Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 7, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
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OKLAHOMA LEADER, GUTHRIE. OKLAHOMA
/
Entered in tBe po tofflceat Guthrie, Okla as
second class mall matter.;
Oficial Paper of Oklahoma Territory.
published BY THE LEADER PRINTING
COMPANY—STATE PRINTERS.
The subscription rate for the
Oklahoma Leader is 50 cents
a year, payable in advance.
i 0. nihl.ACK Kdltorand Manager.
Official Oryan o/ Oklahoma Democracy,
THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1900.
If more Republican senators were
like Senator Hale, Mark Hanna's
thinking box would be able to circum-
scribe its duties.
McKinley might pattern after John
Bull and simply say to the Filipinos,
You're annexed. It would at least
produce the same effect.
If one can believe there is anything
in the sign of ths times, the Republi-
party of Illinois is in the sweat-bo* to
(toy.
Tbkkk was a time in the history of
Republican iparty of Ohio when old
John Sherman was regarded with ven-
eration and respect by that party,
but that was before Mark Hanna was
spewed upon the surface.
Ir Aguinaldo has really quit this
•ublunary sphere as he has so often
been reported te have done, it is quite
clear that President McKinley's offer
of "benevolent assimilation" never
reached him in its entirety and full-
nest.
Should President Krueger seek au
ieylutn in the United StateB in case
be is hounded from South Africa by
the British, President McKinley can
try his "benevolent assimilation" up-
on the old Boer with some hope of
snccess.
If tub postal frauds found to exist
in Cuba, extend to Porto Rica, and the
Philippines, as is supposed, the na-
tional administration will be kept too
busy stopping the holes and shielding
the thieves to give much serious at-
tention to the presidential compaign.
One Dose
j Tells the storv. When fSW heart]
[mlies nii'l \"'i feel • ■'lioiiM, ron-t!-'
'pated, and (lilt of tana, with yuurl
► -loiiiiirh sour and no appetite. Just |
\ bay a package of
Hood's Pills 5
I And take n dose, from 1 to I pi"". J
. Von will lie surprise.) at lio« i . K
'they will do tin ir work, run; y P
I headache anil biliousness, muw tin-0
Iliver and make you fM happy Mill.#
i j , sou. told by . > i i medicine d—li n. s
SO ME CUBAN STATISTICS.
According to Bulletin No. 11, of the
Cuban census issued by direction of the
war department, the excess of males
in the following provinces of Cuba
are here given:
Santa Clara, 21.578; Pinar del Rio,
10,312; Habana, 19,170, Matanza,
5,008; Puerto Principe, 1,504 and in
Santiago de Cuba 25. Of the 1,072,757
peoplel, 004,884 are unable to read.
There are native whites, 910,299;
foreign whites, 132,198; colored 520,300
mixed 270,805 and Chinese 14,858.
There are 1,108,709 single persons;
married, 240,351, and widowed 85,112.
The Bulletin contains among other
interesting statistical matter, a table
showing the age and sex and conjugal
condition by provinces of the people,
which furnsihes an interesting study
for the moralist and philanthropist.
REPUBLICAN PARTY DO EH NOT MAN
IT.
Several of the Republican state
platfoims have contained weak utter-
ances against the trusts and the na-
tional convention at Philadelphia will
certainly adopt a plank along the tame
lines, but it will have the same pur-
pose in view that the free silver plank
in the St. Louis platform had, which
Congressman Grosvenor said was put
there to catch votes asd which no
Republican expected the party to car-
ry ^out. The trust system is a Repub-
lican institution, brought into life,
nursed and protected by the Republi-
can managers for the purpose of keep-
ing that party in power, and so long
as it remains in power there never
will be any legislation enacted to pro-
tect the people aeainst their extortion.
How about Carnegie's steel trust, and advocating the trust sys'en. ^ et
which makes the enormous profl'. of the attempt to monopolize trace is a
840,000,000 a year".' Has this extortion crime punishable by a line of SV'OO or
shaken the grip of his trust on the a year's imprison cent. A Republican
throats of the people? truft president cau publ;cly incite to
"As for the result of combination crjme, can day after da? engage in
being an increase of price to the con- cr)me without attempt at concealment
sumer, beyond a brief period, there BI)(] jti.l be a we come gueit in the
need be no fear," says Mr. Carnegie. j WHte House, an honored acivWor of
Carnegie has been robbing the con-I tbe president of the United States, a
sumers far twenty years, and there widely advertised supporter of the Re-
are no s gns of a halt. I publican party. Think of it! And
What docs Carnegie consider a tjjen yourself what would happen
brief period anyhow i ' to a poor man who publ'c'y advocated
the commission of crime."
M'KINLEY'S CHANCES. : , , ,,
; It is apparent that the Kepulicans
The chances of President McKinley : f(,ar the lrust Ugnei but they cannot
for re-election are not nearly so good adT0Cftte any legislation against the
this year as they were in 1806. tru6ts becan ,a the partv depends for
record is against him. Hanna's friend- it6 6upport on the trus-s However
ship is against him. The scandals of ■ they do nQt hesitale t0 present a "si ly
the l*£t four years are against biru. ! &ubterfuge" t0 the peoole. and have
And when election day has ended {he su„UlDe effrontery to claim that
next November it will be found that | thig ,g anti.lrUBt Illation.
I the people are against him. Discus- —
sing the matte* the New Yolk Post nvTIMS OF THEIR oir.v SIUPID1TY
shrewdly remarks on this question of q'be Democrats in the house called
the personal equation of the men ,(,e Republican bluff on the anti trust
"that disgust is a stronger motive than 1 constitutional amendment in a way
vague dread. Men do, in spite of sage that made Grosvenor, Cannon, Dalzell
advice, Uy from the ills they have to ancj the other Republican leaders wish
evils they know not of. Thousand of j tbey had never heard of the bill. They
independent and Republican voters 1 were tjci{ an(j tired of it when the
are, beyond all question, disgusted ' Democrats got through showing it up
with PresidentMcKinley for one reason J in au ;t8 enormity; but when R?publi-
or another." Therefore it concludes, 1 cln Congressman McCall of Massachu-
"it will not do to rely upon their dis- 1 Setts pointed out that if it ever became
trust of Mr. Bryan to prevent them (i part 0f the constitution laber organ-
from voting against Mr. McKinley." j izations could not exist under it, and
It'adds as a fact within its own .those now existing would be destroyed.
knowledge, for example, that the , they felt that they were the victims of
professors of a certain New England , their own stupidity end political greed.
college who were almost unanimous- , q'ba whole thing was a miserably con-
ly for McKinley in 1896, are almost cacted fraud, the exposure of which
unanimously for Bryan now; and the j has already stuck a deep knife gash
reason, it says, assigned by these pro- jnto the porous skeleton of the Hanna-
fessors is that McKinley "has betrayed yeK nley party, Of all the attempts
them," and that they "do not intend to j at legislation for purely partisan polit-
be like the fool in the Spanish pro- jcai effect during this sitting of con-
verb and break a leg twice over the gres6. this outstrips all others for its
same Btone." Oo the other hand, the j brazenfaced and admitted political
general concensus of opinion is that purpose.
Bryan has grown stronger since the
Thk McKinley administration, not-
withstanding Mark Hanna's dsclara-
tion that the vice presidency will be
open until the Philadelphia conven-
tion names the man, is still searching
(or suitable material. He must have
afew"barls" filled to the brim and
ready to roll them out.
AOMINISTRATION MEN ARB OETTINd
SCARED.
According to "Doc" Jamison, the
Illinois Republican national commit-
teeman, who recently returned from a
visit to the Eastern stateB, including
New York, Hanna. Dick, McKinley
and the whole caboodle of Republican
statesmen and boBseB regard the polit-
ical situation as extremely hazardous
to the Republican party.
A part of the conversation of the
doctor on the subject runs thus : "The
most interesting thing politically that
I found on my recent trip was the feel
ing Eastern Republicans have that
tbere is a great fight aheau of the
party in the East, especially in New
York. The reason for it I do not
know, but the feeling is strong that
Sew York is going Democratic."
The Irish born and the German born
■voters of New York will take occasion
to register their disapproval of Mc-
Kinley's pro-British course in the Boer
■war when they get to the !polls, and
thousands of Republicans and all the
Democrats of the state, reunited in
solid phalanx by the perils with which
imperialism and trustism are menacing
the nation, will repudiate with an
avalanche of ballots the recreant ad
ministration that has so utterly be-
trayed and violated the trust of the
American people.
STAND UY DEMOCRACY.
If there ever was a time when the
Democrats of this territory should
stand together that time is now.
It is ao time for shuffling and inde'
cision. The man who says he doubts
the wisdom of making a party fight is
not the sort of Democrat needed for
the times. Boldness and persistent
aggressiveness are the elements which
should characterize the fight for Dem-
ocracy in this territory, with a lead-
er of unimpeachable integrity, faith
Jul to his party and the great princi-
ples which it represents, there will
rally toundhima support that will
utterly surprise and confound the op-
position. We have the principles. We
have the issues and we have the ele-
ments to make a successful fight. Now
let the party select the right man.
The outlook is encouraging to the ter-
ritorial Democracy and there is no
reason under the heavens why the
Democratic party, aided and support-
ed by all the opposition who are nat-
SHAMEFUT. CONFESSION FORCED.
One of the effects of Senator Bacon's
resolution to investigate Cuban affairs
has been to unearth the astounding
fact that postoffice appointees doing
work in Porto Rico were not only
drawing their salaries there, but also
similar salaries in Washington, and in
some eases employes were monthly re-
ceiving three salaries.
This is the effect of the carpetbag
regime for which the president and
his cabinet are alone responsible. Not
only Cuba, but Porto Rico and the
Philippines, have been fruitful fields
for the peculiar talents of the carpet-
bag element sent by the president to
the people of these islands to teach
them American ways and manners.
Developments already brought to light
show that the carpetbaggers hardly
waited to warm their 6eats, after get-
ting to the islands, before they began
their peculations and robberies; and
yet, while hints of these fact6 were
made in the official reports of army
officers, who had no povverto investi-
gate their truth, the departments at
Washington maintained a clam-like
Bilence until Senator Bacon's resolu-
tion forced them to speak and confess
the shameful truth.
The whole thinir is a brazen piece of
political h . pocricy. so di'gustirg as
to even arouse the indignat'on of some
cf the more conservative elements of
the par y in whose interest it was
pad ed.
The who'e thing smells so s rongly
of Kepub iean bun.combe engineered
purely for political effect that instetd
of helping to exTicat • the party from
the ruts into which it has gotten it
self, will sink it deeper. Not a single
Republican voted for it with tbe
s ightett expectation that it wou'd
ever become a part of the constitution
of the country. E*en were this pos-
sible it couid not ba ratified by the
states until the meeting of their legis-
latures next winter—after the presi-
djucy had been settled. If the; were
sincere why did they not introduce
the bill years ago? They had the
power to pass it. Republican bum-
combe is all they wanted and all they
expected out of it, but their hypo-
cracy was so plainly and eloquently
po;nted out by the Democrats aided
by certain sincere Republicans that it
will not do the party any good but
great harm. It was intended to catch
votes for the Republican party and
not the trust sharks.
The sugar trust gobbled up three
mote sugar refineries last ween, and at
once advanced the price of sugar.
cimp-.ign of 1890.
In the first p'ace, the million or
more votes taken from Bryan by the
bolting democrats in 1896 have return-
ed to him.
In the second place, a large per cent
FRAUD ON LABOR.
Here is another evidence of the ben-
eficient effects of the tru9t system up-
on the laboring c'asses of the country.
The National Tube Trust has absorb-
ed all the lesser plants of the country
and centralized its business at three
of republican voters will decline to j
v I points, New York, San Brancisco and
express approval at the polls for Mc I
^ . . . i Pittsburg, thus enabling it
Kinley imperialism, and, again, the
Methodist church will revolt from the
support of Brother McKinley fcecjuse
of his opposition to temperance in the
matter of army canteens.
Taking iuto consideration the great
Issues of trusts, imperialism and mili- ,
r , ,, duced to the consumer, but such is
tarism, which are espoused by Mc- \ , .
^ 4l i not the case, and the price is advanc-
ed and the enormous saving of SI 000.-
000 goes into the pockets of the
to dis
charge over 800 employes who are now
thrown out of work, and thereby sav-
ing to the stockholders annually one
million dollars. With the 81,000,000
saved it cou'd naturally be supposed
that the price of tubing would be re-
Kinley and denounced by the masses,
it looke as though McKinley's chances
for re-election were not at ail bril-
liant.
CARNEGIE A QUEER CUAF.
Carnegie is a queer compound of
philanthropy and greed. He tried to
SILLY SUBTERFUOE.
It is evident to the slowest intelli-
gence that the Republican pretense
of anti-trust legislation is simply a
transparent trick to catch votes.
That this trick will fail of its purpose
cannot be doubted, for tbe fact6 in
evidence are too plain to be ignored.
Attorney General Griggs refuses to en-
force the laws again6t the trusts
which are now on the statute books.
Then, what use is there of passing
more laws for Griggs to disregard?
As a matter of fact, the Republicans
in congress do not propose to pass
any anti-trust laws. Ihe amendment
to the constitution is, as it has been
characterized by able thinkers, mere-
ly a "silly subterfuge." It is a plan
to gain time and to obscuri tbe trust
issue, which is to be discusBed b.fore
the people during the presidentitl
campaign,
Discussing this matter, James Crew-
man, a correspondent who has toured
the country receotly, says;
"Is there a full-grown man in the
country who will be deceived by tbe
loud trumpeted laws of the United
I States declare that an action of the^
squeeze his partner to tbe extent of
815,000,000, and failed because he
found a man who could and would
tight regardless of consequences. Fear
ing a thorough expose of trust methods
Carnegie weakened and the 6uit at law
was choked off. And yet Carnegie has i „ ... . ,
J B | Republicans in congress who propose
given millions to promote art and liter- , an anti.truBt axeDdlDendment to the l
ature among the masses. But all his C0Dgtituti0D o( the United States? I 1
philanthropy is made vain by bis advo-
stcckholders of the concern.
This is but another evidence of the
greed of these trusts and serves as a
wirnicg to labor that when these
combines reach that point of organiz-
ation wheie they feel sure of their
footing, this wholesale beheading of
employes is the natural and certain
consequence.
M illions ( f laborers today are out of
employment in consequence of the
conBoHda'ion of manufactures into
trusts, and if let alone the day is not
far distant when wage earners will
find ihe Oriental wage system trans-
planted to this country.
.■IS A VOTE CATCHER.
The Republican party on March 4
1897, took full control of the govern
ment in both houses and the execu-
tive department, and during all that
time not a single effort .was mideto
'.egis ate against or regulate the
trusts, but just six days before ad-
journment, they introduce a bill and
pass it throngh the lower house pro-
posing a constitutional amendment to
regulate and control these concerns
cacy of trusts the evils of which are
greater than any personal good that
Carnegie may accomplish.
In the May number of the Century
Magazine Carnegie holds forth upon
the advantages of trusts and the ab
sence of danger from monopolies. In
think not. In every state I have vis-
ited this year the voters seemed to
clearly understand that the trustB are
united in their support of Mr McKin-
Jtappy ^7/other s
Sratitude
explaining the genesis of gr. at combi- JohnD UocUefel|er, tUe head of tbe
nations of capital Carnegie says that Slandar(, (m XrU8t_ ftn nn8werviDg
when a season of business activity an 1 McKinley KePublican; Henry O. Ha' e
high prices comes it is usually follow
ed by a period of depression, during
I [LITTER TO MRS. FINKIIAM NO. 26,785]
"Dear Mrs. Pinkham—i have many,
... , . many thanks to give you for what your
ev and equally united in their oppo- Vegetable (0rap0und has done for me.
ition to Mr. Bryan i ^ftCr first confinement I was sick for
"Who are the men who stand at the nine years with prolapsus of the womb,
bead of this monstrouB_trust system? had pain in leftside, in small of back,
POLITICS, NOT M' KIN LEY.
It is alleged that President McKin-
ley and his backers are much worried
over the Cuban scandals because of the
effect they may have on politics.
Nothing is Baid about their being
worried over the lack of honesty and
tbe presence of a disgrace in Ameri-
can official conduct.
McKinley is a shrewd politician. He
assumes a virtue at times to secure the
vote of good men, but he alwavB looks
to the political vantage in assuming
any attitude.
That the Cuban scandals will do
him great political harm is evident.
Independent newspapers are dicsus-
sing this matter seriously, and the
Chicago Record, always deliberate
and thoughtful, takes occasion to
speak seriously as follows:
"The developments in the Cuban
postal scanda , which are growing
more serious and discreditable the
more the subject is probed, should
serve to put a stop to the cant that is
made to do service as argument by
some of the mjre hysterical champ-
ions of a colonial policy. The man-
agement of island possessions is a very
difficult problem, bat when this diffi-
culties have been pointed out they
have been met by the snug assertion
that the United States is great enough
and pure enough to make' a success of
whatever it may undertake, In the
Cuban postal defalcation we have
reached the natural results of tbe
policy which contents itself with a
self-satisfied announcement of the
purity of the intentions of the i ation,
while leaving the actual work of ad-
ministration to carpetbaggers who
owe their appointment to political in.
fluence.
Tbe Havana defalcation has ai
ready done much to bring us into dis
credit among the Cubans. Unless there
is a radical change of system in deal
ing with island dependencies other
scandals must inevitably follow. Con-
gress has already paved the way for
scandal in Porto Rico by providing for
the disposition of all franchises in the
island under a carpetbag regime. The
selection of American spoils politicians
to take part in the work of governing
newly acquired islands can bring but
one result.
"Although it is deeply humiliating,
it is well, perhaps, that the awakening
should come so Boon and that the
shock shou'd have been serious e ough
to exercise a sobering influence on
those who entered upon the colonial
policy so jauntily. Heieafter itshould
not be possible for advocates of the
new departure in the direction of colo-
nialism to wave aside all difficulties in
the way of its successful execution by
an appeal to public sentiment."
It will b observed that this com-
ment strikes directly atone of the pro-
foundly interesting issues of tie ap-
proaching presidential campaign. Im-
perialism is on trial, and the first
evidence for the defense has gonedi-
rectly against the caus; which M2Kin
ley is endeavoring to bolster up.
a great deal of headache, palpitation
' of heart and leucorrhoea. I felt so
| weak and tired that I could not do my
work. I became pregnant again and
took your Compound all through, and
which the canacitv of nroduction is unBWerTlnS McKinley Republican; now have a sweet baby girl. I never
, ! , i J- Pierpont Morgan, the head of tbe| before had such an easy time during
meyer. the bead of the sugar t ust, an
beyond the market power of consump
tion.
Consoldation is then restored to as
the remedy, and the manufacturers
are offered 'enormous sums for their
plaDts," and the trust makes its ap-
pearance
Why does not Carnegie illustrate
those facts with a citation of the fi-
nancial wrecks caustd by the Stand-
ard Oil company, the ideal trust of the
United States?
"The people may rest assured," con-
tinues Carreigie, 'that neither in one
article nor in another is it possible for
urally their allies, ebo«ld not redeem j any trust to exact exorbitant profit
Oklahoma from the Republican blight without thereby speedily undermin-
which has so long dominated it. , ing its own foundation."
coal trust, an unswerving McKinley
Republican; Andrew Carnegie, tbe
head of one Bteel trust, who raised 83,
000,000 of tbe McKinley campaign
fund-practically tbe whole list of
trust organizers and president's might
be printed and after each name the
words, 'an unswerving McKinley
Republican.'
"These men absolutely and open'y
control the president and his party in
and out of congress. Can there be a
doubt about that? These are the men
who mock the country with a propos-
ed anti-trust amendment to tbe con-
labor, and I feel it was due to Lydia
E. 1'inkham's Vegetable Compound. I
am now able to do my work and feel
better than I have for years. I cannot
thank you enough."—Mrs. Ed. Eh-
linukr. Dkvine. Tex.
Wonderfully Strengthened.
" I have been taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound, Blood
Purifier and Liver Pills and feel won-
derfully strengthened. Before using
your remedies I was in a terrible state;
felt like fainting every little while. I
thought I must surely die. But now,
thanks to your remedies, those feel-
ings are all gone."—Mrs. Emilie
stitution. They sit in their clubs Schneider, 1244 Helen Ave., Detboit
night after night openly defending Micii. ® •
Thk Cuban postal scandal, according
to official information, has not yet
reached it< autumn
Onk lone highwaymau held up three
tages in one day in California last
week, and the James boys are not once
mentioned in tbe dispatch.
Our government is not only great
as a nation of people, but is great in
tbe ability of outstripping all others
in the swindles it suffers at the hands
of iis trusted agents.
The New Jersey Democratic state
convention to elect its national dele-
gates did not instruct thera, but en-
dorsed the Democratic doctrine of bi-
metallism in strong resolutions.
The English cabinet ministers ate-
jubilant in their approval of the con-
duct of Consul Hay Bon of the Ameri-
can secretary of 6tate. at Pretoria.
And why should they not be?
THE If HEAT CROP.
The wheet harvest is in full blaBt in
Kay county, and a tremendous yield
is assured. What is said of the wheat
crop in that county may be said of
the whole wheat belt in the territory.
The yield per acre will undoubtedly
be greater than that of any year stnee
the opening of tbe territory to settle
ment in 1889. Even in those locali
ties where the crop has generally
been light the yield this year far ex-
ceeds the expectations and is better
than ever before.
HE HILL NEVER ABANDON IT.
Its all moonshine about any ele-
ments of the national Democracy find-
ing fault with W. J. Byyan on his ad-
herence to the doctrines enunciated
in the Chicago platform of 1896. Even
the former Democrate who were lead
eff aftsr the gold calf in that year
honor and respect him for [the stand
which he ha? all along taken upon the
money question. The mere fact that
from all human foresight the gold
standard is unalterably fixed upon
this conntry for the next four years,
furnishes no argument why he shou'd
abandon a great national question
which he believes is right and for the
bast interest and happiness of the
American people. For Bryan to aban-
don bimetallism in tlie slightest de-
gree from that enunciated in Chicago
platform would be to create a national
distrust in 'his utterances and the
principles to which he has Idevoted
his life and labors. The go'd stand-
ard may be irrevocably fixed upon the
country for the next four years, but
that fact offers no argument for the
sidetracking of a great national issue,
and Mr. Bryan will never consent to
its abandonment.
Through the aid and countenance
given by the federal administration,
England has announced her purpose
not to leave a shade of independence
of the Boer republic standirg.
The Republican split in this terri'
tory continues getting wider and wid-
er, and the removal by Gov. ISarnes of
L. J. Gunn, of El Reno, from the
board of regents of the normal school
and tbe appointment of John B. Share
of Alva, only tends to intensify the
breach.
There is no doubt of the fact that
when all the returns of the Osage In-
dian election are in they will verify
the prediction that the progressive
party will be found to be in complete
control of the national convention
which meets Bt Pawhuska on June
18th.
ROOSEVELT THEIR LAST AND ONLY
HOPE.
Senator Foraker has been side-
tracked and Roosevelt will nominate
McKinley at Philadelphia, Foraker be-
ing allowed to second the nomination.
This is a eute dodge of Hanna and
NcKinley to force the governor of New
York on the ticket as vice president.
They are scared up about New York,
but with Roosevelt on the ticket and
the $30,000,000 slush squeezed from
the trusts, they hope to keep the Em-
pire State in the Republican column
inJNovember.
Roosevelt has refused and refuses
now, to bite at the bait, but at a con-
ference of Mark Hanna leaders in
Washington last week it was decided
that the case was desperate in the ex-
treme and that by a coup of this kind
he cou'd be forced upon the ticket,,
willingly or unwillingly.
On this point the Washington cor-
respondent of the Kansas City Journal
says;
"It should surprise no one, therefore
—as the cards are stacked now—to see
the Philadelphia convention, after a
few complimentary votes, stampeded
to the New York governor, and Roose-
velt nominated for vice-president by
acclamation.
"Neither Roosevelt nor 'any other
Republican with an eye to his future
would dare decline under those cir-
cumstances."
State of Ohio, Citt of Toledo, )
Lucas Cotkty. f 8
Frank J. Ch nney makes oath that
he is the senior partner of the firm
of F. J. Dhkkney & Co., doing busi-
ness in the city of Toledo, County and:
State aforesaid, and that said firm will
pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL-
LARS for each and every case of Ca-
tarrh that cannot be cured by ths use
of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Chenney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 0th day of De-
cember, A D., 1896.
j "T^rr I A. W. Gleason,
( \ Notary Public.
HallCatarJh cure is taken intern
ally and acts directly on tbe blood
and mucous surfaces of the system-
Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pilis are the best.
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Niblack, Leslie G. Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 7, 1900, newspaper, June 7, 1900; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc121471/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.