The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, February 21, 1896 Page: 4 of 10
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Peoples Voice.
WOKMAX,
OKLAHOMA.
The aggressive end of the BrltlsJl
.ministry is suffering from a peac*
scare.
We're got 'em—statesmen (T).
■duration will rapidly follor organ-
tsatlon.
The people may be goaded to repu-
diation.
Capital, or property,
tsllized labor.
la only crys-
An honest man votes for principle.
The conflict la between manhood and
money.
POOR MAX LEBAl I)Y ^ '°re ''e *aS t'"4w n 'n "Jt' co*'"fr'i,: •n® ! ^ pastor of the I ialcsburg, Mich
• i entered the French army as a private j itaptist church is the leader of the
hurch orchestra, in which he plav^
Capital is forcing the Irrepressible
conflict.
HIS DEATH WAS DUE TO RIGID
FRENCH DISCIPLINE.
Does Hilly Bryan belong to a gold
bug party?
Wisconsin prohibitionists h&ve called
their convention to meet at Cleat
Water. What was the matter with Hye
ville?
Spain has soldiers enough and gen-
erals enough In Cuba to overrun th«
island. But the army has no love fu
the cause.
Where Is Bland?
"forks of the road."
Chinese forgers have issued $2,000,-
OoO in forged banknotes, and yet there
•re perple who claim that the Chlnriae
are not civilized.
Kentucky can t understand why the
Cuban insurgents should want to cap-
ture Havana's water supply. Why don't
they taie a brewery or a distillery?
He s not at the j The "popular loan" will be taken by
unpopular people.
*"■* \° b've * i G<" into line In every state and work
but the majority have bondage. for victory this year.
Bonds mean bondage, but Orover Where Is prosperity? She was billed
says we can buy prosperity with them, to reach here before this.
The platform "trimmer" Is as bad as
the platform "loader." Watch them
both.
,~ ~ " " "The war scare has subsided," says
The popular sentiment was too strong : an exchange. Who was scared'
against the bond syndicate and it dik- '
IIO'Ve<'' i ' waK invited to Washington for a
conference"-J. IMerpont .Morgan.
HI* Aetr*M >«ttf#ili 4rt H
,t* suoii HI «.
1'hm the Knd Wai >«*r
Inherit Mmiy Million*.
•he Ulll
Our great American statesmen (?)
have got things in a nice shape.
It makes us tired to hear a man talk
free sliver while he remains in a gold-
bug party.
No doubt one reason why a groat
toany people are reluctant about paying
their taxes is that they know that much for one ''car
"f the public money is squandered or
stolen by incompetent und dishonest
officials.
All the gold in the world would not
pay the interest on the world's debts
John Sherman and Orover Cleve-
land aro two of the most despised men
In the nation.
If there are any democratic candi-
dates for president, they haven't come
out of the woods yet.
If you think this country is run by
money, why don't you have the man-
hood to protest against it?
Jim Corbett's first wife muBt have a
Foft spot In her heart for him after all.
She is planning to relieve him of the
obligation to pay her lloo a week ali-
mony by annexing a millionaire on her
cm account.
Oood old California! It has been as-
tonishing to those who remember her Keep it before the people that a ma-
b0W Bbe hlU' let Cr|PP>« ^orlty «" congressmen of both old par-
t.roek dim her luster. But she is com- ties voted to demonetize silver.
ing out now. A telegram from San '
Francisco announces the discovery of a
Hew gold field and it's none of your beg-
garly 10-oiinces-to-the-ton fields, either.
The dispatch says that the llrst quartz
assays $167,250 to the ton, or $82 to the
pound. That is, it Is pure gold with
Just enough rock mixed in to hold It to-
gether. 'Hah for the land of the Argo- | <nce.
nauts. They will be mining new-
minted double eagles and diamonds all
wit and mounted out there before long.
The meeting of the Nntlonal Demo-
cratic committee at Washington was
more like a funeral than anything else.
Oh, yes, the hankers know all about
the money business! They now have
the money and the people the cxperl-
"Old Bill' Vosburg, the green-goods
man who swindled Anton Cimfel a
farmer of Clarkson, Neb., out of $500
was allowed to go free in New York
the other day becauso the court thought
he was no worse a criminal than tho
sucker who bit. Recorder floff said ho
thought the legislature should make a
law declaring the farmers who came
on to buy green goods should bo prose-
cuted as felons. Ho had no sympathy
for them. They wero greater criminals
than Vosburg, because he was but fleec-
ing thieves, or men willing to bs
thieves, and as great swindlers at heart j to Prev0Dt 11
as the prisoner. Farmers who seek the
purchase of counterfeit money do so
with tho intention of working It off on
innocent people and swindling them
out of good money or property. If tho
law should take them in hand they
■would lose less money to sharpers.
The gold wing of the Democratic
party won tho first fight by dictating
the place for holding the National con-
vention.
Cursing Orover Cleveland won't save
the democracy or win a victory for the
Populists. What we need is work and
organization.
Down with the salaries in proportion
to the fall in prices of farm products.
Most of tho speeches now being made
in Congress are for campaign purposes
only.
Hie bankers are the only set of men
i who ever questioned the credit of the
government.
The bankers don't want the govern- j
ment to loan money to any of the pco-
plfl, but tliemftclves.
TOiTm* ■W w"' meet the traitors at I
illlipi in November, just as Governor I
VValte said we would.
Nothing but gold and gold certificates
Will buy the new bonds, and the bank-
ers have about all of them.
No party on earth can steal the
Populist party, it will absorb the best
of ail parlies before November.
Philadelphia is moving to own her
own street railways. The logic of events
is solving the problem of human rights.
The most important meeting of the
year will be that of the National Re-
form Press Association at Dallas, Feb.
Paris Letter.'
OOH little Max Le-
baudy! Now that
he is dead, no one
has aught but kind-
ly words for him.
How changed is the
sentiment since a
year or two ago,
w heu he was devis-
ing idiotic means
of dissipating his
patrimonial mil-
lions! But many things have happened
since then. He has suffered. Nay. he
has fallen a victim to the Insensate
malignancy and avarice of politicians
and blackmailers. At their door lies
his blood, just as surely as if they had
assassinated him with clubs and knives.
And more important still supremely
Important, as enlisting the sympathies
of the volatile Parisian public- is tho
romance that enveloped his lest hours
and, touched with the red gleam of
tragedy, transfigures the memory of
poor, foolish, extravagant, warm-heart-
ed "Sugar Bowl" Lebaudy. All thf
world loves a lover; Paris simply
iidores one.
! soldier, there are still enough millions
' to make the actress one of thf richest
I women in Europe. How grotesque a
part money plays in this grim romedy
of life and death. It was with the
money of his father, an enormously rich
manufacturer, that poor, silly .Max, who
was the )oungettt of the family, con-
trived to achieve world-wide fame as j
a elided fool. It was that wealth that,
when perforce a private in the service
of the republic, debarred him from be-
ing treated with common humanity,
such as would have been accorded to |
the meanest peasant. As a soldier his
country paid him t sou per day. And i
as an invalid he could not obtain proper j
treatment. Yet lie could afford to leave i
the woman he loved many times a mil- !
lionalre.
As for .Mile. .Marsy it i* probable that 1
her association with the Comedie Fran- !
caise, including her dividends and her
salary, do not yield her over $." ,000 a
year. The actress lives in a small
house ihe Villa Fanny, just outside
Amelie-les-Bains- on the 1'alalda roads. :
It is a charming, secluded t, sur-
rounded by thick woods. It was here
that Max Lebaudy spent his last day, '
after the military authorities were at I
length (but too late) aroused to the crit- !
leal condition of his health, long since j
undermined by the rigorous discipline !
and brutal neglect under which ho had i
suffered in the army. He lived in tho
military hospital, near his sylvan re-
crement. very simply. Most of his
..me was spent in driving through the
country roads with Mile. Marsy. He
the clarionet.
The successive taxes, on the ocaasiou
<f succeeding to an inheritance or 1*
quest, are levied in almost all Euro-
pean countries.
Ixindon
vants.
has -'(Ml.000 domestic sei
In 189U this country
900 tons of coal.
mined 193,000
ron, W.tl !or Tour Seed.
That's what we say, because it's the
best. Salzer's Wisconsin grown seedt
are bred to earliness and produce the
earliest vegetables in the world. Right
alongside of other seedsmens' earliest,
bis are 20 days ahead! Just try his
earliest peas, radishes, lettuce, cabbage
etc! He is the largest grower of farm
and vegetable seeds, potatoes, grasses,
clovers, etc!
If you wilt cut (lit. out and erne
It to the John A. Salter Seed Co., L*
Crosse, Wis., with 10c postage, you will
get sample package of Early Bird Rad-
ish (ready In 16 days) and their great
catalogue. Catalogue alone 5c postage,
eluding above oats, free. w.n.
Birmingham, Ala. is sad ti have
had a more rapid growth than any
other city not built in tiie gold and
silver milling (listrii'ts.
And Max Lebaudv was a i
lover. Withal his inamorata was a wo- desire,/..^'nVIT """ '""ray- 1,0 Manifests It.neU In many different ways, lile
man of force, of fame, of graces were theMends fZ'S who""' ' ^ "" h°'K
charm, if not of genius. And little sented their cards at the Villa Fanny
Max Lebaudy loved her throughout all ' and the hospital.
ihe vicissitudes of his short and tur- j tun
bulent career loved her in his latter! (ore
Further experience in India tends to
establish the value of Professor Haff-
kinc's inoculations against cholera. Dr.
Simpson, health officer of Calcutta, re-
ports one instance in which a fatal
caee of cholera led to the inoculation,
two days afterward of eleven of the
eighteen remaining members of the
household, and in a second outbreak of
the disease these eleven escaped,'
while four of tho seven uninoculated
wero attacked, three fatally After an
outbreak in another locality lit! per-
sons wero inoculated out of a bout 200
in the district This was followed by
ten cases—seven fatal—of cholera and
choleratlc diarrhoea, not one occurring
among the inoculated persons. The
discomfort of the Inoculations Is staled
As no one will father the tarifT bill
sent from tho house to the senate there
is a growing suspicion that it is a bas-
tard measure.
Christ said, "Feed my lambs," but the
plutocrats are fleecing them and the
church doesn't seem to be doing much
Let the free silver party organize;
%hen we can see the size and color of
the hoss it is plenty of time to talk
about swapping.
The delegates to tho next People's
party National convention will make
tho platform; therefore look to choos-
ing the delegates.
| It Is costing a good deal to make our
money "good in Europe," but then when
we undertake to act tho fool why not
do It on a graud scale?
| Not one official out of a hundred who
assists in robbing the people is pun-
ished for it, and all because we want
harmony in the party, you know.
Notwithstanding the daily assertions |
of the plutocratic papers that the silver
agitation is dead, it is today about the '
Keep your eyes on the man who
wants office. He'll do to watch. If he
advocates trimming the platform
bounce him.
Texas polls more Populist votes than
any other state in the Union, and they
didn t win them by fusion or piatform
trimming, either.
All the people on earth combined,
except one man, have no right to dis-
possess that one man of any of hts
natural opportunities.
All the Spanish and Cuban generals
were killed again this week. The Span-
ish have the Cubans on the run -the
Spanish soldiers in the lead.
Senator Teller, having decided that
there is no hope for free silver In either
of the old parties, ought now to attach
himself to a party that ia in favor of
free sliver.
The free silver lnside-the-party Dem-
ocrats and Republicans evidently thin*
the best way to got free sliver is to
vote against it, and with a party that
is opposed to it.
A majority of men In public office are
making more money than they could
make at anything else, which is to say
that they are receiving more than their
services are worth.
Scrofula
Manifests Itself in many different ways, like
Koitre, swellings, running sores, boil*, salt
rheum anil plmphs ami other eruption*.
Scarcely a man is wholly free from it, in some
1 the hospital, but all were politely I 1* clings tcnaeiously until the last vestige
nod away. Mr. Lebnudy was too ill ' ol"scrof,,Ioii?« | oi oii isirai«iic-uU*€liromtins
receive. l,y Hood's Sarsaparllla. Thousands of voluntary
t'"*timonlals tell of suffer^ from scrofula, often
inherited and most tenacious, positively, p. i
fectly and permanently cured by
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
1 lie One True Blood Purifier All druggists. $i.
Prepared only by r. I. Homl &('«).. Lowell. Mas«.
Hood** Pilfc'n' ;farmonlo,,Hiy with
IIUUU S r HIS Hood h Sarsapanila. Jk'.
ftftdgfetaruest;
"DTATOi
IN THE |
WORLD;
wmi
m
(m
KM'
< ;K<ji
MA HIE LOUISE MARSY.
WAX LEBAl'iA
liveliest question in American polUlTs.' ! se^'maw'™ l"trodu"d a "ill in the
' making; it a misdemeanor for
The Populist senators arc handling ! to.™ter U,fi ''OP""! building,
to be milder and of shorter duration ,he ke a two-edged sword. They ' ■ llt 0,1 ,hp revenues of
aro in fine shape to put the two oli j <>>" So.ons °f
than that of vaccination against small-
pox. For complete protection, inocula- Parties on record and they have the
tion with a mild vaccine should be fol- i courage to do it.
lowed after five days by the use of a I
stronger vaccine. The operations are Secretary Carlisle's circular r-\nlain-
ays harmless. | |ng how t0 ,nake bl(lf, for thp pPn(linK
- — j bonds would be more complete if it told
The kind of work that is acc'om- ' the <,f>ar P^P'0 where to get the gold 1
•ourse it will
Now that the national committee has
met, It is time for all Populists lo go
to work. The making of the platform i
will take place at the convention, and it
Until, , ? 'T"ru"°" W"h 'hf I And ko he was lh,> Poor little "Sugar
linging fondness of a tender-hearted Bowl! " I, was a wreck, nothing mole
he I'ft h" Tk 7'1 K°'V' A"J d'VinK ! that t!-' n"''ary authorlti id vield-
hi mm, ha,! r",]od I" ! «P "'or a brief spell to ihe care of
shield him from a cruel fate-his for- j Mile. Marsy. He was a wan shadow of
ni i i u- o i *1'8 for,llcr se'f. this emaciated victim
Did she love him? As to that Mile. . of rabid socialists and scheming blaek-
Marsj may keep her own counsel. Per- niaiiors. with his hollow cheeks his
haps some hint of her feelings may he trembling hands and his frightened and
she ha pleading eyes. And he did not rorget
... . , ,lle " ors others, though ttrhaps less
I can do no more than tell you the fortunate than himself. Tim. and a-ain
terrible news. My poor, dear little pa he 8r„, money to the mayor of Am^lie
tient died at 7:45 last evening, after les-Balns to be distributed among the
having suffered terribly. His youth poor of the commune. Mile Many
had gained the victory over the ty- nursed him devotedly. She
phold fever. Since yesterday evening , his side.
discerned in this letter, which
just written:
do you know . . .
That the finer.t vegetables in the are !
grown from Salzer'* ced > Why? lie 1
cause they are Northern-grown, l.rccl to
earliness.anrt sprout quickly, grow i
and produce enormously!
35 Packages Earliest Vegetable Seeds, $ I. j
potatoes in 28 dayst
Just think of that! You can have the in by plani- (
ing Salzer's seed. Trv it this year!
LOOK AT THESE YIELDS IN IOWA.
Silver Mine Oats 197 bu. per acre. ]
Sdver King Barley 95 bu. per acre.
Prolific Sprint Kvc Ml bu. per acre. ,
Marvel Spring Wheat, . . . 10 bu. per acre
Giant Sporty, 81 .napeire.
uiant Incarnat Clover, . . J tons hay per acre.
.Mo t ; J
1 Now,above yields Iowa farmers have had A full !
\ list of farmers from your ami adjoining states, J
S doing equally well, is published in our catalogue. J
CLOVER S1-IED.
Enormous slocks of clover, timothy ar i eras* <
seeds, grown especially for seed. Ah, ..'a fine! {
1 Highest quality, lowest prices! <
IF YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT
> Withl2c. in stamns,you willget our big catalog r )
> and a sample of Pumpkin Yellow \Vatermr1or. }
Catalogue alone, Sc., tells how to get J
)J0HN A. SALZER SEED CO.,
1 LA CROSSE, WIS. ')
i to pay for them.
The Populist party is the only free
silver party in existence, and all free
silver men are welcome to march un-
der its banners whether they can in-
Tho Industrial Legion is th
plished by live editors In live commu-
nities, that really appreciate valuable
and loyal service, is well illustrated in
the following; in the Buffalo Times with
repanl to Benjamin S. Dean of the'
Jamestown (N. Y.) Morning News:
■'During his Btay in Jamestow n Mr. ' (lorso our platform or not.
Dean has accomplished many reforms. as ^ar as >'ou ean.
He fought tho old water tompany to a
linlsh, although he was made defend-
ant in a criminal libel action before it'
was fairly settled that tho company
should furnish the citizens an abun-
dant supply of pure water. His earnest!
advocacy of municipal ownership of
eesential monopolies led to the con-
struction of a municipal electric-light-'
ing plant, which has already saved the
city several thousands of dollars. Ha
declaimed against the giving away of
valuable franchises with such earnest-
ness and Ugor that the Jamestown
Street Railway company, on changing
its motive power, entered into a con
tract with the city to pay a percentage
on the gross earnings of the road."
will be made
the people.
There
the fever had abated. But congcslhm
of the lungs supervened. At 2 o'clock,
when I reached The hospital, he was
by delegates elected by 1 breathing freely, and no longer com-
plained of pains in the bead. He was
never left
And so efficacious were her
ministrations, and the balmv air of Ihe
Place, that the boy gathered more
/strength than he had known for
months.
are some men who would
luther vote to uphold a system that la
Impoverishing themselves than to leave
their party. There is no heroism about
n ... | this ,R abject servility of the first
Oo with us magnitude. nr8t
I IT"". *" "v""- """| That was his undoing. When the
quiet, but his temperature was very ,„„.u of Iho velo(lrome at Amelie-les-
Balns had been repaired at his own ex-
low (35 degrees). I gave him some t
and rubbed him with ammonia. 1
fought against death for him for two
hours. But the disease made frightful
progress; he was literally suffocating.
There is
reck-
..... .. a la,v tllat punishes the
best method for organizing for the cam- ' w' c'''kPr'_ hut the railroad wii
paign. Address, (Jen. Paul Van Dei-
voort, of Omaha, Neb., for particulars,
and then go to work and organize your
township and count
I er escapes. There Is also a law that
punishes the man that robs the bank-
hut the bank can rob the
it is called business.
people and
The four million disgusted stay-at-
home voters, and the two million Pop-
ulist votes, with thousands of other dis-
contented citizens, constitute the light-
Kmperor William ought to make a
pretty good member of the Milwaukee
Press club, but who will pay his dues?
If he ever decides to go out of the
monarch business we fee] quite sure
that Mr. Hohenzollern could get a Job
on some of the Milwaukee papers.
An Indianapolis man who shot a hole
through his head calmly puffed a ciga-
rette while the phj-slclans patched up
the damage. This Isn't so very remark-'
able after all; there Is no necessary . ,. .
connection between brains and ciga- " being withdrawn for the pv
rette smoking. ' pos' or purchasing the n*u bonds.
and the last sacraments were adminis-
tered at 4 o'clock. At 4:30 be bad an
attack of syncope, and I thought a 1!
was over. But I still kept up the strug-
gle. We put cups to him; we gave him
all- by opening his moutl:. and stinm-
! lated his breathing by artificial res-
i piraiion. All, however, was unavailing,
and I closed his eyes at 7:4.") o'clock,
after having heard his stertorious
breathing for seven hours. Poor boy!
I had, at any rate, the consolation of
being able to stay with him to Ihe last. |
thanks to the kindness of the chief ,
surgeon at the hospital. Such were
his last hours on earth. Now, what-
ever you may write respecting him, 1
wish to let you know that my poor |
friend forgave all who had done him |
harm. He was the victim of injustice
„ .„ .. . democratic party has nomi- but he forgave it. Such were the last
discuss, nated three times and elected twice, instructions ho gave me a few days
j And now they want another chance. HS° "hen he spoke to me for the last
I Excuse us, please. lime, and I am very anxious that no one
should be attacked.
Say, by the way, how can the United
pense, he could not forbear to ride
bicvclc once more -an amusement of
which lie hail always been passionate-
...... . , j ^ tond and then, the sporting snirit
His brother and ! sent for the chaplain reasserting itself, he entered h.to a
| match race, with pacemakers, with an-
other cyclist. For hour he pedalled
The Populists will nominate the only
free silver man that will be in the
presidential race this year. Every free
silver man will be perfectly tree to vote
ning that Is going to surprise some- 1 does''vote "for him 7° mm S"V" 'nan
body when it strikes at the next elec- elected,
tion.
: -N.ullonal bankers collect interest on
The senate is wasting time Ulkta,
If the per capita of sliver : the privileges of the
free silver.
coin in circulation was on" a parity I Zl™, T haVu
WOUld"be rjr1" SiIV<?r ,a'K' ther<' °Ciat <he democratlc nari'v'l,0.'/1^'!™"
What the country needs is free silver
and not free silver talk.
The gold reservt has lost over $11,-
000,000 since it wail announced that an-
other isstie of bonds would be made
This sum will likely be Increased by
further withdrawals between now and
the time gold begins to come in for the
new bonds after Feb. S. Much of this
"MARIE LOUISE MARSY."
States of America settle this Venezuc „clo
lan dispute without the consent of Eng- t0 have been married if he had lived
land and other European nations? if long enough. From a financial point
we do get int# a war v ith England of vlew. she will not suffer by reason of
we ought til consult her as to what kind hls untimely death. Tho young mau'L
of weapons we would be allowed to use. share in his father's estate amounts to
It wouldn't do to have a weapon that 15,400,000. Although he succeeded in
, «asn I -good in Yurrtip," getting rid of a great deal cf money br-
madly round the track. Then, after
the race was over, be returned to the
Villa Fanny, but had hardly entered
l He door when he fainted in Mile. Mar- j
sj s arms. And Max Lebaudy's perse- I
cutors? It is at least satisfactory to'
know that the first few of what may
move a large crop of arrests of black-
mailing Journalists and others impli-
cated in his ill treatment arc already an-
nouneed.
The total number of new industries
reported as having been organised or
incorporated in thr southern states for
tbe year 1895 was 2.101. in the year
185,1 the whole number reported was
2.2SIS; ill 1X03, 2,251; in 1892. 2.438, and
in 1891. J 713. As will be seen, the
average of ihe five j cars has been fairly
well maintained in 1895.
\ Hon in in Florida.
Florida is on the verge of a big booin 1
-- zai
* *" r Uoo It Rll(j ,j(ies f,||-j)Jn|] #
, orti.'in f.,r leu nonnytlimn
•r* it makm pumping an,;
r< (iAlvamied-aftftr-
• I'IHI..m Wind in 11 ih, TI I tin*
w H'l I owrrs, steel Buzz Saw
. i" i iee,i cutters and iNd
a.,!,liar,.,!,r?',nn'! W"1 n m®on
dropsy
rRi.ATi;i) |.'V(|'|.'
flounced hopelexn by I.«.«r ./'* pri
symptoms dlMiiw.. i., . , 1 : From ilrot d. .
lnal> ..| ml. ' ' S.1'1 '"r tT"' tMtltiK
nVlVu'"" """" "'''""tlmp'"
't„m 1 •
'OKHQCDr Y0UR MEAT WITH
LilU!D EXTRflCTwSidOKf
LLCIRCU LMn.E.Kh^USERi HHO.VJOON.PW.
, PARKERS
hair balsam
— aiiu bMutificf the hatr.
' n , • '« pro*th.
#Foila to Itostoro Oray
llnir ?o itH Mouthful Color/
Clm,.,
for men J" Nauseous
_ Scot Sealed u.. t%.,
Hawthorn-'; Chemicai. i'.
Dosea
at Once.
pt of $ I.no.
Plilladelphia, Ta.
Sent out to
l)o Rproutnl
experience re-
Mile. Marsy and Max Lebaudy were j In tobacco growing, according t.falUn'-
dications. There are fully 100 appli- i
rations for seed tobacco on file in the !
Florida state department of agricul- j
ture, and tobacco growers' associations '
are being formed in almost every coun- I
ty in the state. Both cigar and plug 1
tobacco are to be grown.
SWEET P8T1T0ES
qinr.1 Dilutions r,., rr«."
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ur lUffl &:•?. USSS:
lU£} Thompson's Eye Watir.
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4
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, February 21, 1896, newspaper, February 21, 1896; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116817/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.