The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 1, 1894 Page: 1 of 8
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llftfoUK the taw wm written down with
l rchm utor with peu;
liefore the iuw inaileciiiieui. the moral
litw mud** men.
U* tainU for human riirhta. hut whe t
it fuiU those rights to give.
Then let lua die my nrother, but let hu*
iu*u being* live.
peoples foice.
Labor Ts The Parent Of Capital, Encourage Labor, and You Build Up Capital
"Our Republic can only exist
sn Long as its citizens reBjieet
and obey their self imposed laws."
VOL. 3.
NORMAN, CLEVELAND COUNTY, OKLAHOMA. SATURDAY, SHl'TBIBHR 1. 180-1.
NO. 5
TIM 12 TA1ILE-A. T. AL 8. F.
UOINO MM iii.
No. 4o 1:07 n. in.
No. 4tl7 J:Ml p. in.
No. 421 Accom moduli on Vl^ p. t
liOlNU SOUTH.
No. m .Vt-Ja. n,.
No. 4a* i l l p. in.
No. 4Ji> ,\<*<'oii11iilulutIt ti 7:01) a. in.
No lit! ami 4 >l Ihrouuh to (.ulventon.
" 407 •• will run to uiiil from Purcell
DIRECTORY
CHUHCH.
MKTIIOtUST KPIMXIPU.
Church, corner o*. limv Mreet and Porter ave-
. nu<-. >er vIt'i** over. *iiwlav.. Morning -< i•
' vlees ut 11 a. iii.; Kvculng, 7 to p. in.: Sunday
school ion. iii., \\. II. Kmlil, Superintendent.
Prayer Meeting Wediiesdav evening at 7:1"..
I. It. Ill NOKItSON, ft*Mtor.
MKTtlo| l*T I IMhi-oi-AI. (HOI Til.)
Church, corner of Peters' avenue iiikI Tonlut*
wn itiU'M. *>im'vIcmh t-viTv >• iM'lay. Mornln«
| wrvlcc* at 11 ii. in,; Kveiilim, 7:1"• p. iii ; -Sunday
W «ehool, 10 it. iii. I'niver Meet lit' Witilnwitiiy
••Veiling, H:l* p. iii. KKV. l'ATTKUSOS, Pastor.
CAT1IOI.K'.
Church on Tohniiwa street, lietween ('raw
ford and Porter avenues. services on second
and third Sundays ol inch month.
Ukv. Katiikii llOimKMANS, Priest.
lUITIST.
rem bins* on flrst ami tlilnl Sundnvs of each
month: Sunday school everv Sunday mornlnu
st H.t" i. in.,' N. \N. MtilWtli. Sup't. Pinver
M« 1" ; every Wediiesdav nlirlit.
Uev. W. II. Nli'lloM, Pastor.
NOKMA.< I'UK-f.MKltlAN ('111'lil 11.
Prearhimr every Hum lav morulas at II a.m.:
Kvenlnx service-* at 7 p. in.: Sunday school at
AO a. in. Prayer Meeting Wednesday evenings
at 7 o'clock. ' S. i-:. llKNUY, Pastor.
OFFICIAL.
TKItltbrOKIAL lilllKLTUttr.
W. C, Uenfrow ... Governor.
Itobert Martin secretary.
Frank Dale Chief Justice.
-J; 'V, J Associate Justices.
II. W. Scott, )
} K.. IV Six . I'liltcd states Marshal.
' Horace Speed 1'nlteil States Attorney.
1,'XIVKIIStTY ItHUKNTS.
senator Prlnaev, of i'handler; W. W. Xotf-
■* ln«er, of Kln.rt1-.hcr: Mr. Smith, of Kl lleno,
viiel .1. II. Wheeler, of Oklahoma City,— Wheeler
Clerk.
LODGES.
M ANOXIC,
Norman Lodge, No. *«. A. F. ami A. M.. meets
the llrst ami tlilnl >lomlnys of each mouth. All
Master Mason* arc Invited. A. W. KtstiKit,
W. J. Kki.i.kv, Seo'y. W. M.
KNIGHT* OF PYTHIAS.
Norman l.odge, No. K. of IV,meets every
Alon.liiv nlirlit at Castle Hall In llwlluin block.
V 1*1 fin 2 Kni'-rht* cordially Invited.
K s K \Jliw, l . B. IIoi sk,
K. of II. unil H. C.C.
OI l KKt.l.OWS.
Norman l.oil«e. No. , I. o. o. F each Than*.
<Iav m^lit. Vlsltlas,' brthren cordially invited.
.1. I.. YASKKK, Sec'y. .1. It. I'VUCH, N. (i.
ASCIKNT OltllKIt OK IMTEO WollKMKN.
Norman Lo<l«e. No. A. <>. I . \\ ., meet*
. < verv Tuesfliiv evening at 7 Ml hi hall over the
/ Fainoiis yrocery. Kh. C. UlXHK, M. NN .
^ John s. Am.an, Iteeorder.
FKOlM.irs PARTY l'LATFOHM.
Adoplmt id K*« l itiiilOont ..^lnu at
Omaha. July 4. HWJ.
. We declare—
1. That the union ot the lalior forces of the Unit-
ed States, this day consummated, Khali be per-
mnent and perp<itiial. May its spirit enter Into
all hearts tor the salvation of the Republic and
the uplifting of mankind.
•2. Wealth lielonjfs to him who creates It, and
every dollar taken from Industry without nn
equivalent Is robbery. "If any will not work,
neither shall lie oat." The Interest or rural ami
civic labor arc the same; their Interest are Iden-
tical.
:t. We believe that the time has come when
the railroad corporations will either own the
people or the people must own the railroads;
and should the government enter upon the
work of owning and mnnafflng any or all rail-
roads, we should favor an amendment to the
constitution by width all persons engaged In
government service shall bo placed under a
civil service regulation of the most rigid charac-
ter, so as to prevent the Incrcaso of the power-
of the national administration by theuseofsucl
additional government employes.
4. We demand n national currency, safe
sound and flexible, lssuee by the general gov-
ernment only, a full legal tender for all debts,
public and private, and that without the use of
banking corporations, a Just equitable and effi-
cient means of dlstrlbul Ion dlm?t to the ptniplo,
at a tax not excec«llng -2 per cent per aniitmi be
provided, as«et forth In the sub-treasury plan
of the Farmers' Alliance or some 1 Hitter system;
also by payments In discharge of Its obligations
for public Improvements.
5. Wo domain I the free and unlimited coin-
age of silver and gold at the present legal ratio
of 10 to 1.
B. We demand that the ainouot of the circu-
lating mw Hum bo speedily Increased to not less
than ♦■' <) per capita.
7. We demand a graduated Income tax.
8. We believe that the money of the country
should bo kept as much as pos-dhlc in the hand-
people, and hence we demand that all state and
national revenues shall be limited to the uecessn
ry expenses ol the government ecoinlcally
and honestly administered.
9. We demand that postal savings banks be
established by the government fertile safe de-
posit of the earnings of thepeople and to facili-
tate exchange.
10. Transportation be lugs a mean of exchange
ami a public necessity, the government should j
own and operate the railroads in the Interest of
the people.
11. The telegraph and telephone, like the
postofhee system, being a necessity for the
transmission of news, should be owned and j
operated by the government In the interest of |
the people.'
1-2. The land, Including all the naturnl sonrse
of wealth, is the heritage of all the people, and
should not he monopolized for speculative pur-
poses, and alien ownership of land should be
prohibited. All lands now held by rnilaoads
find other corporations iu excels of their actual
needs, and all lands now owned by aliens
should be reclaimed by the government and
held for actual settlers only.
Clubbing Rate*.
peoples Voice and Home Held and Forum $1 '2"
The Peoples I'arty |iaper of (itcrgla (Tom
Watson's) and I'eoples Voice for 1 .'in
Chicago K\press and Peoples Voice 1 40
Denver liomi, with Octopus map, and Peo-
ples Voice
The Chicago Sentinel one year, one copy
each of Ten Men ot Monev Island, senator
Jones' speech of IS'.H). Thirty Vears Ago,
Monetary Kenort. Political IMatfonns,
So' •1 ' r and Ho a I holder,and 1'eoples Voice
a I for
Kvery peopl e party mini shouSd iobII him-
self of this gol len opportunity to secnr<> some
of the best reform literature of the age.
SI-J1IM of tin" rilllFN,
employment of every kind and de
The great common people "f this scription of labor. Hut* became
country have been for ye:irs bugjjing
the delusive phantom of hope and
houses and tatters became garments
and robes, and the poor lasted the
struggling on, until at last they find \ luxuries o' wealth. Now, why these
themselves entering a condition of fewyear ofprosperity? Simply be
i so
l ;o
We are leaders In fine job ami book printing
bondage far worse than that of Afri
can slavery. The negro slaves were
clothed and fed and their health care-
fully looked after, but not so with the
greater slavery of to-day, whose labor
has been systematically pulled down
to the lower levels of the living line,
and often below it. And this is not
all: the manner in which this fearful
condition has been brought about has
deprived hundreds of thousands of
able, willing, anxious toilers of the
privilege of supporting themselves
and beloved ones by the sweat of
their manly brows, and thousands are
starving and hundreds of thousands
more are suffering for the necessaries
of life-- and all this in the midst of
plenty.
Will any one dare attempt to tell us
that these dreadful conditions are but
the effects of some natural law ? In
doing so they would be compelled to
prove Clod a liar, Christ a deceiver
and the laws of nature nothing but
mockery.
There are but three ways in which
the great masses of any nature can be
brought to this condition of enforced
idleness, destitution and starvation;
and these are, either famine, pesti-
lence or human and inhumane laws
of avarice and greed.
Of course, our direful conditions
not the result of pestilence; neither
are they the effects of famine'—else
what becomes of the great hue and
cry of overproduction ? No, we must
look elsewhere for the cause of our
distress; and that in the inhumane
laws of our land—laws calculated to
oppose and hinder, instead of as-
sisting anil working in harmony with
the natural law of supply and de-
mand.
The chief corner-stone—in fact,
ttic heay foundation—of ail our op-
pressive legislation is our English-
dictated financial system. The gen-
erals in finance are close, deep stu-
dents of the financial history of the
world, and well understand the pro-
cess by which the great common peo-
ple of the once powerful nations of
theearth were enslaved and the down-
fall of those nations so successfully
accomplished. They also know that
the great rank and file (the wealth-
producers) have not been students
along these lines, and that they
therefore could be easily led astray
after false systems, and go the way
of other nations of the earth. Watch-
ing their opportunity, which came in
the war of the rebellion, they seized
it with avaricious cunning, and began
their systematic financial conspira-
cies. They knew that the only way
to control the labor of the great pro-
ducing class of this country was by
controlling their wages, and that this
could only be done by controlling
the money of the nation. They knew
that their opportunity had arrived;
and as a means to control the vol-
ume of money they saw to it that the
great war debt was used for this pur-
pose, and at once set about to secure
legislation for its accomplishment.
During the war they forced Con-
gress to authorize loans of millions of
•tollars, for which bonds were issued
bearing a high rate of interest. The
war closed, and with it ceased the ne-
cessity of issuing bonds to secure
money with which to support armies
and navies, etc. The maximum vol-
ume of money in circulation was
reached at the beginning of the fis-
cal year (July i) 1864, at which time
the amount of paper money in circu-
lation in the United States was $2,-
'2 - >437'• 1 -• At this time the pop-
ulation of the country was, in round
numbers, 000,000; therefore the
circulation was equal to $58.9-, per
capita. Most of our readers well re-
member that, notwithstanding we had
just emerged from the great civil war,
the most prosperous times in our his-
tory followed. As an eminent writer
well said, the productive power of the
ause there was a sufficiency of mon-
ey to carry on
the
dilation and have steadily continued A Word to I'opiiliNtK.
to do so down to the present time. ! ' he work of the primaries last Sat-
I lie last, but by no means the least, unlay completed the nominating work
outrage upon the American people is of the People's party in this county,
the late repeal of what is generally good strong, clean and able ticket
known as the Sherman law (formerly has been put in the field from the
as the llland bill), the results of highest county officer to the lowest
country, and permitted every able
bodied man and woman to become
a wealth-producer. Why did not
this condition last ? Only because it
was not to the interests of the bund
holding money power that such pros-
perity among the wealth-producing
masses should continue. The time
had come when they were to spring
the financial trap they had so cun-
ningly devised and set for the Amer-
ican people. They knew from the
experiences of ages gone by the re-
sults that would follow a contraction
of the currency; that to reduce the
volume of money was to reduce the
price of labor and its products; that
a sufficient contraction would reduce
labor to a condition of dependence
and servitude—a condition in which
'.hey ceased to earn a sufficiency ami
consequently were compelled to bor-
row. They proceeded to bring a suf-
ficient "influence," etc., to bear upon
national administrations to success-
fully carry out their plan, and the
contraction of the currency began in
1866, during which year there was re-
tired, counted and destroyed ?211,-
239,515.41. Here our statesmen (?)
deliberately entered upon the fear-
less journey of contraction, many of
them plainly forseeing the dreadful
business of the which are seriously felt in the more ! township officer.
rapid decline in the prices of the pro
ducts of la.jor, and the general par-
alysis of business and unrest of the
people, culminating in the most gi-
gantic strikes the world lias ever seen.
The facts are that for the last
thirty years nearly every national
law made has been in and executed
in |l> interest of the capitalists
even the dec isions of the courts tend-
ing to establish and perpetuate the
domination of the money power.
The transportation business is con-
ducted with the most outrageous dis-
crimination in favor of the c apitalists,
and the necessities of life allowed to
be monopolized by trusts, pools and
combines. They are permitted to
squeeze all the products of labor
from the producer by corners in the
money market, ami to raise the price
on the consumer to an exorbitant
limit. Even the press, the telegraph
and the great political parties are
manipulated and controlled in the
inter, sts of this hydra-headed mon-
ster.
Now what are the signs of the
times? The great unrest of the
American people, emphasized by the
tramp, tramp, tramp of the Com-
monwealers; and the almost unani-
mous protest of labor in its great up-
consequence, knowing full well that j heavel, terminating in the greatest
creditors alone would profit by the | strikes of history, are certainly pro-
wreckage, by absorbing every dol- puious signs of a radical change,
lar that debtors would lose. From j The great conservative element is at
the time the first bonds were issued
in 1862 to 1869, at which time the
bonds were made payable in coin,
the bond-holders actually made over
Si,000,000,000 profit out of the
wc.ilth-fuoiiucerj of tin- country.
Among the many outrages perpetrat-
last aroused to its perilous condition;
it now hears the fearful roar of the
mighty cataract of financial slavery,
over which, once past, there is 110 re-
turning. The great strikes and agi-
tations which have convulsed the na-
tion from center to circumference
ed during this period was that of the : have convinced them that there is but
so-called "Credit Strengthening Act," 1 ,,ne "way out" and that is through
making a bond worth only $400 in i legislation, and that the only way to
gold at the time of its purchase, worth
| $1,000 in gold—a gain of Si.50 on
every dollar invested in bonds, while
the investments in real estate and
other lines were depreciated in a sim-
ilar ratio.
The general financial storm which
has swept away fortunes and has im-
poverished millions of our people
through a depreciation of the value
of their property, consequent upon
an excessive contraction of the cur-
rency, earnestly began to show its
blighting influence in 1873, when the
business of the people required more
money, instead of less, for its proper
transaction of business; and when,
instead of having more they had 56
per cent, less, the coinage laws were
revised and the silver dollar entirely
dropped out of the lists of coins of
the United States—robbing the peo-
ple of one-half of their full legal ten-
der money. The same act provided
that the gold dollar should be the
unit of value.
OOf course business became stag-
nant, trade paralyzed and bankruptcy
secure this is to make a unanimous
strike by the ballot-box. Herein lies
our only hope.— Home, Field and
Forum.
What do republicans hope by a re-
turn of their party to power ? Dur-
ing its thirty years of almost contin-
uous rule in this country conditions
have steadily grown worse. Do you
hope for it to undo the work it has
done? It demonetized silver in 1873,
contracted the currency, delivered a
prosperous people over to the merci-
less shylocks, established corpora-
tion rule, destroyed enterprise of all
kinds, save that of the coupon clip-
per, encouraged monopoly to tyrran-
ize over labor. If you favor a con-
tinuation of this policy labor for its
return to power.
We hear a great deal about the sa-
credness of property. Is it not time
that a word be uttered in behalf of
the rights of man ? The divineright
of kings is a nightmare of the past.
But the theory of the divine right of
property has been carried to such a
overtook the labor of the country, j point that the rights of man are well
A feeling of indignation grew ag- j „igh forgotten in the presence of
gressive among the outraged people, this nineteenth century fetish which
and an emphatic demand was made j has ignored justice, protected class
for the restoration of silver to its for-1 interests and plundered industry of
mer position in our monetary system, i the wealth it had created.—The
The intensified temper of the people Arena.
forced recognition, in spite of the —
C .1 , Almuly Old 1'ops sniff Ilemit nml tlio Irai.lci-s,
opposition of the money power, and 11,,,,, „„.i .i«nn, wilt „n ti,.- ..u,.-,-
what is known as the Bland bill final- 'UUun-ftoeiootToin.—siutr Dcmoemt.
ly passed both houses and became a ^ 'icn ^'x'er penned the fcbove he
law February 28. 1878. Resumption knew lle erre<1 willfully and malic-
was supposed to have taken place ! 'olls'y ^rom the truth. U the demo
J January 1, 1879. The increase from crals tlon t ,lonor Bixler as the chief
1878 added about $33,550,000 to the Annias of t,,eir party, in this county,
circulatingmedium. Small as it was, ",ev wi" c,° 1,im a great injustice,
this increase of the currency greatly assertions on the part of liixler
stimulated trade and prices. Corn wiI1 ,ur'"-v shake the confidence the
sold for 31.8 cents per bushel in 1878; th'S C°""ly rep°S'' ' °n'
in 1881 the price was 63.6 cents, j
Wheat rose from 77.7 cents in 187.S The democratic party through its
to S4.4 cents in 1882. Trade greatly s'luirrel-tailed politicians, is tryin
revived and the people took on new
The Arena for .September contain* a long re-
view of the Chicago Strike of im. The author
di mi8«e8the matter of rlotw and violence as
being merely a matter for tie- municipal and
(date author it ics to have dealt with miller the
provisions of the statutory criminal law, ami
not a question affecting the principles Involved
iu the conflict between organized labor and or-
£uni/.ed capital, lle then addrc--e> hlniM-lf to
a critical analy*!# of the rights ot both pnrticK
in the conflict. These he defines according to
the greatest leiral authorities, lllack.-tonc, Coke
ami others, and the common law and constitu-
tion of the {'lilted states, and by the same au-
. - . Populists could say as much. If the ! dysls lie dettnos the nature and functions of
to make the people believe it is in . ^ the state and federal governments. Then the
. perfect accord with everything it has Populists of this county will go and j author ilerlniv- the proper equilibrium Of
courage. But in 1SS2 the national, repudiated.— Ex. do likewise we will sweep this county J right* under the law. ami shows the peril of
I banking law was reinstated, continu- j The gall latter day democrats pos-1 next November like a prairie fire |
o 1 s 11 1110s ,. jng t|le syjtem another twenty years, sess might be classed along with the I and there will not be a single indi
j vidual in this county belonging to | pbical spirit, but It tlws not lack iionyamtwill*
The township pri-
maries revealed a strength far sur-
passing our expectations. By an
earnest and united effort we can
elect every officer in this county.
Don't let it be laid at your door that
our ticket suffers by reason of your
lagging zeal. Because some of the
men you supported failed in securing
nominations, don't think that a great
mistake has been made but roll up
your sleeves and work for the men
nominated. In so doing you will
show yoursincerity and good motives
in aligning yourself with the earnest
reformers that have cut the old poli-
tical bridges behind them and are
pressing bravely forward to redeem
this fair land of ours from the merci-
less thralldom of an anarchistic
money power that threatens to en-
gulf the liberties of our people that
were handed to them bv an illustrious
ancestry who wrenched them from
the tyrannical hand of King George,
the 111. If you are an earnest re-
former you will not go around abus-
ing the nominees of your party. The
old party fellows will abuse theni
sufficiently. The latter abuse is hard
enough to bear but the former is al-
most unbearable. Just stop and im-
agine yourself in the place of your
candidate and think how you would
feel if similarly abused. It is true
you may have a dislike for some of
the candidates nominated, but re-
member they secured a place on your
ticket by virtue of a majority of your
party thinking they were the proper
men to nominate. In sho-ving your
dislike for the man nominated you
not only offend the nominee, but also
the majority^ of your party who are
responsible for his nomination. A
man who has secured his nomination
honorably, and there is not one on
the Populist ticket in this county that
has secured his nomination in any
other way so far as the candidate is
responsible, should receive your
hearty and willing support. It has
been reported to us that some of the
men who came before our conven-
tions and failed to secure nomina-
tions have gone home and skulked
and even have gone so far as to say
they will not support our ticket. I
have been making diligent eftorts to
discover the truth of these reports so
that I may have them for future ref-
erence, but am proud to say 1 have
found them to be utterly false. One
of them in particular we took great
pains to trace down and that was
concerning John William's, a defeat
ed candidate for sheriff. I myself,
perhaps, was as responsible for
John Williams' candidacv as
any single individual and you can
imagine how chagrined I would have
felt had I discovered that I supported
a man whose only reason for joining
the Populists party was the hope of
securing an office. I am pleased to
inform you, however, that no one has
felt the humiliation of that report j
more keenly than John Williams and
the two old parties, save Blackwell,
whose term of office does not expire
for one year, after January first,
holding office in this county. The
1'opulists throughout the territory
are looking for a big majority for
the l'opulist ticket from Cleveland
county. I.et us even surprise them
with its greatness. It cjii be done if
every l'opulist in Cleveland county
will put his shoulder to the wheel.
Arevou going to do it or are you go-
ing to brood over your lost opportu-
nity for the next two years. The
l'opulist candidates stand pledged to
the taxpayers of this county to lift
the extra burden of clerk hire off of
their shoulders and also the con-
structive mileage fees by means of
which the officers of this county have
plundered the taxpayers for the past
four years. Bonder well the above
article, and if you think you will feel
better by abusing the chairman for
writing it, do so; but roll up your
sleeves and work as God gives you
power and strength to work for a
good cause; towit: the success of the
People's party ticket next November.
A Short liiograpliy ol' our Can-
didate lor Shcritl'.
Herman Newblock was born
twenty-nine years ago in the Key-
stone State. Mis father was an in-
dustrious German farmer of that
state and a stalwart Lincoln republi-
can. From the state of Pennsylva-
nia the family removed to the state
of Missouri and from thence to the
state of Missouri, and from thence
to the state of Arkansaw, when Her-
man was only eleven years of age.
Soon after locating on a farm in
Washington county, the father died,
leaving a wife and six children of
whom Herman was the eldest. With
an old wagon and a team of old
mules, Herman bravely set to work
to fill the place made vacant in the
family by the death of his father and
remained at his post until all the
younger children were able to sup-
port themselves. As soon as he had
done this he began to devote his
earnings to secure an education and
by hard work and economy has suc-
ceeded in acquiring a t°°d educa-
tion. Seizing the Oklahoma fever
lie came to this county in August of
1889, and has resided here ever
since on a farm east of Noble, de-
voting his earnings to the support of
his aged mother, who lives in Fay-
ettville, Arkansas, and improving his
education by attending the public
schools in Noble during the winter
season. The above is a short sketch
of the life of our candidate for
sheriff, and the man who would
raise the question of lack of prop-
erty on this young man as evidence
of his unfitness for the office of
sheriff of this county, is too far
down the scale of human intelli-
gence to be noticed, and we feel sure
the people of this county will delight
in honoring such a worthy young
man with their votes next November.
Our candidate has no $2,000 to
spend for votes this fall, having de-
voted his money to the support of a
widowed mother and orphaned
children ever since his majority.
Cheap bread means cheap labor.
I am pleased further to state that he j Cheap manufactured goods means
is well pleased with our ticket and cheap farm products. History does
that as soon as his rush of work is I not record a single prosperous nation
over will take his horse and buggy where these conditions prevail. It
and canvass this county from oik* J is not cheap products, but cheap
end to the other for the success Gf ,1<,llars tl,at wil1 ,)rine prosperity to
.. .. , ... I the masses. I he people of this
the entire ticket even more intelli- 1, „ 1 11 1
country have enjoyed an era of hank-
gently than he would have done had ruptcy caused bv dollars and cheap
not the democrats of this county cir j products.
culated this report on him, thereby j
trying to shake the confidence his I
Populist's friends placed in him. I
That is one report the democrats
have circulated that will come home
early to roost in the filthy hen house
in which it originated. Mr. Williams
has never said aught against a single
candidate on our ticket. Would that
other individuals who claim to be
North was strained
every wheel was in motion; there wasj Banks began to withdraw their cir-! seven wonders
such a confusion and perversion of theni s was
I manifested during the labor troubles in ( hi-
j cago. The paper is written In a very pliiloso
II
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 1, 1894, newspaper, September 1, 1894; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116510/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.