The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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People's Voice.
BORMAN,
OKLAHOMA.
HLAUO.ltA AND INDIA* IKKIUlOUf
Cotton planting-is in its zenith all
frver Oklahoma.
The supreme court is to pass on tlie
raised tax ease in June.
The deputy marshals are still chas-
ing the remnant of the Christian gan#.
The people of Greer county join Ok-
lahoma in the heretical condition of
being out of debt.
The cold weather last week did hurt
the peach crop on the low lauds in Ok-
lahoma a good deal.
The Great Cimarron Salt Bath Sani-
tarium company of Ix)gan county, has
been granted a charter.
Arapahoe had the flr*t fire in
its history last week, precaution is acreage is being planted,
the best protection agaiust tire.
Near Blackburn a vein of coal has
Wen found at a depth of eighty feet.
It is not quite u foot in thickness.
The judges must sustain Dale in
the raised assessment decision. Oth-
erwise the legislature cannot meet.
The people of Wichita County, Tex-
as, have just learned that the Fort
There art* no street railways in any) All the Oklahoma papers are Me.. -J
of the cities of Oklahoma. i *ng agaiust the Noble county press ro .
mencer.
The territorial board of equalutation J . . I
... . . iiufin't The v talk about hanging people out
probably wishes now tlifct it liadu t. , , „
r J ( ;n \\ oodward county for burning the
Judge MeAtee will arrange for the prairie grass.
future residence of Bill K.idlcr this , ^ oounty ,,M . ;
wec ' new wheel, with a rake and hoe at- |
Frank Greer says there is a buoyant 1 taehment, for his wife aud is teaching j
hope in every wave of the emerald ■. her to ride mi she can make the gar- !
wheat. ' den.
The Oklahoma County Vinegar fac- j Judge Dale decides thut the 4r, per'
torv path out 1,500 per month to ita cent raise iva legal and should stand |
traveling men. Judge liierer Mya it was illegal and
.. ,n should not stand. Great men seem U.
The Indian agent at Anadarko will
rent the Comanche reservation to the
ON THEIR RECORDS.
LET EACH PARTY BE JUDGED
ACCORDINGLY.
differ.
hitrheat bidder °TC* 0I! n"eli l'ro,'1{ in Ka v coun,-T
, there Uvea a family named Slusher
Judge Pi tier's latest announcement ^ ^ f)uhn th(Ly
need rain.
is that he is out of politica foreycr mid Th ^ ^ ^ up %o their oppor.
a day-und-a-half.
An Oklahoma editor aaya the aver-
age tisherman isn't in it with tha up-
to-date bicycle liur.
Cotton teed see ma to be very scarce
all over the territory. A very large
This time seven years ago people
were setting around on the ground
wondering what au opeuing would be
like.
William Faulk has been found guilty
of manslaughter in the Lincoln coun-
ty court. He killed Jesse Taylor last
summer.#
The 22nd of this month is Oklahoma
Sill Country is not the Indian Territo- j Day and great preparations are being
ry.
The South McAlester Capital has
set out to prove that nearly all the
bandits have graduated from deputy
marshals.
W. R. McCormick of Pottawatomie
county, knocked C. M. Rodman down
mude all over the territory to celebrate
that day.
Jubge Scott has grunted a change
of venue in the case of Harry St. John
who murdered his wife. The case
goes to Canadian county.
t unities.
Greer county, Oklahoma, is a mighty
respectable community, as the sheriff
has notified Sheriff DeFord, of Okla-
homa county, that he has ouly one
prisoner in jail.
The Leslie E. Keeley chloride of
gold company, of Dw ighi, 111., has
brought suit againse the Keeley insti-
tute of Oklahoma for something like
infringement of patent.
The new law on the subject of limi-
tations of actions, outlaws written
contracts and promissory notes if not
sued on in five years. Foreign judg-
ments are outlawed after one year.
Stock shipments northward from
Purcell have been so heavy this week
that the yard men have hardly had
time to breathe. Seventeen trains,
carrying about two hundred and sixty
cars, were handled by the day force
Saturday.
The farmers around Oakland, in Ok-
price per gallon. Mr. Emery went on.
is an illegitimate charge of three cents.
New Jersey pa>s 1750,000 a year, there-
fore as tribute to the trust. During the
past year the trust paid $17,000,000 in
dividends. This year, during the first
three months, it paid $13,000,000 in
dividends, and for the ilrst six months
it has already paid $30,000,000 in divi-
dends.
Mr. Kmery produced letters to show
that the price of oil has been reduced
five aud six cents a gallon wherever his
company has come in competition with
the trust.
And our ancestors, foolish fellows,
rebelled against six cents a pound tax
on tea! And submit to a robbery on oil
— a natural product—of $70,000,000 a
year!"
TILLMAN REPEATS THREAT.
He Will I.eave Ills 1'artj If His Currency
Views Art Not Accepted.
Benntor Tillman of flouth Carolina
reiterates his declaration that he will
leave the democratic party if the Chi-
cago convention does not declare for
free silver. Some of the South Caro-
lina democratic papers took the tena-
toi to task for this defiant utterance,
and he has replied to :.hem by sending
a long letter to the Columbia Register,
in which he sayc:
On the ono overpowering and burn-
ing question of finance we should de-
mand of the national democratic party
a clear and unmistakable utterance for
free colnageof silver at ICtol.the Issue
of all paper money by tho government In
sufficient volume and a system of bank-
ing which will provide against the con-
tlie other day because Rodman had : from the Brooklyn prison. While dep
George Howell i* back in Oklahoma I ]uhoma county, became enraged bc-
uty marshal he shot and killed a man
and was sent up for ten years. He is
now out on u writ of habeas corpus.
In Oklahoma road overseer are liable
to a tine of if they violate the new-
law which says it shall be their duty
written a letter to Mrs. McCormick.
MeAtee and liierer stand together
on the tax decision. Dale stands
alone. Burford and Scott will proba-
bly decide with Dale to preveut a dis-
aster.
Near the town of Noble a farmer
named Daly
neighboring
tifteen plow
put in his crop. and fined $25 and
narry St John has through hi* at «>on after released, "to save ex
torney, Jndge 1'lUer, secured a change pense to the county, us she hud no
of venue to Canadian county, on ae- money to pay her line.
cause seedmen brought on .Johnson
grass seed. They finally held a mass
meeting and raised a fund and liought
all the seed and burned it to prevent
anybody buying and selling it. They
claim it is a dangerous grass.
to work the roads 011 the north and Persimmon and Ilackberrv, March
town or Noble a farmer ... * 1 ummmuu . e wouiu approve 11, n
v was taken very sick. The ,'ast llne" of lhe,r road difctricte only- . :l0th- destroying miles of good range democratlc house
ig farmers to the number of A colored girl was found guilt}- °f j an(' some pm.it" ''"'''''J'S' ; 4. On August 23. 1S93,
wed lus ground for him and larceny in Noble county the other day 1 ' "U,L'.' r ' 'J1 , , • I congress, called In extra
h . .. , , J..I1 VI... o clock at night and succeeded in ex- ;
•o.. ♦/> Mlia 1 ociock ni- night 1
I tinguishing the north line which made '
them safe.—Live Stock Inspector.
I). S. McCubc was granted a divorce
4 , ai 1 . • *• ; i ... from hifewife, C. A. McCabe in the No- ,
oount of the local prejudices 111 Okla- | The one year divorce bill is hung up Me con*tv COUI.t Saturday, on the
homa county.
Chief Wa-Pa-Sho, of the Sac and Fox |
tribe, is in jail in Oklahoma county
for standing off government officials
who wanted to take his children to a
government school.
An Oklahoma paper objects to so
many men taking 10-cent cigars out
of their mouths long enough to an-
nounce that they are too poor to buy
their wives calico dresses.
The Chcyennes and Arapalioes will
be civilized a hundred years before the
Kickapoos, aud the Ch?yennes and
Arapalioes will not be civilized for
about two hundred years yet.
In one vicinity in Oklahoma county
\here is great excitement over Johnson
grass. Fellows who plaut it are
snubbed, and all the seed at the local
stores has been purchased and burned.
A bottle of carbolic acid purchased
by George Gilmore of Woods county
to kill prairie dogs exploded, fatally
burning Gilmore and his wife. Prox-
imity to the stove was the cause of
the explosion.
Bill Raidler, convicted of attempt-
ing to rob a Ilock Island mail train on
April 13, 1895, was sentenced Satur-
day to ten years imprisonment in the
penitentiary at Columbus Ohio. A
stay of sixty days was granted to per-
mit of an appeal \c the supreme
court.
in the Senate and is likely not to be- j proimt|s Qf uy,
come a law; to which an Oklahoma '
paper smiles a large smole and says;
"This is proper. Oklahoma people
are satisfied with the present divorce
law.*'
Riley Sweeney, the desperado who
shot and killed Three-Fingered Jack
in the territory some time ago, has
been taken to Lansing by the Pawnee
county sheriff where he will serve out
a sentence of ten years for murder in
the second degree.
A Kansas farmer is all right under
any and ull circumstances. A Kay
indonmcnt. The coup-
le were married in Kansas in lie
moved to Oregon and raised seven
children. In 1HU4. McCabe charges,
his wife eloped with one John Size-
more and he has not heard of her
since.
Au Oklahoma man Isuight a box of
"One Night Corn Cure," which was
guaranteed to keep a corn from hurt-
ing after one application. The buyer
used the stuff one night and died the
next day. It is not often that quack
medicines are so effective as this, but
there is one disadvantage. It will be
county editor tells of a Kansas farmer ! impossible for the man who sold the
who came to Kay county, bought a j corn cure to get a recommendation
pony team for $20 and drove home.
One his arrival in the state he pro-
ceeded to mortguge his purchase for
$00.
Ont man in Greer county protested
against the decision which gave that
county to Oklahoma on the ground
that Oklahoma taxes were twelve
times as high as those of Texas.
Brief research shows that the general
tax in Texas is one and one-half mills
from the Oklahoinan. Dead men
neither tell tales nor recommend pat-
ent medicines.
People who come to Beaver county
with the idea of going into the stock
business are all right. The suc-
cessful man in this country is the one
who deals in stock and limits his farm-
ing to raising feed for them. As a
usual thing the settler who farms ex-
clusively does not lay up much lor a
The Kccord of the Democratic Pa
on the Silver (Juration for Ten Veer*
— The Ciold Power Always In the Sad-
dle of the Democratic Party.
That the eredlt or agitating the
money question for years past la due
solely to the people's party, no one can
successfully deny. No other national
party has declared for the free and un-
limited coinage of silver at the ratio of
18 to 1. or any other ratio. By Its efTorts
to arouse the people on this subject, It
has made both the old parties Its Im-
plicates foes.
In ^ate« like Teias, where the peo-
ple have become fairly educated on the
subject, and have been brought to a
thorough understanding, not only of
the cause of their misfortunes, but alBO
who are responsible for tbem: the
treaoherous old democracy (lops over
and pretends to be silver's best and only
available friend. That t'nelr claim is
wholly false and unfounded, any un-
prejudiced man wil. understand when
he examines the reoord made by the
party. Here It is. and any one can ver-
ify it by examining the congressional
record:
1. The forty-ninth congress, having
a democratic majority of 22, on April
0, 1886, killed n bill providing for the
free and unlimited coinage of silver at
a ratio of 16 to 1. eventration and congestion of money in
2. The fifty-second congress, having tj,e ]argC cmea t0 (j,e detriment and i
a democratic majority of 148. on the ru|n coun(ry There are other |
24th day of March, 1S92, killed a free p|an](3 Qf great Importance, but they
coinage bill a* the ratio of 16 to 1. are tevt, and the platform should be j
8. The same congress, on July 13, of j,rlef and clcar cut. The masses never J
tha same year, overwhelmingly de- nre cnpa|j|e 0f studying more than one
feated another free coinage bill, 10 to 1, , great qllesti0n at a time, and In propor- J
tlon as they are distracted by contend- |
Ing ideas. Just so they aro divided and j
defeated. If we fall to get the national I
. convention to give us u platform of
be would approve it, If passed > t .e j cjiaracter outlined and a loyal can-
didate on It, we should withdraw.
Why? Bccauso in the present condi-
tion ot the democratic party in the
United States there Is absolute antag-
onism of purpose and feeling existing
between the two wings. The differ-
ence i3 its great us between democracy
and republicanism. It Is just as pro-
nounced, as Irreconcilable, as hitter as j
tha fooling that existed nl the Charles- ,
ton convention in U.Gi), The struggle |
then was for the extension of slavery
in the territories, and '.he party split, |
nominating two rets of candidates. |
Now the issuo Is whoiher money or tin I
people shall rule. As I Sfe It. tho party
la bound to split r.saln, when It meeti
In convention. "Kvcn though," to quota
the language f.-.Uely attributed to Mr. i
Latimer, "thd gold men aro disposed ,
to deal fairly with Iho silver men and
put up a tlcltct to rcpreaont hath fac-
tions."
This la an impossibility. N'o fair
dealing can be expected from the men
who forcod upon us the allver plauk
in the last national platform. No fair
dealing can be expected of those east-
ern democrats, so called, who, In the |
face of that pledjre, sustained the presl-
after it had passed a republican senate
and when It was w'ell understood that
, a republican president, although lndl-
Fire swept down through the valleys v)duaU>. opposed to free f liver, had said
on the dollar. In Oklahoma it is four ] "rainy day." Exceptions to the lat-
um! six-tenths mills.
Large quantities of hay and several
houses were burned by prairie fires in
the western part of Noble county Wed-
nesday. One woman and two children
had narrow escapes while trying to
save their home. A man uained Jones
was arrested for disobeying prairie
tire laws, aud there was strung talk
of lynching-.
Rev. (Iff), Johnson, an old colored
preacher who has been serving twen-
ty days in the Logan county federal
jail for introducing whiskey into the
country of "I.o," was discharged Fri-
day. Like many of liis race, he has a
I storv to tell, lie says he had the hon-
At lilacklnir a, the citizens an fold-
ing indignation meetings against sa-
loons selling Indians whiskey. Busi-
ness men of the town aud other fit -
izens have signed petitions to the sa-
loonists, begging tliem to desist The
Indians come to Blackburn in droves
after night and soon get drunk and
make the town hideous. Several riots
have been narrowly averted between
drunken Indians and the white citi- I or „f having canght General Sydney
'•ens. J Johnson in his arms when he fell fa-
Henry DeP.arr, chemist and geolo-
gist of the territorial college of Cleve-
land county spent last Saturday in
examining the mines in Noble county
and in the evening delivered a lecture
on the minerals of Oklahoma territory.
The professor said that there was low |
grade ore in several places in Oklaho-
ma and the chief questions were "can
the ore be found in sufficient quanti-
ties to justify a considerable outlay to
mine it properly: and secondly, is the
ore, as it comes from the ground, free
from zinc." Si far, while the assay of
ore from Noble county has been snfli-
eient to justify mining in the absence
of zinc, unfortunately that trouble-
some metal is almost always present.
He said that in tho shaft on Clark's
claim a fine lead was found which, if
followed, would prove remunerative if
hii assay of the ore would show an ab-
sence of zinc. The professor further
advised the miners not to get exulted,
to take their time and not expect too
much in the beginning.
The farmers who are putting in-
creased hope in cotton and diversity of
crops will have cash and comfort tills
faH.
Fishing parties are reported having
lots of sport along the streams in
Woodward county.
It is said that Joe Miller, formerly
Df Kay county, was acquitted of the
charge of counterfeiting at New Or-
leans.
"William Tell" socials are among
the latest Oklahoma divertisinents in
church circles. Maipens' blush ap-
ples are used
tally wounded at Shiloh.
A 3-vear-old child of J. L. Ryan, of
McKinlcy. fell into a well twenty-flvi
feet deep Wednesday, and would ha
I he fifty-second
extra session by Mr.
Cleveland, defeated a bill providing for
the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1, by
a two thirds vote. Tills congress had
a democratic majority over both re-
publicans and populists of 83, but the
ten populists voted for the bill, thus
making the democratic majority 103
over the republicans. There w«re 217
democrats on the door of the house [
when the vote was taken, and 101 voted
for the measure and 116 ."gninst it. So
then. It will be seen, if nobody but
democrats had been present and voting,
the bill would have been defeated by a
majority of 15.
6. On the same day, namely, August j
23, 1893, the same democratic congress j
voted down four other free coinage j
bills providing for the latios of 17, 18,
IS and 20 to 1.
And thus it was. Ave bills providing j
for the free and unlimited coinage of j
silver, were beaten in a representative
body now professing to be the friend of
the white metal, as fast as the clerk
could eall the roll. And don't forget, t
honest democratic reader, that in every
solitary instance, a majority of your
Spring
Medicine
Your blood in Spring is almost certain to
be full of impurities —the accumula-
tion of the winter months. Bad ven-
tilation of sleeping rooms, impure sir
in dwellings, factories and shops, over-
eating, heavy, improper foods, failure
of the kidneys and liver properly to do
extra work thus thrust upon them, are
the prime causes of this condition. It
la of tho utmost importance that you
Purify
Your Blood
How, m when warmer weather comet and
the tonic effect of cold bracing air ia
gone, your weak, thin, impure blood
will not furnish necessary atrength.
That tired feeling, loss of appet'te, will
open the way for serious disease, ruined
health, or breaking out of humors and
Impurities. To make pure,-rich, red
blood Hood's Sarsaparilla stands un-
equalled. Thousands Wctify to its
merits. Millions take it as their
Spring Mcdicine. Get Hood's, becauaa
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Turlfler. All (irupphts. fl.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass
. ,, rt*it *re the °"'y Pilla tn
llOOu S S IllS >itk liood'l «r*aj>aril]a.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
W. L. Doucl'as
*3. SHOE BE«ol,loTH£
If you pay to •< fo.- shoes, ex- ^ ^
amine the W. 1- Douglas ^hoe, and 9 <
see what a good shoe you can buy for B
OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
CONG HESS, BUTTON,
an<l LACK, m: d«< In all
kindHof thelH*«tiwl Tt« «l
leather by ukUlcd work-
men. We
make and
sell in ore
$3 Slioes
than any
other
manufacturer In the world.
None genuine unless name and
price stamped on the bottom.
Aslc your dealer for our 85,
S4. 83.AO, 8 J.25 Shoes;
8 :.50, 82 and 81.75 for boys.
democratic congressmen voted against dent In repealing the purchasing clause
ter statement, are found only with
hroomcorn and watermelon growers
these men arc making money. When |
irrigation can he employed any kind
of a crop may 1successfully cultiva- |
silver, and in favor of a single gold
standard.
6. On November 1. 1S93. the fifty-
third congress, with its 83 democratic
majority over all, voted down an
amendment offered by Mr. Bland to a
pending bill, which amendment pro-
vided for the free and unlimited coin-
age of silver at 16 to 1.
7. On October 27, 1893, the United
States senate, having a democratic ma-
jority of three over all, and when the
four populist senators w?re counted for
of the Sherman act. No fair dealing
can be expected from '.he men who de-
feated Hardin in Kentucky last fall
and have just prevented the election of
Blackburn.
The differences are irreconcilable,
the conflict is irrepressible, and all
true democrats must re&olve to stand
by the principles of Jefferson and Jack-
son, or expect to see the party utterly
destroyed and a new party take its
place. Any compromise or straddle
will cause the populists and silver men
county contains people who own stock
enough to eat all the grass the popu-
lation will be sufficient and no more
will be desired. Stojk raising must
and always will be the mainstay and
leading pursuit of Beaver county.
The farmers of Oklahoma can now
enter upon their spring work with
liouynnt confidence. Since the great
„and glorious rain a bountiful wheat
ave I crop is assured. Attention should now
j drowned but for the heroic action of j be turned to planting a large acreage
j the mother, who ran to the well and j of cotton, castor beans. Indian and I
climbed down the rough stone side, j Kaffir corn, l.very acre should be j
seized the little one as it was going j planted that can be prepared in time j
under the third time, and tying it j This is to be the greatest crop yeui |
around her neck w ith her dress, climb- ! Oklahoma has ever known, larmcrs ,
cd out of the well and resuscitated it. j make the best of it.
The first of a long list of perjury i W. K. Canleton of Oklahoma county, |
eases in the I'nited States district i has been appointed Territorial veteri-|
ted, but irrigation is nccessary to nm!ce
sure of anything1 except the hardiest
crops. Heaver county is a stock coun-
try—the best in the southwest-and
that's all it is. It contains many ti"'' j Stewart-B amendment providing for j name, and will become the third party
herds of high grade cattle, sheep and ...
horses, and sends thousands of head of
stock to market annually. When the
i silver the majority over the republl- ! sweep the south and the west, and
cans was eleven, defeated Senator ! thf democratic party will be only a
free and unlimited coinage of silver at
16 to 1.
8. In February, 1895, the fifty-third
congress, being in session with a demo-
cratic majority in both bouses, and a
democratic executive the financial com-
mittee of the senate, with a majority
of democrats on the committee, killed
in the committee room the last propo-
sition made for the free coinage of sil-
ver at 16 to 1.
Thus it will be seen that in nine years
the democratic party in congress has
killed eleven free silver Mils.
The democratic party of Texas has
so long been manipulate J and run by a
coterie of office-holding politicians that j Lincoln, and if it does not win the vic-
i who would avoid the impu- tory this year, it will be hound to carry
the citizen who would avoid the Impu
tatioa of gullibility, will no longer
place confidence in the utterances of Its
leaders and well-takcn-care-of press.
court in Noble county was finished
Saturday after a trial of four days,
William Cobb lic'ng the defendant,
and the verdict was not guilty. I'ni-
ted States Attorney Koy Hoffman was
assisted in the prosecution by Harris
and I.afTerty and Henry Hocker anil
A. 11. Museller defended. Many de-
murrers to indictment
jury
' narian by tiov. Renfrow with orders to
' secure the enforcement of the quaran-
! tine line through Oklahoma. The p-
i point men t is a good one and is effect-
I ive June 1st. The only error is that
! the appointment is not effective from
i date. tiov. Renfrow will readily see-
that the danger from infection is great-
er during the spring drives than later
in the season and it is hoped lie will
make the order effective May 1st. if
not earlier. —Live Stock inspector.
Wednesday evening a partial torna-
county got re- , , . . r,,
iiiVfj.ii over I do swept over the same track in Ueve-
• land county where such havoc took
place two years ago. It arose at 4:30
and lasted but a few minutes, but in
that time it destroyed several houses
and many sheds. No damage to life
is reported. The track of the tornado
east of Moore, and going in a
Th« Standard Oil Despot*.
The struggle for a competing com-
pany to get a franchise lor a pipe line
across New Jersey from the legislature
is developing some things that should
make the hair of men who love justice
and liberty stand on end. 1 quote trom
the New York World dispatch:
"Ex-senator Emory, also of Pennsyl-
vania, who is President of the United
States Company, produced a contract
between the railroads and the Oil Trust
by which a high rutc is charged for
carrying oil, and the trust receives the
increase as rebate. The rallroad3 also
agree not to permit tny competing
company to lay pipes through or under
their property. In this way the rail-
mostly in per
have been sustained by the
court, and thus the wheels of justice I make tlie orticr circcuvo -u«tv .m, .1 ,
grind slowly alonj.
A ur.-.n in Oklahoma
Hgion, became conscious
the manner in which he got. his claim.
and although he had secured his pat-
ent. he went into the Oklahoma coun-
ty land oft ice and surrendered his deed
saying that he had not obtained it
honestly and could not keep it.
Most of tlie stock passing through ! Southeastern direction.
Purcell goes to the Indian reservations i
along the Santa Fe north, the Ponca i We wonder what kind of a disposi-
reservation getting much of it. A tion Miss Tempest Hnrinony, of Lo-
large number of cars have also been ' gan county, is possessed of. It is im- 000,000, but the valuation is now close
shipped to Elgin. Kansas, pasturage i possible to figure out anything from to $160,000,000. New Jersey consumes
being plentiful io that locality 4 that nr me 500,000 barrels of oil, or 2,500,000 gal-
lons a year. The trusts charges an
average of 10 cents a gallon. In this
I'aper .Honey Heat.
The constitutional right of congress
to coin money and regulate the value
thereof docs not admit of construing
that power to mean that coin or metal
shall constitute the sole material of
which money shall be made. Money
is created, coined, manufactured, and
-the value regulated solely by law. The
Constitution of the United States says
Congress-shall have power "to coin
money, regulate the value thereof," etc.
It does not say power "to coin metal."
An absolute greenback dollar is as good
a dollar as can be made from any metal
and is really better for the whole peo-
roads, he held, continually violate the pie than metal dollars, because the cost
Inter-State Commerce Law for the ! coining or manufacture Is next to
benefit of the trust. The contract was
first made in 1872, and was renewed in
1885.
Mr. Emery'showed that the trust was
originally founded on a capital of Jii,-
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer
cannot supply you, send to fac-
tory, enclosing price and 36 cents
to pay carriage. State kind, style
of toe (cap or plain), size and
width. Our Custom Dept. will fill
your order. .Send for new Illus-
trated Catalogue to llox It.
W. L. DOUCLAS, Brockton. Maes.
3hould it be fortunate to carry a sin-
gle state. But those who urge that
we stick to the party, no matter what
| may be Itfi platform, will retort at
once that if the silver democrats bolt
at Chicago the same result will follow.
I grant it so far as the present organi-
zation is concerned, and also so far
as the name is concerned, because
there would inevitably he a new party
formed, embracing all (he eletneulc of j
the three parties which sluud for free
silver and financial reform.
The principles and the platform of j
I such a new party, if it be formed, will ]
be those of Jeffersou and Jackson and '
The Woman's
Bicycle...
In strength, lightness, grace, and
elegance of finish and equip-
ment Model 41 Columbia is un-
approachcd by any other make.
COLUMBIA
saddles are recommended by riders and
physicians as proper in shape and adjust-
^ ment, and every
y detail of equipment
* \(* contributes to com
' fort and pleasure.
The Columbia Cat
alofcue, handsoiiu-fct
art work of the
ycar.is free
« from Colum-
L, bia axent, or is
muiled lor
>,y\ two 2-cent
1 stamps.
Mfg. Co.
Hartford,
the country in 1900. It v. ill be the gen-
uine democratic party. It must not be I
forgotten, too, that the republican par- |
ty is spilt and torn over this issue as I
well as ours.
It
In tho
WORLD I
SUCKER
The FISH BRAND RI.ICKER ta warTantwl water-
eCfersttieenUraaaddla. Bawareof iniltaUoua. l)ont
a a coat If tho M Fl«h BramTMa not on It. Ittuatr*.
OataloRua fVrc. A. J TOwF.Tt. Hottpp, Maaa.
nothing. The greatest prosperity this
country ever enjoyed was when plenty
of government dollars, coined from
paper, were in circulation. Omit the
exception clause and issue more of
them—at least until the amount shall
have reached $50 per head.—N. Y.
World.
The poor sweat while 'he rich steal.
DROPSY
TREATKl) FRKK.
Positively Cured with Vegetable Remediea
Have cure<| thounanda of ca^o«. Cure canea pro-
nounced hopeleHfl by l*st physicians. From first do*.*
bymptotim di«app<ar■; in ten days at least two-thirtls
ull i.yraot'inH removed. 8end lor free book testimo
nlalit of miraeulous cures. Ten day's treatment fie*
>y mail. If you order trial Bend 10c In stamps to pur
postage. Dr. H. 11. Gkkkn A Bona, Atlanta, Cla. if
you order trial return this advortlstiuont to us.
v FXRMLXND^^Tsale.
f In the statesof Virginia, North and South Car.
S lina,(MM)r^ia, \lai..tm i. 'i
r Kentucky. I.nnd K*1 tu Moni from I In* N«>i ti
/ wmt to Southern It'.v fomta April 21 an I May *
) !i. L>etai'f.| information with nm^ anddcscrip- ,
tive pamphlet s-w ill be sent frc upon applloa I
Hon to M. V. Richards, Land AK***"t, Southern
Railway, Washington. R C. will a Imo « ' 1
by every Northern family.
■ — — — — —-, -,1V linoDS only.
SHUTTI FS Th-supplied
■ I LC.O, • send for wholesale price
REPAIRS "M i mv« co.,
r\0. L 91-* I<ocustkt.. St.I.ouif, Mo.
PPWlQN^srgs
I 3jraiu laai war, lia^udJtatujfcUmi*, att,- sun*-
4
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1896, newspaper, April 24, 1896; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116838/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.