The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 17, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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People's Voice.
I Rill Doolin i u bold, list! man but Twin babies. are iu vogue
' he has u way of mskiug 1 U jailor lor fisher couutv.
I lt" ! I'uyue couutv in lnakiuy its
I*ogan countj has a county organi* say at cotton growing.
Kinp
PBMfATS,
OKLAHOMA.
[ /at ion known as the In limited l^qual
| Suffrage club.
OKiAIIUMA AND INDIAN TKKKITUKI I Although Hill Doolin i* out it is
marbles against monarchies that he
Oklahoma county haft 18,000 acrss of
Cotton under cultivation.
will not do any uiore killing unless he
is cornered.
Mr. liuzzard of Pott county is rain- j Jt |„charged that a sweet gir! grail
•ug a corn crop of l.->,000 bushel*. llat, of Logan county, who had the
A new church has just been com- swellest dress iu the class, prooouncetl
pletcd at Altoonu in Kingfisher conn "unique** uu-i-kwee.
This is the time of year when Hilly
Ira Terrill must someday be brought Bolton travels around in western Ok-
back to Oklahoma to 1h re-sentenced. ( lahoma and breaks down innocent
It is then that he expects to get away, people's hammocks. ®
The next time they capture Bill j A Congregational church in Cans-
Doolin they should send him to the <ll*n county indorses the ^tnlliness of
penitentiary and try him by proxy af pleasure by having attached to it a
terward.
Ciood crops were made last year
planted as late as July .' th, and good
fodder can be grown planted as late as
August]. Oklahoma for crops.
Oklahoma is to the front to stay.
She is now shipping vegetables and
fruits into Texas to supply the deli- | .
ciency in that state occasioucd by the
great drought.
Hill Tihlgman is certainly in hard
luck. The rewards on Doolin were
for his capture and conviction. That
eonyiction ought to have been strick-
en out as redundant
l>. S. Picket of Lincoln county had
a mule shot iu the neck by an unknown
jwrty last week. He o Yers 8^5 reward
for information leading to the capture
of the sneak who did the shooting
Two llaby, a Cheyenne Indian, re- j
cently saw a bicycle go down the !
road. He had never seen one before i
snd at last accounts In* was standing
in the middle of the road looking after
the wheel.
An Oklahoma editor has
speller who writes correspondence to |
the paper, and insists that the editor '
print his items just as they are written, j
The editor does it and they are the'
worst botched up things in the whole !
territory.
We are not a believer in "second pro- I
l>aiion," but there is a second chance '
for an Oklahoma farmer. If one crop
fails plant another. One farmer's oats !
made but eijfht bushels to the acre,
but part of the field has a fine prospect
for sorghum, sown since the oats
were harvested.
Canadian county hus an editor
named Furr. Last week one of his
readers got mad and went to town
with a shot gun and a warrant. He
declared his intention to make the
I- urr fly but he did not succeed verv
well, as the object of his wrath utter-
ly refused to "budge."
Martin R Kindly of Oklahoma coun-
ty, while transacting business in Kan-
sas City became violently insane and
was sent to a hospital. He was un-
der arrest Saturday, but became ra-
tional and was released. Monday it
required three officers to guard him
on his way to the hospital.
An unknown man was struck by a
Katy engine at Savanna Wednesday
and seriously injured. He was asleep
on the track at the time of the casual-
ty to which fact the accident was due.
The engine wheels crushed his head
and otherwise bruised him considera-
bly, but it is not believed that his in-
juries will prove fatal.
The East Logan county Sunday
School Association held a grand rally
at Berry Woods grove, a few days
since and more than a thousand people
were in attendance. The morning
was Spent in songs, music etc., follow-
ed by a basket dinner which was tine.
After dinner a carefully arranged lit-
erary program was well rendered and
the picnic was voted a great success.
An evangelist in Logan county ac-
cused a woman in the choir with sing-
ing "Come to Jesus" through a set of
teeth that had never been paid for.
He told her to get out and pay the
dentist before she came back.
A man named Hook, in Kingfisher
county, thought he would celebrate
the Fourth with a dynamite bomb. He
lighted the fuse and threw the bomb
into the street but the fuse went out.
He went out to get it, intending to re
light it, and stooping over it to pick it
up, the bomb exploded, blowing off
one arm. shattering to shreds one leg
and destroying both eyes.
The authorities down in the Semi-
nole country caught a fellow stealing
a pig. They took him up, tied him to
a fence post and administered forty
lashes, on the back, with the promise
of a double dose if he allowed his ap-
petite for pig to overcome him again.
They say a proper compound of hick-
ory withe and raw hide is a sure cure
for the unnatural appetite for fresh
pork.
H. C. Hinton, agent of the White
Hewing Machine company, and George
Finch, a grocer, both of Oklahoma
county, have made an assignment.
An Oklahoma county man offers
ten dollars reward and no questions
isked for the return of a diamond
*tud which he lost a few (lays ago.
Near Anvil in Lincoln couutv, the
lawn tennis and croquet grounds.
The silly story has again gained cir-
culation in Oklahoma that no-Wal
clerks have been ordered not to re-
ceive mail at the cars Nothing in it.
Hishop IIrooke has made a tour of
the churches of the Indian territory,
spending a month among them. He
is now in Purcell holding services and
will remain several days.
The assessors' report show a popu-
1 lation in Pawnee county of 8,593, and
whites in the Osage nation J.0V4.
The amount of property in the Osage
! country, assessed to Pawnee county's
! credit amounts to 9320,160.
1 During a recent cyclone a fellow in
Hlaiue county was picked up and
j when he lit he discovered that he was
i smothering to death. lie made a ;
struggle and discovered that a bucket'
<>f peach buttpr had fallen, bottom
side up. over his head.
j Charles Smith, son of William Smith
i of Logan county, last Thursday, while
; roping a horse, had the two middle
| fingers torn off his right hand, pulling
IKHH the leaders from his elbow loose with
them. He may be compelled to have
his arm amputatied.
A man registering himself as W.
Fulda, from Harper. Kansas was ar- j creH,npi'.v proves to be
rested in Oklahoma county Thursday
on the charge of fraudulently getting
In Itluim county they arc Mill plant-
ing Kaffir corn, millet and nirghuui.
A Oarficld county boy who was a
«agarette fiend has become insane as
a result.
Hill Tilghman can start right out
again. The next time he will prot>-
ably fire.
Only one hundred dollars reward
has been offered for the rccapture of
Hill Doolin.
Competition is rife at Coulgate as to
who can produce the longest spikes of
castor beans.
A tiartield exchange speaks of a
charming young lady as the "wind-
some Miss ltlank.'1
It took 8840 to repair the school
house in the capital of Logun countv
after the windstorm.
Beaver county was so dry that a
spark would have touched the whole
works off when down came the rain.
The only thing that Oklahoma
wants this year is the assurance that
the Free Homes bill w ill be enacted
into law.
Miss Burch, the whistling soloist of
Oklahoma, was married last week.
Perhaps this is the bad end prophesied
for whistling girls
The rewards for Doolin originally
read "for the capture and conviction.'
If he is captured again and convicted
the rewards can be claimed.
I William Markwood of Logan coun-
ty has eighteen pound cabbages on
his place. He irrigated and is much
pleased with his experiment.
! little Gilstrap wants to know if the
< anadian county preacher who was
presented with a refrigerator will feel
obliged to quit preaching about the
| hot place.
The cream cry contract in Kingfisher
county reads that the managers, if the
a paying con-
cern for the first ten months, will
thereafter run the creamery without
SURRENDER TO ENGLAND.
The Republican national platform endeavor* to tire the reader with
• lot of rot ajout tariff and reciprocity, and then ihows the dominating
influence behind the once great party of Abraham Lincoln when it t&yt
in anbetanoe: "The Kepnblican party is unreservedly in favor of English
money and against American money. It caused the establishment of the
English system by the act of 1873. and since then every American dollar
has been m hard to get as an English dollar. We are unalterably opposed
to every effort to turn the silver in American mines into money; we pre-
fer to borrow of England. We are therefore opposed to free coinage except
by the consent of England. All our money must be as good as gold, not-
withstanding the fact that that form of money has given to the world
such monstrocities among nations as Turkey, Persia, Arabia. Egypt and
Greece, whose people have long since been enslaved, and notwithstanding
the fact that Italy, Austria, Germany, Bussia, England, France and the
United States are marching toward the same sad destiny. In short we
want a currency system that will make paupers by the millions and 'mil-
lionaires by the score."
TREASON OF 1896.
Article I. Section 3 of the United States Constitution says: "Congress
shall have the power to coin money and regulate the value thereof " No-
tice that it says, "regulate the value." Now the republican platform says
that ^ the constitution is all wrong and that congress cannot and shall
not 'regulate the value" of money. Nowadays it must be done by inter-
national agreement only. Shades of Washington. Jefferson. Jackson and
Lincoln behold the fruits of Yorktown and New Orleans. Bahold the deadly
treason to a constitution baptized by the blood of countless heroes and
sustained by the blood of martyrs; behold the realization of William Pitt's
prophecy m the English parliament 108 years ago that "America would be
more profitable as a financial dependency than as a political dependency."
Are the American people going to support such a treasonable platform' The
man who can see it in any other than a treasonable light must be an idiot If
the spirit of 76 is sufficiently strong there will be another Yorktown
November.
money out of citizens by represent- I exPonse to the stockholders,
ing himself to be the agent of the Na- 1 The Sapulpa branch extension of
tional Reserve Association. He caught less than 100 miles would control the
about forty eitixens tor five dollars transportation of the product of 00,-
each by telling each one that he would j acres of cotton, TO.000 acres of
make him secretary of the local asso- wheat. -10,000 acres of oats and 100,000
ciatiou at a salary of $100 a yaar. He acres of corn. There will be this year
has worked a number of towns all ; 'n territory traversed, ','0,000 hogs
over the territory. : and 6,000 cattle for export. The ex-
The swindles of the Oklahoma insur- , P°rt from the territory will amount to
ance agent. Fulda, have been reported j *K000 ears for the first year, and will
to F. W. Sears, supreme president, increase ?5 per cent every year for ten
and .!. C. Hennessey, supreme secre- . years.
tnry. of the National Ifeserve associa- j J. W. Ilalm, of Cuuudian county,
tinn. Hoth of the gentlemen adiuitt.-d | who was adjudged insane last week,
that I'uIdH was a duly authorized ' attempted to commit suicide in the
agent of the National Reserve, liut 1 eonnty jail Thursday evening. He
they stated that lie whs only working placed a blanket over his head, then
mi commission. Steps will at once lie getting in position in the extreme
taken to see to what extent Fulda has | north end of the eell of the corridor,
obtained money through the use of j rushed headlong for the iron bar., at
the name of the association. j the south eml. When his head struck
L. S. 1 laugh of Kay county, planted j the liars he foil back like a dead man
some Nebraska seed corn on his place j and it was thought he was dead, but
this year. The corn from the Nebraa- j he soon revived. Sunday he attenipt-
ku seed is already made. The stalk is ; oil his life by smothering, but was res-
C0ST OF A CAMPAIGN.
TO CONDUCT A PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGN NOWADAYS.
Where the Money Cornea From—Who
Pays It anil What They Fay It For—
Why So Much Money I* Kited.
very short and heavy, while the ears
are exceptionally large. It matures
much earlier than the Kansas variety
and the thickness of the stalk renders
it less susceptible to the I aneful in-
fluence of the hot winds. It appears
to be a good variety to cultivate in
sections where the climatic conditions
are similar to the hot winds Kansas
Used to have.
I'p to this time there has been but
little Kay county wheat threshed. W.
Dou-jfrerty and M. C. Yoeum each have
a steam thresher and are improving
each shining hour threshing out the
golden grain. In that section of the
country the yield is about 20 bushels
to the acre. Among those who have
already threshed are .1 C. Columbia,
1.400 bushels; Charles Wallace, 1,500:
cued. He will be taken to the Cleve-
land county sanitarium.
It has developed, since the sudden
depaature of the -divine healer," Dr.
Furlong of Oklahoma county, that he
left upon the advice of the secretary
of the state board of health. Com-
plaint had been made to the secretary
that l urlong was practicing medicine
and claiming to heal though not a
graduated physician. Furlong went
to McPherson where he raised great
excitement l>y his claims to a divine
healing power, which he exerted by
simply laying on of hands during a
"trance. He charged $."> per trance,
and many afflicted people were Hock-
ing to him.
When the gate was opened at the
2,000; Phil Mason. 1,000; Hen Mayes.
1,000. Mr. Stansberrv, 2.000. One of '
to be seventy-five very fine stacks of
wheat.
In Logan county the other day a di-
vorce was denied Mr. Pierce, who set j
up in his complaint that his wife :•« - ,
fused to accompany him when he mov-
ed to Oklahoma from the Kast. Mrs. i
Pierce set up in dc
their courting days
of prisoners
weapons of
Uofortl, Jt Mitchell, 1.300, Mr. Turner. I ''T" TT j:lil Sat
I urday night a handful
a sally, secured tin
4l . • i , , . ! the guards and forced the iatter into
the big jobs will be on school section ; n .... ..
, .. I cells. 1 hen they .-ailed upon all who
.16, near < hilloeo, where there are said • , , .
wished to escape to do so and fourteen
of the forty-nine availed themselves of
the opportunity. Hill Doolin and
Dynamite Dick, last survivors of the
Dal ton gang, were the ringleaders.
Of the nineteen escaped one. William
Peck, returned and reported Hill
Doolin as so weak that he sat beside
fense that during j t,h<* road wondering how he would es-
her husband had L.ape. Bm Tilghman. who (.aptnrei,
assured her she would never have to TJooUn in the first place, isattheheud
leave her parents, which was her sole | 0f a posse ,|(.plllv sheriff, in |)Ur.
suit, .lames Koons and a young wo-
man were out driving when thev were
reason for refusing to move to Oklaho-
ma. The judge who beard the case
decided that Mrs. Pierce had a good
and sufficient defense, though the
query naturally arises as to how a
rash courtship promise can be given
preference over the marriage service
which pledges a bride to leave her pa-
rents and cleave unto her husband.
approached by two armed men who
made them give up thesr horse and ve-
hicle and walk home. It is believed
the two men were Hill Doolin and
Dynamite Dick. Telephone wires
were all cut thus shutting off
diale communication.
iniiue-
' In Garfield county during a recent
' storm Mrs Myers and her baby were
killed by lightning. Mrs. Myers was
sitting iu the doorway holding her
baby when the bolt of lightning struck
them. The husband and two little
boys were at the well about twenty
tact away and were unharmed.
j It is developing that the good out-
farly cotton is waist high and full of ( law is in the same state as the good
bolls and looking fine. j Indian.
And so Bill Doolin got away. And Oklahoma is on the eve of
the secret of his capture and many ! ions revival. The papers she full of ialtv of pocket hooks, and advertise,
other valuable things went with him. | the doings of revivalists. ] thirty different kinds
Marsh I. am licit lives in K;u i.nmtv
and is a brother of Ike Lambert, the
Kansas politician and statesman.
Some rascal in Kingfisher counti re-
cently went through a town at night
and marked everything up with chalk.
On the bank lie wrote: "liusted b«
Cosh!' lie also decorated the depot
and the railroad company will p SiJ
for him.
Topeka Co-Operator: Although most
#f us have an idea that millions of dol-
lars will be spent in electing the next
president of the United States, few can
fay definitely where the money is to
tome from, who will collect it and how
It will be spent. The record of these
transactions Is not kept for obvious
reasons, but it can be dispensed with.
Methods do not vary.
When the Rational committees of the
two old parties assemble after the con-
ventions make the nominations, the
first thing to be done is to estimate the
expense of managing the campaign.
These expenses run into a fortune.
Therefore they will make a list of the
very rich men whose interests are most
affected by the result. To these men
the chairman sends personal letters
asking for subscription.
The Twentieth Century says William
C. Whitney is expected to contribute
$50,000 to his party fund, or his backers
do it for him. But the most expedient
method is to have the trust magnates
from a pool and make the raise by
themselves in one great amount. The
Pennsylvania manufacturers, led by
Tom Dolan, will organize a committee
and agree to raise a million among
themselves for the Republican fund.
John Wanamaker raised $400,000 all by
himself in 1S92.
As a rule the tariff barons are ex-
pected to hand over two millions, be-
cause they are great beneficiaries when
the Republicans are in office. The dif-
ferent trusts are then dealt with sep-
arately. For instance, the sugar trust
will pay half a million to the national
committee, receiving in return a
pledge not to be interfered with should
the party attain power. A concern like
the sugar trust pays money to both the
old parties and then does not bother
its head about the result of the cam-
paign.
But sometimes two trusts find their
Interests opposed. Thus the beef trust
cannot contemplate without a skiver
some legislation which the sugar trust
«ants. Thereupon the two bid against
each other, for the support of the party
most likely to win. That is why the
Republicans have so much money just
now. There is a general impression
that the next president will be a Re-
publican. and all the corruptionists are
hastening to secure the friendship of
that party.
Here we have the real explanation of
the growth of civil service reform. In
former years the parties found their
chief revenues in struggles for office.
The only rewards of victory were the
emoluments of office and the opportuni-
ties of robbing the treasury. But with
the growth of trusts, the creations of
vast monopolies and the necessity of
securing the franchises, the politicians
began to find that the rank and file of
the offices were poor gain. What the
politicians found important was the
possession *-f the executive and legisla-
te branches of the government. There-
fore the clerkships and inspectorships
and the police and postofflee positions
have been allowed to pass under civil
service regulation. They do not yield
the rich rewards to be gained by be-
traying the people to the capital.
Many people do not understand this
md are ill-informed enough to imagine
that politicians want the offices. What
politicians want is power. Some of our
I most influential politicians care very
little whether they are In ofliee or not.
When the vast campaign fund has
been collected it is distributed among
the doubtful states. A good organizer
forms a campaign club. He inveigles
lot of young counter skippers and ill
Informed wage earners who are give
So prosperous
Oklahoma, that
relig- Kay county merchant make
spec-
It Is getting to be difficult, however
to bribe voters owing to the great im-
provement of late years in our election
laws. Consequently most of the money
goes to individuals who control voters
to saloon keepers, to stump orators and
to the general run of shady characters
so numerous during a presidential year.
The papers are heavy subsidies. This
money is never paid out openly as a
bribe. It takes the form of payment
for advertisements, of purchasing atock,
of purchases of whole campaign edi-
tions and of the bills contracted In col-
lecting "campaign material." The won-
der is that many newspapers have any
influence at all upon voters, but for
some unfathomable reason they do.
In round numbers the political par-
ties spend about twenty million dollars,
directly or indirectly, in electing the
president. That is little more than a
dollar and a half for each voter in the
land. When the campaign is over we
poor, idiotic citizens of the United
States wonder why the country seems
to belong to the plutocrats. The coun-
try belongs to the plutocrats because
they have bought it and paid far it.
Strikers Kcplarail tiy Machinery.
Promoters of strikes argue to thel
comrades that unsuccessful efforts are
nevertheless ultimately beneficial: but
study of the subject has led me to
take the opposite view, viz.: that all
strikes of skilled workmen are, in the
end, harmful to the participants. No
one single cause has done more, in my
opinion, to hasten the introduction of
entirely automatic machinery in opera-
tions where a certain degree of skilled
labor was considered indispensable
than strikes on the part of such skill-
ed employes. Numerous instances
might be recalled where large manu-
facturers have, on account of strikes,
cheerfully expended immense sums of
money in perfecting automatic machin-
ery, not primarily to effect economy in
wages, but as an assurance against
future danger frafn such causes. A
notable instance of this nature oc-
curred a few years ago at one of the
largest iron and steel works in the
world. In a certain department speci-
ally skilled men were able to make
wages which now seem incredible.
They were, however, paid a percentage
upon the tonnage and, owing to enorm-
ous output, the profits of these opera-
tives exceeded in some years that of
many successful manufacturers having
large capital at stake. These men con-
sidered themselves indispensable and
struck, not for higher wages or shorter
hours, but at the dictation of outsiders.
When work was resumed they found
their occupations gone forever. Auto-
matic machinery had supplanted the
former skilled labor.—Popular Science
Monthly.
Homes and Patriotism.
Before the French revolution 12,000
men owned all the land of France.
Now she numbers 3,222,000 free hold-
ers. In England 180,000 persons own
all the land, and the proportion of pau-
pers is 23 for England to one In
France. If our people desire to save
themselves from the fate of English
pauperism they will have to begin the
work of salvation by adopting the
New Zealand graduated lagd tax laws,
which will speedily emancipate them
from extortionate land rents, and give
every industrious prudent man a
chance to secure a holding somewhat
larger than a cemetery lot—a home j
the great incentive to patriotism.—Thf j
Call.
A Village ftUlnc Bell.
For more than twenty years Bow-
mansville, Pa., has had what is known
as a village bell. It is swung between
two high upright poles and was paid for
by public subscription. Every day the
bell is rung three times—at 5:30 o'clock
a. m., 11 o'clock a. m.. and 4 o'clock in
the afternoon. The leading object of
its ringing is to announce to farmers
id other working people the time of
The first bell in the morning
aniforms and torches or gewgaws of at Bowmansville i^plhe signal for the
the kind and are sent parading and at-
tending mass meetings in order to
:atch voteTS as addle-headed as them-
•tlves. The politicians pay for the
ttoisy work, such as printing, music,
hall hiring n l so on, but their chief
ixpenditure is in the bribine of votera.
people to arise and in the summer most
of the residents are out that early.
The 11 o'clock bell announces tha< It
is time to leave the fields and prepare
for dinner. At 4 o'clock in the after-
noon they prepare for supper.—Corre-
SDondence Philadelphia Record.
£Aitzerland proposes to have a Stat*
mutch monopoly, not for profit, but
aiming at (lie suppression of the phos-
phorus match. It is dangerous to work
with phosphorus, and the disease re-
sulting is as eorrihle leprosy. ^
ValuaM* Fraarhta* leeured.
The Iranrbine of ea y diifettioo oae of tba
in« t valuable io the fift of medical •<*.enee -
ran be aecured by any j-eraon wiae enough to uae
lloitetter • S|omarh H:ttera. either to aappreM
growing dyspepsia, or lo uproot II at maturity.
Biliocs. rheumatic and ferer and ague sufferers,
persons troubled with nertou*nee and the
constipated, should also secure the health fraa*
ihiae by the same means
The horn of the rhinoeerous is sim-
ply an extension of the skin, like the
hair and nails. It does not grow up-
on the bone, but is a true exereseence.
The world's railroad reach 407,506
miles.
Coarse threads, of which large quan-
tities used to be sent from England to
Japan, are now made in the latter
country, except the finest quality.
The imports of raw cotton from Amer-
ica, China and India have nearly doub-
led in the past three years.
I believe Pise's Cure is the only medb
cine that will cure consumption.—Anna
M. Ross, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. l-\ '95.
To help out the sulphur industry
in Sicily, where, owing to the rivalry
of Japanese sulphur, the price has
sunk from 140 to GO lire a ton. Italy
intends to abolish the export duty ol
20 percent on the sulphur and to in-
crease the import duties on barley and
corn.
llall'M Catarrh Cure
Is a constitutional cure. Price 75c.
M. Gerve, is to print a picture of the
coronation of Czar Nicholas for the
city of Paris on a canvas 33 by V4 feet.
Tfegeman's Camphor Ico with Glycerine.
The orlifinBl and only irenulne. Ouree (.'napped llaiula
aud Face, Cold Sure#, Ac. C. O. Clark Co., N. liav«u. Ct
Alma-Tameda executed one of his
best classical pictures before lie was
seventeen.
■I rod.
FITS stopped free and rernnn*
C's after first day'm S of Dr. Kllne'a<i eat Ner**
Keatorer. ]■ ree t2 ' r a1 U u anil 11 -ai '• M r .
eiuuscurce. l>a. kumc,'. 31 art tabt. J' < a e ,.h *, 1'a.
Kubens had finished a number of
greatly admired portraits before he
was 10.
If the llaby le Cultlnit Teeth.
P* sure and n*e that old antl well tried remedy. Mrs.
winnow u Sootui.nu sv iu r for Children leethinff.
As warden of a women s prison, and
as prison commissioner Mrs. Ellen C.
Johnson has served in Massachusetts
for nearly twenty years. 8he is said
to exert a remarkable influence over
the women prisoners and in many
cases has reformed them.
Mrs. John M. Clay owns the Henry
Clay farm in Keutnoky. She has such
a tender feeling for her stock that she
has provided for the future of all ths
superanuated anima's on the placo by
leaving each 859 in her will so that
they may receive good cure till death
snsues.
In its course of 120 miles the Jorda n
plunges over 27 rapids, and from its
source to its mouth has a descent of
3,000 feet
A strange coincidence is noted in the
statistics of Steuben, Me. Iu the year
just past, there were 16 deaths, 16
births and 16 marriages.
The bell flower is symbolic of grati-
tude.
Eat
lfaturaUy, havo a good appetite, keep your
blood pure aud your nerves strong by taking
Hood's
* Sarsaparilla
The best — In fact the One True Blood Purlfler.
Hood's Pills cure biliousness, headache.
Don't take substitutes to
save a few pennies. It won't
pay you. Always insist on
HIRES Root beer.
ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART
s r. JOHKPH, MO.
ln,tr r,l°n In this academr. condnrted
by the Religious of the Sacred Heart, emhta •* th*
*hnle range of subjects necessary to constitute a snlitl
an.i re lined education. Propriety of deportment, per-
sonal neatness and the principles ®f morality are ob-
jects of unerasing attention. Fitemdr. g, .>Und* af
ford the pupils every facility for useful hodi'v eter-
else; their health is an object of constant soli.dtm.e
an.l in «ckno^ they are attended with maternal care.
Fall term opens Tuesday, Sept. 1. Terms for session
ln •d'*«csI 1115, tM« Includes
tuition, board washing, courses in French, Oerm*
or l atin, use of l.brary and physician s f*<v For fur-
ther particulars a.ldross. TIIE Sl'I'KRIOK.
Academy Sacred Hea-I. St. Joseph. Mo.
DRUGS.
o*cei?:S."°ck °' EBr" >
liood reason for telling.
FJIANK BUSriEY.
Wichita, Ran.
lENSicm; \Vr'* W"n"K-
Waahl tipton, D. < ?
'Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal K*kvnin*r IT 8 Tension Bureau.
J jisiu hut war, ijadjudic-aliugclaims, atlr since.
flPIIIM InlMl. Thousand*
UIIUIY1 L.'^o •-n,n"'st cure- Krk*Tr,ai-
I'R. Marsh. Quln
W.N. U.— WICHITA,—VOL. 9. NO 29.
W hen answering Ai.vertiseiuenti please
mention this paper.
I Best Gpagh fcyrup. Tastoa Um
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 17, 1896, newspaper, July 17, 1896; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116861/m1/2/?q=music: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.