The Peoples' Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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FAMOUS DOCTOR'S
PRESCRIPTION.
SERIAL
STORY
I.v.v.v.wv.v.v.v.v.v.v.*,
| The Master
of Craven!
gTeat black and green globes of lucl- she thought she" bad never seen suefc
ousnesa and golden apricots—piled In a transformation of a faco. It was •
a silver basket as fragile and white j full of brllliauce as It bad been full of
as snow. The Ramsdlll linen blushed melancholy.
in coarse red weave, and the homely j "I wrote you a note," the girl said
blue-and white ware that slipped in to timidly. "Mrs. Ramsdill wa/ to post
fill out what Craven had not supplied It."
appeared to have clacked and cracked "You did! I will get It from hei."
with abashment. "Oh, no, since you have seen me."
Mrs. Ramsdill Oerved with some- Ha shook his head. "I w ant all my
thing like awe, and regarded Miss letters, and I am curious to see how
Carew with a respect not unmixed j y°u leave. But that Is Just what
with such suspicion as has place In 1 bt'S you will not take—that is, to-
every honest woman's heart when a I day."
The gentleman who stood by his
horse's head she could regard for
some reason even with less ease than
hitherto she had been able. In his
rldlng-clothes he seemed to have lost
his other personality, and was noth-
1 POR !
pyspepsiM
I^Sf^RRHOF STOMA*?1
KNEW HER STYLE.
/Jy Marie Van Vorst
Author of
"Amanda of the Mill,'*
"Miss Desmond,"
etc., etc.
".V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.
Cupjrljfbl IMS, by J. 11. Llpplncott Couapuuy.
Suitor—Hut you haven't asked me
yet whether or not I can make a liv
Ing for your daughter.
Father—Never mind, Henry; If you
marry her she'll see to that
KEEP BABY'S SKIN CLEAR
Few parents realize how many es-
timable lives have been embittered
and social and business success pre-
vented by serious skin affections
which so often result from the neglect
of minor eruptions in Infancy and
childhood. With but a little care and
the use of the proper emollients, baby's
skin and hair may be preserved, puri-
fied and beautified, minor eruptions
prevented from becoming chronic and
torturing, disfiguring rashes, itchings,
Irritations and cliaflngs dispelled.
To this end, nothing is so pure, bo
sweet, so speedily effective as the con- i .. ...
•tant use of Cutlcura Soap, assisted, I Je*el *hlch he he,d up t0 see ,ta
when necessary, by Cuticura Ointment.
Basil Tempest, world's greatest novelist
Brwl poet, refusing to be further lionized,
sliiitw himself up In Craven, his country
home. His gloomy meditations are brok-
en by his housekeeper, who has disobeyed
his orders not to admit any one. The
visitor is T,ucy Carew, an American who
has come to England to write a study
of the author, but more especially to get
a synopsis of his new suite of poems,
having been promised a good position
with u magazine if successful. Tempest.
In anger, declares he will write no more,
and asks her to go. Repenting of his
rudeness In sending her out in the rain
at night, he follows, hut she refttses to
retorn to Craven with him. and takes
lodging with a cottager. Next morning
I.uey receives a note from Tempest apol-
ogizing for his rudeness and offering to
asstat her In writing her essay.
CHAPTER I—Continued.
Without demur, and an evident dis-
taste to prolonging the personal
theme, she said:
"May I begin to make my notes, Mr.
Tempest?"
He smiled. "Will you sit there at
my table?"
He put the chair in place, drew bo-
fore her paper and a choice of pens.
Ink, and sharpened pencils, left her
side and went round In front of her,
where he sat down facing her, closing
his eyes and folding his arms ncross
his breast.
"Write," he
dictate, please, as fast as you can
man showers undue favors on another
of her sex.
CHAPTER II.
The day was early over the mead-
ows and the first dews lying with the | bl|t a well-looking Englishman—
frost upon the stubble-fields when ' !n the most fashionable and perfect
Tempest came out of the house to the tenue—who had ridden to see her at
terrace where Ills horfie waited. j an unusual hour over a dewy field.
The avenues before him were nests I "You have then definitely given up
of golden and brown leaves, and his the sketch, of tho writirg out of your
maro at first went gingerly into them, i notes which you bo kindly sent me?"
with pretty, careful steps, picking her | "Yes," she said, and to his surprise,
footing and shrinking as they cracked ; "Ah, I can't, of course, gainsay your
and rustled. At the foot of the ave- good taste there," he smiled. "I accept
nue he Bkirted the railings of the park that—I suppose I must pay tho pen-
in search of a small gate for pedes- i alty of my lack of good faith. Rut it's
trlans and leading out Into tho road not nbout that I have ridden over. It
is to beg you will delay your going;
I can't read ono word of your writing
—not a word!"
Site looked amused and said, "No
one ever told me that before."
'Tut It, then, to my lack of educa-
tion," he laughed, "but please come
and read it to me, or at least help me
to decipher."
The village clock struck In tlie re-
towards Billings Poke and Craven.
He had an idea, doubtless a very
reasonable one, that if Miss Carew
was as serious and good as she seem-
ed she had every plan to run away—
or to Blip out of Craven by the morn-
ing train.
"She could not slip out before. Not"
—and he smiled at the idea—"unless
she start again on foot, which I have
no doubt she would be capable of do- ! mote distance some part of tho hour
ing If she knew me to be so early on I and Miss Carew started.
the chase." j "There, it Is half-past seven. Mr.
At RamsdiU's Polly told him the ! Tempest. I must go."
| lady had already started to walk to j "You mean you won't come to Cra-
the train and Tim was to follow her yen to-day and read your manuscript
later with her boxes. ! to me?"
Tempest, in whom the invigorating I Shs hesitated.
day awakened the best of spirits, was : "Why?—why not?" he asked quietly,
delighted. He wanted to find her fly- 1 If he !lad searched his wit through
Ing. It pleased him to see his psy- be could not have fallen upon a better
chology was not at fault, and that he Question. He blocked her path, his
should as well have the pleasure of horse's coat reddening in the sunlight
the chase. that now began to brighten.
"Yes." he nodded to Polly, who, de- j "Why won't you come?"
mure and admiring, stood by the gate Why should she not? In all the
delivering her news. "Yes, I knew ,or'(l '° care—°r praise or blame—
Miss Carew intended to leave, but I : Klle Baw on'jr tbe trim figure of Polly
have a telephone for her, an important Hamsdill and her honest, curious eyes,
message which may keep her, pos- As "Jere were Polly alone to know
WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES SUS-
PECT THE KIDNEYS.
! Backache Is kidney ache, In most
cases. The kidneys ache and throb
with dull pain be-
cause there Is In-
flammation within.
You can't be rid of
the ache until you
cure the cause—the
kidneys.
Doan's Kidney
Pills cure sick kid-
neys. G. S. Warren,
1517 No. 7th St.,
Boise, Idaho, says:
"An injury to my
back years ago left
me lame. I had to
use a cana, and It
hurt me terribly to
stoop or lift. The
kidney secretions
passed too frequent-
.y. For five years since I was cured
ly Doan's Kidney Pills, I have had no
return of the trouble."
Remember the name—Doan's. For
sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Irr^Pkhm
DREADFUL
CHANGE
Nor On a Half-Dime, Either.
Bimon Hardcastle believed with sin-
:ere faith that any wife who had, or
asked, more than a quarter a year
lor her own amusement or enjoyment
.'as a being too horrible to contem-
late. He came from the village store
or dinner and told what he had
ifnrd.
"Miranda, would you believe that
he Lord's Prayer could be engraved
n a space no larger than a dime?"
"Well, yes, Simon," she hazarded,
'If a dime is as large in the engraver's
eye as it Is in yours, I should think
that he would have no difficulty at
ill."—The Housekeeper.
or remark, weakly sho said:
"Mrs. Ramsdill thinks I have left
Cravenford."
Exultant, but keeping hi3 triumph
sibly—at any rate, I must find her.
Why did she start so soon?"
It seemed that Miss Carew had
. , ..... wished to go up Charm's hill, and In -• ---
commanded, what I , order to make th0 tra)n Ehe wou,d be under, Mr. Tempest said:
,s fast as you can I com|ng down Wood lane in the hour i Xo' she doesn't. I stopped there In
In a low and measured tone, as if j Tempest rotle away At the on(j o{ passing and told her—not quite an un-
tVTih *if'r° 4 Pt Wood 'ane. just a little to the road- truth—that an Important message had
weighed n, a8iIf every phrase were a slde> he 6aw the figurc of a lady_the come for you which might delay you."
only lady In Cravenford. of course Thev had started to walk along side
Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.,
ole proprietors, Boston, for their free
82-page Cuticura Book telling all about
the care a^u treatment of the skin.
Two Votes.
The first time I ran for the general
assembly one of the prominent citi-
zens of my community told me that he
was going to vote against me because
when I was a shaver I threw a rotten
apple at his horse. Another prominent
citizen told me that he was going to
vote for me because when I was a
shaver I put a rotten egg in a buggy
cushion belonging to the woman he
worked for and he had never liked
the woman. Think of it! And yet such
stufT has thrown the scales where
thrones have been at stake.—From a
speech at Norwich by former Gov
George P. Mclean of Connecticut.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature
In Use For Over ;?0 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
uu cuuureu, uiiu see mat H
°f
The Unterrified Improver.
First Angel.—What Is the rumpus 'ia
the seventh heaven?
Second Angel.—A moral uplifter has j her right hand.
quality. Tempest began to compose.
Not in verse, but in an even, sonorous
prose as rich as it was free from man-
nerism and ambiguity.
The scribe wrote like lightning and
listened spellbound as she wrote. The
power of what she was going to tran-
scribe shook her as Tempest develop-
ed the theme and warmed to his sub-
ject. Once as he paused she raised
her eyes to his, her own ardent, deep,
full of emotion, In tribute for the gen-
ius she had been permitted to see. She
was unconscious how much of her-
self her uplifted face betrayed.
Tempest, as If she had bidden his
eyelids to lift, opened Ills eyes, stopped
speaking. A flush came Into his face,
he unfolded his arms and stirred.
"Wait," he murmured, "don't move."
He held her eyes for a second, then
fell back, set her free, refolded his
arms, and continued his dictation.
Miss Carew filled page after page
with rapid characters. When he had
definitely ceased she sighed, dropping
her pencil. If she had yielded to im-
pulse, she would have buried her
head on her arms and so remained
under the spell that had magnetized
her. Too tactful In the presence of
this uncontrolled and personal man
to betray anything of herself or her
feelings, she sat without comment or
movement.
Tempest came up to her and lifted
She Stood Under a Beech Tree.
broken through the roof trying to find
an eighth heaven.
Distemper
In sll its forms, among all ages of horsei
and dogs, cured and others in the same
•table prevented from having the disease
with Bpohn's Distemper Cure. Every bot-
tle guaranteed. Over 500,090 bottles sold
last year. $.50 and $1.00. Good druggists,
or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted.
Writs for free book. Spohn Med (Jo.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, lud.
An Idle Threat.
Son.—No, sir, father, 1 absolutely re-
fuse to go to work.
Father.—Careful, boy; don't you
make such Idle threats to me.
She stood under a beech-tree, or under
all there was left of its fine luxuri-
ance the leaves raining around her
in abundance.
Tempest took the direction and
rode across the fields to her side.
Miss Carew's surprise and wonder
was an added pleasure to him. He
was laughing as be came up, and
greeted her:
by side across the fields. His bridle
was over his arm as she walked be-
side him, lovely In the weakness and
| the grace a woman's yielding gives
her to a man's eyes. Tempest, even
i then—in the barren field, the open
load near by—Tempest contemplated
I stealing his arm around her and draw-
; ing her to him. What would sho do?
What did she feel of the rush and
throb his pulse and brain trembled
under? A fierce joy at his victory
came across his face as it bent upon
her its recklessness and devil-may-care
Ireedom. "Only a day," he mused,
"an hour—and, my God, haven't I a
right to tear from fate what I can?"
11a may have been about to speak
to her—to touch her—when she unex-
pectedly turned to him her frank, pure
, cyis. There was something so virgin,
so young, so good in her faco, trans-
. cending hc-r beauty, that he was
; ashamed. The miraculous purity of
| her unspoiled country seemed typified
j In her. His spirit changed within him
and his voice was very gentle as he
said:
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
A Girl and Her Money.
The fact that a young woman, five
feet and one inch in height, was able
to frustrate and almost knock out a
six-foot robber, by hitting him over
the head with a purse containing her
"I have never believed anything was week's salary, Is an interesting lllus-
really lost, you know!" He spoke as tratlon of the large Improvement that
if to answer her. I hey used to send |las taken place in recent years both
me to find things for them when I was m the force of woman's muscle and In
a little chap; the fact of their being the size of woman's salary
lost made me angry directly, and I )t may also, to the wary seem -
"You are tired out."
"Oh—no—no!"
"But you sighed."
"Because It was at an eud."
"That's graceful. You have written _ ,
two hours." Ho gathered up the started out Invariably with my teeth | warning' that some good "things may
1 them slowly together set and saying, i will find that at he carried loo far a n.nma„
ai.i.KN'H LUNG l!A i.SAM
tb« old mllahlo routrh remedy. Found In
' pracUr*"
For uiA
No man can be provident of his
time who Is not prudent in tho choice
of his company.—Jeremy Taylor.
•lr«. Wlnilow'i Boothln* Nyrap.
eblldrtn mit'jtDK, •< fu,u« tlngutui, reduce# t
A* u tion,ni;*>8p«ln,euro* wladcolic. ZVcaboiU*.
It Is easy to offend people who have
do use for you.
Guara^
sheets and piled
"Why do you push your chair back?"
"I must I will be lato for Mrs.
RamsdiU's lunch."
"Mrs. Ramsdill—" Ho caught him-
self. "You lunch here."
"No," she said firmly, "not to-day,
Mr. Tempest."
Then he said tentatively: "Yon are
tired, of course. I'm a brute, but you
may as well know it—a brute absorbed
and egotistical."
"You don't think It, Mr. Tempest—
not of yourself—and I am tired. I
suppose my 12-mlle walk Is still In my
bones."
An extraordinarily gentle look came
over his face, his Hps parted as If to
say something which he altered.
"I won't keep you, then; go and
rest, with Mrs Ramsdill to coddle you
—she's a dear little soul—but to-mor-
row. please, you shall work for your-
self, I promise you."
As she drew on her gloves he said:
"I have not written one line In six
months. To a man of nty tempera-
ment no one knows what that means
—of nervos and bad humor and—de-
spair. I will not bore you with my
migraines, but I thank you more than
you can know, Miss Carow." At tho
carriage he said: "I hope you will
lunch well, and remember that I let
you go only from an unselfish scruple.
I can say without exaggeration It's an
epoch In a self-indulgent life."
She lunched at Mrs. RamsdiU's like
a queen, for Tempest had sent fruit
and wine and game. Tho table in the
cottage kitchen had a royal air, for
the service was from Cravon and the
wine In dusty bottles, and the fruit—
once.' I usually did. 1 was invalu-
able for lost scissors and thimbles and
spools. Henly will tell you—and here
you are! Possibly not really lost, but
If I had been an hour later, it would
have been close to It!"
This was not Craven. There was
no master here of a house where she
had presumably no right to be. They
were In the open, the fresh, delicious
fields, in the fresh delicacy of the day
around them, shining in their eyes—
touching their cheeks.
"How did you, nevertheless, find me
here?" she asked. "You must have
second sight"
He exclaimed In an undertone:
"Second sight! If I have, I have used
It better than I ever did the first—If
this Is its mission. At all events, I
felt morally sure you would go this
morning in sheer Impatience with nie,
and so It seems."
"Yes," said Miss Carew, "I shall
have to start for the station In a few
seconds."
Tempest drew out bis watch. "We
have half an hour. I will see that you
do not mlsR your train unwillingly."
Nothing could have happened to the
girl to so staitle and surprise her, to
bo disturb her, as this unexpected ar-
rival of the man whom she had de-
termined never to see again. No bet-
ter use can be made of Independence,
than to make It serve as a warder be-
fore all the doors of freedom, or as
a guide who knows the impasse dan-
gereuse and olrcles It.
TempoRt, holding his horse's rain—
he had dismounted and stood by her—
was In a new mood—gay. luminous;
be carried too far A woman with
money has been one of the legitimate
pursuits of aspiring but impecunious
youth tince th3 beginning of time, and
It will be sad evidence of the passing
of some of the customs of good old
days, should the combination, once so
attractive, become In the new civili-
zation a thing to be avoided like the
hind log of a mile.
8tire Death to Files.
Fly papers are to be superseded by
a fluid exterminator. "In our experi-
ence," says the I.ondon Lancet, "the
best exterminating agent Is a weak
solution of weak formaldehyde In wa-
ter (say two teaspoonfuls to the pint)
and this experience has been con-
firmed by others. It would appear
that flies are attracted by a weak so-
lution of formaldehyde, which they
drink. Some die In the water, others
get as far only as the Immediate vi-
cinity of tho plate of water, but all
ultimately succumb, and where they
occur In large numbers hundreds may
be swept up from the floor."
Bobbed Up.
"See what our ship news man says
about the lato Capt. Topnotcner?"
queried the editor.
"Why, he says the captain chose
the sea for his life work—and began
at the bottom."
Limits the Size.
"Marry me," pleaded the mere man,
"and your slightest wish shall be
granted."
"But," queried the wise woman,
"how about the large one ?"
Make $500 in Gold.
Read the magnificent offer by the
John A. Salzer Seed Co. in another
part of this paper. Get your wits to
work and capture the $500.00, and at
the same time secure a supply of the
Bost reliable seeds on earth. The com-
pany is one of the largest in the coun-
try, and thoroughly responsible.
If you want to test a man's charac-
ter, watch and see what creates In him
in enthusiasm.—Angela Dickons.
to rt itr a rot,i> in one day
Jako LAXATIVE liKOMO Ouinine Tablet*.
pniKgl us refund money If it fails t«. cure. L. \\.
tKOvti S signature iaon each box. 2bc.
Mrs. Jones Was in a Serious Co
dition Before She Helped Her-
self With Cardui, the
Woman's Tonic.
Dexter, Tex.—"I certainly was In a
serious condition when I wrote you tor
advice," writes Mrs. Calvin Jones, ol
Dexter, Tex.
"I suffered a great deal with those
dizzy, fainting spells, but after taking
several bottles of Cardui, relief finally
came.
Cardui prepared my system for the
dreadful change and when It came It
was not half as bad as those dizzy
spells I had before. I now help every
day with the housework and am got-
ting along fine.
"Cardui Is certainly fine for female
complaints. My neighbors praise It
and so do others."
Take Cardui when you feel 111 la
any way, weak, tired, miserable, or
under the weather.
No matter what the Immediate
cause, it will help to brace you up, give
you new force and vim, help you to
throw off the trouble that troubles you.
Cardui will not interfere with any
other medicine you may be taking. II
Is a gentle, harmless, non-mineral, non-
poisonous, non-intoxicating tonic, that
every woman ought to take when she
is looking for health, strength, beauty
and vitality.
N. n Write (0! T.artlew* Advisory
Dept., Cknttanuogu Medielue Co., Chat*
tmiooRa, Tenn,, for Speelal Instructions,
and (M-pnsrc book,"Home Treatment ror
Women,'' sent In plala wrapper, on re-
Quest.
TREES-TREES «If
Of Muskogee. Oklahoma, offers fn e seed of
the Flowering Bean, a hardy trailing v no
for porches, as long as seed lasts, for parties
who write for their new 50 page illustrated
and Descriptive Catalog, "Special Plauters'
Price List." Their new February Bulletin
goes with every catalog, pertaining to the
CATALPA (speciosa) and Black Locust
$2 to 85 per thousand. These cata'ogsand
contents w ill prove a revelation to the New
Southwest. 220 COURT ST., PHONE 1244,
Landlords aEd tenants can never see
through tho same spectacles.
oefiakse surch—
ounce# to
'the package
—other ttarchta only 12 ounce*—name price *n4
"DEFIANCE" 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY.
Despair and Despondency
No one but a woman con tell the story of the suffering, tho
despair, and the dcspondcncy endured by women who carry
a daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and
derangements of the delicate and important organs that aro
distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com-
pletely upset the nerves if lon^ continued.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a positive cur« fov
weakness and disease of tlie feminine organism.
IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONG,
5ICK WOMEN WELL.
It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pafn.
It tones and builds up the nerves. It tits for wifehood
and motherhood. Iionest medicine dealers sell it, and
have nothing to urge upon you as *'just as good."
It !S non-secret, non-alcoholic and has a record of forty years of cures*
Ask Your Neighbors. They probably know of some of its many cures.
^ If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cur®
them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing
only, and he will send you a free copy of his great thousand-page illustrated
Common Sense Medical Adviser—revised, up-to date edition, in paper covers.
In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
For
Rheumatic
Pains
As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the mus-
cles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold
easier. Sloan's Liniment quickens the blood, limbers
up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache
with astonishing promptness.
Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism.
„. Mr"' Da.n"'1- H- DIM!, of Mann's Choice, R.F.D., No. i. Pa wrlteti—
It U ihf Ui me a,borttl<l of -sloan's liniment for rheumatism and stiff Joints.
It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can't do without it."
Also for Stiff Joints.
MI Mr- Y?™" WH"1"' Mo"is Ave., Birmingham, Ala., write.,-
, l" that Sloan's liniment has done m. more good for stiff
Jointa than anything I have ever tried."
Sloan's
Liniment
is the qickest and best remedy for Rheuma-
tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises
and Insect Stings.
Price 25c., GOe., and $1.00 at Ml Dealers.
Send for Sloan'. Free Book on Ilarne.. AddreM
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
*
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Allan, John S. The Peoples' Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910, newspaper, February 25, 1910; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc118305/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.