The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1902 Page: 7 of 8
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NERVES LIKE A PLAT-IRON.
A woman who suffered for three
years from nervous prostration says
two bottles of Lichty's Celery Nerve
Compound effected a complete cure.
She hardly knows whether she has
nerves or not, as she nsver feels them.
It is certainly a wonderful remedy.
Sold by all druggists.
STOP COLDS
when you feel one coming on by tak-
ing' Krause's Cold Cure. Prepared in
convenient capsules that cure while
you work. Price 25.-. Sold by all
druggists.
QTIcK RELIEF FOR AsTHMA dUF
FERERS.
Foley's Honey and Tar affords im-
mediate relief to asthma sufferers in
the worst stages and if taken in time
will effect a cure. Barbour & Son's.
FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE
Will cure Bright's Disease.
Will cure Diabetes.
Will cure Stone in Bladder.
Will cure Kidney and Bladder disease.
ANTI-HORSE THIEF ASSOCIATION
A. 1). Uox, President,
Jus. Deuntson, Treasurer.
J. C. Wails, Secretary
Funds on hand, $*11.00, which will be used,
together with an assessment of fifty cents on
each member If necessary In hunting a horse
stolen from any member of the Association
All good citizens of Cleveland county are In.
vltedtojoin. Membership fee $1.00, payable
in advance to the secretary.
LIST OF MEMBEitS:
H C Dennlson, W F Essex,
L E I.each. S A Ambrister
I.fo I' llnian, CH Dibble
A O McUitl U D Hewitt,
N Wallace, , C F Cox,
AO Cox, William Leggett,
1,1* Barker, A Hopping,
W. N. Elledgn, W T Tate,
J 1! Cummings, Hi Downing,
D Denham, W E Bain,
A M Watfleld, 1. Faublon,
W E Abbott, Louis Ullrnan,
John Sullivan, John W. Foster,
J D Kendrick, W L Crlppen,
J C Wails, Dunnison,
W H Adkinson, Ueo Wilson,
John Merkle, U 1- Abbott,
Lewellyn Gwynn Nathaniel Wallace
B N Anderson, J 1' I.ong,
George, Gabriel ^D Hickok
W D Krahl Jas. McDamel
G C Foster •> M McDanlel,
Ervin N. Censor i>H Hungerford,
H F New ti lock 1' H Wynn
J H Fletcher, T C'larkk,
Geo. Tarklngton, DC Kline,
w H Barbour, S Ecker,
E. Hakstein J l> Jones
J H Miser J B I'hllip
L. F. Outhouse.
The Association offers a reward of J">0 00, for
the apprehension and conviction of any per-
son who shall steal a horse or mule from a
member of this association
BANNER SALVE
the most healina salve in the world-
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of the
digestants and digests all kinds of i
food. It gives instant relief and never I
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all)
the food you want. The most sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many i
thousands of dyspeptics have been '
cured after everything else failed. Iti
prevents formation of gss on the stom-1
ach, relieving all distress after eating. I
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It can't help
but do you good
Preparedonly by E, C. Be Witt & Co., Chicago.
Tbofl. bottle contains 214 times the 60c. sImT
Da. G3E'S
KAfiSAS
TY, MO.
m
matMSMsm
looted at aG'.k tnd W-udotte Streets.
Office No. 915 Walnut Street.
Not a Hospital, but
A PLEASANT, REMEDIAL HOWE
Organized with a full staff of Physicians am
surgeons for the treatment of all Chronic an I
Surgical Diseases.
Trusses, Braces and Appliances for Deform i
ltles manufactured. Thirty rooms for the as I
eommodation of patients. A quiet home fot
women during confinement.
T/iinsd Attendants. B«it Invalid's H:mi
in the West. Diseases ef Women
a Specialty.
Write ff>r circular on deformities—e)ub
curvature of the spine—Wbsal. throat, lung, kid 1
n*y. bladder and nervoun dUeases. siricture '
pi «■-. ll.-tula, tumors, cancers, paralysis, epl
lepsy, all eje. skin and blood diseases 1
All the Mut Elffealt Cur^lcal 0p ratiwuPirf:rai4
with Skill sii I-com.
rWOnly reliable Sanitarium In the West mab
fog Hipeclalty of Phivate Diskarbs.
All Wood disease* successfully trea' A. Srpb !
111ti< poiron reroofed from the system wlihou1
men ury. New restorative treatment for loss o
Vital Power, Rupture, Varicocele. Hydrocttlf I
llaif Lip. etc. Persons unable to Tisi't u< ma-
be treated at home by mail. One pooral in
terview preferred. Goulultatlon at or bj I
leitev frt'^and confldeutlal. Thirty yc irs expj
rlenee in Samtartum work My book s-tu f:~ |
en request. It contain* much valuuble Info
•ation. Address,
Dr. C Ml COE, Proprietor,
Cffico 9f& Walnut St.,
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI.
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CAMPAIGN
SUBSCRIBERS.
Beginning August 1st the
Peoples Teiei
Will be sent to Sub-
scribers until Dec.
1st, 1902
For 25
In clubs of five sub-
scribers for $1.00. . .
If You Care To
Post Yourself
on how the affairs
of county have
been conducted
and learn why
your taxes have
continued so high
you cannot well
afford to fail to
take advantage of
this campaign
offer.
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yr^rtrt^
This signature is on every ho* of the genuine
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets j
the rornedy that « iirea a cold In one day
■_ I
Kodol Dyspepsia Cur®
Digests what you eat.
A Chinese compositor needs a type
case at least sixty foot long and has to
walk about twenty-five miles a day
■ap and down It
When we get what we want, we do
not enjoy It as much as wo had antici-
pated.—Atchison Globe.
Our I.nek.
, "\\ hat Is the national air of tUis
country?" asked the foreigner.
"This is a republic and therefore has
Bo national heir." replied the native.-
1 ittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.
Quit quarreling with your neighbors,
mid the Judges anil lawyers will soon
cease to run everything, as at present.
—Atchison Globe.
Lending lllin On,
He—Would your mother let you go
to the theater without a chaperon?
She—Not unless I was engaged.—
Brooklyn Life. *
How She Madr a Profit.
In Paris a gentleman who Is very
fond of fine paintings bought for 15,000
francs a work entitled 'The Bride of
Abydos" and was congratulating him-
self on becoming Its possessor when h*
suddenly remembered that bis wife
disliked very much to see him spend
his money in this manner.
"How can I avoid a scene?" he asked
himself. "If I say that the painting
cost 15,000 francs, there will be an
awful time, and so I'd better say 7,000.
No; I'll say 4.000."
By this time he had reached home,
and when he saw his wife he told her
unbiushingly that he had Just secured
a beautiful work of art for the nomi-
nal sum of 3.000 francs. At this good
news she seemed more disconcerted
than pleased, but said nothing, and
the painting was hung up.
Next day the gentleman was obliged
to go to the south of France, and when
he returned after a week's absence
his wife met him with a beaming coun-
tenance and Baid: "I've done a good
stroke of business while you were
away. You know that painting you
bought for 3,000 francs? Well, I sold
it yesterday for 4,500, a clear profit of
1,500 francs!"
Hard I<ennons In Good Manners.
School chaff is wholesome In most
cases, but it may cramp what should
not be cramped. As to the chaff which
a man gives and gets at a university,
however, we do not thi-nk there can ba
two opinions. It must do good, and It
has not the opportunity of doing harm.
Only those receive It who lay them-
selves open to receive It. The quiet
man who wishes to read or to think
apart need hardly ever come Into con-
tact with his fellows unless he so
chooses. The swaggering or bump-
tious man, the opinionated man, the
offensive man—these aro certain to be
chaffed, and the chaff usually goes
home; not at once perhaps, but It usu-
ally gets there in the end with satis-
factory consequences. The personal
remark may be rude, but rudeness is
often a very salutary weapon. It is
certainly one of the most valuable In-
struments of English education. In-
deed it may seem a strange thing to
say, but it Is surely true that contin-
ued experience of calculated, formu-
larized and well Intentioned rudeness
teaches people to be polite.—London
Spectator.
Shifting the lteaponnlblllty.
An Irishman who traded in small
wares kept a donkey cart, with which
he visited the different villages. On
one occasion he came to a bridge where
a toll was levied.
He found to his disappointment he
had not enough money to pay it.
A bright thought struck him. He un-
harnessed the donkey and put it into
the cart. Then, getting between the
shafts himself, he pulled the cart with
the donkey standing In it on to the
bridge.
In due course he was hailed by the
toll collector.
"Hey, man I" cried the latter.
"Whaur's your toll?"
"Begorra," said the Irishman, "just
ask the droiver."
Ut. Stream.,
I It is scientifically reported that the
| lava streams from Vesuvius in 1858
j were so hot twelve years later that
| steam was issuing from the cracks
j and etevlees, while the lava beds from
j the eruption of Etna In 178" were
found to be steaming hot Just below
the top crust as late as 1840. But still
more remarkable are the scientific re-
ports of the volcano Jorullo, in Mexi-
co. Ihls wilt forth immense streams
of lava in 1750. In 1780 the lava beds
were examined by a party of scien-
tists, and it was found that a stick
thrust into the crevices instantly ig-
nited, although there was no discom-
fort experienced in walking on the
hardened crust. Again some forty
years after the eruption it was visited
by scientists and reported to be steam-
lug in many places, and even eighty-
seven years after the eruption two col-
umns of steaming vapor were found to
be Issuing from the crevices. Some-
times the upper crust of such a stream
of lava cools so that plants and lichens
find precarious growth on the surface,
while a few feet beneath the lava is
almost redliot.
Her Mlntnke. '
Two elderly women and an old man,
evident strangers in the city and who
were carefully guarding a huge tele-
scope between them, stood in front of
the Grand for an hour the other day,
waiting for some kind soul to direct
them to the residence of a friend they
had come to visit. The noise and bus-1
tie of the city evidently confused them.^
and they stood bewildered, not kuow-f
lng which way to turn. Finally one
of the women plucked up courage to
address a man who was passing, say-j
ing, "Could you tell me where Will
Blank lives?" A
"Who?" inquired the man. T
"Why, Will Blank. He used to live
next door to us at Linton, and we have
come In to see him." t
The man had to acknowledge he had
never even heard of Will Blank, and
the old lady turned away with a scorn-]
ful smile, saying, "Oh, I thought per-j
haps you lived here." — Indianapolis
Sentinel. <
Hath* In Flnlnnd. ^
One of the greatest trials a visitor iu
Finland has to endure is a Finnish'
bath. The method of procedure is'
unique. Divested of outer clothing and'
attired in a light and airy cotton gar-
ment, you are slung in a sort of ham-
mock composed of cord above a largo
receptacle like the boilers iu public
laundries. This is almost filled with
cold water, into which at the right mo-
ment is flung a large redliot brick or
piece of iron, which of course causes
an overwhelming rush of steam to as-!
cend and almost choke you. Then!
when that process has gone on suffi-
ciently long you are shaken out of your,
hammock, immersed In cold water, and
after very drastic treatment you re-!1
Bume your raiment, sadder and wiser'
than before your novel experience.
Ted and the Teit.
The golden text for a certain Sunday
school was, "ANid the child grew and
waxed strong in spirit" (Luke 11, 40).
Little Ted's hand went up like a
flash when the superintendent asked:
"Can any of these bright, smiling little
boys or girls repeat the golden text for
today? Ah, how glad It makes my
heart to see so many little hands go
up! Teddy, my boy, you may repeat It
and speak good and loud that all
hear."
And they all heard this: "And the
child grew and waxed strong In spirit
like 2:40."
No Sunset For F^ivc Days. ^
I At the head of the gulf of Bothnia '
; there Is a mountain on the summit of
which the sun shines perpetually dur-
j ing the five days of June 19, 20, 21, 22'
I and 23. Every six hours during this
season of continual sunshine a steamer
leaves Stockholm crowded with visit-'!
ors anxious to witness the phenome-
non. At the same place during winter,
the sun disappears and is not seen for
weeks. Then it comes In sight again
for ten, fifteen or twenty minutes,
gradually lengthening its stay until'
finally it stays in sight continuously
tor upward of 120 hours. . ... -i
A Well Stttlxfled Girl.
At an old fashioned revival meeting
the minister approached Minnie, who
was only ten years old, and urged her
to go forward to the "mourners' bench"
for prayers, as many of her young
friends l:id done.
"No, thank you," said Minnie, hold-
ing back.
"But why?' questioned the minister.
"Don't you want to be born again?"
"No," replied Minnie. "I'm afraid 1
might be boru a boy next time!"—
Brooklyn Life.
A UucMtlon of Color. j
i Benjamin Constant when painting
I the portrait of Queen Victoria made
j the grand ribbon of the Garter, which
was part of his illustrious sitter's cos- i
I tume, a certain tone of blue. The
j queeu criticised tills part of the pic-
ture, but Constant stuck to his color.
One day he received from Windsor a
! little parcel containing the order of the
j Garter. The queen, fully convinced
j that she was right, had sent him the
ribbon to prove his color sense was
i wrong. She did not confer the Garter
upon him, however.
The Glnnt Squid.
Undoubtedly the giant squid has fre-
quently been mistaken for a sea ser-
pent. In all qualities which can ren-
der a marine monster horrible this
huge and frightful mollusk may lie
said to compare favorably wltii any
creature of fact or fiction. When full
grown, it weighs 10,000 pounds, having
a body fifty fet long and two arms
each 100 feet in length, as well as
eight smaller tentacles.
EnoiiKh Settle If.
A wag after having witnessed an un-
usually villainous performance of
"Hamlet" remarked: "Now Is the time
to settle the Shakespeare-Bacon con-
troversy. Let the graves of both be
dug up and see which of the two turned
over."
The hide of the liippopotamup t>a
some parts is fully two Inches thick.
Albuinentsed Milk. '
Albumenized milk is a most nourish- I
lng drink for an invalid, and in hot
weather, taken at intervals of three
hours between breakfast and a ti
o'clock dinner, would be all the nourish- ,
meut required by a person in health, '
Drop the white of one egg in a glass, '
add two-thirds of a cupful of milk, j
cover and shake until thoroughly J
mixed. Strain into another glass and '
serve. J
Roth III ii ii t.
"I'm too practical to do as heroes do j
In books, Miss Slight, so I'll Just ask
you bluntly, will you be my wife?"
"No, thank you, Mr. Terse. I myself
don't believe in those silly bookish no-
tions, and as the silly heroines always
say yes, why, I'll tell you bluntly, no,
sir, I won't!"
The World an We Find It.
Ftitld—1This is ft hard world.
Dudd—And yet everybody is looking
for soft places iu it.—Boston Tran-
script
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1902, newspaper, August 1, 1902; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117596/m1/7/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.