The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 8, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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PEOPLE'S VOICE
tliAk'MiLYlfiW L\ BRIEF i Mr*. Ceorff Gould is Ui« '
NORMAN.
- OKLA
Sena tor-elc t Dupont, toe pn*d«,r-
nmker, ought to be able to contribute
tome interesting matter to the mag*-
lines.
notable happenings 1>rum
the world at LARGE.
Down For ! ««•▼ Ml«o«t 'ln<o
>ut h«JJa lilvlnj n uliithiK Inlor-
Uiatlon of the (*rral l'nH*J ,6 Know
• OliMjjfU irooj Hie \V1rm lle|M/rl ,
Society girls in Cincinnati hare or-
ganized a society for the suppression of
fossip. This looks like a covert attempt
k suppress society.
Aj a factor In uplifting and sustain
&g the human rare the new woman'f
Bible can never hope to rival the old
'Oman's cook book.
There may and may not I* *«i extra
•ession of congress, but the ^tf'iloi
If the hour L«, will If I lill Milt
It football next fall?
With Uij general adjournment oi
•tate legislatures throughout the 11a
ilon the country once more resume thi
tapect of the times of peacc.
The friends of Prof. Lnughlin asserl
that in his Joint debate with Mr. Har
rey he was "ail wool and a yard wide;*
the other side claims h was worsted.
As aa jperatoj* in wheat and an ex-
pert in ruaning a corner the Hessian
By seems to be Quite as skilled as any
professional board of trade manipula*
It cost New YorV 120,000 to secure 9
Jury that disajrrc^d as to the guilt oi
Inspector Martin. What will it cosi
to find a Jury in New York that wil'
tgree?
Th« gold rewrre i« clim'iiia^ up
olose to tuc $100,000,000 u ark.
The heat in i^iiidoi: May '-M **as the
prea*est in that city on thai dale for
27 years.
The public debt Iw cm*h in the
treasury is placed at r<onie'.hiof Qttv
M12,000,000.
Tiie lo?*s caused by the petroleum
bla/e at Harbour^ i* estimated at
I 2,000,000 marks.
j Three Uritii h warships have pone
U) Jc(.<lnli to investigate the murder
, of the Vice < on.MiL.
I The government revenue receipts
I for Muy were 8J.',,600,000, $3,000,000
i imore than May, l 94.
A three-days' festival of Missouri
j \ *lley ] urriers was bc^un at kansas
CiCy, Mo., Saturday,
The controversy between Mormons
j and Christians at El Dorado Springs,
1 Mo., ia waxing wuriu.
Mrs. Andrew (Jrirnmer of Qniney,
Sir Vista, I.orti llo-^lxrrr"*roU.
the Kngiish derby.
The Tennessee legislature met Moo
day in extra m-^iod.
Kentucky is the seene of a L«ot fi^hf
: for the next governorship.
The International Exhibit of Art
at Munich opened Saturtlay.
Russia. < frin r.y and Frarv* will |
jointly take the Chinese loan.
-Queen Victoria h:is made a protest
of Scotch wLisiry to the Czar.
The Pope received Cardinal Gibbons |
of lialtiniore at Rome Monday.
Reports from Argentine are that ,
war feeling is strong a^aics^. Chili. (
I lie Ohio Srate Republican conven-
tion was held at Zautbvi'ts Tuiiiliy.
The steamer Ilunnells bunod and J
sank at Ashtabula, O She ia a total
LS THE NEW COl'MBV I
1 uou, trice A- J- Looper. resigned.
BHfEF BITS OF GENERAL NEWS . - A - H.1#
A roira was fminn iti an msensioie
FROM THE TERRITORIES.
OKHiHoma nnd th« Indian Territory
with Their Undue!of (ifnrral ml,
Lo«nl Lore Itemized tor the ( o#
Saiilrnet of (lie UvBfml Keadar.
Tac freight biuiue** of Tonca City
is $% a day.
TUe Kdmond Republican, It Is said,
iviti auve to Siitwnec.
Corn in the Chicka*aw nation is
waist i>igh and doing well.
l'i e saloons in Pocca City were
burglarised in one ni^ht recently.
The Indians really look u|>ou white
blood u* their vcius as a contamiuu
tioa.
several days ago south of
uied after being eared lor
mtr a few days.
John
ncwsjMpe
in the Okl
iL Alk*ex-\
land is bnnjr.ng in ex-
Oklahoma hum Me-
''as sentenced to one year in trie
Millionaire Mackey tells an inter
viewer that he never was bo happy ai
when he wan swinging a pick. Well
thero nothing to prevent him from
taking his pick now.
There was a sturdy old Sioux,
Used to hunt by tho stream Klckapioux;
In sheer desperation
He b quit the durned reservation—
As he went he blubbered bloux-hioux.
George M. Pullman has confided to
*n Interested public his slowly formed
conviction that he was mucil happier
when he was a poor boy earning his
living by his daily labor than now when
he Is worried with his millions and
burdened with the weight of vast In-
terests and business cares. Wealth, he
says, does not bring happiness. Mr.
Pullman is evidently getting ready to
buy happiness for the rest of hl3 days
by unloading his surplus and with-
drawing from the Millionaire club.
The old foolishness that women of
learning, or eloquence, or brain, are
never pretty, or even good looking, Is
extinct, and has been put on the upper
shelf among the dead scarabs of old
Egypt. In this generation we havo
women professors, lecturers, scholars,
authors, politicians, and philosophers,
who are beautiful Indeed—far more
beautiful than those brainless women
3f old who left nothing better than their
pictures for our lnstruc''on.
The insurrection In the republic ot
Colombia has ended less pleasantly
than that In the republic of Ecuador.
There was a good deal of bloodshed In
the one, but little if any in the other.
The Colombian rebels aro tired of trea-
son, the Ecquadorlan rebols are amnes-
tied; Colombia was disturbed for
months, Ecuador for only a few days.
President Caro is a revengc-rul man;
President Cordero is the most forgiving
of rulers. For th fun of the thing,
the warlike ways of Ecuador are much
preferable to those of Colombia.
There Is nothing In the cruelty of a
man-governed world more cruel than
the deception complained of by Miss
Willard and Mrs. Somerset in securing
their signatures as members of the com-
mittee on tho new woman's Bible. They
signed without knowing Just what they
Vere subscribing to, and in that they
were Just like the man who signed the
petition to have himself hanged. The
new woman movement ought to be
more careful about making such old
masculine mistakes in getting out
a woman's Bible.
A Brooklyn man who was "convicted"
of a burglary he did not commit, and
"pardoned" after he had served nearly
two years In Sing Sing, has sued the
etate of New York for 1101,838.28 dam-
ages. Of this amount $25,000 is claimed
for injury to reputation and mental
and physical suffering while in prison;
the rest is his computation of the
amount he lost In business by this false
Imprisonment, with his attorney's fees
added. Since the state authorities ad-
mit that he was innocent of the crime
for whi(* he was convicted, and his
"pardon" was granted because of his
Innocence, they have a very Interesting
case on their hands to defend. They
may set up the claim that he Is the
victim of misfortune rather than
wrong, but the state Is responsible for
Its part in the denial of liberty that
caused his suffering and loss.
In the army and the navy and In the
police, lots of officers who ought to be
good for many years of service are re-
tired on pensions. Some of them have
but reached that time of life at which
their powers ought to be at their best.
It is tidiculous to call them veterans.
The system Is costly and wrong.
The Globe-Democrat suggests that
England name her next two battle-
ships the Bailiff and the Constable. If
the names are to be suggestive of
their business what is the matter with
the Bully and the Capt. Kldd?
III..
penitentiary for bigamy.
The iiwman Bimetallic Union re*
solved to take no action on silver un-
less l.iigluiid joined the proposed con-
ference.
1 bo Kit>£ of Saxony has received
several letters threatening assassin-
ation. A number of arrests have been
made.
Judgment has been given in favor
of the Pullman company in the suit
brought, to secure the annulment of
*ts charter.
The coinage for May shows that
over $4,000,000 in gold were coined and
8400 000 in silver, 3150,000 being stand-
ard dollars.
The six men recommended for pro-
motion for meritorious service by Gen-
eral Mchodcld were ail rccoinmonded
on the ground of savin# comrades
from drowning.
Justice Horrett, while presiding in
the New York City court of oyer und
terminer, was overcome by the heat
and fell from his chair.
Ex Congressman Win. J. Bryan
•poke at Mexico, Mi, Tuesday.
Too much rain in Texas is said to
bo doing as much damage as tko lontr
drouth did.
The French steamer Dora Pedro
sank on the west coasi of (Jalieia aud
102 people were drowned.
Sir William Ilareourt has assured
the English bankers that the govern-
ment will stand firm for the single
gold standard.
David Weaver of Cairo, W. Va., died
of htnrf dlai om, resulting from the
discovery on Lis land of a 540 barrel
per day oil well.
1 he hot wind storm of Monday and
Tuesday is reported as haying done
much damage to crops in Iowa. Illi-
nois, Nebraska, Kansas and the In-
dian territory.
A fc^*ange case of crime has devel-
oped •in Alabama. At Livingston,
Ala., a year ago, Hinton Rice was
chargcd with drowning Win. Iturrel.
He was tried, convicted and sen-
tenced to twenty yearn in the peni-
tentiary. A brother of the prisoner
testified as an eye witness to the trag-
edy. The supposed murdered man
W;;s located at Mobile several weeks
ftjro, but eluded the officers until Sat-
urday night when lie was arrested.
Burrei, when asked why he did not
make himself known, said he did not
want people to know his whereabouts
and expressed 110 regret that his sup-
posed slayer was serving a term of
imprisonment.
The SL Louis Chicago lines have
reduced the passenger rate between
the two cities by almost one-half The
step was made necessary by scalpers'
manipulation of excursion tickets.
Secretary of State Walter Q. Grcsh-
am died at Washington, D C., at 1:15
o'clock, Tuesda3' morning, May ~'8.
The Interior Department has sent
anagent to sec that canneries arenot
violating Uncle Sam's law in Alaska
Theodoro Durrant was arraigned in
the superior court Wednesday, for the
murder of Hlanch Lamont and Minnie
Williams at San Francisco. Ho plead
not guilty in each ease. Both trials
were set for July 22.
The big American line steamer, St.
Louis, which left Philadelphia on Sat-
urday for her preliminary ocean voy-
age, but which was detained in Dela-
ware bay by the dense fog, passed out
of the C apes at 0:15 o'clock Tuesday
morning.
Messrs. John C. Burcli and James E.
Allison today purchased from James
M Head, a controlling interest in the
Nashville American, aud at once as-
sumed control. The American has
advocated the frco coinage of silver,
but will hereafter preach sound money
doctrine.
teting at De-
There is a prospect that the war be
t^cen China and Japau will be re-
newed.
liussia now has a la v allowing com-
mercial transactions to be made on a
4'old basis.
Morgan Black killed his sister',
lover, George Fisher, at Walnut Bot-
tom, Ky.
Governor Altg-eld scored tho United
States supreme court for its action in
the lieiib ease.
Ibe Baptists of America are gath-
ering for their annual iue<
catur. 111.
Jeflfery and Henderson, the murder-
ers, were Iiaoged at Murpliysboro,
I1L. Friday.
1 be Confederate monument at Oak-
woods cemetery, Chicago, was dedi-
cated Thursday.
A steamer lo;idcd with ammunition
•cached Corinto, Nicaragua, uftor tli
British left.
Tin Gardio, scting Chief of Police
at Porto Priucipc, Havana, has desert-
ed the island.
The body of Mrs. (I. Ohlenbush ol
• t. Charles, Mo., ivas found in tin
Missouri river.
I'liere was a great turn-out at De
catur, III., at tho annual meeting ol
German Baptists.
Right Hon. Sir James Hacon of En-
gland is dead. Ho .vas cx-\ ice Chan-
cellor and member of the Privy Coun-
cil.
ihrec men have been arrested in
New York on charge of robbing tin
Springfield, 111., posloffice.
The clerk of tho House of Represen-
tatives at Washington has just given
out a list of Congressional contest
cases.
lliirty-thrce men on a raft on the
Spanish river, Ont., were e_-,r,i.!d intc
tho rapids anil drowned.
Monuments to Gen. Geo. II. Thorn
as, Garfield and Jeremiah M. p>u u
were dedicated Thursday.
A monument to the memory of those
killed in the bridge disaster at Asiita
oula, C)., has been erected.
The ceremonies at the Confederate
uionumcnt in Chicago on Decoration
day .vere elaborate aud impressive.
A fight toolc place between sheep-
men and cattlemen in lloutt county,
Colorado, and four men were bailiy
wounded.
The Ko 'x U
cur ionUu to
baska.
A division of the League of Ameri-
can Wheelmen was organized at
Guthrie Friday.
The McConns, who u^cd to run the
Cro!* lie* id eat. are uov*' runuiug a
daily paper iu Ar,:au a«5 City.
Mr*. K. N. UatlifTe, of Vinita, lias
been elected president of the V. C. T.
L'. of the Indian territory.
Ilockner, the Guthrie man who
locUcd up his wife, has been bourn-
over at Guthrie in the sum of 81,000.
Mrs. Selwyn I>ouglass has been
elected principal of the Oiduhoma City
lligh school for tiie next school year.
Colonel Klackweil ii out of jail. He
will be tried next "Monday and on
Tuesday he will dedicate his Indian
temple.
II Jcnidns, of El Reno, is wanted.
His attorneys, lilaku tV JUake, an-
nounce thai he has been left a for-
tune and that they cannot tiud him.
An Oklahoma editor declares that
he has studied the Indians for years
and can Ktate positively that they are
more inimoral than the English no-
bility.
Tiie famous mound claim iu the
Kickupoo country near Chandler is the
residence of about twenty people who
are all staying to see what the other
fellows are going to do about it.
Professor Gentry, who was elected
superintendent of the Oklahoma City
schools has also been elected superin-
tendent of the lloonville. Mo., school.
Ho will accept the latter position.
P. H. Brady, who was tried at Okla
*erry. u
by tk* 4
Ho# nscheidt. t!«e " German
r :nan. hn so d his interest
lahoma City Daily star to I*.
. who will assume eontroL
' The Hon *a Indian base ball team,
which started on a tour through th**
Eus;*cTcral weeks ago, disbanded at
Chicago, and the members will r ;tnru
to their homes in the territory.
The Klackweil Uecord sahl last
week: "We are needing r.;in again
badly." The next day it rained and
the Record is claiming rcdit for the
moisture.
A number of prlsone~s confined in
tho L'nited States jail at Ardmore
made a break for liberty Wednesday
night. Si nee the tire destroyed the
prison criminals have been guarded in
temporary quarters. They tore the
door down, then wrapped themselves
in mattresses and bedding, and were
rushing to the wall of thu stockade
when the leader, Albert Williams
fell to the ground with a pistol bullet
in his thigi), indicted by a gr.ard. On
seeing their leader fall, tue others
made quick theii retreat.
Friday night Detective Sutton of
Wichita arreted Walter Doak in that
ily and p need him in the city prison
C*«a«rvall*e Little Bodies
Are Aum dlratnative or-pant, the k dnpyi,
wbleh. Is ftpiU of their small tits, ptiform m
health s not! important part In tb«* m< eHan-
;«m of tb* fy tem thulr activity w ih
Ho«te:t*r's rttoamrh Bitters, whlrb p cvroti
tbeserioua an) often fatal dl******* lekQiting
fr jm ihnr in*< tiou. This sterling tried cin*.
luoreovtr. r-me-h«a malarial, rU earn at c and
iTspeptie ruwi'.aiuta, and iaviiotate* Ui«
wLuie system.
Su Oltlilal Annouueeiuent.
"I am told that Smithera is quite
cured ot his illne«s.M
"I don't believe it " replied the
blunt citizen
•'Why not?"
•*I haven't seen his picture In any
patent medicine advertisement. —
Washington Star.
Kiperletire lead a man* iii< th«r« •« any
"1 •« Parkar'i Gl&c-r Tou!c." b#-i «u*e Itlafpac-
1 -Uy goojforculd*. ptlnaaaUaUiiuateterj we«kueu.
iloosac tunnel cost I37U a foot
Thoae IM«trpn|n« Cnrna!
as tliey arc. Hlndercorni will remu\e them, and
Uicu you can walk aud run ami Jump aa you like.
Norway has 59 wood pulp mills.
Piso's Cure cured me of n Throat and
Lung trouble ol three year*' standing.—
K. Cad*, Huntington, fnd., Ncv, 12, 1804.
More attention is just now attracted
to the Wyoming oil lie ds than ever
be/ore.
The Nfrhel Plate* New Trains.
The new train service of the Nickel
Plate road, which went into effect Sun-
day, May 19th, has met the approval of
the traveling public. On all sides are
heard expr^ss'.onfl of universal satisfac-
tion regarding the efforts which this
to await the arrival of oAIcers from 1 popular road Is making In the inter-
the Cherokee natiou. The cause of
his arrest is unknown, but it is sup-
posed to be for some crooked business
dono by him recently at tiie pnymeat
of annuities to the Indians The ar-
rest was made on descriptions of the
man sent out by Colonel Emerson of
Vinita. Doalc is said to be the last
man one would think to oc a criminal
He looks like a smart, prosperous
vaung business man. He has been in
Wichita for two weeks and was con-
sidered to be a young man of some
consequence. He dressed in the
height of fashion, wore tan shoes, the
swellcst kind of a shirt, some dia-
monds, a liat of tho latest approved
fashion and a beard cultivated r.nd
trimmed with artistic taste. The fel-
lows who considered liiin "big pota-
toes" are anxious to know what he has
done.
An appeal from the decision of the
district judge at Oklahoma City in tho
Choctaw injunction ease was tiled in
the supreme court late Wednesday af-
ternoon. T)ns is the case in which
lioina City on cliargo of obtaining ^'1C JT°vernincnt
money under false pretensious and se-
duction, was cleared, and he and his
father have left for their home iu the
fcouth.
seeks to hai
tho
Itobcrt Kincaid, late of Linn coun-
ty, Kan., was arrested Thursday at
White Hock, near Perry, on a requis-
ition from Governor Morrill and re-
turned ti) the creditors ot a bank in
that county who complain of the man-
ner in which certain deposits were re-
ceived by the bank of which Kincaid
was at tiie time an ofHccr.
A car load oi provisions collected in
Vernon county, Missouri, by Rev. II.
W. Robertson has been shipped to
Pond Creek for the drought-stric:<eii
inhabitants of that section. Tin
Choctaw Railway company enjoined
from going through the Kickapoo res-
ervation, instead of building six miles
south, as the original route was sur-
veyed and agreed upon. The road's
desire to go through the reservation
was to miss Tecumseh and start a
rival town of their own, because Te-
cumseh would not fully accede to their
demand for a bonus. The Kickanoo
reservation has been opened to settle-
ment since the controversy began, but
as the road essays to go through nu
mcrous Indian allotments which are
held in trust for the government, the
government's attorneys claim 110 right
of eminent domain can exist against
their lands. This is but oue of the
esta of Its patrons Three fast trains
are now run In each direction dally.
Superb dining car service; no change
of cars for any class of passengers be-
tween Chicago, New York and Boston.
City ticket office, 111 Adams street. Tel.
Main 389. Depot, Twelfth and ^lark
streets. Tel. Harrison 200.
Paper gloves are on hand. \
ONLY ONE AND THAT IN JULY.
Excursion to Colorado.
Th© Orpnt Rock Island Route will soil tickets
ch<-ap for this excursion to Denver in July, and
jou should post yourself at once as to rules and
routes.
Send by postal card or letter to .Ino. Sebastian,
O. I'. A., Cnieago, for u beautiful souvenir issued
ty the Chicago, Roek Island and Puciflc R y, call-
el the "Tourist Teacher," that tells nil about tho
trip. It will be sent free It is a gem, aud you
should not delay in Hsking for it.
J No. Sebastian, Ci. P. A., Chicago.
Taper Is the latest insulator.
billed to County Commissioner A. ' many reasons alleged by .Judge Scott's
Corbett and
New York
Titzsimmons met in
ar.d Fitzsimmons agreed
to deposit sr.,000 when a battleground
was selected.
Secretary Smit.li of the Interior has
det id -d to spend ¥.10,000 in improving
the Government reservation at Ilot
Springs, Ark.
1 he Creek Indians have explained
to the government that their arrest of
their governor was
against ring rule.
only
P'OlCbt
_ A passonprcr on the Lloyd isteamer
Ems dropped a w.cath of flowers in
the oreun where tiie Kibe went down
with ills wife on board.
Executive clemency was refused
Douglass Henderson and Frank"Jef-
frey, sentenced to be hanged at Mur-
pliysboro, 111., Friday.
Letters of incorporation have been
issued to tiie Kansas City Connecting
railway. The road is projected to run
through Northeast Missouri to lotva.
The following is tho Ohio Re-
publican State ticket nominated at
Zanesviile Wednesday: Coventor, Asa
A. ISushncil; lieutenant governor, Asa
W. Jones; auditor, W I). Gilbert; su-
preme judge. Thaddcus A. Minshall;
attorney general, Frank S. Monett;
treasurer, Samuel R Campbell.
The Agricultural Department is get-
ting ready to inaugurate its new sys-
tem of gathering crop reports.
The One Hundred and Seventh Gen-
eral Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church of the United States, held at
Pittsburg, Pa., adjourned Monday.
Hetty Gtccn's suit to set aside a sale
of $000,000 worth of property in Chi
cago on the ground of fraud was
knocked out by the Supreme Court.
1 ho finishing touches are being put
on the steamship St. Louis prepar-
atory to her maiden voyage some time
this month. The citizens of St. Louis
presented the vessel with libraries for
both the first and second cabins and a
portfolio of views of St Louis as a
testimonial of their appreciation of
the fact of the vessel being named for
that city.
Reports from Venezuela say that the
Venezuelans aro about to" take up
arras against Great llritain.
The Arkansas militia is disbanding
because of the refusal of the Legisla-
ture to graut assistance.
Funeral services were held over the
remains of Secre ary Greshmn at the
White House Wednesday and the
body then shipped to Chicago for in-
terment, which took place on Thurs-
day.
Miss Jennie Urogle, aged 21, wag
drowned while bathing at Atlantic
City, N. J. Her companion, a young
man who was teaching hor to "swim,
was rescued, and was arrested by the
young lady s sister, charged with
criminal carelessness.
J. Arnold, and contained .'i,M0 pounds
of flour, 32 sa-'ics of corn, three barrels
of molasses, 1.200 poundfs of meal,
nine sacks of potatoes, a lot of meat,
coffee, sugar aud other gro -erics.
Three marked men created a panic
Friday night at Paris, twelve miles
southwest of Hennessey. They lirst
rode to the home of ex-United States
Marshal Dixon and demanded the val-
uables in the house. Mrs. Dixon gave
up 3-- and two revolvers, 'i'hey then
proceeded to the residence of Dr. A.
II. Akers, who surrendered Sl'>r> and a
gold watch. They also held up three
travelers west of Paris.
refusal that to grant an injunction
was not good law. The brief is one
of the moit thorough and exhaustive
ever filed in the territory, being tho
work of ex-United Stales District At-
torney Speed, who has been retained
on the case by Tecumseh people to as-
sist United States District Attorney
Hrooks, The appeal covers 4 0 type-
written pages and cost S100 to copy.
The case has been set for next Mon- 1
day, and will be one of a large num-
ber of important cases to be handled
by the regular session of the supreme
court now being held.
G.*eat destitution is reported in m
Deputy Ed Kelly arrested and lodg- strip of country embracing a part of
ed in jail Friday, .1. G. ('hump, post- Grant county, Oklahoma. While
master at Zion (). 1. Chump iscnarg- nearly all of the territory has had
ed with embezzling postoflicc funds to | Kpicndid rains, there is a distance ex"
the amount of $425. It appears that ! . r- j
, | i si■ ,i r . < teuding from four miles south of Enid
he ordered S4. 0 worth of stamps for :t h
cross-roads postofflce, and finding he nor,h a dis,ancc twenty miles, al-
did not need so manv exchanged all most to Medford, and from six miles
but about 32.1 worth of them for other uest of llo"nd Pol,d c;lst nearly t0
goods. Lamont, a distance of ten miles, where
j there had been no rain since October
A dispatch from 'itithrie, June 1, ' uctil last Friday. In consequence of
says: Deputy 1 nited States Marshal the serious drought of last summer
Samuel Learge came in yesterday , ;in(i this spring, there is neither
from the ( reck nation with <«. \\. \N il- grain, garden vegetables, nor grass for
son, who is charged with killing Zaek | animals. The people in that drought-
1 hutch, on Rock crerk in toe Creek stricken section arc in utter and de-
country two or three weeks ago. 1 he plorable destitution. Many families
murdered man was en uncle to Wil- j ttrr now without the common nccessi-
son, who when arrested had the dead ties of life, and they are compelled to
subsist in many cases on corn in
The Cures
fly Flood's Sarsaparilla lire wonderful,
but tiie explanation is simple Hood's
Sarsaparilla purifes,
vitalizes and enriches
the blood, and dis-
ease cannot resist its
powerful curative
powers. Read this:
" My girl had hip dis-
ease when live year#
old. She was con*
fined to her bed and
r for six or seven weeks
the doctor applied weights to the af-
fected limb. When she got up she
wai unablo to walk, had lost all her
strength and day by day she became
thinner. I read of n curij of a similar
case by Hood's Sarsaparilla. and decided
to give it to Lillian. When she had
taJcen one bottle it had effected so much
good that I kept on giving it to her
Until she had taken three bottles. Her
appetite was then excellent and she
was well and strong. She has not used
crutches for eight months and walks to
school every day. 1 cannot say too
much for «
Hood's Sarsaparilla
It is a splendid medicine and I would
recommend it to any one." Whs. G. A.
LaHqSK, Oroville, California. 9
Hood's Pills
PATENTS1 . / ?,
A Al AJli 1 U taiiKHi. Writefui Inventor'sQuld#
flENSIQN^KK
ROOFING
Corrupnto.l Iron, Standing Beam
Steel ami Felt ltoortng, Metal
8hl ffle«, Steel Imitation Brick
ind Stone, Building Paper, etc.
The Kaoiai Citj Mdal Kuofiog and Corro^itio^ Compaaj,
41ft Delaware it., Kansas Citjr, Mo.
PARKER'S
„ HAIR BALSAM
Clrer.fr, and beautlfici the hair.
I'romutci a luxuriant growth.
Novcr Fails to Restore Gray
Hair «-•-
Cure* . _
fr'.-,aivl 31."
Ely's Cream
QUICKLY CURES
COLDihHEAD
mail's money anil goods on ),js person.
Ho does not deny the ownership of
either, but says his uncle left him in
charge of the outfit and went to
Shawneotown. He entertains hopes
that his uncle is still alive. The
corpse of a man was found near where
he hai camped. It was partially de-
composed, but there was a partial rec-
ognition and the officers think it is the
missing* uncle of Wilson, but 110 pa-
pers were found on tlie dead man to
prove his identity. Mr. Learge will
leave tomorrow for For* Smith with
his man.
The international council of the
five tribes met at Ft. Gibson Wednes-
day with delegates from each of the
al and
water and cracked wheat and water.
There arc many families which are
now without money to procure even
the coarse food, and unless help is
forthcoming they must face the pros-
pect of starvation. An appeal in bc-
! half of the unfortunate inhabitants of
that section lias been issued by the
Women's Aid Society of North Pond
: Creek, Ok. Food, clothing and gar-
( <'.en seeds are solicited.
S. P. Kemper, who shot Captain
llond at Enid, has been arrested,
j chargcd with assault with intent to
I kill.
Busch, the man near Hennessey who
fasted forty days, is crazy.
■ The Yeager gang, which operates
nations except the ( hoctaws and ad- | noir Alva, has one member known as
journcd to meet at Kufaula. The ob- "The Ghost."
jcet of this convention is to formulate f The oklahoma National bank of Ok-
some plan to oppose the work that i* lahoma city went into voluntary 11-
bclnjf laid out by the Dawes com mis quijBlionSatnrdav and transferred all
•i°n- nmv at Muskogee endeavoring j its aeCounts. deposits and business to'
to negotiate with them for the re- thc Fi)at N:ltinnal bank of that plac,.'
linquishment of their tribat relations. ,, ie„ H (; Thomas is president and'
The convention was unanimously op- i L Uobbiu cashier. Thc bank fail-
posed to any change in their course, cd ln 1893> and 1Vils in the h.lllds ofa
and expressed themselves as such in I receiver several months, finally re-
vilforoui terms. j 0pcning under new management. *
I EW1S' 98 % LYE
■ IWtESED AUD PEErUMID
(PATENTED)
Tho atrnriQut and puregt Lr
Unlike other Lye. It being
..2 Powder and packed in a can
jwlth removable Ud, the contents
are always ready for une. Will
jnaketheii«( porfumed Hard Soap
In 20minutesiWf/iouf boUing. It la
the beat for cleansing waste pipee,
"°sh'up
PENNA. SALT M'F'G CO.
Gen. Agents.. Phila^ Pa.
* ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR it
TMPERIAi
* THE BEST*
^Nursing Mothers, Infants/1
CHILDREN
JOHN CARLE &. SONS, New York.
IS
%
y +
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 8, 1895, newspaper, June 8, 1895; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116710/m1/2/: accessed September 27, 2023), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.