call croup it is unsurpass d
B I'eunlngton.
ticket-, must
six o'clock
be ob.
Friday
From September 15 to October 31
for this U that they know there is no j We will sell cut rate tickets to Cali-
danger from it and that i> always j fornla at $2.>.00 one wa>-
cure*. There is not. the least danger I .T. J. BAKER, Agent,
olds anil
sale by j For ,Sale' .. .
all d> legists. j Five acres near ti ill verelty, enquire
of J A. Fox Norman. T-18
New Orleans takes pleasure in '
announcing that she is not as jelli Chnmberlain's DiirrtSa^me^
as she has been of late. Never fails, ltuy it now. It may save life.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1905, newspaper, October 27, 1905; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116093/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.