The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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People's Voice.
PPTIMAS.
OKLAHOMA.
If Mr. Bull is «l«o filibustering In
■id of Cuba there li little chance tor
Spain's colonial system.
Wall street is the headquarters of
anarchy.
Demagogues and fools talk about a
60-ceot allver dollar.
The only way to control the railroads '
Is to own them.
The prohibition party appears to b*
divided on the told cure.
THE MONEY DEARTH.
* PLUTOCRATIC PLAN OF RE-
LIEF FOR THE PEOPLE.
Any dollar that the government If Wall street will not submit, then
makes is worth 100 rents. she must be made to submit.
Not tnsny populists are stampeding
to get Into the democratic party.
The scorcher sometimes gets acci-
dentally killed, and we doubt if he
stops his rapidity even then.
' Hold contracts are treason against
S the United States government.
Wevler ought to look upon the In
furgents as newspaper correspondent!
and order them out of the country.
Our sculptors seem to be as good at
carving each other's reputation as they
are at norking on the lifeleas marble
It seems to be a hot race between the
chinch bug and the general financial
condition on the Ohuago board o(
trade.
Of course New York can hold a suc-
cessful world's fair in 1 00. Remem-
ber what she did with the Grant mon-
ument!
Say. read the Omaha platform occa-
sionally. It is mighty good reading.
A dog may return to his vomit, but
no true populist will return to his old
party.
' There is only one way to make voters
for the people's party- that is by edu-
! cation.
Perhaps Carlisle now realises how
much he is doing for the silver cause
by lighting It.
The people's party will not be swal
lowed: the people are waking up all
along the line.
to Km* t> Thlnst. "All lh<
Around" by faying Their l>*til*
With Gold Horrowftl From lor«l(nan
—A Frink Admlt.lan.
t'njust debts should never be paid—
.-all It repudiation, or whatever else
you please.
A man who can digest Democratic
politics now ought to be able to live
on tin roosters.
A little more honest politics is
needed now worse than the so-called
honest money."'
Don't miss an opportunity to spread
tie truth The voters are now in con-
ditlon to hear gladly.
Llmburger cheese must not be con-
founded w Ith our filled cheese. IJm-
burger is merely filled with a harm-
Jess odor.
The senate very emphatically vetoed
the president's veto in the matter of
the river and harbor bill.
t No currency system will benefit the
people materially so long as the banks
."octroi the volume of money.
Grover has trimmed down the demo-
cratic party until it imagines it is
small enough to spIiL
Wall street is getting desperate. It
means to rule regardless of what th«
people demand by their votes.
Charles Harris, of Niles Ohio, haf
trade a gavel from a piece of wood
taken from the house McKtnley was
born In. and Charles doesn't want an
efficc, either.
Labor Is the true measure of value
> and Corey's non-interest, good roads
plan would fix a stable value on a daj s
labor.
The democratic party will indorse
silver at Chicago, but what will 1{
amount to? Hasn't it broken enough
promises?
Don't worry about trifles One day
last week a man tried to recover his
hat that had blown off, and in doing
w lost his footing, and was carried
o*er Niagara Falls.
Three boys, readers of dime-novels
fcave gone to prison, one for life and
the others for forty years each; but
the publisher of the dime-novel has his
liberty and doubtless much wealth.
Butler s bond bill stirred up sll the Sherman and John Carlisle, th.
latent vituperation in the stomachs of ""'ho™ " iniquity than a bun-
the gold bugs and thev belched forth • dreJ Booklet Arnolds, let history ree-
rot as never before. ort lheiT
It Is true thst a gold dollar joes far- t " the people aon t rise up and limit
ther than any other dollar—it goe; to the powers of the courts in this coun-
Kurope. but It never comes Kick until . try they ought at least to stop boasting |
bonds are issued to buy it back. • free country.
An Omaha man who was marrieo
(tie other day made his hride a wed-
ding present of eight bonds which he
had forged. That fellow seems to have
had a very unique idea of the bonds
of matrimony.
While a Cincinnati man was deliver-
ing a 100-pound block of Ice that
«eighed thirty-five pounds one day
last week he was struck by lightning
Providence is making it hot for the
short-weight fiend.
The Fourth of July is coming but it
Is mockery to celebrate the same until
the freedom from England, which our
forefathers fought for, is restored.
i The man who heads the democratic
national ticket this year will have the
honor of leading the greatest funeral
proeessjon the world ever witnessed.
Col W. C. T. Breckinridge had the
distinction of making the only gold
bug speech in the Kentucky convention
-and he hasn't paid that fcW.wtt to
Madeline Pollard yet.
This being a year of cyclones it wilj
not be surprising if the campaign ends
in a tyelone that drives the gold bugs
all to Europe. So be it
The republican lower bouse of eon.
gress will not vote to prevent President
Cleveland from putting another mqrt-
gage on the I'nited States.
Now that plenty of time has elapsea
| and we can Tiew matters calmly and
I dispassionately, we rise to ask wba
| Eugene V. Debs was put in Jail for?
A Wisconsin paper's statement that
"everything in Milwaukee appears to
be boycotted except the boycott" is en-
tirely too sweeping. The street car
strike does not affect the use of hop-
water for internal irrigation.
The best evidence that neither eld
party will bring prosperity to the peo-
ple is that both have had a good chance
under the mos* favorable conditii*is.
and both have signally failed.
The Kansas City Journal says a
young woman wearing a Mother Hub-
bard was on the streets the other night
riding a bicycle." We desire to retract
say derogatory utterances we evei
made against bloomers.
Tfcere is discord in the high school
A Cartersville, Ga, because the band
played "Dixie" Just as Edward Dwelle
finished an oration on The New
South." W. C, Fite asserts Dwelle got
the prlie because the Judges were ln-
tucoced by the musical climax.
Speaker Heed deviates he will not
plaj second tiddle to tin-cup McKin-
ley. All right, "Ciar." we glory In
your spunk. Just wait until 1S00 and
| ee'll lav you out with a populist.
> It has been well said that the
preachers are, as a rule, the political
I idiots of the age"— but the college pro-
j lessors play them a close seoond-fid-
,.le as the gibbering idiois of finance.
j Wall street is growing bolder. It
•omes out flatly opposed to a govern-
ment by vote of the people. May it
r<e overtaken by hell on earth, and he
'orever plunged in fire and brimstone
beyond.
One of the paradoxes of the times is
the strenuous effort to make our money
good In Europe, and the more strenu-
ous effort to prevent It from going
there. Bu: "the bankers they under-
stand all about the money question."
Certainly.
If they lock the bolters out of the
democratic convention how are they
going to bait. But what's tie use
J talking, nobody is going to bolt The
! tree silver democrats will control the
j convention and the gold bugs will put
' a knife up their sleeves for the ticket
When the democratic party indorse
free silver at Chicago, as it is likely to
do. the gold bug democrats will Tote
the republican ticket as they did in
Kentucky last year, and the demo-
cratic party met the most overwhelm-
ing defeat It ever had. There is no
such thing to be had in the democratic
| party as free silver.
English newspapers which are com-
menting on the slowness with which
the World's Fair medals are being dis-
tributed also contain a paragraph
which says that the royal comm.ssicn
upon vaccination will, after seven
vears' deliberation ss ue its final report
before Parliament r.sf s in August.
There is occasionally a poor boy who
"catches on" without gc..r.g wes: to
grow up With the country, l^ook at
Billy Murphy, for instance Many
years ago William left Ireland and
went to Spain to grow up with tlie
country. He is now Count di Morphi
private secretary to tie queen regent
of Spa.a and chamberlain to Alphea-
se Jan. and a grandee of the first
class.
If Henry Clews and the men whom
be speaks for don't want to submit to
be nilKi by the votes of an ignorant
suffrage.' let them go to Europe The
American people can get along without
mch anarchists as Clews.
It is new almost certain that the
Jemocrane party will declare for free
silver m its national convention and
nominate a free silver democrat—all
by consent of Wall street Where,
hen, will the silver party be*
The wealth of this country is 170.-
I On this entire wealth the
credit of this government is based
But there are those who would have us
believe that the whole thing rested up-
on our ability to keep one-seven-hun-
riredtb. part of that amount IKK1 000.
0*0 in gold, in the I'nited States treas-
ury. And there appears to be about
| 006voting fools who believe it
Dur.rg her orations before the Fed-
eration of Women. Belva Lockwood
held in her hand a larg* umbrella with
which she emphasized her points, bot
some depraved person of the tyran-
nous sex stole it and it afterwards
turned up in the Kentucky State Con-
vention at lexington, where it was
used as a gavel. If there is any chiv-
alry left in Kentucky, Mrs. Xjock-
wol'i umbrella will be returned to
Xrr with whatever repairs it may need.
ii Hung Chang, the rehab., tated
Chinese diplomat, is on his way home
from Russia, leaving a trail of polo
and Jewels behind h;m Emperor Will-
Jam is the latest recipient of this
Oriental bounty, and with typical tvon-
«ny repaid the ob. .gat ion with an
honorary decoration that cost only a
few marks and a few odd words. Oom
Lj expects to pass through the Tnited
States on his tour of observation ,n
order te study our po,.. raj institu-
tions.
A Spar.tsih pipe- thinks that in case
i.f a war between Spt.n and this coun-
try the sct-them states would secede
and Join the Spaniards and as a result
;be union ot the states would smash
itself into minute ht: icies There are
many perils of this kind that are a
great comfort to foreign pewers that
«.t't knew anything about it.
Turks and Spaniards have got In a
(ntt deal of bloody w-ork this yatr,
considering that it is so near the erf
<vf a century of so much exligntcumfcxt
nd j.rottf
When Wall street attempts to foice
i silver congress to violate its pledges
0 the people, then the earth will trem-
ble in revolution. If Wall street w ill
rot submit to the voice of the people
t will have to go. The people are in
tamest.
It is constitutional for the people to
:.a\ ihe rich sugar trust a tax or
bounty to .ncrease its profits, but it is
nn^onstituttonal for the rich to pay sr,
ncome tax into the treasury to help
:.*y ihe tunning expenses of the gxc-
-rrmert So savs the Vnited States
supreme court.. Rats*
The eastern liars are defaming the
*est. by saymg that it threatens to se-
cede. Bnshl The only secession
movement in th^s country is confined
:s the foreign spies and the traitors of
Wall street. Henry Clews" cold-
blooded anarchist letter from Ne*
} ork reveals the plot
Banks of issue cannot be depe^ied
i. pen t o . •■■■•*■ K a i.y.rrc vc i.n •
turrrtir; Without < uniform volume
of currency prices will fluctuate, panics
oeror, and periods of depression and
i.iMress prevail. What we need is the
tholition of ali banks of issue and re-
store the circulating med.um ti the
goverriment the people
The national banks bo-rcw monev at
1 per cent and loan ,t to the people u
■rom IP to S# per cent. This is a s>j .-
!it! privilege The distiller makes
l.is whisky and puts t into the care
t>! the govemme'nt. if be wants "0 for
the period of five years without cost ;o
timself Then be can take it out e!
' bond," hy pay ing the tax. and re-
reive from the government a guarantee
of its ape This is a sjwcial pr ece
A railroad corporation is permitted,
subst-anuaily in charge what it pleases
tor trafh. This ta another specis,!
pr op. «.Ci' ' ; h ft c. T : '1 .
When a man goes to a bank to bor-
row money he is required to give se-
curity many times the value of !*s
loan: but when he deposits money be
has absolutely no security to guarantee
his deposit or loan. This we presume
is be.-ause the bankers understand the
currency quest,on. On account of this
deficiency in the system the banks get
away with about Jftr, OOfvOGG of the peo-
ple s money every year: more than the
irajn robbers take in twenty years.
There ought to be a law to hang both
ot tbe al>ove kinds of robbers.
A tut et BhtflT*.
?• : A:- hiba't A..:sor in his history
of Europe, says
Tbe suspension of specie jvayments
by ihe hank of England in ITS* led to
the use of an enormous amount of
redeemable paper money.
The result was magical.
It terminated in a blaae of glory and
a flood of prosjperity which lias never
.'.tiore since the beginning of the
w-ord. descended upon any nation.
Prosperity, untiersal and unheard ot.
prevaded every department of the <m-
1 jare.
Agriculture, manufacturers and eom-
laeroe increased in unparalleled ratio.
The landed proprietors were in af-
fluence.
Wealth to an unheard of extent was
created among the farmers
Our exports, imports and tonnage
more than doubled, and the condition
at the people was one of exi.raord.lu,:.
prosperity.
From 1TJT to 1S1> no nanciai em-
fcarrassaoents of any moment were cx-
pene-nced and in vain Naj>oleon waitei
lor tbe stoppage of England s financial
resources
But the resumption of gieioie pay-
ments of . >1 J*—the chant* ol f-Lli ..
system from legal tender paper io
metal mc.nf? w-as ruinous to :-ll the in-
dustries of England. Tbe distress
tiecame insufferable, and in Manches-
ter W Mill men women and children I.s-
nem hied, demanding blood rxr brea l.
and many of the people were k i leld
• - • Tun y VI -« wounded tv Er.Jai
(The following extract is from a
plutocratic 40-page Chicago Sunday-
paper.)
St. Paul, Minn., dispatch: One of
the leading bankers of the city said
to-day that a company of wealthy
Frenchmen Intended to establish head-
quarters In St. Paul for the loaning
of an immense amount of money to the
farmers of Minnesota and the Dakotas
after the assurance had been given
that the financial system of this coun-
try was to continue on a sound basis:
He continued:
"This company is prepared to loan
milions of dollars to farmers at rea-
sonably low rates of interest, but it Is
waiting to make sure that if it sends
gold here it will receive gold in return.
If the republican party declares for
sound money, as it surely will, the i
central office will be established here
in St. Paul, and all this money will be
distributed from here. It is easy to
understand the benefit such a company
would be. It means that the farmers
would be provided with money to pay
their debts, the country merchants
would be paid by the farmers, they in
turn would pay the wholesalers, and
everything would loosen up all the way
around. The trouble now is that no
one cares to advance money on land
values leat loss should result from a
still further depreciation in the event
of going to a silver basis."
If the above isn't a clean-cut idmis- ;
•ion that there is net sufficient money
in the country to do business with,
what is it?
The only difference between this
"leading St. Paul banker ' and our
"leading populists " on the money ques-
tion is in the means which each would
employ to rid the country of tha money-
famine admitted by both to exist.
But, withal, is the St. Paul banker's
plan not an exceedingly brilliant one
when you consider it thoroughly? The
farmers would pay their debts with
money borrowed trom this company of
foreign capitalists; Funny, isn't it. the
ideas concerning "money" and debts"
a banker can have? This St Paul
banker really believes that the Dakota
and Minnesota farmers would "pay"
their debts by putting a blanket inter-
est-bearing mortgage on their land
values" and using the proceeds to
liquidate certain non-interest-bearing
claims which merchants have against
them! It is this style of ideas and
this sort of logic that rules at Wash-
ington to-day and has ruled there for
many years.
Poor old Vncle Sam "paid" his
"debts" exactly that way scon after the
war closed, and the consequence is
that the old ass has since that time
paid nearly double the amount of his
debts in interest and still ewes the
principal.
Of course, if the farmers could pay
the merchants, and the merchants the
wholesalers, "everything would loosen
up ail the way around," provided the
farmer acquired his ability to pay
through the sale of his products. But
if he got his ability to pay through
rlastering his farm w::h a mortgage,
then the loosening process, instead of
go.ng "all the way around," would
have to begin above him and at the
expense of a lightening up of thing?
for him. ■
Suppose the number of ' millions of
dollars' which "this company is pre-
pared to loan to farmers at reasonably
low rates of interest'' should aggregate
five per cent. Suppose the rate of in-
terest be fixed at 6 per cent Is it not
plain that instead of paying their debts
they will have assumed an annual debt
of sr- fi.000 in addition to their pres-
ent debt of t:■.(•Ot'.OOO? So tar from
"paying their debts this course would
compel thc-m to pay ti, (KKVCOO in in-
teres*. in the course of sixteen years
and eight months, and still leave the'r
present debt of $5,#00,00# on their
farms.
But, dear me. what a picnic the
foreign company tie and ' jead.ng St.
Paul banker." who would, of course,
act as the company's agent in obtain-
ing the loans, womd have in the event
of the farmers borrowing this money.
While the fool farmers of Minnesota
and Dakota were skinning around con- .
tending with hot winds in summer and
cold t.-ziards in winter ;a their efforts
to meet the additional interest burden,
assumed for the patriotic purpose c.f
"loosening things up all the way
around." the gentlemanly foreigners
ana their St Paul agent could 1* lux-
uriating at a seaside watering place, or
enjoying the balmy breei.es of Florida
with an Increased sense of God's f.oo-5-
ness to man and of their own impor-
tance in the makeup of sublunary
affairs.
The leading St Paul banker, who
cased the pressure on his mighty brain
by evolving this scintillating scheme
for loosening things up "all the way
around' talked from the standpoint of
a republican, and appeared to lie utter-
ly unconscious of the fact that in thus
trustfully relying upon the ass.stance
of "foreigners" to help us run our
affairs he was go.ng directly contrary
to the doctrine so assiduously taught
in the cardinal princijde of his party-
thai America can be and of r.ght ought
to be. .ndependent of the world under
the blessedly beneficent lianner of
• Protection Wh.ie this St Pan.
lackey of the money barons is thus
engaged in his iee l ie way in doing
the work of his wealth-itiBorb.ng
usury-taking masters, hy pleading for
the retention of the gold standard. M?
McKinley and his crew of tariff shr.et-
ers are posing as the ' advano. guai.,
of prosperity' and declaring as one
man that the th.nf to da to ' loosen
tbtnes up aii tbe way round' a u
re-enact the VrKlnlev law and r.mrlct
all Intercourse with the "blareted for-
eigners" to the smallest possible' com
pass.
In the meantime the steadily 'r"M
Ing distress and suffering am""* ' "
wealth-producers of this nation, '
grandest and best favored by nnt.ti*
under the sun. Is rapidly preparing t i
way for a style of loosmiug things up
all the way around that Is undreamed
of in the philosophy ol leading bank-
era and tarlfT shouters and which nia>
be safely relied on to Jostle Into ob-
livion the horde of demagogues and
leeches who have so long deceived and
preyed upon the people,
Tradi.« and Uluir M n .lre nl lne
From National Blmetallist (Chicago!
Mr. J. H. Ley son of Butte, Mont., was
a welcome visitor at this office last
week. Mr. Leyson is one of the most
prominent and highly esteemed busi-
ness men of the state and also a gentle-
man who is remarkably familiar with
the principles involved In the silver
question. Largely through his instru-
mentality the trades and labor unions
of the west are now organizing in the
interest of silver restoration. I he
headquarters of the movement will he
at Butte, Mont., and the plan is to
send able speakers to address the labor
unions wherever necessary and to con-
duct a general campaign of education.
These organizations, of course, consist
mainly of workingmen and the subject
will be dealt with chiefly from the
workingman'e standpoint. The speak-
ers and the literature will not only
cover the question as one of finance
affecting the world's money and meas-
ure of values, but also with reference
to the importance of silver mining as
an Industry. If the campaign be in-
telligently conducted, as it no doubt
will be, the effect in molding sentiment
can scarcely be overestimated. Noth-
ing but study Is necessary to show the
workingmen of the I'nited States that
the restoration of silver means pros-
perity for them, a: i further, that the
interests of the workingmen of the
east are identical with those of the
same class in the west, Mr. Leyson's
whole soul is in the work thus under-
taken and if intelligent, well-directed
energy can make it a success there
is no room for doubt as to the result.
From National Bimetallism The
bitter determination which Henry
Clews makes no effort to conceal In
declaring the threatened coercive pol-
icy of the Wall street money trust has
long been anticipated as a terrible cer-
tainty by many thoughtful men whose
serious experience and wide opportuni-
ty for observation enables them to
weigh with much significance the rap-
idly developing sigtfc of the times One
correspondent, reflecting the sentiment
of his neighbors in one of the central
states, says: "While I do not speak of
it promiscuously, yet I am to-day more
afraid of a rebellion than I w?s in
May, 1SS0. Should the gold standard
idea succeed in this election, strife will
be almost inevitable. The banks will
know that their sway is limited to two
years, and they will du all they can
in that time to bind future genera-
tions: and the people of the west are
not in a temper to staad much more."
v*nr* for th* Trooft* Otlr
The goldbugs assert that the low
*_ceis prevailing at this t.me :s no de-
trimeat to the laborer and producer be-
cause the dollar will bay so much
more than it would a few years ago.
The following conversation between
a money leaner and a borrower shows
the folly of this claim and places the
matter in a light that any wayfaring
man. though a foot, may understand
the deception:
"Money ioaner—Ton ought not to
complain even if there is less money
in the country now than there w as ten
yeas ago. Toa caa buy twice as much
with a dollar now as you could then.
Borrower—I borrowed {]<X> from you
ten years ago and have been pa? ing
you interest on that amount ever since
1 now tender you ti. _s pa;, meat in fail
for that debt
Money loaner—Tou are a repudiates,
an anarchist I must nave my ti','(>.
Borrower—But you can buy as much
with the tr.'j now ts y oil , .Id w :h the
}10A whea you loaned it to me Be-
sides 1 must «*;: tw.i* as miii of the
products of my labor now to get the
SIM for you as I would have to sell at
the time whea 1 borrowed the money.
Money leaner—I don ; want to arne
w ith you. Ton are t dang?r u- c
ze-n and such talk as that v.. hurt the
credit of the slate.
Borrower—Won t > ,-,u even lower
your rate of intere*.t one-half"
Money leaner— No. si?' Why ihould
I do that? Money ^ scarce and hard
to get and 1 have more apj cants fot
money at the present rate than 1 can
accommodate.
Borrower—J thought se-.t.c that
your interna money wriD pay yos twice
ts much as it used to yon wouli V
willing to take one half the amount
Money leaner—] doc'i have to Stand
away from the window and let tht-
otber man come uj —Concordia Kan
san.
T'nuUitTit.i <.♦ a h
HOUSEHOLD HINTO.
Flour thrown upon burning oil wir
instantly eitlngulah It, while water wil
ouly spread the flames.
Steel pens are destroyed by the acli
In the Ink. If an old nail or an ole
ateel pen Is put in the Ink the aci£
therein wilt exhaust Itself on them,
and pens In dally use will remain li
good condition much longer.
It Is not generally known that i
piece of raw potato rubbed on a stee
knife Stained with acid will remor#
the stains. The knife must be polish-
ed afterward In tbe usual way. Thij
uethod saves the wear of the knife ant
economizes labor.
To remove coffee stains from linen
dissolve the yoke of an egg in a little
tepid water, add a few drops ot spirits
of wine, and rub the mixture on the
stains. Wipe It off with clean warm
water. Glycerine may be used Instead
of wine and water.
A dish for an Invalid—Pound up the
meat from the tenderest and whitest
part of a boiled chicken with an equal
weight of stale bread crumbs. Add
the broth of tbe chicken, stir well, put
nil Into a saucepan, and after boiling
for two minutes rub the whole through
a sieve.
Spirits of turpentine Is one of tht
must valuable articles for family use.
Its medicinal qualities are very numer-
ous. For burns It is a good applica-
tion, and gives Immediate relief; foi
blisters on the hands it is of priceless
value; for corns on the toes it is useful
end it is beneficial for rheumatism ant
sore throats.
Cut old socks and stockings down tht
back seam right to the toe. Place a
pair facing each other, open out, right
side in. Machine round, except the
top, about half an Inch from the edge.
Turn inside out, and marine across
in zig-zag rows from side to side
Woolen socks and stockings treated in
this way make excellent scrubbing
cloths, and silk ones are Tory useful
tor rubbing grates, etc.
New socks feel very comfortable to
the feet, but wearing them before they
are washed is a mistake. Hosiery
should always be washed before being
worn, a3 the washing 6hrinks the
threads and makes the socks wear as
long again, besides preventing the feel
being injured by the coloring. When
put on before washing they stretch out
of shape, and can never be restored to
their original form.
Experiments made in France show
that the reason the sapwood in timber
is worm-eaten is Wcause it contaix.1
starch.
The Supreme JuriicialCourtof Maine
decides that a nev. -paper ha' the rig t
to oriticise the manner of construct!., a
of a city hall, and that no action for
damages can be brought by the bui'.o
?rs in consequeme of such criticism.
A eominjr blessin? may inii.ee
thanicfulnerss before we are conscic -s
of its approach.
f^atan manages his children en y
because he knous so well their taste
for sweets
The effort to express roe're than ^ f
feel eventua.lv destroys what feeling
we have.
Some very str.i. :rg -t.t s
givea tfl sibew bow rapid..' the proc^ t-
nan of klnasiiitiJB hts increased n the
. L:te*d Suies since vi.' ,n v .. h - e±:
it did not eseeed eighty-three pounds.
In :ss€ the protection had mcreoLsed to
.'.(W pounds, m IKK.1 to I' «.ftf, pounds
in 1881 te ISfi.tM potrnds and ,n ]MC
to (;2Jt ponnds. wh >e ;n U'M -.be
total w as 556 Of# pemnds. The Iron Age
puts tbe jirod dittos fc-r 3SS5. it K>i ;i(iji
pounds and estimates that this yen,- j-
wili not fa... K*.c~! {>f t 00f' pounds j*.*
tic frrit V f| •
0 W. CRAWFORD
Qtt HsROn.f TChir. p«. in.
. When you comc in noi
and thirsty,—HIRES Root-
beer.
rm-' Y" ~w •>,*- « T fl|«* c,. rLitaAe.'phfc.
sw.it rvttrjwte
ION
|JOH> W ltHBIV
- — — - w . 1 M fchtr£lon, IS. ( ,
PfoseouTe* C:a a~s.
• r7"* • t- imi . - .. H
fl PI IIU H*v*'l -i.Mt l tknn*
UNUFn 1 ' ' - liuna...
— n* ti.ioo,
True the t:.'m ;* the tieiar mar.*
tmanwhc .i l! rt:' hi. ■ ■ ast f tee j s
• *■i i". a pre::- g -. Lti af:erwar4
hue tta vul jtLjed ever them.
aennsz
it l rs*.
( I ^
The moment vet refuse to for^ixe me
let loo** the Hacd that is leading *-•
upward.
A report on tbe ^tate farms in Xrrtb
Carolina, whieb are operated by con-
▼ictA. ahows their are now 1.000 am*
in corn and 4,C 00 in cotton, and that
the oood'.v. n of crops is 25 per
cent better than last rear at this date.
The £at« to eternal life is as narrow
ui the £TaTe. We di£ a pr&Te to bold
one man and not h;s house or t .t
hortc. Vis bam or his ball-room.
The critics are still in an aponr c1
fear lest somebody should mi&ta*<
%5oses for a modern scientist
Econo-
iijt— Jnst tJirnt — rvrrr bon> r ? H ' o<5'v Sar?: -
fiknlla contains itn deists. Tius is trof oxxjj t l
Hood's
Sarsaparilia
Tbe On? Tri* F-kod Fur fi^r .*|;
A STORY OFGOLDj
trt DRcnptM of Crippif Crm, |
i
1 v
i
■il y
f *
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1896, newspaper, July 3, 1896; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116857/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.