Mangum Sun-Monitor. (Mangum, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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Mangum Sun-Monitor.
•« tiuWiiM* laf (Jwfefcwt bOHHIL Wl*s\ I S tMM.
M. I. t Kit IHUIV
MHur mm4 Cukluh^i
PtttltlNIIti Kvuv Tncixuv.
I HMfMt O '
the Mil in wbkt.
i Mr W«lwQ ttcvt«ir<! that "lb*
dctm*i«tu |«4»|> altrr MmIibi |bc
|JO|HtU»t to 11/ h«a
•t<4ct» tbc rr|>olilitM fdaifurm iu
11904 " "H, miU WaImm. you
ibdm* to rrp«bl>i«it ikxttioe*
I why ft* I'arkn' Why not
Hifutliii mi ml IM Titmmi Um.
tHUMriit MtilihDfWM mm4
C. C. CrlkfeM
I llMMf «4gbt» • goad «kr*l. 1 »!•»*»
like ti* «4lr *iitc wJ •n>tbiiig I
due t I blob ti bt»t anyway to ctr-
• uUte *u*b •. they arc j
•f* lo BtlliMd mjtttl uOv. to M)
t«w broal of it, CimI truf» o« on
airrag* ar« not oral <o gaoil a*
ta»t acaauo. Am «>»■»*a\ **
StmnimoN Rath*
Oar Vrai.
Sim Muotb»
One Dollar.
Fifty Crotft
Tbc lepubtkan* ot the ctMtttid
.... l _. l 7~. "~S I dlatrni m«rl in delegate n.ovrnitou ttmm ^ -
«o'^,ho|.lM,o'y.«.pJ,U'c .lCh«„»«oa lb? **b. .000™, "" ~ ?—*■««. .
lvJkT?i!l """ "" "»l« • ivuiKilmtn JikIk« II CI*. ,. »•»*>.
i-.^L 1. ... . i__^v «*•>«* *«• .let ted iltaitotait and .. 1 ha« •oWChaoiUrlain^» Couch
In •'?>*»' U at«j« !• rirfbt j I Hoover mtrtaty Nc**h worn ban twenty>ear»
CerwMt* who wub to vote for j-,|h, ju., Sr.fvit aud Hartholootcw •«*«*»» *»*«> entire «*ti»faetion
I lutie men sod mea»urc» cannot rt. a,mm,llw ul, |' havi -old a pie of it and i an j
very well wpM jud«t Parker . cwd««u2a and K I> I'riuhord J it highly.-Jo«|di Mr
Tk, KM MntttTOR .> r**J —* I * u r,,hf w,lb **• ,u°'* \ Heard and G. W. Seifert «<tter Klhtiwjr, l.inlon. Iowa You will
Tk* SUIt-MOttTO* i* rfd tmrk jronaervauve Pffdlala nncfcr Mr ,ou rnoiu(Kn). Ccomuttee on l*** *h* "***?• «ood friend when
*# F,et Tkm&md pfpk injllocweiiwlt or im mote radical pop- a«denttala reported tliat Roger! with a cough or cold. It
CrH-r cvtutin. l* UDUcr ^ri f1-0?; »'j Milia wa» rctirewotctl by Sam ' ■,w»>a afforda ijuick relief aud i»|
" *taka. For ««ale by k
Hhona Mo. A.
lj»P
—. ^ "They MilU Ma* rct>rc»eoicd by ^Saut f affor'iwifb relief aod
I™,11!!:* I>0 fcU,un,uu',> « loterot. Barinolomcw. C. A\ Seifert. Jacob lo 1
mopu! IT! deoiocr,,. , , Hoorar aud k. I) K H«nnab.
Pt.oPUJ.'wbo are au^porttog Judge Parker » Pritchard, aod that W. H Mather
in ti, Vm » tk. , 1... '*'• Erick, waa duly autbori/ed I\k. W. O. IIODSON
I. .h. K.., ,bl. «, | „ „ fur ClmMm. D
- L , „ ,, ^p.lnol *is25i ' "unl) w" "• '.-"i o«« Buiidu>(.
iaanpport.ng the Parker ticket ia u|,„u have ever bad much real \v h mV.hlrl,. i„ . ^ « . Phone J3«.
«' »"»"»«« «». .««»«.«. c. o, the AU„h.., .plbVm'^C C* M^dl
it dow not uieati that the rcpubli-1 ■«"»*•»»* But we may be cuncuh I for cx>uocilman aud he waa uuani
Homer Naudain,
City Meat
Market
raCMI and ftall »lc«l*.
An up todate hoe of Market
product*.
nan, avarraa,
ccicav, ere.
Telephone your order aud \vc will deliver it to you. P. O.
Block. 'Phone 120.
MOM S POWKH v» TMI
The aiiuouuceiucut that Freder*!
icfc P. Olcott. of New York, who „ . . — ,—,
. . .it ] will nieet with coo»iderahlc favur
j F\k. W. H kt'TLANU.
can party ia losing *UcugU« to the I ,[Jk"0* h°* lUc c^tcT.n, w.'ng. if I aott«ly cIiomth by acclamation. Diaaaaaa of the Kyea,
democrats. i lu lhc uomiualiou. Mr. Olaa*. Scientifically Fitted. Arti
The budineaa connection* of Mr Li fellowship with the faction in |I r,l^!,a,,d °H.ll|io<d ibc poI,cy he bc" flC,#1 By** ,,,,,cr,c<, without pain.
Okott are an indication of twoUiS^Mivid uS^jSSHJSt
tbiiigi They show «h) he '* n£^tb^lUDWM«Tof,tBr,^^, lhc co,uu,i»te *»the followiug W. N" ™
iwpporting Parker, and they »bow vol_ }Jjf JJJEIS1^i®. S ,1JV ' resolution* which were adopted i „ Architect.
that the charge* that have beeo I Belmont-Parker wiua of the nam* ^Jhout diacuaaiou. | Office-—Jackaon & Wilaon building
made that Parker ,* the creature L^-.u lo " Z'thc domiua.it Wc tbc ?^lutio»
of the truata aud the financial jug-j Action of democracy would feel r'^*ou,u^c.,, . " 1 e ° oW,nK 1**
glers of U'all *treet are well found- P1**5**1 if tJ>c Bryanite* withdrew
, ,, , | » , I from (lie nartv fnr annl
ed. Mr. Olcott i* a leader in the
financial world. He is president
of the Centra] Trust company
director in a do/.en trusts, aud one
of the money monarch* of theea*t.
lie is one with Belmont and the
other financial giants who are at-
tempting through the purchased
democratic party and their crea-
ture, Parker, to capture the gov-
ernment of the United States.
The very fact that this mau is
prominent in the Parker campaign
is ooe of the most sweeping con-
demnations of the democratic tick-
et in this battle between the rights
of the people as represented by the
republican party and the aggres-
sion of the money power as repre-
sented by Parker and Davis, the
creatures of the trusts.—Guthrie
Capital.
WATSON'S VIVISECTION OF CANT.
Kasily the most interestiug fea-
ture on the stump in the present
campaign is Mr. Thomas E. Wat
son, of Georgia. His frankness
his hatred of cant and timeserving
his devotion to principle, unite
make his speeches illuminating
an uuwonted degree.
The real core of the partisan op
position to President Roosevelt has
never been exposed more relent
lessly than it was in Mr. Watson's
address at Atlanta last night. The
negro issue he called a fraud—the
stock in trade of Southern politi
cians for thirty years. "The dem
ocratic leaders who talk this stuff,'
he said, "laugh and wink at one
another as they pass." All the
talk of "Roosevelt's militarism,'
he declared, was fudge and subter
fuge. The milk in the cocoanut
he found he found in Senator Dan
iel's assertion that he was "tired of
being in the minority." And there
is no denying that Mr. Watson's
diagnosis is correct. ,
It was in the hope of striking
winning combination that the party
made its bargain with Wall street
and nominated an unknown candi
date. This might as well be ad
mitted frankly. There is no use
in beating about the bush aud sol
emnly advancing arguments that
nauseate by their insincerity.
Populists Kicked Out
Kansas City Journal.
The New York World, regarded
as the personal organ of Judge
Parker, discusses the relations of
the Bryanites and the populists to
the present campaign with very
great frankness. As a first premi.se
the World can see no difference be-
tween the Bryanites and the popu-
lists. It declares that under the
leadership of Bryan the democratic
party was populistic in every es-
sential feature. Its dictum is that
"if Judge Parker's candidacy means
anything it means that the demo-
cratic party is democratic again and
ao loufjer populistic." And when
it speaks of the populistv it wishes
troui the party for good.
Why He Is For Slraufbea.
From KiniAiher Reformer.
The Hill and Cleveland democra-
cy is not the kind that the popu-
list* have been fusing with, and on
the national ticket they will go it
alone and no braver or purer lead
er exists thau the Honorable Tom
Watson.
We are for the Hon. H. E.
Straughen for delegate to congress,
because we helped to nominate
him, and because, in our judgment,
he represents the truest principles
of populism. As a member of the
people's party territorial committee
we helped to call the congressional
convention at Oklahoma City, on
the same date as the democratic
convention, in spite of the opposi-
tion of the mid-roaders, hoping
that although the national conven-
tion had dropped Bryanism, the
Oklahoma democracy would nomi
nate a candidate who would be ac-
ceptable to the people's party. In
this we were disappointed. While
we believe that the majority of the
democratic convention was friend-
ly to the populists aud willing to
form a co-alition that would ha\ e
completely downed republicanism
iu Oklahoma, it was yet dominated
by a strong element who were op-
posed to recognizing the people's
party as an independent organiza-
tion.
The populist convention ad-
journed, temporarily, to await the
action of the democratic conven-
tion aud see whether a candidate
was named who was acceptable to
the populists.
When the populist convention
assembled at eight o'clock the next
morning, the result was known,
but not a message or even a friend-
ly inquiry as to how they felt was
received from their friends, the
democrats.
The populist convention did what
was left to do. They had gone to
Oklahoma Oity to assist in nomi-
nating a candidate for delegate to
congress and as the democrats did
not consult them in regard to their
preferences, they proceeded to nom-
inate a candidate of their own.
Mr. Straughen is a man of high
character, capable and an ideal
populist candidate. He has been
county clerk of Lincoln county for
the past four years.
This was not a convention of
mid-road populists, although there
were some sturdy mid-roaders
there, but represented the people's
party of Oklahoma. A mid-road
course was all that was left to fus-
ion or mid-road populist. What
was doue was necessarily done
without much time for consulta-
tion or consideration, but we have
considered the matter carefully
since then and discussed it with
hundreds of populists, and we be-
lieve now and we believed then,
that the populists were justified in
nominating their own candidate
and are willing to let the conse-
quences fall where they may. We
have not a work to say against the
Hon. J. Frank Mathews, the dem-
ocratic candidate. We have met
him a number of times and believe
him to be an able legislator, honest
and upright, but it was the almost
unanimous sentiment of the popu-
list convention that he was not the
H.
adopted by the convention:
We re-affirm our allegiance to
the principle* of the republican, ■uu'ieu ao
party and our belief iu the wise aud •,Ir""u" ",v
statesman like administration of
our honored leader*, President
Roosevelt, Governor Ferguson and
our Delegate to Congress, Hon. B.
S. McGuire.
We endorse the administrations
of President Roosevelt and Gov.
Ferguson as thoroughly republican
and for the best interest of all the
people of Oklahoma.
We endorse the able and pro-
gressive manner in which our dele-
gate to congress, the Hon. Bird S.
McGuire, has represented Oklaho-
ma; and especially do we endorse
the active interest he took in se-
curing the passage through the
lower house of the Hamilton bill,
and we urge every voter in the 13th
Council District to do all within
his power to secure his re-election,
as his re-election means statehood
for Oklahoma.
We recommehd the selection of a
candidate for the office of council-
man who will exercise every honor-
able means, when elected, to secure
the passage of laws whijh will be
beneficial to the people of Western
Oklahoma; that he at all times op-
pose the sale of our school lands,
as we consider it to the best inter-
est of the schools of this generation
and all future generations to come
that this laud remain in the control
of the territory or state for school
purposes.
We also recommend that the can-
didates of this convention, if eject-
ed, secure the passage of a law
making it a crime for any bank or
other institution, acting under au-
thority of law to loan money and
collect interest thereon at a higher
rate of interest than the legal rate,
with sufficient penalties attached
thereto to prohibit the usurious
practices now followed by our
banks.
E. D. Pritchard)
Jacob Beard [■ Com.
Geo. W. Seifert)
A council committee for the dis-
trict was elected consisting of W.
H. Matherly, of Greer; I. L.
Hoover, of Roger Mills, and W.
H. Wright of Day.
south-west corner of square.
eT'
McCOLUSTER.
Attorney at Law,
Mangum. Okla
Hon-loJ Abstracter »n<l Comryanerr Surct
to Utid Titlea. ^
/^akkktt, GakkkTT & W«i.l,
Attorneys a Law,
Office South Side Square,
Mangum. - - Oklahoma
JF. MATHEWS,
• Attorney-at-Law.
Office South Side over Farm
ers State Bank.
FC. HOLMES,
• Dentist.
Office south side Square.
Mangum, Okla.
Jif ANGUM HOSPITAL.
A Drs. Border & Dodson.
Contagion* Diseases not admitted.
Mangum, Okla
CTEWART & ROBINSON,
^ Attornevs-at-Law.
Will Practice in all the Court*.
Mangum, Oklahoma.
D. HENRY,
Attorney-at-Law.
Office in Land Office Building.
CHAS. H. KAGIN. O. P. KI.MOTT
EAGIN & ELLIOTT,
attorneys-at-law.
Land Office Blanks. Notary Public.
Office in Court house Bldg.
Mangum, Oklahoma.
G. A. BROWN j. A. POWERS
Brown & Powers,
LAWYERS
Will practice in all the Territorial and State
Courts and in the United States Supreme Court.
Sour Stomach.
When the quantity of food taken
is too large or the quality too rich,
sonr stomach is likely to follow,
and especially so if the digestion
has been weakened by constipa-
tion. Eat slowly and not too free-
ly of easily digested food. Masti-
cate the food thoroughly. Let
five hours elapse between meals,
and when you feel a fullness and
weight in the region of the stom-
ach after eating, take Chamber-
lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets
and the sour stomach may be avoid-
ed. For sale by Hannah.
America's Greatest Weekly
THE
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llt>wunfltw>r 1.. r J
A Kick From Teacross.
Tea Cross, O. T., Aug 29, '04
Sun-Monitor: In last issue I
notice that the farmers of the
county had met and decided that
it would take ten thousand men to
gather Greer's enormous cotton
crop. Well, I want to say that I
have had some experience in cot-
ton growing, and as to Greer's big
cotton crop, I think the picture
overdrawn. Iu some localities the
cotton is better than last season.
In others, it is not near so good.
There is plenty of cotton in Greer
man to represent the people's party.
to be understood a* speakins of a!! Stops the Cough and Works off, county that "it will take six or
those democrats who do not accept the «k»ld. j eight acres of to make a bale. On
the policies and doctrines of the. [^xat]ve Bromo Omnine Tablets Jn av«-'ra«e I dou t believe the cot-
ChMbraTde"V ** ICUre * °°ld in one d*v cure, ! \°n *lU ^ 85 K0®1 laM *ason.
the true democratic fiUth pay. p,^ „ , Had our farmer friends waited uu-
In discussing th^ speech °f *c- now to have made their report.
crptance made by Thomas fc. Wat-| Subscribe for the Sun-Monitor. JI think they would have lowered
THR TOI.KDO BI.ADK is
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Weekly newspaper edited expressly for everv
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Write for free specimen copy. Address
THE BI.ADK.
Toledo. Ohio.
._T? cjshjn-advance subscribers i will send
both the Toledo Blade and Sun-Monitor one
year for *1.25 h. i.. crittendkn.
Editor Sun-Monitor. Mangum, Okla.
TIME TABLE.
MANGUM, O. T.
The I • and fi and ketweca
CNICACO
ST. LOUIS
MEMPHIS
PEORIA
ST. JOSEPH
KANSAS CITY
OMAHA
OEHVER
COLORADO SPCS,
FORT WORTH
ST. PAUL
MIHHEAPOLIS
tvtr.»*rrf bevMM.
DEPART.
No l?4 Freight Chickasha aad interme-
diate point*, daily except Sandav ; 00 a 1
Ko IJ« Pawearer connects at Chicka
•ha lor north and mth daily .. 745 a 1
ARRIVE
Ko |-J freight daily ex snndav ,. I to a
No ij] Pawnger daily < ,K> p •
Eo» slerp ■( car rntnttioaa tickets base
■Mr*, etc apply to aar Mark I4an< TVke
*«nt L M. UUDI On Pmaa A at
N MATNMtt'hMM
Pt.M-Urif
aovu
* ITnWfi
I a NUIU Cash tar,
J M NOKfi.N A~t Cash
First National Bank,
s* ^ Mangum, Okla.
CAPITAL, $80,000.00.
! SURPLUS. §8,000.00
OtRCfTORS:
G W. aovtl. C. P HAMILTON. JSO MUHTUS. H. MATHKW»ON
Our Pat ron > receive every Courtesy ami Accommodation within the
raiiKc of prudent banking.
US^BlSSS QsSsSs^a^A
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• door to Rude's Furniture Store
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Crittenden, H. L. Mangum Sun-Monitor. (Mangum, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1904, newspaper, September 8, 1904; Mangum, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc285387/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.