The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1894 Page: 1 of 4
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THE CHANDLER PUBLICIST
"■New occasions leach new duties; time makes ancient good uncouth; He >r.ust upward still and onward w!:o would keep abreast of truth."
VOLUME 1.
CHANDLER, OKLAHOMA TERRITORY, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1894.
NUMBER 11.
icist
Kntered at the postotflce tit Chandler.
Oklahoma Territory, us second class mat-
ter June 15 1804
"NY. II French Editor and Mauager
Mrs. V French \gbociate Editor
SUBSCRIPTION HATES
Bix Month* .. ... ,f
Three Months 2
COUNTY DIRECTOR*
IHstrict Judge Fruuk Dale
Probate ludge \Y. LI. Mason
County Attorney D. N. Frazier
County Clerk J. 11. Underwood
County Treasurer D. W. I lain
Register of Dtfeds G. U. Ni black
County Superintendent. M. I). Losey
County Surveyor N. McKimmey
pup I. of Health -l)r. .1. B. Haggard
Hheriff 0. F. Parker
Coroner C. H. Perswell
Commissioners..,
C. A. Kelso, Ch'm.
Jacob A in berg,
llcuoni Ken.
CITY DIRECTORY
Justice of the Peace 8. A. Cordell
M a rsh al Thomas (i arne r
Clerk aud Assessor L. 11. Wray
Treasurer
First ward
Hecond ward
Third ward
Fourth ward
Fifth ward
Eugene Deacon
tiiu8tee8.
G. \V. Schlegel
D. li. Owens
F. W. Hash
....Bennett Creech
J F. Ayars
LODGE DIRECTORY
A. <>. U. AV
Chandler Lodge No. 10 Meetings
lirst ami third Thursdays of each month
ut llellron'c Hall.
W li. Harvey, M. W.
Eugene Deacon, Recorder.
A. F. Si A. M.
Chandler Lodge No 10 meets the first
aud third Saturday evenings of each
mouth at Heffron's Hall
J F. lyars, W. M.
1) N Frazier, Secretary.
I. 0. O. F
Chandler Lodge No. 9 meets at HefT
roll's Hall every Monday at.8 o'clock
p. in 9 B, J I. .lone?. N. B.
A. D. Wright, Sec.
"WOMAN' S RELIEF CORPS No. 0,
* O. A. It.
\Y. 11. C. No. (i meets every alternate
Friday at 2 p.m. Visiting members cor
dially invited.
Mrs Matrgie Ashton, Pres.
Mrs. Alice \Y liaah. Sec.
Populist Central Committee.
Chairman
Secretary
Treasurer
Librarian
Iowa Township
Cimarron Township..
Osage Township
Pawnee Township....
Pouca Township
Keokuk Township-..
Fox Township ...
Chandler Township—
Otoe Township
Tohee'Township
Choctaw Township ..
Seiiiiu'olc Township..,
Creek Township
\ E Stutsman
... W 1 < 1 >iamond
S. I . Nation
...w...George Smith
C. A. Kelso
I. W. McLain
.. T T. Bolton
...Matthew Hoyt
E. Brown
Andrew Bower
S. \\\ Pro volt
M. I >. Tenney
11 Straughen
- C. C. Smith
W C \'iblack
1. W 1 vens
• ••• I I>. (-irimes
Pooplo's Party County Convention.
The county central committee met in
Chandler June 29 and decided to change
the time for holding the county couven
tiou for nominating county otlicers to
Thursday, August 9. 1804. The town
ship chairman of each township is in
structed to call the township caucus to
elect delegates on Tuesday. August 7. at
'■i o'clock p. m. Delegates are appor
tioned to the various townships as fol
lows:
Tp.
17 ...
Hi
17
Del
4 14 .
11.
4 13 .
i; 13 .
K.
. 6
. 0 ...
Del.
4 12.
4 13 5
4 12 ti
• ••.4 Chandler ('itv
W. J). Dl.\ mom),
Secretary county central eommittn
'I iie state officials of Kansas are plan-
ning a grand reception for Governor
VVaite when he shall visit Topeka
1 uly 1 ~' ______
Foo-iiohn Fusston is ut last retired
to private life by the house elections
committee and II L Moore will un
doubtedly take his seal, after a delay of
two years, as congressman from the sec.
ud Kans is district.
Hon F. AY. Fracius, of Clyde, who
was a candidate for lieutenant governor
with Moonlight in 1880 on the demo-
cratic ticket, has declared for the popu-
list state ticket and will have stiong in-
fluence with the German vote of Kansas.
Fhom the way the populists are
organizing in tne eastern states, it
begins to look as though Wall street will
have to work if she maintains her grasp
upon the masses in the East. New
Hampshire is the latest to wheel into
liue with a populist state ticket.
In Germany you can ride four miles
for one cent on the government-owned
railways Yet wages are 120 percent
higher than when the private corpora
tions owned them, aud during the last
ten years the net profits have increased
41 per cent. Last year the roads paid
the government a net profit of $25,000,-
000. Not bad, for the practical working
of a visionary scheme, is it V
The latest trust is the cracker trust.
Crackers have gone up li cents a pound
since the combination was made, al-
though wheat is lower. If the basis
ami cause of all the monopolies that now
rob the people—our present system of
private management of railroads—is not
soon remodeled, till business will, before
long, be absorbed by monopolies and free
competition be entirely destroyed.
Since populists gained control I am
just a little ashamed of niy state. Win n
strangers ask me where 1 mn from, 1
it void the question mid say 1 am from
I \ M- : i ■ ■ ■
governor of Kansas.
Uks r assured, deah boy, t'.iat Kansas
is uo less ashamed of you and will make
you equally ashamed of yourself before
snow Uies
Kansas City Journal The man who
says our silver dollar, which buys a dol-
lar's worth of any commodity upon the
market, is "only a 4G cent dollar," is a
100-per-cont ass.
Ottawa Journal Dick Blue says it is
worth only 40 cents. Morrill says the
same, and yet, you cowardly, dough-
faced wretch, because they are on the
republican ticket you support them and
advise Kansas voters t<> vote for them.
When the editor of the Kansas City
Journal was made, there was u waste of
good iuud.
The sugar trust was created seven
years ago witli a capital of $9,000,000.
It was immediately capitalized at
000,000—90 per cent water. In the seven
years since its formation the trust has
paid dividends amounting to $35,000,000,
nearly four times the capital invested.
The year after this trust was formed the
republicans granted it a subsidy and shut
out foreign competition by an excessive
tariff. Now the democrats give this gi
ant monopoly a bonus of $34,000,000.
Voters, do you see any choice between
the two old parties?
Constitutional Reforms
From the Deliver News.
When the people's party is falsified
by charging it with anarchical tenden-
cies, let it be remembered that the organ
izatiou had its origin with the agricul-
tural class aud that its controlling
strength is derived from tillers of the
soil. No stronger guarantee, could possi
bly exist that the party stands above
everything else for the stability of gov-
ernment and the conservation of those
principles of right and justice which
have successfully passed the ordeal of
conscience and the test of experience.
The farmers and planters of the
United States constitute t >e sheet anchor
of American civilization. They are
bound to conservi'tsm and the mainte-
nance of individual ml property rights
by the strongest ties of self-interest
but their conservatism is n< t the mis
nomer now in vogue, when the purpose
is to justify industrial piracy and per
pctuatc economic wrong their conserva
tisni does not eliminate from the term
the idea of human development and the
application of the eternal principles of
equity to human affairs
It is the mission of the people s party
to effect certain changes ii. our economic
methods, through the machinery of gov
eminent, that if not wrought peaceful!)
will inevitably come l>\ v iolence. The
anarchist wars on the idea of any gov
eminent; the people s party looks to gov-
ernment for redress aud as the only
guarantee of social rights aud civil
liberty.
The fact that the farmers and planters
of our country were mainly instrumental
in organizing the peoples party, and
that as a rule they look to it as the
agency for industrial relief, should in it
self invite the most serious attention of
thoughtful people to its avowed objects
and the necessity of a political organiza
tion to effect them
The people party charges the exis
tence of a well defined combination of
money owners which, through the per
version of legislation, has secured the
mastery of the industries of the world
that it lias for more than twenty years,
tinder color of law, been engaged in cap
luring the earnings of industry andst z
ing tne possessions of the t« iIinL.r mil
lions, with the result of such coucentra
tion of Wealth in a few hands as was
never previously conceived in the annals
of mankind, that this conspiracy of
wealth has already blasted agriculture as
a remunerative calling that should give
reasonable returns on labor and capital
invested; that its process of decimating
the interests of wage earners has been
retarded by the protective force of labor
unionism, but that the rights of labor
are menaced by this i "inbinatiou of < api
tal and the laborer is doomed to want
and degradation unless popular govern
jneut is substituted foi oligarchical dom
ination in mil industrial affairs that tin
' ' 'A .i ' - .
earners produce, that during the last dec
ade trebled the private indebtedness <>f
our country and transformed ownership
iuto landlordism by wl olesale, having
undermined agricultural prosperity and
juished :i war of extermination airainst
labor unionism, is now <n mured in
stamping out t
of the nation
ami conducted
The forces
of those now t
seek other means of living or joiu the
army of unemployed. The fraction of
population that owns the great bulk of
the wealth, having secured the power to
control production aud dictate wholesale
prices, is now diligently and insidiously
employed in absorbing the retail trade.
If the springs of industry are to remain
under the control of conspiring avarice,
the individual retail dealer is as certain
ly doomed as is the producer or wage
worker of any calling, lie will be
crushed under the juggernaut wheels of
industrial capitalization, a term now in
use to express the most dangerous form
of business monopoly
The existence of the people's party is
a protest against the monstrous idea that
economic conditions which leave the
forces of production at the mercy of non
producers and give a comparatively few
persons the power to seize the sum of all
wealth, by confiscating the property of
industry, can be right or should endure
It demands equity for the producers of
wealth, and the instinct of self--preserva-
tion should turn all who live by their la-
bor. whether on the farm or elsewhere,
to its ranks as ♦ho only agency through
which relief can be reasonably hoped for.
Cause of Falling Prices.
From the Ottawa Journal.
A shrinkage in the volume of money
in the channels of commerce is the one
great cause of falling prices and finan-
cial distress.
AYe might go far back in history to es
tablish the correctness of the assertion,
but that is unnecessary. We might go
back to the year 1800 and state from
official authority the amount of the cir
culating medium at that time (only pa-
per). Should we do this, the statement
would be disputed by sonic; hence, we
will begin with the United States treas-
urer's report, 1881;
1881.
Page 85 Stock of all kinds
of money in the United
States October, 1H81 $1,482,518,38?
distribution.
Page 89: Specie in U 8.
treasury October, 1881... 209,399,311
Page 90: Paper in U. S.
treasury October, 1881... 43,400,852
Total $312,800,173
Spofford's statistics, volume 1889—
Page 91 Deposits in na-
tional banks. $1,083,100.
000. average 20 per cent
reserve locked up $210,620,000
Tribune Almanac statistics, vol. 1890—
State and territorial bank
ing institutions in the IJ.
s. October, 1881, deposits,
$2,223,000; a uniform 25
per cent reserve locked
up and out of circulation
equals $530,750,000
RECAPITULATION.
October, 1881, total stock
of money $1,482,518,887
October, 1881, in the I'. S
treasury $ 312,800,173
October, 1881, national
bank reserves
October, 1881, state bank
218,020.000
Total out of circulation $1,000,230,173
Amount in the channels of
trade 422.288,214
Total - $1,482,518,878
United States agricultural statistical re
ports, 1893. page 477. Wheat, average
price per bushel. 1881, $1.19.20. The
supply of wheat, home demands for food,
after deducting from total crop of issi
for seed . and export, equaled ii 59-00
bushels per capita of the population.
1893.
Total stock of money in the
I nited states October,
1893 (see I S. treasurer's
report, page S7) $2,404,274 ?{t0
DISTRIBUTION.
Page 115 October, 1893, in
the U. s. treasury $ 702,334,878
Page 341 National bank
deposits, all kinds. < >cto
ber 1893, $2,102,280.000,
an average 20 per cent
reserve 432,450,000
Page •!It State and terri-
torial banks and banking
institutions, deposits, $ I, •
332.122,000; 2") per cent
average reserve 1,083,030,500
October 31. 1893, total
money out of circulation.$2,217.*21,378
Ocrober 31, 1893, total
money in channels of
commerce 186.453,418
Total
12,404.274,79
COMPARISON.
Money in channels of com
merce, October, lssl $ 422,288,214
Money in channels of coin
merce. October, is93 186.453,418
Decrease of money in the channels of
commerce in 12 years, $235,834,790.
equaling u decrease in the channels of
trade of 55 85-100 per cent
Wheat for home ' food" consumption,
1898, 3 34 60 bushels per capita.
Value per bushel <U. 8. department of
agriculture) 53 4 5 cents per bushel.
Decrease in quantity of wheat for
food per capita, 1893 compared with
1881. equals 10 2 5 per cent Decrease
in price. 1*93 compared with 18*1, 54
95-100 per cent Decrease in money in
chaunels of commerce, 1893 compared
witti 1881, 55 85 100 per cent
By the law of supply and demand, it
will be seen that wheat in 1893 should
have been worth 10 2-5 per cent more
than in 1**1. or *1.32 5 per bushel, In-
stead of 53 4-5 .-nts, as per I nited
>'ates reports, a loss to the farmer on
each bushel of 73 .' 5 cents
Kansas Comraom i The currency ma
e very honest, but somehow the grea
ulk of it has tound its way Into tin
ockets of the most dishonest set of ras
• ret at
int.
at present unde
The
planters of the Sandwicl
I Islands have now complete control oi
Ml"' constitution il convention and tin
1 government of the islands
WHEELS.
They Are Never Hoard la m TfrtUhj
City of Mexic o.
"In the city of Catorce, In Mexico,
the sound of carriage wheels never
has been heard," said a traveler, late-
ly "The city is located in the moun-
tains eight miles from the railroad
station. In order to reach it an ex-
tremely perilous ride up the moun-
tains must be made. For that reason
but few foreign people have ever vis-
ited the town. As a result, at Catorce
is found the Mexican people in all
their primitive purity. They know
but little of the outside world. Its
inhabitants are engaged in silver
mining. Thousands of dollars of bul-
lion is secured yearly. Miles of tun-
nels extend in all directions, and
thousands of dollars have been ex-
pended on the mines.
"The streets of Catorce run up and
down the mountains often at an angle
of forty-live degrees, making the use
of wheeled vehicles impossible. All
transportation is done by the borros
or by the C&rgedores, who are able to
carry great weights on their backs
suspended by bands from around their
foreheads. With 300 pounds on their
backs these men will move along ou a
trot. The only level spot of ground
in Catorce is its plu/.a, which is very
beautiful, as also Is its cathedral,
which is richly decorated with silver
and preeious stones. Catorce, which
is the Spanish word meaning fountain,
got its name, so the legend runs, from
fourteen bandits who discovered the
rich deposits of silver iu 1780, and at
once made it their headquarters. It
is indeed a wonderful town, fabulously
rich, grand in scenery, aud interesting
by reason of the life and habits of its
people.
AN ENGLISH PARTY WHIP.
One of the Quoer Salaried PonltlouH lu
the House of ConimoiiH.
Reverting to the duties of a whip
and patronage secretary, in English
politics, it is an astonishing fact 1 lat
gentlemen of birth and social posi on
can be found to fill the post. ho
junior whip's duties are not only oner-
ous, but irksome. They sit or stand
in the outer lobby of the house from
3:30 to 18:30 at night and they ask
every member who passes where ho
is going, whether he is paired, and
when he will be back. If he is not
paired they have either to find a pair
for him or to prevent him from pass-
ing out by coaxing or threats, the
former for preference. When their
party is in these gentlemen have to
at tend to their office from 12 to a.
Their hours of duty are therefore
from 11 a. m. to 12 p. m., or thirteen
hours, with intervals for lunch and
dinner, and this they do foV £1,000 a
year. When their party is out they
do it, minus their otlice work, for
nothing.
In addition to keeping an eye on
his juniors, the chief whip, who has
£>',000 a year, deals with the members
on their more touchy side. It is ho
who practically distributes ribbons
and titles and sees that cards of in-
vitation are sent to this man and that
—that no one is given undue prefer
ence—a delicate duty which requires
much tact and skill.
I)ldii ♦ Dare to Dim liurgc Mary Auu,
Hut I .a Id n Deep riot.
The young husband was somewhat
surprised when hia wife came into the
ofliee. She opened the conversation
at once.
"I want enough money to go out of
town for a few days, she said, 'and
you will have to take your meals down
town for a few days.'1
"Why, what does this mean? '
"It means just this. I got a messen-
ger boy to come to the house for Mary
Ann to tell her that she was wanted
at her aunt's, and as soon as she g >t
around the corner I shut up the house
and locked it and ran away. When
she comes hack she won't find any one
there We don't owe ber anything so
it's all right, and 1 wanted to dis-
charge her. but you know I never
would dare to tell her to go. ami I
knew you wouldn't dare. and don't
you think your little wife knows
pretty well how to manage? Say ye-,
now, or I'll break down and cry right
here in the office."
ItOktn
for
School principals in I. ston arc not
much troubled by truancy in their
schools. Every morning directly
after the opening of the school, every
principal makes out a list of the
names and addresses of the pupils
who are absent without known cause
and hands it to the policeman on the
beat. It then becpines the business
of this functionary to call at the ad-
dresses given and ascertain the cause
of absence. Hy this system unex-
cused absences are very few. No
youngster Is going to dodge his arith-
metic and geograph . when he knows
perfectly well that before dinner time
a big policeman will call at hi fathei s
house to know why is not at Med.
The l ahulou* Cockatrlc*.
The cockatrice, like the a
wn> one of the fabled lumi
of antiquity. Its v. v look va
to life. It breathed tire, and >n
account could on; . live In deser
gions, where there was no dangi
its tiery exhalations consuming \
tation. Travelers who were fore,
cross a desort formerly took
them h cock erw, _r
believed, would k . all the at
in hearing.
fatal
that
I'rerautlooa AtftU t Xnari hUm.
before admitting trange.rs to tin - .1
n •
rope. Iu Rome only forty eight iu n
arc admitted ut an om tim. and iu
England ic ?i. . i- or
pare i ver a. o.scd to eUtei the
A Deal l.uko of Kirn.
The greatest natural wonder of
Hawaii, if not in the entire world, is
l.ako l>ana. or Dana lake, a body of
molten lava ten miles in circumfer-
ence. To the sightseer the surface
of this wonderful lake appears as If
it woj'o a soa of rod hot water dash-
ing again >t the clitts which surround
it on ail sides to a height averaging
100 foot ,1. J. Williams of Hono-
lulu, who probably knows more about
the volcanic condition of the Island
than any other living man. says that
"this rushing, restless, heaving lake
of boiling fire never remains silent
or calm for a single instant'1
NEW GROCERY STORE.
Motlforto Building. North Manvel AVo , bot 7th and 8th Sts
A First Class Stock of Groceries And
Provisions.
K very thing goel at the lowest possible prices,
James Brownlee Chandler Oklahoma
The color lied his bright young
face. There was a terrible, implie-
able look in his oyes.
'•No,'' he harshly insisted, "you
can nover be a sister to mo."
Sho frownod angrily.
"Kir,11 sho oxclaimod, "ox plain
yourself."
Ho lavghed a hollow eachination.
••If," he presently observed, "my
father in his diary speaks truly, you
have already choson to bo ray aunt "
She shrieked as tho past curae
rushing upou her like a tlood.—
Mercury.
The Coffee Wum Forthcoming.
"Lady, could you give a poor man
a cup of colTee?"
Mrs. Nuwifo No, breakfast is all
over.
"Well, I'll say this, that I've
tramped lor two yoars and Its tho
first place that I've -moiled gonuino,
first-class colToe yet"
"Nover mind your foot; they don't
look muddy. Just sit down hero at
tho table Do you take croam and
sugar?"- Chicago Inter-Ocean.
< heap Tlilntlilf>tf.
I'ersons who sow a groat deal often
sutler from soreness in tho thimble
linger. Silver or plated thimbles
are tho best and next to those a !
lightly burnishod steel thimble I
should be used. Swelling of tho
finger and very serious inllammatiou
are often causod by cnoap thimbles.
Pooplo's Party Omaha Platform
We declare. First—That the union of
the labor forces of the I nited States Ibis
day consummated, shall be permanent
and perpetual. May its spirit enter into
all hearts for the salvation of the repub-
lic and the uplifting of mankind.
Second—Wealth belongs to him who
creates it and every dollar taken from
industry without an equivalent is rob
bery If any will not work, neither
shall he eat." The interests of rural and
civic labor are the same; their enemies
are idenlicul
Third —We believe that the time has
come when the railroad corporations
must cither own the people or the pc ple
must own the railroads, and should the
government enter upon the w >rk of own
ing and managing any or all railroads,
we would favor an amendment to the
constitution by which all persons en
Lruged in the government servh e shall be
•placed under a civil service regulation of
the most ligid character. so as
to prevent the increase of the power of
the national administration by the use of
such additional government employes
We demand a national currency,
safe, sound and flexible, issued hy the
general government only, a full legal
tender for all debts, public and private,
*ind that without the use M banking cor
porations a just equitable and elllcieut
means of distribution direct to the pco
pie at a tax not to exceed two per ce, t
per annum be provided, as set forth in
the sub-treasury plan of the farmers' al
liancc, or some better system; also by
payments in discharge of its obligation-
for publicum pro veincnts
We demand free and unlimited coin-c-e
of silver and gold at the present legal
ratio of 10 to l
biting medium be speedily increased to
not less thtm $.">0 pei capita
We demand a gfaduated income tax
We believe that the money of the
country should b« I - pt as much as pos
siM • in tt.e hands of the people and
hence we demand that all state and mi
tional revenue shall be limited to the
necessaiy expenses of the government
economically and lrtnestly administered
We ih maud that postal savin •• banks
be established by the government for the
safe deposit (if the earnings of the peo
pie and to .'reilitatc exchange.
Transportation Ix ing a mean- of ex
cliangt and a public neecssit;. the gov
eminent should own and operate the
railroads in tin inten st <•! tin people
Tie- telegraph and telephone, like the
postoftlce system, being a necessity for
transmission of news, should be owned
and operated by the government in the
inter. -M of the people
The land, inelud.ng all the natural
resources of wealth is the heritage of all
t lie people and should not be un nopo
li/ed for spce dative purposes, and allen
owtn 'slip of laud -In-ultl be prohibited
\d land now held by railroads and
other coi point ion in < x< • *s of their act
mil needs and all lands now owned b
aliens should be reclaimed by the govern
nicut and held for actual settlers only.
~ A. D. WRIGHT.-#-
DRUG, BOOK AND NEWS
DEPOT
"Wall 3Pa.3pei',
Paints, Oils, Glass, School Supplies, Fancy and Toilet Articles Etc. Ftc,
PRESCRIPTIONS AND RECEIPTS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED
Post Office Building. Chandler, Ok.
Mir MinuL,
LOG-S SAWED ON ORDERS NATIV3
LUMBER KEPT ON HAND.
Also (iklsr MILL, t'orn Meal and Hraham bMour for sale, aud ground 10 ordei
Southwest corner of Chandler Towusite.
I). R. OWENS, Proprietor,
ELKHART GARiRiiCE in I'ii..
$11.CO
No.Kurro* Harness.
lor *1 >t .-
lil«% B Nultl I
Having ti-"in tlio denl'
Olile.tan.l l.urgr-l i . n 'vi* In. i
It'll m.'IIIiik Volilclu* n.-ni I icih wny ►
wan pr|\ iii'ni' in e.Tftin.iiH iHjfi'rti uny mone>
pill.I. Wf |, ,y fri-W'tll I -II -. MV t ,
I I * Will I iMif I i ' vra. • W i. y IV ii'i. . |I
• #.« 11 >1 order fr \ Writ • >. ur i.-a '
IFR c! dMinna) i
!<•> init froe. w.j
$75
v- ^ . -
I • I *<'
037.GO, Ftirotonr..£ CO
to sioo. Form Wa&ona, V-'om
Ik Wagons,Deliver-) Wacom
— * •
$43.00 5**.
No. J, 1 arm Wtufou,
* FI.V M'TX n„hllrt Blcj,i,.
H perri'iit. oli for .n.lt ulOi < rd«-r. M«-ud lo. In piU'lltllfUii III'- \« . M .'SH
■lamps to |,u) poMuirc un I l'i |.ug« <'utiil<>iruc. mIi-i-i i : intr, dn i> l-rKihira.
Address W.B.PRATT, Pec'y, ELKHART, IND.
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TiJI£ I H■ 111 IS NOW ON.
ST ,:■?>«,. VVA'v
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Mountain
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Cnrtrxm /1 th
tvtry
rhu Loading Daily Populist Pupor,
POLAND - CHINAS.
[Dandy Jim, Jr., M93 8.1
Property of DR. P. A. PEARSON,
KINSLEY, KANSAS.
6TOCK FOR SALE.
\ Paper for the iJissatished ( lowd
"Free coinage is a light for commer-
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ress. prosp lily, freedom and happiness
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I | ,
tions prevented for tin consideration of
mankim.-
"W'hat man can love his country when
his country lets him starve
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NOT It I.
Laud Otlice at Oklahoma < it v < T
lllln 7, 181)1
t ompbiint liavinir I•« • n <nt« n d at this
Ofliee !,\- Frank «• < hiiiidb > ayainst John
No 31 lif dan ,| March ' i ■••.* upon iln
west half "f tin imrthwist qiMinrof
section •-'* in t«Avnshi|i . '■ n i'I. «.I ran-<
5 en«t of I he Iinliaii m< n Line*.In
i
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French, W. H. The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1894, newspaper, July 6, 1894; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc147143/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.