The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
People's Voice.
OELAHOV 1 AM) INDIAN I'KKKITOKV
John Jennings, who was hurt in the
Curtis duel, is recovering.
The Choctaw road is said to employ
1,500 men in its coal mines.
Hereafter the Choctaw railroad will
run hut one train on Sunday.
It is claimed that the Know birds
have arrived in Payne county
Over sixty tons of broom corn was
marketed in Colgate in one week.
Beginning with next week Purcell
will be illuminated with electric lights.
The total amount of tux delinquent
in Oklahoma county amounts to 90,000.
A biff prairie fire last week burned
out M. Clipper, who lived in Garfield
county.
That slow drizzle Tuesday extended
clear into the nouthern portion of Ok-
lah< una.
Jake Admire saw* ex-Senator Ross of
Kansas when he visited New Mexico
this summer.
John Peterson is back from the
Wichita mountains and as usual he
has some "ore.''
It is almost chilly enough for the
Cherokee strip correspondent to begin
freezing people to death.
The Oklahoma editors are all mighty
glad to get luick. There is nothing; so
fascinating as newspaper work.
J. J. McAlester, the big man of
South McAlester, made his maiden
trip into Oklahoma the other day.
It is said that wheat never fails
when it gets a start in the fall in Ok-
lahoma. It has the start this fall.
Those wholesale divorces in Oklaho-
ma are said to have the effect of cur
tailing the number of loeal marriages.
Indian Agent Baldwin of Anadarko
is now engaged in that perpetual picas-
are known as "bouncing the intruders."
20ne of the delightful novels encoun-
tered by the Oklahoma editors while
in Texas was the absence of hard
times.
Last Saturday delegates from all
along the Rock Island road met at
Marlow to devise some way of
opening the Fort Sill country.
The Choctaw council appointed three
members of the senate and four of the
house on Friday, to meet the Dawes
commissioners and receive their pro
position in writing. It is a foregone
conclusion that the proposals will be
rejected.
Twenty thousand bushels of wheat
WrMt 09ir* Im i:-- AMHUV
within the short space of three weeks
and twenty thousand bushels more
will be sown this fall; this means a
million bushels will l>e produced next
year in that county.
Last week a man named W. M.
Make received a check from some
man he had never heard of in Ohio.
He took the cheek and cashed it. Now
another W. M. Make appears on the
scene, claims the money and has the
first Blake arrested. Both live in Ca-
nadian county.
I Three hundred murders were com-
mitted in the Indian territory in eight
months
The Oklahoma experiment station
will buy hundreds of bushels of corn
and Kaffir corn this fall.
A big prairie fire was started in Ca-
nadian county recently by a wagon
! wheel passing over a match.
C.al
a 1 win
man who
-bake/'
ston
givci
entertaining vi
leather medal t<
ats the most oysters
ors
at a
Southern Oklahoma has had a big
rain and the howl for street sprinklers
has changed to a howl for better street-
crossings
The railroads are trying to induce
Oklahoma people to visit the Inter-
national regatta which takes place at
Austin, Texas, next week.
Peter Pearson of Kay county de-
clares that it is a shame that the coal
fields of that county are not developed.
He says the fields are then* all right.
'-'The eorre*p ndent fr m Coon Hal-
1 >w instances the progress of culture
by noting that a literary society has
been formed "at the sod school house."
Louis Wedman of Oklahoma count}*
recently returned from his old home
in Sweden. He says that mortffages
over there are as thick as in Oklahoma.
Dennis Flynn makes the beast tha*
no one has ever written him a letter
since he became «-« ngrca>;uan without
receiving a reply.
After several honra work a burglar j
at laat got into the money drawer of
the Alexander Lumlwr company at 1
Hunnewell. He received 40 cents.
Occasionally an Oklahoma paper
breaks out agaipst the "dlv<.roe trade
but only occasionally. As a rule Ok-
lahoma appears to enjoy the commerce !
in damaged affections.
Last week an old negro woman
living in the Seminole nation died at
age of liW years. She was an
aunt of William Noble, of Nobletown,
who is 100 years old and hale and
heart v.
PIERRE LOTTS LIFE h,v*,Ireadr marte-
first impressions of
how the great writer
passes his days.
Henry Wood, formerly general su-
perintendent of the Little Rock A Fort
Smith railway, has been appointed
acting general manager of the Choc-
taw, with headquarters at South
McAle
Manner of Compatln^ * Co* turn*—
Bis Charming Wife—she Prefer* the
Norn tie Plume to That of Madame
Jean Viand.
(Paris Correspondence.)
. HE illustration will
I enable you to judge
of Loti's manner of
composing a cos-
tume. It repre-
sents his attire at
entertainment
•fnS of mine, in which
each guest was to
come in the cos-
tume of some fam-
ous character, and
for I wrote my ;
the place on the j
spot, and I cannot improve it "Loti'«
house is small, but is decorsted by the |
fancy of a great artist. Over the white j
woodwork of the drawing-room, very .
commonplace and bare in itself, Loti j
has drsped fishing-nets, which are agi-
tated by the warm air from without,
and cause light and mysterious shadows
to flit over the walls. The gray of the
nets waving over the softened white-
ness gives the impression of an evanes-
cent decoration seen in a dream. Huge
crab8heils, which have become trans-
parent, rough and ugly monsters of the
■ea, are attached to the netting.
"On every hand, in the many vases,
are many beatuiful flowers, which Loti
can never be denied. Hangings draped
in the corners, portieres, furnishings
disposed with taste, all combine to
make one exclaim, on entering for the
first time: 'How beautiful it is!' Loti's
study, placed above the drawing-room,
A north bound M. K. and T. freight *^CI1 to D*a>* his Part during the even- out aIso on Bldassoa; one
broke is two near South McAlester 'nB* Thus Osiris was brought into con- ? 83y certain^ hours that the
Zach King of Cloud Chief was riding
along last week when a man on a hill
shot at him. Zach dismounted and re-
turned the compliment. After a hot
■duel the first man dropped his gun
and fled.
Captain Joel T. Kirk man who went
from Oklahoma to Fort Riley to answer
the charge of conduct unbecoming an
I officer, has been acquitted on every
charge and specification. This is de-
: lightful news to his many Oklahoma
friends.
; Patsy Aired is on trial at Shawnee-
town for the murder of J. T. Lucky,
six months ago. Miss Aired and Mr.
Lucky lived near each other in Cleve-
land county and were sweethearts.
' They fell out about some corn and
Miss Aired shot and instantly killed
| Lucky.
| TI. C. Wallace, a stenographer who
{ has been assisting Jas. Ewing of the
district of Logan county, was arrested
on a requisition from the governor.
His real name is H. A. Couch and his
home has been in Waco, Texas, where
he is now wanted on a charge of for-
gery, which involves f«o. He was ta-
ken to Texas Wednesday.
Lucky Davis, Moam July, Sam
Simpson, Lewis Davis and RufusHuck
members of the notorious Buck gang
sentenced ta be hung at Fort Smith on
Thursday for numerous murders and
assaults on women in the Creek na-
tion, have appealed their case to the
United States court. This will act as
a respite until their appeal can be
Saturday morning, running together reraation with Cleopatra, Charlotte
and knocking five cars off the track. Corday with Marat, Charles the First
Two were smashed into kindling wood. wilb Cromwell, a grisette with Nero,
The north bound passenger was dc- A(^*^enne Leeouvreur with Scapin, and
laved three hours. No one was hurt. Mahomet with Pourceaugnac. Pierre
Tho Fi«B-nQ 1 r>, 1 • k®1* 031116 08 the Fi8ber of Iceland to
The Choctaw comm.- * garden party wbicb j lhp
sions have m.-t an.t adjourn.nl with no Abbage de Gif
lha" be,0re P!err<* L"11 «■ "Ideally never Idle,
i. 'n , . T,h' >««es oomraussion ha, slBCe j havo t0 k of hlm on,
returned to Fort Smith and will soon
■ return to Washington to make its re
|>ort, which will undoubtedly be ad- !
verse to the present tribal relation j
: ship.
The Cheyennes and Arapahoes are |
preparing for a big dance, out near
j Chief Left Hand's allot ment, and '
I Black Coyote, chief of Indian police. |
will superintend the affair. He ha a j
orders from Agent Woodson to break ;
| up the danee at the end of four day-- j
| Without such an order beinj? (fiven.
I the "hoe-dowh" would probably last
until Christmas.
j Poiey Iinpsnn-wus shot and killed by
Deputy United States Marshal Jim
Thompson near Colgote Saturday
morning. Since Thompson arrested
i Impson for the killing of Dave Bohan-
1 non a year ago, there had been bad
blood between them, and when they I
met Saturday both began shooting. I
, They tired four shots each. Thomp- j
: son's horse was killed and Impson I
> was shot three times-
? On account of his wife's sickness
Judgd Kilgore will be unable to go to
Purcell to appoint ju.y commissioner., raoreover pertectl 8lm , and can be
u 'T'"" m ? ^ I ^"ibed in a word. In the morning
ma hall E. M. Moore, who will ( Lieutenant Julien Viand ia wholly de-
summons a sufficient number to make voted to hit work or to his ntudy or
the grand and petit juries to be on j to hi. service as a mariner. If he has
hand at the opening of court on the I command of a vessel, as soon as he
To My Joy
Rood*s Sarsaparilla.overeame the effect#
of the grip, cured me of dyspepsia, and
nervous prostra-
tion. I treated
with three differ-
ent doctors with*
out r« alir.ing re-
lief. I resorted
to I ford's Sarsa-
aril la and short*
ly my appetite
was improved
and my rest wat
notsoinucli brok-
en at l ight, get-
ting up in the
morning greatly
refreshed. After
taking three bot
ties of Hood's
Karsaparillal was
KBtirely cured and today feel ns well as
tver 111 my life." If. I' Hanuktier, Ken-
ett, Arkansas Get Hood's because •
Hood's Sarsaparilla
fs the Only True Wood Purifier promi-
nently in (he public eye. $1: six for $5.
Prepared only by 1. Hood & Co.,
Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass., I*. S. A.
Hood's Fills;; v
■Y-m
mm
VIAND, THE NAVAL OFFICER,
private life, I need not linger to de-
scribe his manner of writing. It is,
view is over the sea. To write in peace,
Loti has condemned the inner door to ]
the room, and his visitors must go up ;
to his sanctum by means of a rope lad- i
der, an easy way for sailors, but slight- |
ly incommodious for others."
Pierre Loti is a musician of a high !
order. Ho sings in a beautiful, true '
barytone voice, and as an accompanist j
he is unrivalled. He loves quiet life |
with his family. His mother, Mme.
Viand—for Pierre Loti is Lieutenant
Julien Viand—is the source from whlc
he has drawn the distinction, sensibil-
ity and grace
eighty-two years oiu, out sne is * **«;- * « , i_ ar
tive as a young woman, and she per- j 6 Depended on by Nurses'
formed feats of mountain climbing last . J
autumn which were
of her daughter, Mme.
Loti.
Pierre Loti is married, and his young
wife loves to hear the name of Mme.
Pierre LoW, In preference to that of
Mme. Julien Viand. She admires her
husband as much as the most impas-
sioned of his readers, and she is sufll-
| ciently literate to understand him.
Knowing Loti's love for flowers, It is
one of her fa vorite occupations to renew
the flowers on his table and in the
drawing-rooms for the gratification of
Loti's eyes.
Loti lost his first little son, who camo
prematurely into the world, and he has
never ceased to mourn for him. He has
given his second son the name borne
by the first, Samuel, The young Sam-
uel, although scarcely four years old,
is already a person of pronounced char-
acter. Of course, he intends to be a
sailor, and is always dressed in sailor's
costume. Inasmuch as his trousers are
white, they must be changed several
nt|1 -GRANUMj
\ Prescribed by Physicians?
ie distinction, senaiuil- g* «• « • >v •. . /
of ins mind, she I. :: Relied on in Hospitals?
3 old, but she is as ac- ; j « t ar *
~*oman, and she per- | j Depended on by Nurses'
intain climbing last ■ • p « « « -*-< **** r\nr*Po
beyond the powers r EttdOrSCd b)T IIE'PRESS 5
ie. Bou, the sister of S T. — oi- , r^nt, i
The BEST prepared FOOD;
t Sold by DRUGGIST5 EVERYWHERE I
S John Carle A Sons, New York.
PINEOLA COUGH BALSAM
la excellent for all throat i&flammar,- « *n«l f,,r
asthn . ' # nsum p.
tive* ui.i invariably
derive benefit fr«>m
ii« use, ua it qvi.-kty
ahatei the coojfh,
rendeia expectora-
tion ea-y, assisting
nati.re in restoring
wasted tisauea.
There is i large p -r-
centape of th*> e vrho-
anpiioae their caaea
to be consumption
vrbo arc oniy auffer-
, .. _ Ing from n chronic
cold or deep seated Map, ofren aggravated by
ruarr! # i-'or raturrli use Rly's i'ream fialm. Both
remedies are pleasant to irae. ('ream Bairn, 50r. per
bottle; Pineola Balsam,at Dru^giata. In quan-
tities of f'.so will deliver on receipt of amount ^
KLY BKOTliEIib, 56 Warren St., >iew
acted upon.
Another shooting scrape « ccurred at
Tn^alls last Friday morning, when Dr.
Rriffffs received a severe flesh wound
from a ffun in the hands of his son.
It appears from the reports that the
father and son became engaged in a
quarrel at the breakfast table
which the shooting occurred.
ltfth. His honor will no doubt feel I
gratified to know that a nice and com- 1
fortable court building will be ready I
for him at Purcell on that date.
The bugaboo o f taxation, if careful- ]
ly investigated, will show that the (
Chickasaw people pay moie to main- |
tain thi ir government, per capita than :
citizens of any state of the union, and
that thousands of non-citizen renters j
who pay a permit tax of annually, !
would, in the states, come under the
luring | exemption law or pay less than that
Young- | amount on the excess, including the
Briggs immediately left for parts un- poll tax, which is most beneficially ap-
known and has not been seen since. : plied to the improvement of country
W. D. Haldhill, who was recently j ? * v , ,
\ rather sensational and romantic
Charles Murray, an Iowa Indian
living on South river, while returning
home the other night, in an intoxica-
ted condition, fell out of his carriage
and received a compound fracture of
the leg. He lay in this condition un-
til 9 o'clock the next morning before
he was discovered. At present he is
in a bad condition, but he will proba-
bly recover.
A big law suit is now l>efore Judge
Ilierer. It is the of Gay & Raid vs !
sheriff and treasurer of Kay county, i
The amount involved is 812,000 and i
"thedecision will effect taxes to th -
amount of 800,000. The official of
Kay county assessed all the Texas cat-
tlemen grazing on the Otoe, I'onca and
Osage reservations and also all stock
dry goods and other property owned
by Indian traders in these Indian
tribes. Henry Asp and Attorney |
General Galbraitk are in the case.
Clara and Sadie Jenkins, Sam Mar- j
ritt and the two Warner boys were ar- j
rested Wednesday night charged with
conspiracy in resisting United States!
bfticereand for assault with intent to !
murder. The girl's father is living on 1
an Indian allotment and the Indian !
officers attempted to eject the family
in the absence of Jenkins. The young
women with guns ran the police away,
wounding some of them.
Indictments against the officials of
the defunct bank of Kay county and
all of the officials of Kay county haw
been returned. It was found that
they wera technically defective, but
the judge of the district court holds :
both bank and county officers for in-
vestigation by the grand jury and le-
gal true bills will be found if the in
structions of the court are observed.
The bank's creditors claim that the j
bank's failure and the county's loss of
funds was the result of the connivance
of both sets of officials.
M. Mom Weeks of Curtis, recently !
had seven strangers sick in the house
all at one time.
Quantities of persimmons are re-
ported on Indian river, and many
eaxnping parties are on the hunt for <
the lucious fruit.
The following reservations are yet
to be opened in Oklahoma: Kansas
100,000 acres, 200 Indians; Kiowa and i
Comanche2,W58,803 acres, 2,7*> Indian; 1
Osage 1,470,058 acres, 1,608 Indians;
Otoe 129,113 acres, 362 Indians; I'onca I
101,894 acres. 577 Indians; Wichita
743,610 acres, 996 Indians.
vnt from Kay county to the Kansas
state penitentiary, may soon get a re-
prieve. The defense which W. D.
IIilfhill made when tried for drawing
a check on a bank on which he had no
money on deposit, was that he found a
13 year old girl on the train sobbing
and being questioned told Mr. Halfhill
that she was peniless. He took the , r , ,
,.AA, ... • i u i 4 i l Lucky were lover:
little girl in charge, paid her hotel I .
bill and livery hire and running short I
of money himself, he drew the fatal
check which ended in his imprison-
ment.
l,eft Hand, an old Indian who lives 1
on Deer Creek, near Arapahoe, has la- J
bared with the department for several '
years to have his neighlior, T. A. But-
ler a white man, in whom he has ev- !
ery confidence, appointed Indian far- |
mer for his district. Mr. Butler re-
ceived the appointment some months
ago and the aged Cheyenne sent him
to a lawyer of Arapahoe and had his
murder case was closed Monday in the
district court at Shawneetown, Judge
Rierer presiding, when Patsy Aired, a
young woman, aged 24 years, was ac-
quitted of the murder of James Luckv,
her sweetheart, in January of this
year. The evidence adduced at the
trial, showed that Miss Aired and
Miss Aired owns
| a valuable claim in Pawnee county and
Laeky farmed it on the shares. In
■ January the two became engaged in
an altercation over the division of
some corn. During the quarrel a gun
was introduced and the two lovers
scuttled for the possession of the gun
which was accidentally discharged,
killing Lucky. The defense held that
the shooting was accidental.
The Grave gang of desparadoes in
the territory have l>een captured and
sent to Fort Smith where they will be
tried under the charge of murder.
rises he is occupied with his men; he
either questions the second in com-
mand, summoning him to his house
for the report, or he goes in person to
inspect his vessel; for when he is Lieu-
tenant Viand, this dreamer becomes the
most serious and most accomplished
of officers. His bearing, his gesture,
his glance, his voice, and one might
almost add his stature, undergo a com-
plete change when Pierre Loti, of the
Academie Francaise, becomes a lieu-
tenant in the French navy.
The young commander is adored by
his men, who find him devoted to the
execution of justice, at once implacable
toward a wilful fault, and indulgent
toward an unwitting error. Although
of small stature, he is so strong that he
calls forth the admiration of his men
when, in the case of a manoeuvre badly
executed or in the removal of some
cargo, he indicates with a gesture what
is to be done, or lifts or sets in place
some object. No one of hi3 subordi-
nates could get the better of him, if
he ventured to contend with him as
gymnast or as marksman. The sailors
ascribe to him a very complex super-
iority made up of all in him that they
can see and understand, as well as of
much that is beyond their grasp, and
they are devoted and submissive to him
to the point of fanaticism.
Lieutenant Julien Viand, whenever
he ha3 the leisure to do so, becomes
Pierre Loti from 2 o'clock until 6
o'clock in the afternoon. He requires
no more time than this to write in his
P/Mf
Sff bhIlV*
Tks Best
Waterproof
Coat
In the
W0RL01
SUCKER
The FI9fI BRAND SLICKER la warranted water
buy a coat If tho "Fish Brand" Is not on it. ITTnstra-
ted Catalogue A. .J. ToWER. Mui.
will written, bequeathing his beauti- j The officers in charge were Deputy
ful allotment to his youngest child, j I nited States Marshals Charles For,
or. nge
which was born since the county was
allotted. The farmer is entrusted with
the safe keeping of the instrument.
John Stroud a farmer living near
Carney, reports a slick swindle which
being successfully worked in his sec-
tion of the country. The modus op-
erandi is given by Stroud as follows:
A man. well dressed and with a busi-
ness-like air. called upod the people in
the rural districts and represented
himself as a government detective or
agent, with the statement that there
was much counterfeit money in circu-
lation and requested them to show
what coin they had in their posession.
He then used a chemical which would
turn the coin black, declare it was
spurious and take it away with him.
The victims said nothing for a time for
fear of being arrested for having
counterfeit money in their possession,
and by this time the swindler was far
away.
An Oklahoma judge has ruled that
the winner in a civil case must pay
the costs when the loser is a pauper,
whether the loser brought the suit or
not,
Mrs. Mary Mahara has sued George
Keniall, a Logan county money lend-
er, for 810.000 damages. She claims
that he used her roughly and .sei zed
her chattels.
It is said that Judge Dale may grant
Dr. Mayer a new trial if Mayer will
promise to support the children.
Mayer recently a*ked for a divorce
and Dale refused it.
| Heck Thomas and John James. The]
i four prisoners. Jaines Grace, Bill I
Peeters, Lee Poulson and JamesSlcph-
| ens, were strongly ironed and were as
I hard looking a crew as anybody ever
saw. These are only four of the worst >
1 gang of criminals that ever infested a
! country ;^nd it is believed that having 1
captured the leaders the remainder of .
, band can easily be taken. They have j
i been guilty of all the crimes known to
! the catalogue but could only be caught
after the cold blooded murder of John
! Swilling October 17. Graves admits I
the murder of the inan and says they
' killed because lie had some change j
and they were in need of the same. •
Monday the Marshals came upon the
gang unexpectedly and they were
forced to surrender but not before a
Mexican named Beiol had to be shot.
They were as bad criminals as the
Daltons kvt lacked executive ability
and belonged to a lower class so prer-
alentamoivr Mexicans.
, The county clerk of Blaine county
took 85,000 iu county warrants to Ca-
' nadian county and sold them for 00
cents. The warrants were only worth
j 35* cents.
The Oklahoma correspondents have
iK-gun their annual Indian burnings
by prairie fires.
Last week Collet Jc Brady sold thirty
, eight head of fine corn-fed steers, the
average weight of which was 1.312 1-2
pounds. .
' The lands of Beaver county are now
subject to entry for settlement under
the United States homestead laws. i
\ <7
AS A FISHERMAN.
superb, iarge, correct handwriting a
volume in a few months. His study is
always full of flowers; he has a passion
for them, and in a few seconds he can
arrange in a vase an exquisite bouquet
of what had appeared to be the mo3t
insignificant flowers. The more per-
fume hi3 flowers have the more he loves
them. The odor of flowers never be-
comes oppressive to him, even when
he is writing.
If Loti is stationed in a city, it is
quite certain that within an hour of his
arrival he will have found and selected
for his residence the house command-
ing the widest views, situated in the
most original manner, and in which
one can find the greatest retirement.
In such a house I saw him at Hendaye.
The house was situated on the
Bldassoa, a river as much Spanish as
French, which serves as frontier to the
two countries. When the tide rises,
the Bldassoa is an arm of the sea, a
gulf.
My readers will permit me to copy
a description of Loti's house which I
PIERRE LOTI AS OSIRIS.
times daily, for the future admiral is
somewhat too fond of playing on all
four with his cats.
Loti is passionately fond of cats. He
attracts them to him to such a degree
that all the unfortunate cats in a city
where he is living seem to give each
other the word, and flock about him to
enlist his sympathy in their lot, to
which he Is never insensible. Thi3
brings to mind his wonderful "Book of
Pity and of Death," in which he has
drawn us to participate so deeply In
the sufferings of animels.
It has often been said that a man of
letters cannot be a sailor in serious
earnest. Such an affirmation may be
true in regard to others, although the
French navy has counted distinguished
authors among its men; it is not true
in regard to Loti. No one is more con-
versant with the occupations of his
career, mohe attentive or skillful in per-
forming his duties. Here, again, he
gratifies the old passion of childhood
for physical exercises, his love of ac-
tivity. The calling of a sailor has this
peculiarity, which would naturally at-
tract Loti's choice, that in it one is al-
ways on the eve of a battle between the
elements, of an unfolding of moral and
physical power, and that it affords
many days to be given to dreaming.
Spilled 120 Ton* of Molten Glass.
Marion.—Special to Indianapolis Sen-
tinel.—A costly accident occurred this
morning at the Marion fruit jar works.
The bottom of the large tank suddenly
fell out, spilling and ruining a mass of
molten glass weighing 120 tons. Since
the accident four streams of water have
been playing constantly upon the
moltjn mass, thus preventing what
might have been a disastrous fire. The
factory will be compelled to shut down
two weeks.
Positive, f
Mrs. Gunning (taking up the broken
thread at breakfast)—And are you sure
of your grounds, my dear?
Mr. Gunning (looking absentminded-
j ly into his coffee cup)—Yes, love; there
is at least an inch of them at the bot-
tom.—New York Recorder.
LODD POISON
A SPEC!ALTY': ^~
nary HI.ouD POISON permanent:?
loured In 15 to35 days. You can b« treated at
homo f-Tsntne pri< e un.lertamo guaran-
ty. If you prefer to oma here we wtllcon*
tract to pay railroad far rand h- tel bills.and
nocharjre. if we fail torure. Ify 'ii have taken mer-
cury, iodide uot:i«h, and atill hnTe a.-hes and
iaina, Mucou*l'utc-lie* in mouth. Sore Throat,
'iuiples, Copper Colored Spot*, I'icera on
any part of tho body, Il:iir or Fvebrows falling
out, It ia this .Secondary lti.ooi> POISON
we guarantee to euro. We solicit the mo«t obsti-
nate cases and challenge the world for a
cane ne cannot cure. This di-easo baa always
ba filed the skill of the most emineut physi-
cians* W.'OO.OOO capital behind our uneondi*
tlonal (Pinrantj. Absolute proof*sp^t *«>a>d on
application. Address COOK IIKMKDY CO-
807 Masonic Temple, CillCAOO, ILL.
Cut out and send this advertisnment*
lieaSthy
Kidneys
make 1
Pure
BSood
DPHobb's
fleyPills
Guro nil Kldnoy
Dleoasos.
At all druggists, or by
mail prepaid, for 50c. a box.
Send for pamphlet.
Hobb's Mcdieine Co.,
Chicago, San Pranclsc*.
VARICOCELE C^ED
Rupture and Piles no pay.
Xo Pnin or Cnttini. Particulars J*re«. Addresi
Or. H._.l. Whit tier, 9t h A I > • 1 a w «rrVK an. CI t v.Mo.
CI^AKTFO—kny lady wishing to% make somw
Vf money qulrkly ami nerdlng Meat'v employ-
ment should work for in.-Helling medicated wafer*.
Address a. m. Um, 11. 1)., 212 loluuibua ave«
lioston. *%
MINERAL
para
|o« ullne K
syrup
CQNSUMP
K ! '
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1895, newspaper, November 8, 1895; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116774/m1/2/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.