The El Reno Democrat. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1894 Page: 3 of 8
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• -:1
0-
A UNIQUE KINGFISHER
Tha Only One of the Species Known
to Ornithologists.
A registered parcel, bearing sev-
eral kinds of stamps so curious as to
attract the attention of tlie post-
master, arrived at Sandusky, O.,
says the Register of that towu, re-
cently addressed to Prof. Moseley.
It contained a specimen which has
traveled far enough at. one time and
another to have gone quite around
the world. Rut its chief interest
lies in the fact that no person or in-
stitution in the world has another
specimen of the same kind. It is a
beautiful kingfisher which was shot
by Prof. Moseley in the island of
Negres, Philippines, one thousand
miles southeast of China. It is not
as larg"1 as our American kingfisher,
but has a greater variety of colors,
the breast being butt' and whita
with bai-9 of black, and the back
••PHENOMENON" EXPLAINED.
Why III** 11.• tik* Have m Plethora of t'*«h
While Time* Kemaiii llnrd.
There is a glut of gold in the Hank
of Kngland. That institution holds no
leas than $41,000,000 more of the metal
than it needs; and its governors would
be glad to be rid of at least *10.000,000
of this surplus. Will the silver people
be kind enough to explain the phe-
nomenon. occurring- simultaneously
with their agitation for billions more
of silver in the world's money supply?
—Chattanooga Times.
To which the Memphis Commercial
replies that it is the easiest matter in
the world to explain the phenomenon
of gold banking up in the money cen-
ters in times of depression and when
there is a general complaint of the
scarcity of money. While superficially
it may seem to be strange and anoma-
lous that money should be idle when it
is in great demand, yet really it is the
most natural thing in the world when
i the financial stringency is caused by
a contracting currency and falling
prices. ••Demand." in the economic
green, blue, buff, black and brown, sense, is something more than desire:
arranged in such an intricate pat 1 something more than want. A million
7, . « 11 . ... , , beggars staring liungrilv at a bakers
tern that a full description would. wil, u<>1 .liming his supply of
occupy a column. It was shot at, | brpart by a sin?u, ,„af imp of tin- most
dusk from a bamboo on the bank of a j notorious and most visible effe.-ts of
little stream about a mile from thft j hard times is the accumulation of iui-
ocean. It was alone and none lika sold (foo<ls in the hands of merchants
tt was seen during the remainder of ! ®iml
the expedition, nor did Bourne and
Worcester, who have since spent
two years collecting in the islands,
obtain a specimen.
Prof. Steers, the lender of the
first expedition, on arriving in this
country and comparing the speci- j
men with other kingfishers from !
the East Indies and the descriptions j
In works on ornithology, decided it i
to be a new species and named it J
"Halcyon moseleyi." But Prof. j
Moseley, not feeling sure that it was
really distinct from other species of I
Halcyon already known, took it to
the British museum, which contains j
the largest collection of birds in the
world. The chief ornithologist ot
this mus«um, Mr. R. B. Sharpe, has
made a special study of the kingfish-
ers and is the author of a book de-
voted to thern, and illustrated with
colored plates. Mr. Sharpe pro-
nounced the bird distinct from any
previously described, and tried to
induce Mr. Moseley to let the Brit-
ish museum have it, offering liberal
exchange. Not succeeding in this, he
obtained consent to keep it long |
enough to have an engraving made
of it. After this it was in some way
lost, until a few weeks ago one of
the ornithologists of the museum, in
overhauling some cases, ran acro3s
it and sent it on. It will be kept at
the high school building, and San-
dusky may well be proud of having a
bird which is unique in the true
sense of the word.
THE DISMAL SWAMP.
twppn yohl and silver coins, or that it
wonlil send '1111 out of the country, if
at all. am faster than it would he dis-
placed by silver. The five or ^.x mil
linns of gold with which the I nited
States is credited can only l e displaced
by a money equivalent: otherwise we
woultl not have our distributive share
of the world's money and the conse-
quence would be such a fall in prices
that gold would be sent here to buy
commodities, instead of being drawn
away.
It in
Inhabitants of the Place and Its
Chances of Becoming Rec'aimed.
The fauna of the Dismal swamp is
peculiar, says the Washington Post.
The trees being mostly iuniper, c.y-
prcss and black gum, there are few
which bear nuts, and so there
are not many tree! squirrels. Of
course, rodents of species which live
underground are absent. Bears arc ,
very abundant, and hundreds of
them are killed every year within J
the limits of the great morass. I
There are considerable numbers of
horned cattle—the progeny of indi- j
viduals which have escaped from do- j
uiestie herds. They are mostly ;
small and black. They are extreme-
ly wild, and when hunted are often
dangerous to the sportsman Com- j
bats between the bulls and the bears
are said to be frequent. Them 'hod
adopted by the bear in these fights
Is to spring upon the back of the
bull's neck and rend the muscles
which support the head, thus render-
ing the horns harmless. The cattle
are occasionally enticed out into the
cultivated fields bv offerings of salt
and led to join civilized herds.
During the old slave days a con-
siderable part of the Dismal swamp
was drained by ditch s. These were
dug wherever they happened to ha
wauted, and without any general
system. If the same amount of la-
bor had been devol .1 to one com-
prehensive scheme eo\ ring the en-
tire region, it would have sufficed to
redeem the whole of the swamp to
agriculture. Doubtless this will be
accomplished eventually. It is reck-
oned that the achievement would
render an area available for tillage
which would produce sixteen million
dollars of value per annum. The re-
claimed land yields from eighty to
one hundred bushels of shelled corn
per acre. It is enormously rich, the
soil being an accumulation of veg-
etable matter deposited through
centuries on centuries. Whereas in
an ordinary forest the products of
decay are steadily absorbed by the
atmosphere and carried away, in a
swamp they are retained.
Potatoes with Their Jackets.
An English scientist, after care-
ful experiments, finds that when po-
tatoes are cooked without removing
the skins they lose only three per
cent, of nutritive quality through
extraction of tha juice. When the
skins are removed before boiling the
loss was fourteen per cent., which
makes the process of cooking the po-
tatoes without their jackets an ex-
ceedingly wasteful one.
manufacturers. In other words,
there is a surplus of goods in the stores
ami a scarcity of goods among the peo-
ple. The Commercial asks its contem-
porary. to employ its own words, to be
kind enough to explain this phenome-
non of a great surplus of food and
clothing accumulating in the stores
simulaneously with the general com
plaint on the part of the people that
they find it difficult to procure a suf-
ficiency of either? Certainly the mer-
chants could say that they have more
of the goods than they ran use, just as
the Hank of Knglaml "has more of the
metal than it can use:" anil they would
be ju.'ft as '*glad to he rid of tho
surplus." Hut would anybody be
justified in saying that the complaints
of the people are all bosh because of
the fact that the stores liave more goods
than they know what to do with? The
fact is that there is a surplus in the
stores simply because the people are
not able to buy. It is a surplus not as
compared with the wants of tho people,
but as compared with their ability to
satisfy those wants. And it is even so
with the accumulation of money in the
great money centers. With a surplus
in their vaults that they would be.
'•glad to he rid of" thousands are turned
away from the banks empty-handed
every day. It is easy enough to say
thai any man may borrow money if he
offers good security. But what is good
security in good times may he utterly
worthless in hard times. W hen money
is contracting and prices falling the
number of good set*i rities grows smaller
every year. Kvery year sees a steady
diminution in the volume of collateral
that will command money in bank.
Hence we see such statements as
this, quoted from the report of
the money market: "The supply of
money is abundant with banks, and
first-class loans are in demand. Kates,
according to the character of the paper,
vary from •' to s per cent." The sup-
ply of money in the banks i>. ahnndaut.
because nothing but first-class loans
are in demand, and these are exceed-
ingly scarce. They are scarce because
of the long process of eont <-action, fall-
ing priecs and diminishing profits,
which has steadily destroyed credit
and thinned out the number of first-
class loans." The remedy is t. stop
the process of cont raeti.Mi. check the
downward tendency t prices, rehabili-
tate credit, increase the volume of good
securities and thus relieve the banks of
the surplus that gluts their va.ilts and
supply the many thousands of men and
industries that now sock their favors in
vain.
(•needed that if. under free
coinage, our supply of money should in
time become greater than necessary to
meet the requirements « f an increas-
ing population, the tendency would be
for silver to displace gold. \N hetheror
not the volume of the circulating me-
dium would under unrestricted mint-
age increase faster than required for
the development of a country like the
United States is by no means certain
and is at least problematical. Should
that result be verified it would only be
necessary to restrict the creation of in-
ferior forms of currency and credit to
supply the remedy and enable the
United States alone to do what France
was able to do for three-quarters of a
century.
Assuming for the moment that under
free coinage we should eventually go
to the silver standard, and the gold be
driven out of the country, as is charged
by goldites ami feared by some bi-
inetallists. Gen. Warner challenges a
comparison of gains and losses. One
great gain would be that, in leaving
us. on* supply of gold would pay its
equivalent in indebtedness to foreign-
ers and our people would save for
themselves the money they had pre-
viously sent out of the country in inter-
est. What they had before paid in in-
terest they would save as profits, while
the gold would, in response to our
abounding productive resources ami
the needs of other nations, flow back
to us.
Then again, if the gold now in the
United States were transferred to lOu-
rope. it would swell the volume of
money in the countries that require
our surplus products ami necessarily
occasion a rise of prices in markets.
Thus we would get higher prices for
what we sold abroad and it would take
fewer products to pay our remaining
foreign debt: as the prices of staple
products are fixed by the value of the
exported surplus, it wotlld take less
labor, or less of the products of
labor, for the people to liquidate the j
enormous burden of their home indebt-
edness.
The conditions under consideration
would check imports from and stimu-
late exports to gold standard countries,
as is now demonstrated by all silver
standard nations. Unrestricted coin-
age would open direct trade between
the United States and silver-using
countries, with their population of 800,
000. OOO.
AI>ove all, it would furnish a stable
and equitable money standard for our
internal trade, which is a thousand
times more important than that our
money standard should conform to a
certain rate of exchange with other
countries, since our people enter into a
thousand transactions with each other
to one with foreigners.
den. Warner's plea for an independ-
ent financial policy, be the conse-
quences what they may. is timely in
view of the evident intention of money-
lending gold monoinetal lists to intrench
themselves behind a scheme for inter-
national bimetallism, with the expecta-
tion of perpetuating the cruel advan-
tage they have gained over the produc-
Falrvlew.
Mrs. Kwing is seriously ill.
Miss Belle stafford Is ri sweating in
El Keno, the guest of her sister Mrs.
Shaw.
Theodore Horn is in the most serious
throe* of typhoid fever
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Williams visited
at the Squires yesterday.
It is not the income tax that troubles
the voters of Canadian county, it is the
outcome.
A. W. Lake and family Sundayed in
Oklahoma Cit%\ visiting relatives and
friends.
Mrs. Phillips will teach the young
Idea at tht Spring Creek school this
winter.
A teacher has been employed for the
Fairview school, therefore we warn
other aspirants to "koopoff the grass.
Mrs. Ceo. Dewcese is seriously afflic-
ted with neuralgic troubles in her neck
and shoulders which is very painful and
battles the skill of the physicians to al-
leviate the pain.
People who reside north of Will
Smith's home seem to think that he is
a great lover of eats as they have for
some time past used his front yard as a
sort of dumping ground for these
squallers and screechcrs embracing
Maltese Toramie and Pussy varieties
as well as several other kinds that may
be denominated "gist" cats. Some of
these tine evenings these donors will
see Will approaching them in a man-
ner that would indicate that tie had
come directly from a catapult.
SHELHAKK.
Notice For Publication.
fjind Office at j
Oklahoma City, O. T.,
August -1. 1NH4. t
Notice is hereby siveu that the fol-
lowing named settler has filed notice
of her intention to ninke final proof
in support of her claim, t nd that said
proof will be made bi 'ore Register
and Receiver at Oklahoma City, O.
T., on October 13, 1894, viz.:
MRS. JEN NIK HKIPLK,
(nee .Tennie Steel)
for the southeast one-fourth section It.
township 11 north, range ti went.
She names the following witnesses
to prove het' continuous residence
upon, and cultivation of. said land,
viz.:
clinton Steel, Charles Howard, liar,
ry Hilljof Yukon, and Thomas Bell, all
of El IJeno, O. T.
Any iierson who desires to protest
against the allowance of such proof,
or who knows of any substantial rea-
son, under the law and the regulations
of the Interior Department, why such
proof should not be allowed, will be
given an opportunity at the above
mentioned time and place to cross-ex-
amine the witnesses of said claimant
and to offer evidence in rebuttal of
that submitted by claimant.
it. M . DILJ.KY, Register.
(First pub. August 2.1.)
S'otit r for HuNUntion.
f.and office at
Oklahoma Citv, O. T. !-
Aug 28. 1*1.4. )
Notice is hereby given that the fol-
lowing named settler has filed notice
of his intention to make final proof in
support of hisclaim. and that said proof
will be made before register and re-
ceiver at Oklahoma City, O. T., Octo-
ber lit, 18!>4, viz.:
JAMES W. KITZOKRALD,
for the south east one-fourth, section
SO. township l:i, range 0.
He names the following witnesses to
prove his continuous residence u|k>ii,
and cultivation of, said land, viz:
Suinuel Cioff, C\ H. Hulbert. Elmer
E. Long, L. 1). Partch, all of El Reno,
(>. T.
\ny person who desires to protest
against the allowance of such proof,
or who knows of any substantial reason
under the law and regulations of the
Interior Department, why such proof
should not be allowed, will be given an
opportunity at the above mentioned
time and place to cross-examine the
witnesses of said claimant, and to offer
evidence in rebuttal of that submitted
by claimant.
B. M. DlLLEY, Register.
(I'Vst fill), iAug. 30.)
Notice for Publication.
Notice For Publication.
Lund office at i
Oklahoma Citv. O. T.
Sept. 4, 18W4. )
Notice is hereby given that the fol
lowing named settler has tiled notice of
her intention to-make final proof in sup-
port of her claim and that said proof
will be made before register and re-
ceiver at Oklahoma City, O. T.. on
October -li. IX!M. viz:
LEvVIS RICHMOND.
of I'll Keno. O. T.. for the southeast
1,ASH Oi l II i: AT I
KlM.I IS1IKR, O. T., >
Sept. ■">. 1894, I
Notice is hereby given that the fol-
lowing named settler has filed notice
of his intention to make final proof in u townshli. I"
support of his claim, ami that said proof one-fourth section 14. township 1-.
will be made before the register and , range
(). T..
Oct.
eiver at 'Kingtishi
1.1. 1894. viz.:
FREDERICK W. BENTON.
II. E. f>49, for the east one-half, north
west one-fourth lots I and 2 secttion .11
township ll north, range 6 west.
He names the following witnesses
to prove his continuous residence
upon, and cultivation of. said land,
viz:
(icorge White, .lames Rochellc, Wil-
He names the following witnesses
to prove his continuous residence upon
and cultivation of, said land, viz.:
Perry Martin, Jesse Boles, W. T.
Phelps and Mart Mitchell, all of E
Reno, < t. T.
Any person who desires to protest
against the allowance of such pioof or
who knows of any substantial reason,
liura Smith, and Edward Brown, all of u„der t|ie law ami tho regulations of
( lal,7i"-rson who desire to protest | Department, why such
against the allowance of such proof, I proof should not be allowed, will lie giv-
er who knows of any substantial reason. 1 eu an opportunit v at the above mcn-
under the law and regulations of the | ijom-d time and place to crons-cxaminc
Interior Department wl.y Ht.jd. piwr I eli,in,an,, and to
should not be allowed, will be given 1
an opportunity at the above mentioned oflcr evidence in rebuttal of that sub
time and place to cross-examine tin* mitted by claimant.
witnesses of said claimant, and to offer
evidence in rebuttal of that submitted
I by claimant
K. (.;. SiMI.MAN. Register.
(First pub Sept ti.)
R. M. IMLU.Y. Register.
(First pub, Sept. ti.)
Notice for
Publication.
I
I
Land Office at
Oklahoma City. O. T .
August 21, 1804. \
Notice is hereby given that the fol-
lowing named settler has filed notice
of his intention to make tlnal proot
in support of his claim, and that said
proof will be made before John li.
.Vof iff #*>##• I'ftblltntioii.
Land Oftiee al
i >klahoma I 'ity < >. T.
August -I. 1894. )
• is hereby given that the fol-
named settler has Hied notice
intention to make tlnal proof
ort of bis claim, and that said
ill We made before .Ino. H.
Probate Judge at Kl Keno. < >.
ing world by widely changing the ex- j Pitzer, rirobate judge, at Kl Keno, O.
is ting* ratio between gold and silver. j 1 •; on Oct. <"►, 1W4, \iz.
The friends of true silver coinage ALBERT E. LIGHT.
should regard all movements to bind j foa northeast one fourth section
the I nited States to an international
agreement upon the coinage question
with the gravest suspicion
GEN. WARNER'S IDEAS.
The worst
| enemies of silver are not looking to-
| wards that solution with any friendly
! purpose. Denver News.
It Would He :«s KwinniiabU' for l * to Sub-
mit Our Industrial ami < «oinu«M-<-ial lu-
trrenlR to l-lnglaml an t > iVrmit ll«*r to
Say Whether the liiittd state* — •>* 11 or
SIihII Not llave llinietallisin.
The wisdom and ability < f the I nited
States to lead the world in financial
reform was ably championed by (Jen.
A. J. Warner in the May issue of the
American Journal of Politics, lie con-
siders the proposition that Englan I
should be permitted to say whether the
I.'nited States shall have bimetallism
or not as unreasonable as it would !>«• j
to submit our industrial and coiumer- '
ciul interests to the determination of !
Great llritain. lie suggests the possi- ,
bility that the interests of the two
countries differ so widely that it is no j
safer to submit our financial interests j
than it was to submit our com- ;
THE HUB HEArtD FROM.
now
h
mercial interest
dictation. And
humiliating fact that
twenty years foreign i
controlled our financial
let
foreign
s the
e past
s have
perations to
their great advantage and our
trievable 1< ss.
As showing the difference bet wee
the standing ground of the two nation
Gen. Warner cites the fact that En-
gland has an annual income abroad
of some $40<i.oik).000 or s.immmhj.ooo,
while the I nited States has to pay
annually to other countries, mostly to
England, from $200,000,000 to 50.000,-
000. as interest on loans, besides what
goes to the carrying trade and other
expenses abroad. Hence the debase-
ment of silver and the constant appre-
ciation of gold inures to the advantage
of the money owners of I ngland. who
control the government. They cannot
be expected to accept bimetallism un-
til the point is reached when they will
lose more by the bankruptcies of their
debtors tham they gain by the apprecia-
tion of gold.
lien. Warner rightfully maintains
that the effect of restoring the coinage
law as it stood previous to 1^7;'.. under
which the right existed for anybody to
take gold or silver to the mint and have
it coined for his benefit, would be to
raise the price of silver bullion the
world over to the mint price, or coin-
age rate, in the United States, less the
cost of bringing the bullion to our
mints. He correctly denies that this
would necessarily break the parity be-
A Itostoii I'aper I>« «-- Not Take a IVhhIiiiIs-
ti< View of tlif 1 iliaiirial Situation.
It is the height of unwisdom to
preach, as some do. of a dangerous
contraction of the currency through
the exportation of gold which has been
going on for several weeks past. ^ itli
in a year the country has passed
through a money '"scare." and very few
people care to repeat the experiment.
Especially is there r« iuetance. to suffer
again such grey' distress through
I causes largely imi: 'narv.
In the first place, the exportation of
i gold at the present time, while large,
| is no larger than might be expected, or
j than occurs naturally without the least
! financial disturbance. Moreover, there
now exist no unhealthy infhienees,
such as existed in tlu* Sherman silver
' purchase law last year, and the nun < -
nicut of gold is normal and not the J e-
suit of distrust of the conditions prc-
' vailing in this country.
I In the next place, the currency uis
j suffered no dangerous or inconve lient
| contraction. There is m00.n00.000 more
j money in the country than there
| on the 1st of July last year, and it is
j held in better shape, as the bank re-
ports show.
In short, there is money enough for
township 1 o north, range 7 west.
This application is made for the
purpose of complying with commis-
sioner's letter "CM August 18'Jo.
He names the following witnesses
; to prove his continuous residence up-
i on, and cultivation of, said land, viz:
I John Wilkerson, Peter Weidman
Jacob Richert, and (1. L. Filkin, all
• if Reno City, 0. T.
i Anv person who desires to protest
l against the allowance of such proof,
or who knows of an\ substantial reason
j under the law and regulations of the
| Interior department, why such proof time and place
i should not be allowed, will be given an witnesses of said
1 opportunity at the above mentioned
I time and plat
witness.
evidenc
bvthet
•8 Of
p in n
,o cross-examine the
aid claimant, and to offer
uttal of that submitted
Notie
lowing
of his
in s.ipi
proof \
I 'it/.er,
T.. ion < letober >. 1 Hl>4. vi/:
ARTHI RJ. ROVER.
of I nion < ity. *). T., for the sonth w• -
one-fourth sect ion 10 township 10. rang
li west.
He nanus the following witnesses t
prove his continuous residence upon,
and cultivation of, said land, vi/.:
Geo. I >. Gibson, Peter W Krey.
James H. Newman, and Tlios. I . I'aul
ter all of Union < ity. <). T.
Any person who desires to protest
against the allowance of such proof,
or who knows of any substantial reason
under the law and regulation- of the
Interior Department, why such proof
should not be allowed, will be given
an opportunity at the above mentioned
i cross-examine the
la i nisint. and to offer
evidence in rebuttal of that - ibmitted
by claimant.
B. M. Dilli y. Register.
(First pub. August 28),
NOTiVE Fib ti rrnislCATiON.
Land Office at i
Oklahoma City, <>. T., r
August 25, 1H94. )
Notice is hereby given that the fol-
lowing named settler has filed notice
of his Intention to make tiual proof
in support of his claim, and that said
proof will be made before Register
of the land office at Oklahoma City, O.
T., on October 20,1894, viz.
JOHN METZICK,
FrUeo, O. T., for the southwest one-
fourth section 3, township III, range
\7. 1. M
He names the following witnesses
to prove his continuous residence
upon, and cultivation of. said land,
viz:
George Brown and Louis Hlllgren of
Clermont, O. T., and Charles A. Roek-
enhach and Christian Vorrathof Frisco
O. T.
Any person who desires to protest
against the allowance of such proof
or who knows any substantial reason,
under the law and regulations of the
Interior Department, why such proof
should not lie allowed, will he given
an opportunity at the above mentioned
time and place to cross-examine the
witnesses of said claimant, and to offer
evidence in rebuttal of that submitted
by claimant.
II. M. DILLEY, Register.
(First pub. Aug. 30.)
The Cleveland County Agricultural
Society, will hold its annual meeting,
at Norman, O. T., on Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Sept.
12. 13, Hand 15. A good race program
has been arranged and a premium list
prepared which embraces live stock,
farm products, mechanical, needle and
all kinds of fancy work. For further
particulars call on or address M. L.
Rixler, secretary, and receive race pro-
gram and premium. -H'
Sheriffs Sale of Real Properly-
Tkiumtohy of oklahoma.
Notice is hereby jfiveil thai by virtue of an
order of the I list rid ("ourt In and for rutin
dial i county lone - direct ed. on t lie lot 11 day of
October. ISIU. al lOo'clocU. i
of Kl Keno, at I lie front d<
house in sniU citj
loi v of I 'kluhotn
in I lie city
I la* court
uiidhiii county Ierri-
I sell al public sale so
in tic h of I he fol low In it described real proper-
ty us may b© ueccMNiiry to satisfy certain
judgment obtained by ti laser Bros, airaiu-i N
It. Was-, in tin said (list lid court on thetUh day
of A u-Mist K 4. in said court w liiei^suid judg-
ment I- for I In -inn of live liundri d and .-.ev-
enly dollars and -evenly nine cents and cost-,;
the said real properly being described a> fol-
lows. io-wii:
Lotsi. 7. and s. block 1 il: hots 1'. I t. 14 and
1ft block 1:87: lots 1 to III Inclusive, block IVI.
east one-li i I f of; block l-Vt: east one-
half of and lots I.' l i and 14. block
174; lots 4, ! , 7, *. 'Hand II In block I7i , all
i„ ti,, city of El Meno. ( ounty of < anadian,
Territory of Oklahoma according lo t he plat
of-aid* ity of Kl lb-no of record in the oMW
of the reglsler of deeds in said county, tlie
properly of V It. Wa —. levied upon by virtue
of a writ of attachment at tin' suit of (!la-cr
list -aid N B. Wass. and ordered by
Itr.
laimant.
15. M. DILLKY.
(First pub. Aug.
R.-gistc
i23.)
NOTICE F0K PUBLICATION.
Land ntUri'al /
(Iklahcmia i ity. < >. T.
August 21. IK'.il. (
Notice i- he.et.y
1 lowing named -i tiler ha- tiled noti
'of his intention to niiike final proof
| -upport of hi- claim, and that
1 proof will bo made before 1
| Receiver at ')k 1 a 1 tom
j ia, 1804, vi/:
Notice of Contest
I . S. I .11.1(1 « )ftiee ill i
>lilahoma City. <1 1 ■
August'31. 18'M. '
rt to be
I to salisfj
elite
[). Sandc
virigg the
!>n 12. to\
north-
nship
-l one
! north
Sheriffs Sale of Real Property.
Ti KUJTOItV OK IKI.AIIOM \
a lid
('it \ . 011 ( letober
prove his continuous residenc
and cultivation of said land. \ i/:
>l>v, A. \V. Lake. M
A. A. <
\Y.
d F
business and for financial security: and ! \\ A 1.1 l.l \\ . < > M M 1 >
it is useless as well as \vroiiLr. to bey in I for the noi'tleast on«-beirtli sr.
to croak again.—Boston Post. township 1-5. ranjre b.
I He names the following witnt
(•old-Bug Silver I.oaifuo*.
From now on until next fall we may
expect to hear of American gold-bug's
organizing* bimetallic leagues and bi-
metallic associations. The publication
of bimetallic literature, painting the
horrors of the single gold standard, is J
about to become a gold-bug 'a I again. 1
but at every step the gold-hut.' bimetal- j
list will contend that we must wait for
universal bimetallism. He will say j
just what Mr. Harrison said just prior ;
to the election of 1 s'.rj -that America
should lose no opportunity to impress
upon other countries the importance
of bimetallism, always with the tinder-
standing that America will nut restore
bimetallism within her own In linda-
nes until the step meets the sanction
of Mr i iladstone > countrymen, w ho
have i1.000.000.000 invited in other
countries. St. Joseph ■ Mo.) tia/ette.
XOTK
« omplaint ha
this otliee by .1.
W. S. Miller,
entry No. .'J7b4. <
i >kluhoma < i1 •
for the nortli-w •
on -li. 12. township l'
< anadian couiit .
.-en t<j the said entry
I c il III. \ RI N ■
i-nte
;it
( t. ~>;i iidcrci h ik .i v a •'it
who mail' homestead
hi led I . S. I .and t Ittice
u. T.. April 211. I i'1"" w
st one-fourth of section mucb t
north of range 10 west, | propert
,. <). T., alleging that
is illegal and inoper-
,f tin IMsli
hinty to in
II- lot It (la \
f tin cuiirt house
!>«•1
<•1 ;i I 10 <
at I lie
11«-
f lb*
f..
•d re
Kwing. (
T.
Any person who desires to protest
against the allowance of such proof
or who knows of any substantial reason,
under the lav and the regulations of
the Interior Department, u li \ such
proof should not be allowed, will be
given an opportunity at the above
mentioned time and place to cross- ex-
amine the witnesses of said claimant,
and to offer evidence in rebuttal of that
submitted by claimant.
R M. DlhLKY. Register.
(First pub. August 23.)
tpon. ative u* against him for the reason that
he, the said -I <>. Sandereook made
. M. personal settlement on said tract prior
>. < >. to the date of said homestead cut ry and
prior to any settlement made thereon
by the said W S. Miller; also that said
Miller ha- wholly abandoned said tract
from for more than
10 date o! -aid entr\
|s«i4, in
the -III
erly Ik
Lots
iind in
•lilOVt
and
six months sine«
and next prior hereto.
With a view to the cancellation of
said entry said parties- are summoned
to appear at tbis ottice on the 1st da\
of October, 1H94 at o'clock a. m. to
respond and furnish testimony concern-
ing said allegations.
R. M. Dilley. Register.
(First published Aug. 23.)
erc. >a 1 \ to satisfy acer-
iudirinent obfnlnetl by Foster Knljrht A
ualiisi N 15 \Viis> ou the ia Inlay of An-
In said courl. which said .judjrnient is for
of W7l.<!and ecihls. Said real prop-
UK described as follows, to-wlt:
^ r. ; and s hlocK l it: lots IIll and
ck I ;T: lots I to ltl Inclusive in block 145:
1-1 one-half of block I .VI; tin east half of
.
id II In blork 1 T i; all in the I'll v of 11
Keno. in the <.'ounty « f' anadian and Terrltn-
r v of < lUlahonia, aecordlajr lot he plat thereof
on ti 11 in the ofliceof the reirUtcr of deeds in
w;i id count \ th i>rop«'iiy of N l \Va-- I• *^1 •
1 . ..1 ■ ■
suit of I uster Kni'-'hl \ I <• a ialn-<i -aid N b
Wass subject to a prior writ of attachment
*ued out hy Glasei Bros, against said N. R
Wa-s. and ordered to he sold lo sutlsfy said
judgment, Interest and eosis.
Sheriff'softlce, t anadian t ounty «>• T.
T. U. IACKSON Sheri ff.
>d \
|vi|
|-'ORUK.-T & lifXN.
Ally- for IMaintiff-
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Hensley, T. F. The El Reno Democrat. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1894, newspaper, September 6, 1894; (gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc159908/m1/3/: accessed April 20, 2018), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.