The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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People's Voice.
NORMAN,
If this scheme to tow canal boats by
electricity does away with canal boat
drivers, whenco will come our future
FreeldenU?
The king of Corea has called upon
•a American to run his kingdom for
him. Can It be passible aUo that Queen
Victoria has cast the eye of hope upon
Richard Croker?
In celebrating the German victory
over France Buddy Hohenzollern pro-
poses to Ignore entirely the services ot
Bismarck. In other words, the tin
soldier proposes to boycott the old wai
horse.
Bismarck Is an old man, and It Is
a cynical commentary upon his life that
he gives In saying that through all the
years that he has lived he has not
experienced more than twenty-four
hours' happiness.
The United States navy has too man)
offlcers and too few enlisted men. Near-
ly every class of cadets that is graduat-
ed from the naval academy at Annapo-
lis provides a supply of young officers
in excess of the available vacancies,
and In spite of the most skillful maneu-
vering some of the cadets In each class
fail to secure commissions and are dis-
charged, although well qualified for the
service. The surplus of ofllcers Is ono
of the legacies of the civil war. during
the course of which several classes of
unusual size were rushed through the
naval academy in order to meet the
necessities of the times.
The new administration of Great
Britain has very much the aspect of a
nice little family party. In It are a
father and a son, Mr. Chamberlain and
Austen Chamberlain; a father-in-law
and a son-in-law, Lord Salisbury and
Lord Selborne; two brothers, Arthur
and Gerald Balfour; an uncle and two
nephews, Lord Salisbury and the
Messrs. Balfour; and two brothers-in-
law, Lord George Hamilton and Lord
Laasdoirne; and, when the cabinet
meets the clerk of the fc;'.l39 of com-
mons, they will find him to be the hus-
band of Lord Salisbury's niece.—Bos-
ton Herald.
A Michigan dispatch says: "A new
species of grip has appeared in Shia-
wassee county, locally known as
"Trilby," Its symptoms and varied ac-
companiments are severe pain In one or
both sides, sore throat, headache, high
temperature, and difficulty In breathing.
It Is no respecter of persons, but seizes
old and young, prostrating them usually
within a few moments from the first in-
dications of Illness. There are 500 cases
of "Trilby" In Owosso, and similar re-
podts come from Bancroft, Morris,
Perry, and other parts of the country.
Ab yet, however, no deaths have been
reported." This all comes from Liu
Maurler's hypnotized maiden having
posed In her bare feet and left off her
stockings in some of the recent Trilby
dances.
That retribution for unscrupulous
dealings is sometimes visited upon the
wrongdoer speedily and from an un-
expected quarter is Illustrated in an in-
cident given in the "Missionary Re-
view," and taken from a native paper,
*'£ milkman at a fair made 50 rupeei
by selling milk which was largely wa-
ter. Grateful for his prosperity, he
made an offering to the shrine and set
about washing away his sins by bath-
ing in the river, though it does not ap-
pear that he reckoned the adulteration
of milk among them. He laid aside his
garments, in which were the 50 rupees,
and proceeded to his bath, when a mon-
key seized the garment and climbed to
the topmost branch of a tree overhang-
ing the water. To the horror of the
bather he saw the beast take out the
silver pieces and drop them, one by-
one, into the swift-flowing stream.
There was nothing to be done but to
bear his loss; but mindful of how the
money was obtained the man piously
exclaimed to tho river, 'Mother Gunga
has claimed her own.' "
Edward Eggleston originated the
Christian Endeavor Society in his pop-
ular story, "The Hoosier Schoolmas-
ter," which he wrote in 1872 in a small
house In Schermerhorn street, Brook-
lyn. It is In this fiction also that may
be found "The Church of the Good
Licks." In 1877, when Mr. Eggleston
became the pastor of the Lee Avenue
Congregational Church (now the Lee
Avenue Theater), he organized for the
young people a Society of Christian En-
deavor, In imitation of the one in hl
book. The weekly meetings In tli*
church drew together such a compan.-
of bright young men and women as that
town never witnessed in similar gath-
erings before or since. All the pro-
fessions were represented; and the ob-
ject was chiefly social culture. It was
from the success of this small company
In making one evening in the week
agreeable and profitable that the great
gathering in Boston has come to pass.
A Kansas man and his wife spent a
fortune In suing each other for divorce.
After they had gotten rid of all their
money they concluded to live happily
together in poverty. This is a new
demonstration of the theory that the
way to get any satisfaction out of
wealth is to spend It.
In the present Salisbury ministry
blood tells, or title does, for nearly all
of them belong to the titled classes;
but so does education count, for nine
of the members are graduates ol Ox-
Cord and thres Item Cambridge.
TN THE NEW aH'ATKV
BRIEF BITS OF GENERAL NEWS
FROM THE TERRITORIES.
Oklahoma and the Indian Territory with
Their lludget of Ornrral and I.oval I.« re
lUtulird for tin- C ontrukutt of theCeu
era I Reader.
Hay thin winter is going to be scarcer
in the territory than corn.
All over Oklahoma firm* are adopt-
ing a strictly ca h bufciness.
Those ten days for the II. O. G. road
to begin building is up again.
The Santa Fe and the (hoctaw are
now fighting for the territory freight.
T. E. Week has tired of the west side
and will establish a paper at McLoud.
I
An Oklahoma man won 2300 on a i
hort e race in Pittsburg, the other day. I
The territorial malitia will give a i
sham battle during the Logan county '
fair.
There arc corn failures in spots in i
Oklahoma, but the spots are not very j
large.
They say that Judge llurford can
make a speech that makes the windows
rattle.
There is home kicking orer the terri-
tory to have the game law repealed.
Wisely a constable in Noble county
decided not to arrest a man who was
cut up on a railroad.
Frank Prouty, the old-time editor of
Oklahoma, is now editing a baseball
nine in Nob e county.
The doctor* are working very hard
on Zip Wyutt and hope to confer a fa-
vor on the gallows.
After hearing him Oklahoma is of
the opinion that Coxey has better
features than Oberlander and let s
brains.
The eastern papers are now saying
that at the editorial convention in
Oklahoma it was resolved that 44 cal-
ibre carried straighter than 32.
At Sharon the other day a man ad-
mitted that he had committed perjury
by swearing he had seen a neighbor
j sell whisky to an Osage Indian.
The Oklahoma farmer is now sizing
( up his corn and trying to strike a bal-
i nnce between the height of his side-
i oards and the strength of his horses.
Sheriff Wilson of IUaine county, is
reported to have hidden out when a
1 report reached town recently that the
county treasury would tw? looted by
| outlaws.
Hide buyers in the territory pay
I he (udahv meat company has . . . , . .
. . • . /.'iii about 4. cents over the market pric
made a distributing point in Oklano- ! , , . . . . '.
, for hides not branded on the prime
ma county. 1 . . . . , . , , 4l r .
parts, or for hides branded on the neck
Several Oklahoma towns are exhib- | or shoulder.
iting the ''first bale of cotton" of this
It is said that Cleveland will finally
commute Clyde Mattox's sentence; but
| that he will not do it until the last day
for the purpose of giving Mattox the
benefit of the scare.
year's growth.
Eleven men are to be tried in the
Kay county district court this week
for "introducing."
Oklahoma is reminded that there
no rose without a thorn—wet seasons
always bring mosquitos.
1 A minister preached last Sunday in
the territory on "Cheap Religion. He
j was painfully surprised to find an un-
Fourteen-foot corn and eighty-pound . usual number of coppers in the basket
watermelons doesn't look m.i h like i after the services.
starvation in the territory. . , ,, . . ... ,
John Halley, charged with shooting
I he meanest name an Ok.ahonia John (Jeer at Homing recently, was
editor can call his rival in business is j tried before Judge T. J. Leahy and
"the ungallused accident. bound over in the sum of 91,000. Bailey
Jennie Metcalf and a companion
made his <
ape,
but returned of his
named Anna McDc ulet are in jail again , own accord for trial.
this time for stealing n bridle. j The {)roject of rail.injf a r0(?iment in
Two-pound ears of corn and three- Oklahoma to join Cuban insurgents
pound sweet potatoes look like a fain- appears to be a much more serious af-
ine in Oklahoma, don't they'.' fair than at first supposed. It is said
Onions bring 90 cents a bushel in that the leaders of the movement are
western Ohlahoma a price that will . really in earnest, and a number of
hardly take the purchasers breath , men have already enlisted who are
away
Agent Freeman, of the Osage*, is now
"writhing under the torture" of a se-
ries of resolutions passed by Oklahoma
editors.
Wyatt is the only outlaw in Oklaho-
ma's long list who was actually taken
alive after a fight. Palton was killed
and Cook gave up cpsily.
llruce Lynch, warden of the peni-
tentiary of Kansas, is trying to arrange
a pardon schedule wit.i Oovernor Ren-
frow whereby prisoners from Oklaho-
ma may be advanced i«>r good behav-
ior.
A girl who attended a society dance
in the territory tin other night was
arrested for a line she owed the city,
as she was leaving the hall, and the
whole company was consequently
scandalized.
The little city of Pun eli has < I'gan-
ized a sort of provisional government
and elected officers for the purpose of
trying to improve the condition of the
city—morally and otherwise.
The taxpayers of Noble county
heaved a sigh of relief that sounded
like the wind playing with :: loose
shingle when they heard that the Uni-
ted States government would pay the
expenses of nursing Zip Wyatt.
i holding secret meetings and arranging
plans for a movement toward Cuba.
Deputy marshals arrested the noto-
rious^! ennie Metcalf Tuesday but she
stole an officers horse and fled. She
was formerly Jennie Stephens and is
an own cousin to Hill Dalton. and not
an officer in the territory is a better
shot than she. She was arrested two
months ago for selling whisky to Osage
Indians and gave bond. Although
only 18 years old she is said to have
sold more whiskey to Indians than
the oldest offender.
Here is a queer advertisement found
in an Oklahoma paper: Found—A di-
vorce, which the owner can have by
calling at this office and paying for
this advertisement. If owner does not
call within reasonable time, we will
offer the said divorce for sale to the
highest bidder to pay expense of ad-
vertising. Said divorce was granted
to Anna Simmons, in Jackson county
Missouri, in 1*S8. and is therefore good
as it is a little late for the defendant
to appeal. It being valid, we shall
give the probate court subjects first
chance, in case we are forced to sell
the same.
A telegram has been from Judge C.
It. Kilgore. now at Washington, that
Charles L. Stowc would be the man to
succeed his deceased brother as United
States Marshal of the Indian territory.
The people are greatly rejoiced over
the news.
Noble county was visited by a four-
inch rain Wednesday night. The rain
was accompanied by a very heavy elec-
trical storm east of Perry. The wind
was very severe and blew down several
houses but no casual it ies hi
reported.
A boiler of a portable engine on u
thresher blew up near Oakland, twen-
ty-six miles east of Ardmore Wednes-
day, instantly killing Will Craft, Lee
Norwood and Pink Norwood and seri-
ously wounding several others, a num-
ber of whom cannot recover. The
Norwoods are father and son. Craft
was the band cutter. The following
is the list of the most seriously in-
jured: Will Tippett, badly scalded,
cannot recover; C. H. Hainm, bruised
and scalded: James Wilken, bruised
and scolded; J. P. Walker and Claude
Howell, scalded and bruised; T. P.
Carter, severely cut on head and ankle:
been 1 Short, the engineer, badly scalded and
will die.
The four Deputy Sherift's who killed ! A scene was enacted on the south-
Dick WlUett and wounded two other I bound Santa Fo train Friday night
men. near llennessv. Mipposing them j whicli was laughable to all who wit-
to be part of Dick Ycaevr's « r.tlaw ; nosed it and humiliating to the star
band, were placed under Sl.r.OO bonds | player, a I. Mood of New York, a
each to await a preliminary hiaring I member of the < alumet club and one
on the charge of murder in the first
degree, preferred by two brothers of
Willett.
A curious accident occurred Wednes-
day evening at Samuel Connor's, seven
miles northeast of Oklahoma City.
Mr. Connor purchased an alcohol bar-
rel. There was enough alcohol left in
the barrel to produce considerable gas.
but Mrs. Connor not thinking of the
infiumable character of the gas, un-
f (lotliam's swell set, was aboard the
train en route to Texas for a pleasure
trip. Near Perry a band of Otoe In-
dians got on board, and young Mood,
whose brain was fired with Cooper's
poor lo tales, got very gay and offered
them a flask of whiskey with the re-
mark: 4,I)—n your cowboy laws."
The Indians took the whisky with avid-
ity and to the intense delight of the
clubman. While he was enjoying the
ne Deputy United States Marshal
ilertook to clean the barrel by burning Overby, who was sitting near aro
it ou*. but w hen the torch was stuck from his seat and stepping up to Mood
quietly said: "1 want you." Mood
barrel a terrific explosion
currcil, which was heard a half mile dis-
tant. Mrs. Connor was badly burned
about the face and hands and her an-
kle was severely bruised by a flying
piece of the barrel. She will recover.
As an illustration of the wonderful
strides in civilization • Burlington h
taken it may be said that at tin
burial there the corpse was carried on
an ox cart, while now corpses can ride
in a wagon with glass windows and
curtains.
Annie Dechaiser. in the Jacksonville
insane asylum from Choctaw City,
'died the first of the week with con-
sumption.
Miss Minnie Couch, daughter of the
late ('apt. W. L. Couch, was married
Saturday to Toney Alexander, the cat-
tle \ ing of the Kickupco country.
was lodged in the federal jail. Satur-
day he was taken to the county seat of
Kay county where a large jtiicy hole
was dunched in his wallet by the of-
ficials of Uncle Sam.
Judge Me A tee jabbed a collar and
an extra shirt in his valise the other
first night and took the train to Mackinaw,
Michigan where he join Governor
Renfrow.
John Twamley, not far from Guth-
rie. wants .">00 men with Winchesters
for the purpose of "hunting geese on
the gulf of Mexico." Twamley is a
Cuban sympathizer.
H. G. Fast of Waukomus, advertises
that the man who stole his horse and
left an inferior pony in its place can
get the pony and a licking by commu-
nicating with him ut once.
Noble county has got to tho polof
where it ''defiescompetition."
About ten thousand dollars are paid
in pensions quarterly in Garfield coun-
ty.
On an average twenty car loads of
watermelons leave Oklahoma every
week.
Peaches of a fine order are selling in
Oklahoma markets for a dollar a half
a bushel.
Within thirty days the people of Ok-
lahoma expect to go to St. Louis via
the Choctaw.
A territory pai>er in advertising for
a devil says she must be red headed
and weigh at least 100 pounds.
A Kansas City paper publishes in
good faith that Zyp Wyatt is in jail
but that Dick Yeager is still at large.
It is understood that Tom Irwin in
trying to slip back into Oklahoma on
the west side has been lost in a corn
field.
A new wholesale grocery under the
name of Ranney-Alton Grocery compa-
ny has been organized in Oklahoma
county.
It is to be hoped that Zip Wyatt will
recover sufficiently to explain whether
he ever met Ira Terrill in his travels
in the wilds.
There are eighty-five men in the Kan-
sas penitentiary who might be resi-
dents of Oklahoma today if the}' be-
haved themselves.
The committee said that Reverend
Joel Smith was indiscreet. Perhaps
they believe that indiscretion is the
worse half of virtue.
The Harry St. John case is to come
up in the Oklahoma courts in the near
future. It is the general opinion that
St. John will go free.
Know men by all these presents, that
Woodward county has up to
date carefully kept its gold mine con-
cealed from the public.
A man in Oklahoma lias invented a
machine for cutting trees. George
Washington once got in trouble exper-
imenting in tliut line.
Merely as a matter of form it should
be stated that the Oklahoma man who
started to walk to Dallas to attend the
prize-fight, is still walking.
Bill Taylor, who is to hang in Mis-
souri, was in Arapahoe taking depo-
sitions the week before the murder of
the Meeks was committed.
Hon. Horace Speed and Mrs. M. J.
McAllister were married at Burden,
Kansas, last Monday. Horace Speed
has come to Oklahoma to stay.
Tom Irwin should vary the tale a
little. He should say that the settlers
of Oklahoma are killing themselves by
eating nothing but watermelon.
Prof. Hailman, superintendsnt of
Indian schools, insists that the man in
red should be made to earn his chuck
by the sweat of his countenance.
Some Oklahoma lawyer should ex-
plain what would happen to a man
who was divorced from his wife with-
out the ••fully and forever" attach-
ment.
Frank Richardson, discharged from
Troop A, Fort Reno, is riding home to
Detroit on his bike. The distance is
1.598 nliles and he expects to make it
in 21 days.
In Kay county the commissioners of
the county are accused of buying in-
terests in papers as soon as they are
elected. That will end a man every
time politically.
A young lady is so bothered by her
sweetheart's kissing while buggy ri-
ding that she now takes a baseball
mask along and wears it when the}'
get fairly out of town.
The Oklahoma newspaper men have
now met and told one another how
they do it at their office, but no one
offered a successful plan for drilling
into the pocket book of the delinquent
subscriber.
A Cheyenne sub-cliief who has been
in from his allotment for some days,
stated that there was, living on an al-
lotment west of El Reno, the Indian
who killed General Custer. He is
small in stature, literally covered with
scars he received in the famous battle,
and keeps very quiet, never going out
amon£ the whites.
Warrants have been issued for Clias.
Allen, a deputy sheriff, and Benjamin
Vandeworth, George Huff and Wil-
liam Fox, three of his posse, who en-
gaged in a fight with John and Dick
Willett and William Henderson, in
which Dick Willet was killed and .John
Willet and William Henderson serious-
ly wounded near Sheridan three weeks
ago. The charge was preferred by
relatives of the W illetts.
Under the revised statutes of Okla-
homa, all unpaid taxes for 1S«. 4 become
due in August. To all delinquents
there shall l>e added as a penalty one
per cent on the amount thereof on the
first day of each month for the first
three months, and two per cent a
month to be added on the first day of
each month for the second three months
after delinquent, and five per cent a
mouth shall be added on the first day
of each month thereafter until the
taxes are satisfied. Taxes on real
property are made a perpetual lien.
In Noble county the taxes due from
the Santa Fe for 1894 are $3,400, and
the road declares it will pay $2,600,
but the balance is not due.
Eleven car loads more of rails have
arrived for the Choctaw railroad.
Rev. A. V. Francis made an address
on silver in Oklahoma the other night.
The territory minister must also be
something of a statesman or he will
not be in it.
Judge Parker, who sentences so
many criminals in the Indian territory
weighs 203 pounds.
HANDLING BOA CONSTRICTORS
The Trick by Which the Serpent. Ir.
|hM|«l Without longer.
Snake dealers In South America
have a line contempt (or their squirm-
ing and venomous wares, though it is
sometimes difficult to Induce ship cap-
tains .to carry them as freight. The
snake dealers handle the boa constric-
tor with great deftness. This ser-
pent bites, but his bite is not venom-
ous, so that the chief danger to the
handler is from the serpent's enor-
mously powerful muscles. The deal-
ers have learned that the boa, to be
really dangerous, must have a ful-
crum In the shape of something around
which he may coil his tail. The boa
Is, In fact, a lever in which the or-
dinary arrangement is power, weight,
fulcrum. Knowing this, the dealers
drop a soft hat over his head, that he
may neither see nor bite, and then
snatch him so suddenly from his rest-
ing place that he has no opportunity
to braca himself by seizing a fixed ob-
ject with his tail. After that the es-
sential thing is to see that he is not
brought within distance of any such
object. A snake dealer on board a
Brazilian steamer the other day was
occupied in transferring his boas from
one box to another. He opened the
box an instant, dropped a hat over the
head of one of the creatures, snatched
it from Its fellows, and. rushing across
the deck, dropped it into another box.
The thing looked so easy that a deck
hand, waiting until the snake owner's
back was turned, essayed to repeat the
act. He neglected to use the hat, and
with a yell yanked a great snake from
the box with its fangs fixed in his fin-
gers. Not daring to let go, yet fear-
ing to hold on, he began whirling the
snake about his head, meanwhile danc-
ing madly over the deck. The snake
man managed to capture the reptile
and box it in security. Then somebody
expressed concern for the rash deck
hand, to which the snake owner an'
swered:
"What, him? He's all right. But
think of my snake! It's worth twenty
of that mug!"
Moth.r. .ho hn. n.ed r«rk.r'« Oliin
SubIc for Ttar, lo.i,l that ti benefit, more than
oifjrr medicines, ev.rj form of and .iU
d«i ) !eld lo It
A Philadelphia critic, speaking of a
prima donna, says; "We hang upon
every note." This is a proof of the
lady's remarkable powers of execution.
Hinderrorus la ■ simple remedy,
but It takea out the corns, and * bat * consolation ti
lal Makca walking a plcaaure. lie, at drugglata.
One may live as a conqueror, a king
or a magistrate, but he must die as a
man.
I HALL'S CATARRH CUKE It liqnid ind !i
Uken internally, and act. directly upon lb. blood
and mucoua surface* ot the ayatein. Bend (or tea-
timonlttla. tree. Bold by Druggiata, 75c.—F. J.
CHENEY * CO., Propra, Toledo Ohio.
Emancipated Woman (1900)—I wad
a divorce.
Lawyer—What la the matter?
Emancipated Woman—In looking
over my husband's papers, I find that
he spells Woman with a small iv.
A string tied to a gift is a great
drawback to charity.
He that cannot forgive others breaki
the bridge over which he passes him
self.
You may cultivateyour field by proxy
I but you can only cultivate your soul
| yourself.
! The man who committed suicide by
| turning inside out, and crawling
{ through his boots, is not expected tc
I live.
Learn a lesson from the fly on the
fly-paper, and never get stuck on your-
self.
As we must render an account cJ
every idle word, so must we likewise
of our idle silence.
NOVEL SAVINGS BANK.
How a Student Regulate* Ilia Expend
lture* While at College.
Those whose money burns holes in |
their pockets may find a useful hint in I
this story. It is of a student in Colum-1
bia College and his strikingly original j
manner of regulating his personal ex-!
penditures. Like many another youth
of salad age he finds it impossible to'
refrain from squandering his money.
It simply burns a hole in his pocket. So j
to get over the difficulty he has hit up-
on the following plan: Upon receiving
the check for a fortnight's allowance,
intended to cover his living expenses,
he first liquidates any indebtedness
that may be outstanding to his lodging-
house keeper and washerwoman and
converts the whole of the balance into
50-cent silver pieces. Then going to
his room and closing the door, he takes
the coins by handfuls and scatters
them broadcast around the floor. A
few of those which remain in plain
| sight he puts into his pockets. When
they are spent he picks up a few more,
and so on, as necessity requires. After
a week or so has passed he is compelled
to hunt around pretty sharply for the
cash, and the last day of the fortnight
finds him grubbing under the washtand
and bureau, poking beneath the bed
and squinting down the register in the
I hope of discovering a stray half dollar
that had eluded previous search. But,
though occasionally impoverished, he
is seldom reduced to absolute penni-
lessness.—Ex.
When a man's mind is unsettled, it
frequently l^ippens that his bills are
in the same condition.
When the peace of Europe is rent
will be a good time for somebody to
put a patch on the scat of war.
Do Yon Ile.lre to Adopt a Child?
Address the International Children's
Home Society, 231 La Halle st., Chicago,
Illinois, Kev. Dr. Frank M. Gregg. Gener-
al Manager. Such a child as you may de-
sire, of any age. will b3 sent you on ninety
days' trial. Enclose stamp.
The Andoman Island is the oniy
place in the world where the banana
produces perfect seeds. Every place
else they are propopateil by sinkers.
Poverty never ivearsa large stomach.
"I beg your pardon, sir; did I step
on your toes?" "Oh, no—dont mention
it." The interlocutor is evidently not
satisfied. "No harm done, sir; that's
a wooden leg."—Chicago Record.
Kuril to Find in Itoaton.
In the early days when Mrs. Julia
Ward Howe was becoming known in
Boston as a public speaker, she met
with some opposition both among her
friends and the people generally.
Walking down Charles street one day
with a friend. Mrs. Howe noticed the
sign over the charitable eye and ear in-
firmary, and read it very slowly:
"Charitable eye and ear—can it be that
there is a charitable car in Boston?"
EDUCATIONAL.
A movement is on foot for placing
on the wall of every public school ir
the United States the portrait of George
Washington.
Mrs. Blackadrler, 19 years old and the
daughter of a Dundee architect, is the
first woman to be graduated from St.
Andrew's University, Scotland.
The University of Pennsylvania is
about to adopt the dormitory system
after having existed for one hundred
and forty-five years without it.
Japanese is to be one of the languages
taught in the Chicago university in the
future. Those preparing for missionary
services in that country can avail them-
selves of this advantage.
President Gllman of John Hopkins
University has accepted the office of
chief of the bureau of awards of the
Atlanta exposition, and has cabled to
Paris for offers of designs for the
medals.
Over 40,000 women are attending the
various colleges in America, yet it has
been only twenty-five years since the
first college in the land was open to
women. Oberlin College first allowed
women.
The sultan of Turkey has asked the
United States department to find him
three American professors to place at
the head of his three government de-
| partments of science, art and agricul-
ture, recently established. The salary
is S6.000.
The Boston Y. M. C. A. lias just is-
sued its report. It has 500 students
in evening classes. It has 7,000 volumes
in the library. Service is held every
Sunday evening in the building. It
closes its financial year with a balance
in the treasury.
Because of a depleted condition of the
blood. The remedy is to be found in
purified, enricbed aud vitalized blood,
which will be given by Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla, the great blood purifier. It will
tone the stomach, create an appetite &Lti
give renewed strength. Remember • ^
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the only true blood purifier prominently
in the public eye today. $1 ; six for
COLLINS AGUE
CURE.
Three or four doses of this ffrnnd
old remedy when your stomach or
bowels are out of order and you
feel badly all over will cleanse
your system in a most wonderful
manner and make you feel like a
new person.
t^'All druggists sell it.
ILDDD POISON
_ ondaryorTer-
Itlary r.!.ooi> POISON permanently
I tired In 15to35 days. You enn bo treated at
[horns for tamo prloe under same Kimrau-
|ty. If you prefer to come here we willcon-
tract to pay railroad fureand hotel bills,and
nocbaiye, if wo fail to cure. If you have taken mer-
cury, lodltle not.mil, and still huvo aolics and
Sains, 31 ucousVatches in mouth, Kore Throat,
>imples. Copper Colored si <.t-, (Jleeri on
anv purtof the body, Il lr<>r Kyebrown fulling
out, it is tins Secondary lit.ooi> POISON
we guarantee to cure. Wo solicit the most obsti-
nate canes and challenge tho world for a
case wo cannot cure. Tills dt«eoso has always
bullied the skill of tho most eminent physi-
cians. •500,000 capital behind our uncondl*
tlonal imarauty. Absolute proofs srnt. sealed on
apiHicatkon. Address COOK KKMKDY CO*«
307 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, ILL* __
t ut out and send this advertIsnment.
WELL MACHINERY
AT70ERS, ROCK DRILLS, HY
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
Sent Fbex. Have been toitod and
all warranted.
" " & Chase Machinery Co.
1414 West 11th Street,
KANSAS CITY, MISSOCRI.
A building is now being: erected next
the Washington Building, on lower
Broadway, which will be 162 feet by 190
by 250. The last measure is the height.
It will be Ave stories higher than the
Washington building.
FOR LADIES ONLY.
necessary information.sent recurely sealed In plain
wrapper upon receipt of II 00. Stamps taken. Ad.
Ladies Companion Co., Kansas City, Mo.
PATENTS,TRADEMARKS
F.iamlnation and Advice as to Patentability of In-
vention. Bend for "Inventors' Guide, or How to Get a
Patout. PATRICK O'FARRJSLL, Washington, D. C.
AGENTS MAKE $10 A DAY
eltiea. Just out, and sell like wlldflre. Send for circular
miiI terms. Dixie Novelty Co , Ltd., New Orleans, La.
JIUPTCRE CI'RKD. Noknlfeu«ed. Nopay until
cured. Catarrh treated by mall. Call or addreaa
Davenport Rupture Cure,141N. Market, Wlcblta.Kan.
aates Good. V
Best Cough Byru
In Ume. Bold by drusslsts.
3SEEE2ZQQIS]
d by druggleta.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1895, newspaper, August 23, 1895; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116741/m1/2/: accessed May 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.