The Mulhall Enterprise. (Mulhall, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 11, 1896 Page: 2 of 4
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The Mulhall Enterprise.
D. C DWINNELl, Kdltnr.
MULHALL,
< auudian county will be oil a caulk
basis in a few weeks.
All the railroads have given reduced
rates to the Oklahoma convention.
O'Keeneover in lilaine county wants
a pood Hour mill, and they ought to
have it.
J. 11. Head Irs raised six
* thousand "'g'1*
flohu llugg of < i:r* will pjot.uMy ,
not get a rest iu "*.•*», as it is leap your, 1
There is a Cripple Creek in Noble j
county, and it claims to have gold j
quart.
Marshal Nix entertained eighty-fivt
deputies at a banquet the other I
bushels of Kuflii corn on his farm in
Noble county.
So many men swore oft' iu Oklahoma
New Years, that it actually hurt the
trade of the saloon men.
The present state of Utah is to be
larger in area than both the Indian
and Oklahoma territories.
Pawnee Hill, who is in Oklahoma
now. says he made a pile of money in
Hclgium during the exposition there.
The ( hoctaw road refuses to locate
their shops at Noutu McAlester until
they can be assured that their proper
An Oklahoma sal«K»n advertises "ice
water, red-hot beer and old Oov.
Stone."
In the item of tires, has been
the most disastrous year in the histo-
ry of Ok la noma.
The Indians of the five tribes allow
no white children to attend school
with the Indians.
Hart Murphy of Logan county has
II.
OKLAHOMA AND INDIAN TFllRITOKY
Both the Santa l'e and the Choctaw
ape now advertising for able-bodied
men.
The Chiekasuw nation will send
fifty delegates to the Oklahoma con-
vention.
"Mr. Donahue of the Purcell Printing
Company spent the holidays in Fort
•Worth,
Harry St. John's trial for the mur-
der of his wife, is set for the last week
'ji January.
Miss DeCou, who won the Oklahoma
oratorical prize, laiuo from Cowley I |y wil| not |>n sui,J,.ctod to the lot-
county, Kansas ! j„mpintf habit.
DennU Flynn has introduced a Mil ! New8 has ju»t been re.elve.1 bv his
creating a court of appeals lor <>»«•"- , friontlH. of the suicide
hoina, Arizona and New Mexico. j |(r „ R williams, a(fed 7:.. at liisl
Frank Greer says that in her prize home on Kaueh creek. He shot him- j
oration Miss Do Con confused the self on account of his poverty.
terms ••ambition" and "aspiration." j U i. not likely that there Is any-
A city marshal of Payne county was j thing in that report that Oeorge Kl-
fined #5 last week for arresting a col- ; wood will turn outlaw. He is said to
ored boy without a warrant. Arrests ! be smart and if he is, he knows that
cannot l>c made without a warrant the day of the outlaw in Oklahoma is I John I. Dlllc has been appointed
where the amount stolen is less than I over. i judge advocate of the oklahoma regi*
?M. I County Commissioner .lames of Oor- j ",eut- with
The Krebs coal mine, belonging to ; Held county, has been acquitted. Ok- • Miss Ainsworth, an netress who for*
the Osage Mining company, one of the j lahoma counties should not fall into ; merly lived in Oklahoma, is now play-
largest in the Territory, and the first | the habit of carrying their personal ing in oklahoma with Si Plunkard.
BRADSTREET'S ROT.
WANTS FOREIGNERS TO LOAN
US MORE MONEY.
Sense Would K.»v That No
llnneat Man or Nation C'un llurrow It-
self Into Kit-lies — HorrotriOg Mtuni
C<reuter Trouble to I'ay.
1 . « s i - ! "Iam ashntned of you, my dear, sw
wi** In trusting her brood to me i >
. • iauurhinir at ti:«risque stories of Mrs.
, tender caro of a hawk, ; Am
people would be la leaving their Unin- ' l)o French. Uu would better lm»e
* ' blushed." "Hut, mamma, 11 I had
blushed, it would have shown that 1 gar^parilla has over snd over again
understood them,"—Life. proved itself the beat blood purifier medi-
cal science has ever produced ■* B""1
cial affairs in the hands of tho baik*
ers.—National Bimetallism
l-mod's
mtraet for grading ti
through the strip.
Marshal Nix presented I'nited States
District Attorney Hrook - with a gold
watch Christinas
The county seat of Payne county is
full of Denver people who are attend-
f | ing a divorce trial.
Dennis Flynn has introduced a bill
appropriating Sloo.oon foi
building in Noble county.
Senator Piatt of New 1
favop of opening the Indiai
to homestead setth nient.
federal
rk, is in
Territory
inline to strike, has resumed work,
j Kverything is now quiet among the
'miners.
D. II. Stiles, of Kay county, has
been made colonel of the entire militia
o4 Oklahoma and the territory is to be
congratulated on thi; fact that such an
ttblo soldier has been chosen to leud
their military forces.
Governor Renfrow has refused to
call an extra session of the legislature
to legislate on the payment of taxes.
The governor sa}*s as the people arc
willingly paying their taxes, aud as
tfee amount saved, even were proper
legislation had, will not be more t^an
the cost of holding the session, he
does not consider it expedient.
Hill Doolin, the outlaw, after an
Unsuccessful attempt to compromise
with the territory authorities, is be-
iitg pursued by armed deputies. Doo-
lin, tired of living a life of outlawry,
agreed to surrender if assured of a
light sentence. The proposition was
refused by I'nited States Marshal
Nix, who immediately sent officers
out to capture the train robber and
murderer.
Indignation exists iu the Pawnee
country over the unlawful arrest by
deputy I'nited States marshals of men
and women charged with cutting tim-
ber on government lauds and of boot-
1 egging whisky to the Indians. The
investigation shows that the charges
are trumped up and about half of the
'deputies of that country have been
recommended for suspension.
The C. C. C. ranch, a new organifu
tion which takes in a large body of
land in the west end of Heaver county .
nnd ./f the Panhandle of Tex As, is
quite an extensive affair, and a de-
scription of it would probably read
like a fairy tale to far eastern roadqrs.
To give some idea of its yastness, next
year it is to be stocked with 40,000
liead of cattle, and the necessary men
end horses to handle tlieiu. Another
interesting piece of news is the way
♦hey buy supplies. The first of the
week a buyer for the ranch went to
Liberal, Kan., and bought of the Star
Grocery company a little bjll of five
carloads, comprising flour, corn, cured
meats, sugar, coffee and general gro-
ceries. Kloven teams came in from
the ranch, were loaded and sent
back as a starter. Half of these teams
were four-horse teams, ami they ex-
pect to have teams coming and going
nil winter. The ranch is located altout
Kcventy-flve miles south-west of Liber-
al, and is in a delightful part of Okla-
homa. and will prove to be a good in-
vestment.
The 'new woman" came to the front
in vigorous style iu a school house in
ti e northern part of Noble county
Tuesday night at a meeting of the lo-
•■ul literary society. One young lady
read in the weekly paper a joke about
another girl and a certain fellow. The
grievances into expensive
evedings.
' ' 1 Wheat has never looked k> well in
Canadian county as now, and prospect!
Wister Station, on the Choctaw, mas a |„,avv js very Muttering,
probably named after Owen Wister,
the best writer of western stories liv- j The Chickasaw National Hank build-
ing. Wister's home is in Philadelphia ing at Purcell is undergoing repairs of
and Philadelphia people own the the damage done by the recent fire.
( hoctaw. Those Oklahoma fellows who went
Dennis Flynn has tried to get Duff out to Cripple Creek have begun to
Oreen, a son of Cannonball Oreen, re- drift back and warn people to stay
leased froin Fort Reno, where ho is j awav.
imprisoned for desertion from 4he
I'nited States army. Secretary Lamont
refused.
Hy a recent decision, Ore
which was claimed by both Oklaho
ma and Texas, has been given to the
former by the lT. S. Supreme court.
It eantaius almost 1.000,000 ncn
a Able laud.
Many of the Hlsino county farmers I
Winter 'bring I ho Oklahoma law'down on tl.o
neral Meginty (who is probably
cd in his best suit of clothes), who
I lives in Woodward county, has come
county, ] out against war.
The single statehood advocates
should make an official estimate of how
| long Oklahoma will have to wait for
ic Indian Territory.
\ Noble countv man threatens to
are plow ing for spring crops.
using hi.■«
plowing has proved to be a greal sue J ""men
cess in annihilation of insects n^ul 1 ,0*' ls ,n I"1' upt.i' up.
their eggs, also in the maintainancc of | A few pigs should i> • kept
•ommg season, upon
:i pop
.eon- j
being
thing !
nection with milk cows, ami by
economical, hard times will be
of the past in Oklahoma.
A Canadian county man advertises
for a coyote skin. He will pay one
dollar for it. He will not take a
poisoned one, as he wants it to mako
a rug.
James Harvey, a prominent man of
Saline county. Missouri, has sued his
i wife for divorce in Oklahoma county.
I lie charges abandonment aud "indif*
. fcrence."
moisture for the
such lands.
The farmers in Garfield county are
beginning to see the advisability of
changing their mode of farming.
Wheat has been the main crop, but
last year a few planted castor beans
with good results, which has encour-
aged others to plant a crop next
spring. A large number will also ex
pertinent with tobacco. Alfalfa and
Kaftir corn will be planted in large
quantities.
United States Deputy Marshals! In Canadian county a farmer is ex- I
Charles Kilgore and William Colbert 1 periuientlng with wheat. The first he j
arrested F. 1). Dawson, C. II. Chessier planted in August and the hist on
and J. Hone Monday evening for pas- j the 15th of December. This is to be a
sing counterfeit money. Chessier had ; fair test to see which is more yleldy,
several dollars of the spurious coin. « early or late planting.
all in dimes and quarters. Hone and) ,. ... , I
.. 114, 1 r ti Cotton IS ;i crop that will stand n
Dawson had ten cents each of the , .. , • • ' , .
, ...... . ... drouth as well if not better than any
counterfeit. Chessier and Dawson live lt . . . , , ,,
I other crop that can be planted in the
territory, and as it requires no cxpen- j
sive machinery lo harvest, it is a • rop I
that should be more generally planted, j
No
oka King Haiiii
in Coalgate and Hone in Texas TI
parties have not been very succcssful, !
as the three did not have in gi>*»d
money exceeding
It is proposed to build a railroad '
from C.alena. Kansas, down into the innlr litflithorsemnn. attempted to
Indian Territory. The Peoria Rail- rest Alexander Saunders .for the
way company has been chartered for j P'*s°d bringing in of whisky and
that purpose. It will pass through j attempting
the Peoria reservation in the Indian i billed linn, at
shot and
a me time fatally
utiding Dav
ant.
Wheat beyond a doubt is and wo
predict always will be the main crop
iu southern Oklahoma, but the suc-
cessful farmer will not risk all on
that one cereal. Kutllr corn has come
to stay, and there are but few farm-
ers who will not plant a li'Id of that
A novel story comes from Oartield | grain next year.
county telling the woes of a spiritual- j The Crystal salt wor
1st. The spiritualist is a farmer and ' of Salt Crecg in blaine
owns a lot of hogs. The other day j ing a thriving busine
while lie was feeding his swine the un- i faeturers are unable, \>
Territory. The charter expressly
states thai the purpose of the compa-
ny is "to mortgage and operate said
road." The compauv owns property
to thA amount of $10,000, and the cap-
ital stock is SI ,000,000. The directors
are II. Cootey, of Galena, J. P. Mc-
Nanghton, of Max, I Ty.j and W. L
Turkinton, of Cherokee.
fortunate man had the
drop his watch, lie fore
•over it the whole drov
ill
girl of the joke was sitting on the j bore down on the time pie<
front seat. She jumper! up and knocked
down the reader and then jumped on
her in prize ring style. Others inter-
fered and a general row ensued.
In the district court of Oklahoma
county Wednesday. Mrs. Isabella
Weiss secured a divorce from Joseph
Weiss of N. V. City on the grounds of
non-support and cruelty. The plain-
tiff. who is a handsome Jewess, a,fed
about 30 years told a good story on
the stand, which the attorneys for the
defense failed to break down, although
they attempted to show that she had
held intimate relations with one Dr.
Abram Mayer, a wealthy retired op-
tician of New York City, and expected
to marry him if she secured her de-
cree. Joseph Weiss, the husband,
had charged her with adultery with
Mayer, but the truth was not forth-
coming.
Hon. J. 15. Beadles of Noble county
reports his Kaffir corn as yielding six
thousand bushels besides a large
amount to feed his cattle.
Nearly half of the jury panel drawn
it Woodward county, reside in Ash-
land. Kansas. They hold down claims
iu the territory bu* reside and vote in
Kansas.
The sale of the II o. <J. to a stronir-
• • company is a good thing for Okla-
homa. it means the road will be
pushed at once to Denison, Texas, via.
Logan county, and other good fanning
j>*rts of Oklahoma.
C. Haydon. who has immense pas-
tures along the ' i ran ti river, reports
having had over 400 head of cattle
luck
could
of pork
e and <
them swallowed it. The farmer,
not liking the idea of slaughtering
fifty hogs for the sake of recovering
one watch, bethought him of his faith
and set out in quest of a medium. The
medium consented to lend his power-
ful aid and point out with emphasis
the hog that had ticks in his stomach.
The pig was slain but the chronometer
was not in its person. The medium
said there was some mistake but was
positive he could bring the watch to
light at another killing. But in this
he failed. Twenty hogs have been
killed and still the spiritualist is con
t'.dent of success, but the farmer re-
fuses to devastate his hog crop ufiy
ltirther. The only logical course for
flu' farmer is to line up his swine and
i process of machinery
I demand. The salt is
quality, which is cei
thing for that locality
It may seem incredible
it is a fact netevrtheles■-
the season to plant pot at
t he beau
i county, is do-
•ss. The mtinu-
yitli their small
, to supply the
of an excellent
tainly a grand
to some but
that this is
es. A nuni-
have
inter
her of farmers in Grant county
successfully experimented with
planting and report its results as as-
tounding. Leon Yates has plautcd
about 1 • bushels, and says he is sure
of a crop with an ordinary fair season.
Dradstreet's of Dec. 7, says: "Wall
street seems at last to appreciate the
fact that at; long as grounds for distrust
in the currency of this country are al-
lowed to exist, European Investors and
speculators will give our railroad and
other securities the cold shoulder."
Then tliat journal proceeds to say
that such has been the case snce 1890.
and it ascribes it to our silver legisla-
tion. Bradstreet's Is considered to bo
very reliable in its statistics, but 1U
ideas on the monetary question are
about as shallow as they can be and re-
ceive expression in very good English,
lt actually seems to think that the sure
road to national prosperity In this coun-
try is to "borrow abroad." That is also
the Wall street idea, and it is not a new
one with that money center, by any
means, although Bradstreet's seems to
think it is.
If speculation In American securities
is only rife, the Wall street manipulat-
or is happy, no matter what the condi-
tion of American labor may be.
We believe that Bradstreet's state-
ment Is wholly without foundation, lt
seems unreasonable to believe that the
securities of Mexico, China and other
silver countries should be snapped up
with avidity in Europe, and the same
investors turn the "cold shoulder" on
"Americans" because of silver legisla-
tion here. But concede it to be true by
way of argument. Does it prove that
we should discard silver and plant our-
selves solidly on the eingle standard ot
gold? Certainly not, unless we are pre-
pared to claim that we can borrow our-
selves rich. The principal trouble is
that we owe too much abroad now. Our
foreign debt already amounts to six or
seven billions of dollars. Of tills, about
four-fifths ls the result of a mere com-
pounding of interest, year after year,
since lbC9, ao shown by General War-
ner's monograph on "Our debt abroad,"
which appeared in No. 3 of this paper.
The Interest and other charges which
we have *to pay amount to not less than
$100,000,000 annually. This we have
to meet, with silver, wheat, cotton and
almost everything else which we ex-
port, selling at about half price on a
gold basis. Still Wall street and B{ad-
street's cooly assume that all we nerd
to give ue national prosperity is to go
on borrowing year after year. Do they
think that there is no end to such a
process? Do they think that either a
man or a nation can continue to in-
crease his borrowings forever? Do they
not know that the more we borrow in
Europe the more of our products we
must surrender to keep down the in-
terest account? Do they not know that
we can only sell in that market, In the
closest competition with other sellers,
including the Asiatics,who produce and
sell on a silver basis?
So far as the Wall street business ot
mere speculation is concerned, it makes
but little difference whether prices are
"high" or "low," considered abstractly.
Fluctuation— rising and falling—is
w hat la wanted. But when it comes to
paying our debt abroad the range of
prices is of the utmost importance.
A bushel of wheat at 05 cents will
go just half as far as a bushel at 91,30.
Therefore the true remedy is the adop-
tion of a policy which will check the
terrible decline in prices, both at homo
and abroad. This can be accomplished
by restoring silver to its former post
tion as standard money. Not only will
lt have the effect of raising prices gen-
erally by increasing the volume of pri-
mary money, but it will deprive the
competiton of silver using countries ot
the peculiar severity which conies from
the disparity between gold aud silver
in international trade.
It cannot be done by lowering the
value of everything we have to sell in
Europe, destroying our money and the
borrowing more. Still that is the spe-
cific prescribed by the champions or
"sound money," and right upon the
heels of a proposition which is an insult
to common sense, with unp irallelcd self
assurance, they denounce the advocates
of bimetallism as "wild-eyed cranks."
National Bimetallism
Delegate Flynn has called or. Secre-
tary Lamont to secure a pardon foi
Duff Green, who is being held at Fort
Reno as a deserter. Young Green is
the son of "Cannonball" Green, once a
member of the Kansas legislature j
from Kiowa county, but now treasur- '
er of Grant county. O. T. The son en* '
listed when 10 years old. had served j
iv "Knie. ineenie. minie. nioe 'litis four years, then deserted. On being
ill relieve the expense of employing apprehended, he received the usual
"IntriiKilo Value.'*
The theory that gold has un inherent,
intrinsic value which remains forever
the same, immutable ; nd evi rlastit g,
is a delusion which should have no
weight with any thinking man. Why
should gold alone, of ail the substance*
on earth, be unaffected by the law o!
supply and demand? If a shipload ol
men were cast away en a desert islam
and found a thousand tons of yellow
metal, but no food, would they nol
gladly give a ton for one box of bread?
Suppose they found the sand was all
gold, but thero was one little patch of
earth where they could raise a garden,
would not that little patch bo of mor
vtt4 It cui^
A Michigan man sold a horse to two! when o' h r medicines uttsrly }•"• llJ
record is unequalled in the history ol
■trangeraand took their note in pay-1 • - — *- *-—•
ment. After thinking over the trans-
action he went and hanged himself.
Miss Kate Field is talking very
.earncdly about the evils of plural
marriage, tor » woman who has »uoU|-1^—i, t. bur, inm
a meaner amount ot mat r. n.' mia* ex- I IOOU I lllft easjr m »tf<*<-t. 21) r*nu
... Deli Ita success in based upou ill
intrinsic merit, llood's
Sarsaparilla
'/In One True Blood Purifler. f 1; 6 for f5.
WHERE nil)
' Had the Ladies'
Church out for
all pronounced the German Coffeeberry
equal to Rio! Salzer's catalogue tells
alue to them than all the rest of the I you all about it! 35 packages Earliest
I sentence, and is now serving his time.
Nellie Norfieet is n ninety dover in
j oklahoma. She comes from Memphis
i and charges her husband with nban-
[ don men t.
Mrs. .lames Robinson, the woman
who was shot in the McNeil-Marshall
' row iu Noble countv. is dead.
diowned by the Hoods of the past
week, and savs that fully 1.000 head ' tax by appeal to courts.
or ison* perished in the 0«g.e ,'e.er- j ouhomH ,1I1H hll(t raore tl,mv, t||i|>
j year than ever before. The time will
vation.
County treasurers are compelled to
apply the penalty for unpaid taxes af
ter January 1. under a tine.
( apt. Nipp. of Kay county, receiyca
a telegram Monday fron his attorney
that the Secretary of the Interior had
decided against him on his claim. It's
tough a^ he has spent W>u on Hie
contest and improvement'-.
a medium.
Deputy Marshal Madsen of King
fisher county has received word of a
tight between officers and outlaws on
border between the Comanche country
ami Texas.
Canoopjobic. an old-time Seminole
warrior, died last Thursday, lie was
over 100 ve„rs old and was buried will, ; , Mll|hl|ll om. of thc brl|rh)es,
in ml honors and bile mourning al ,HIVH it„rv. M,„.
Mekusukey on l-nday. ; (|il. , „f ut tho hom(, o)
There is a rumor, having origin in his pi\retit s Sunday
Many an Oklahoma editor will tunkq
a virtuous New Year's rcsohe. rven if
they don't keep it more than fifteen
minutes.
In Payne county. Clay Barnard,
Clias. Craft. John Harnett and Arthur
Harris, with Misses Kdna. I• race and
Millie Spencer aud one other young
lady, went to a dance. On the way
home the hack in which they were rid-
ing toppled over a high hlufi' ami
Oklahoma county, that the Santa
new management will nullify the
road s former contracts with the labor
organization.
Heaver county assessments were
raised loo per cent by thc Territorial
equalization board. Several townships
have united to resist payment of thc
It to the Hunker*?
The chief reason why England con-
tinues to be the dictator to the world
in financial matters is not merely that
she ceased in 1816 to try to make two
yard sticks of different lengths measure
one yard; not merely that for 300 years
she has left the banking business to
bankers, and declined to trust it to
her politicians, but that whenever the
money question has been before her
people or her parliament, it h s never
been viewed as a party question nor
Jraggcd down into the blinding ani-
mosities of party prejudice nor subor-
dinated to class interest.—Times-Her-
ald.
Hello! What is this? Carlisle told
lis in his speech to the bankers that
tho position of London as the
world's clearing house was ow-
ing to the uso of the "pound
sterling," and we supposed tho
Tlines llerald agreed with him. But
the information now comes that it was
not so much the gold standard as the
fact that the finances of the country
were run independent of party politics.
Well, the same thing was true of the
I'nited States up to 1873. Hut In that
year an unseen hand changed the mone-
tary system of the country. Without a
word of public discussion, and by a bill
which ostensibly related merely to the
details of mint operations, the standard
of value was changed. Since then, thc
people,disorganized,divided and divert-
ed by other issues, have labored vain-
ly to bring about a restoration of the
former system.
island? The gold would bo a "drug on
the market;" no one could use it and no
one would want it.
The price of gold is no more intrin-
sic and no more permanent than any
other value, except as the demand for It
is steady. The coinage value set upon
the metal by tho governments of tho
world gives a steady demand at a fixed
price. The same set of circumstanccs
would act in the same way for silver.
It is silly and futile to deny it.
Some goldites admit that remonett-
zatlon "would cause some rise Iti value,"
but they deny that the silver would have
this wonderful Intrinsic property and
preserve Its value unchanged without
fluctuations, as they say gold does. At
least, such is the argument of some gold
men. Others claim—and hero ls an in-
consistency very characteristic of tho
gold sophist—that "no amount of legis-
lation in Its favor could change tho
value of silver one lota." The Ignor-
ance which promotes such statements
as tills must be wilful ignorance, lt J
comes from men who have every chance 1
to know better.—Farm, Field and Fire- \
side.
nt'iliicod Cost of Gold Mining.
The Chicago Record of recent date
has the following on the cost of produc-
ing gold:
Mr. George Helm, in an article pub-
lished in Berlin in 1S93, presents opin-
ions that the occurrence of gold in the
Transvaal is so extensive and so rich
that the cost of production of the metal
ls ridiculously disproportionate there-
to. Mr. Helm says the progress of tho
Handt mining industry is duo in tho
first place to tho construction of iail-
ways. Not until recently, he says, havo
the mining companies been able to em-
ploy the beet mining and metallurgical
power and appliances. Continuing,
Mr. Heim sajs:
"Quartz containing seven penny
weights to the ton can now be profit-
ably worked. Some companies are at
present operating at an aggregate cost
of 30 shillings a ton, and otiiers at only
17 shillings. The average cost of pro-
duction a ton, which In 1S8D was 00
shillings, fell after the opening of Capo
Town (Port Elizabeth) Blomfontein-
Johanncsburg railway to 22Va shillings
in 1802. Companies are now produc-
ing which in 1800 and 1891 could not
operate at a profit and were compelled
to suspend."
Is it not about time for some enthu-
siastic gold man to begin to talk about
thc enormous profits of the "gold
kings?"
It has been rung in our ears for a
decade, that silver has depreciated, be-
cause of the diminished cost of produc-
tion. The same seems to apply to gold,
for the less It costs to produce it, the
higher it gets. National Bimetallism
Sherman on llm ( rlnio.
In a recent interview John Sherman,
discussing the part lie played in tho
demonetization of silver, said: "It was
quite an undertaking when 1 agreed to
shape legislation on this lino in 1873.
I can forgive the Democrats now for
what they w< re pleased to call my great
crime. 1 have lived to see their leaders
swallow their words, and to-day thero
is not a stronger or more outspoken de-
fender of my course than you will find
in President Cleveland's state papers,
and the speeches of his cabinet otticer.%
It is hai-dly necess.try for me to say a
word. Of course it is gratifying to me."
-Mercury.
How proud Democrats should be ot
tho record which some of their leaders
have made upon this, the most import-
ant question ever before the peopl- o!
any country! How delighted they
should be to know that upon the great
question of silver coinage Cleveland,
Carlisle and Sherman are touching el-
bows so affectionately!
> vol' i;i:t thii roFFFi'T C T\/T T? T T .
Aid Society of our J f [M X
Cor tea, forty of them, nnd | j
\ Is Pure and unsweetened
| and can be retained by
Hhe weakest stomach.
?A safe, easily digested;
|FOOD for DYSPEPTICS!
vegetable seeds 51.00 post paid.
If you will rut ttil« out Hiul *rnd
with 15c. stamps to John A. Salzer Seed
C5., La Croase, Wis., you will get free a
package of above great coffee seed and
our li8 page catalogue! Catalogue alone
Go. w.n.
Nearly ten thousand tonsof tea were
landed in Tacoma from < lilna in one
day not long ago.
BtatP of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas
O-gnty—SS.
Fri;nk J. Cheney oath that he
Ih the senior partner »>f the firm t»f F«
J Cheney & Co.. d Onjr busim-so In the
City of Toledo, County and State afore-
said, and that said linn will pay the
sum of One Hundred Dollars for eacn
and every case of Catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use « f,v
Cure. FRANK J. CIlKNhA.
Sworn to before me and subscribed !n
, ... n ... this eth day of Dee< mber,
A I>. 1 sstj. A. W. CILEASON.
(Seal > Notary Publio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure i- taken Internal-
ly and act* directly on the blood and
mucous surfa s of tin system. Send
for testimonials, free. »
p. .i CHENEY A CO., Tulcdo, O.
Sold by dru^'i <ts; ?."><•.
Hall's Family Pills, -5c.
Sold bv I)RI'(H1I5TS CVFRVWHEREI
C John Curie A Sons, New York
■■"■•« *****••■ *******
;., .. Aiai wo-x.K »:o.,<!•« J;s!LflX.?2KS
) ti ha.i reduced the coil of
..iv.is.e It lias many branch
iws»odinuid repairs
i I m ■
<.tli"is it makfS I'liuipiliS anu
Oeanu, Steel, Oulvanlted after.
. ('oiiipa tliiii Windmills, Tiltlug
it ti il Flxicl s..H Tow» m. SM»el Bum Saw
M.».'i I'ufd Cutters and Fowl
tliindiTa. on iiH'llratlon it will name ona
uf mi tklc.> iNut li will furnish until
if Halls c .- trrll JammrflM hi I/3 n..> i.hi.uI iirlcc. It il»
T;ii:W•> ;aid IMimiiS «.f Jill kinds. S*nd for catalogue^
f iv- •. u I fillmore Slrect*. Chicai*
WEIL MACHINERY
Illustrated cataloir'io lliowinff
AT'f.O HOCK D1III.I k'. HYI'KAtJLlO
AM> JKTTJNO MACHINERY, etc.
Sent Fufz. Have boon tobtod and
ail icarranteil,
PiOnSlI & Chase Machinery Co.
i 11 i \\ eat 11 ti. Street*
HANS AS CITY. MISSOURI.
51 J
il
Have your win-el painted to match
your carriage, lt i;. the correct tiling
in London.
tered, first
Kaiicli, Seward County, Kansas. Trav-
bv ' linnarron ltivt-r. l.fxjO acres
^ I fenced meadow land. Abundant range pas-
Fob InMTATiotf ot tiib Thboatcaused by ture. 0 ml'ei from shipping j'oint, Itock
old or uso oftbe voice "Bbowh's Brov- [gland R. R. 24 hours from Kansas City.
,m nnot i::«r . x. •1":i.:I\ i« neiicUU. . All desirablefacilitiei. Good buildincs and
tons bay on hand. Apply to I». II.
\ I ;M II, "'1 1' iplf r>iiil(lil)£, M. Louis,Mo.
New
The largest vineyard in
is iu Seneca county. It lu
"Ilpiison'o M&fflo Com Salve.'
Warrant'.- '■ ' > in «-y refunded. A«k
dniKKi»t lur IU l'rli-8 li cents.
The Berlin Academy of Seieiiso
preparing to i*sue a complete edi
of the works of Kant.
^ASKER'8
HA.il DALSAM
c: i in il btaiitifici the hair.
l'i. ,« u lar'ina .t growth.
f,'c r I'ails to liostore Oray
Jin:r to I'n Youthful Color.
( ...>• • u ;> <1.A hair tailing.
1 <
- 1,:
WHY CON T YOU LL'Y CORN?
Kotlilnc'sosouileaiy ana completely
disables the muscles as
i ,N 'nu k ls
PATENTS,TRADEMARKS
} - iriiii'.if! n and Advice m tn Patentability ot In
1 t Onlde, or How to Get a
■ . l'.VIi.: K i I'l AKiJ l.L, Ma.iliiuKton, D. O.
.'.V TIIOKN li
:o prLiptly % ' R tu!::-SV/ilIKAl'UStFAIlS.
«T Oil o
K anfl nothing co
5 aad surely
9 cures them as
"I firmly bellevo that rise's
q Cure k"[ t mo from having
m ?i'.r53 quick ':• ?i.-umption." — Mrs.
P KM 0^ if. D. DARLING, Eoiiver
Sag Mo;iJbw, N. Y., Judo 18, 1895.
r.'-y
Cures Whoro All Elso Fails. BEST COUCH SYRUP.
r V--TKS noon, rsn i\ rnre. «oi.i> by nnuaoiSTR. rr«.
FOR
Of Course-
(Do you Wash QUICKLY?
f)TJT/Do you Wash EASILY ?
Dl)l)Doyou Wash THOROUGHLY?
IDoyoa Wash CHEAPLY?
You may IP you v/ill use
THE GOLD BLADDER.
IIow It Whb Puncturutl l»y Kx-Sp.«ke»
t'rlsp In tin* llouso.
Ex-Speaker Crisp, in a few words, ;
punctures the bladder of Mr. C. vc-
land's argument concerning the n <js-
sity of retiring all the greenback, and j
Sherman notes to preserve the gol.i re- '
serve and the public credit.
The ex-speaker points out thai
President's assumption that our
gations are payable in gold is fal
there is no law in ihe statute book
| tlfying this assumption. On the
trary, all bonds, treasury notes
other obligations of the government
are payable in "coin," that is, in gold
or silver of tho present standard of
weight and fineness. All that is nt "S-
sary to relieve tho gold stock of exces-
sive drafts is for the se< r.-iary ol ti e
treasury to exercise the option ex; • -.<■?-
ly given him by law to pay in ^ I or
silver, as conven'once may sugpo t.
If the secret nr.v of the treas u v • xc -
clsed this legal option he could pie.: . t
the gold stock from its eontlnuoti iiam
and could make uso of tho idle stock
of silver in the treasury, lly this i mr*o
the necessity of issuing bonds c< l ho
avoided, and there would be in> oo
ion for the retirement i
^£JuKi9e«ISi8l E U 829
The Lest, purest and most cctuioraics.1 soap tnada
Sold everywhere. Made only by
THE N. It FAIRBANK COMPANY,
St. I^uis.
Great Prize Contest.
1st Prize, KINS ABE PIAMO, stylo "P"
2d Prize, Cash, -
3d Prize. Cash, -
10 Cash Prizes, each $20,
15 Cash Prizes, each $10,
' 28 Prizes, - $1300
The tirst pri/" will be L'iven to lh-» persm who constriictf the shortest
intaining all the letters in the alphabet. Tho other
$800
Mitence, in English,
rizes will go in reg
e\t iu point of brt \
!ar order to those compelilurs whose sentences stand
it v.
So f:ir as the people arc coni i i ncd. ivr j and th(, U1 rni!l(, o( lh(, ,.,)lltro| tho
tli of ft sentence is to be nie
contestant must imli
li>tig it is. The sen
s and names of persol
ury 15tli, 18P0, niul the results will I
two or more pri/.e-winning scntcn
\henthc companies will all go
riouslv hurt.
It
believetl
through Oklahoma to reach Tt
I stead of going via. Arkimnas.
i Territorial Auditor taineron n
that uklahoiiia i% bounded on the »
by Arkansas on the north by Kan-
| on ih* south by Texas, and on
wet !• i he pr" id^rj' ** '»od
In tbht none will <iie.
It is a little singular, remarks an Ok- j
lahoma paper, that < lyde Mutto.x has
! «| ti it dying of eousmptioii.
An (Iklaboma man lias sued bis wife
for a divoree ifcettlise she would not I
nigii u Heed to some property
havo had just the condition that the
Times-Herald endorses Hut on the oth-
er hand, the money power has been
constantly organized, always a unit,
acting together regardless of differ-
ences on other points, controlling con-
ventions and dictating the nomination
of men who can be depended upon to do
the bidditif )f capital.
So tho Times-Herald thinks me finan-
cial affairs of the government should bo
left to the blinkers. What a tplindtd
thing that would bw for the toller and j when you fl
producer. I'mgolog
A mother ben would be jurt a* going to iv
currency over to the national banks, j
As the Post-Dispatch has frequently
asserted, tho real cauue of the worst
troubles of the treasury ls the fact that I
the administration is willing to kuTi- 1
lice the interests of the country in t r- f
tier to maintain the single gold r mj- I
aid in tho interest of the financier*.—
St. l,o*iis Post-Dispatch.
Dudely What are you going to he
grown up. Hobb> ? Bobby
» be •• man What are you
Harper's liaiar.
CONDITIONS.
The
contains, ami eaq
sentence just ho
Geographical n:u
closes Feb
later. In «
one first received will be given preference, livery competitor whose
sentence is less than l it! letters in length will reeeivo Wilkie Collins' works
in paper cover, including twelve complete novels, whether he win* a , rizo
or not. No contest ant ».in enter more than one seiiti nco nor combine with
other competitors Residents of Omaha are not permitted to take any
part, directly or Indirectly, in this cont< >t.
This remarkably liberal offer is made by tho Wi kki.y WonLD-ITEliALD,
of which the distinguished ex-congressman,
miim i. BRYAN, is Editor,
and i' il required that each competing sentence be • uolossa with one dollar
for a year's subscription. The Wi i-.ki.v Wi>i;U)-Hi-;iiAi.n i« issued in semi-
weekly sections, and hence is nearly as good as a daily, it is tho western
champion of free silver coinage and the leading family newspaper of
Nebraska. Address,
11red bv tho uuinber of letters it
le by figures nt. tho close of his
nee must have some meaning,
annot be used. The contest
published one week
pially short the
I
No Injections
« Checks at Onc«.
l'h'.larielpbla, I'a.
1
\
Weeklu World-Herald. Omaha, Neb.
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Dwinnell, D. C. The Mulhall Enterprise. (Mulhall, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 11, 1896, newspaper, January 11, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc285608/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.