The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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T
The Guymon Herald.
R. B. QU1NN, Publisher.
9LVM0.V, i I OKLAliOMA
Illegible Prescriptions.
The illegibility of many prescriptions
•annot, we fear, even In the eyes of
the unlearned, be attributed entirely
lo the unaeciiHtomed symbols for
drachma and ounces. Whether the
handwriting of the medical profession
as a body ia worse than that of any
other equally large body of men, re-
marks the London Lancet, we do not
know; certainly Its official writings as
evidenced by prescriptions cannot com-
pare will) the clerical productions of
the sister profession of the law. In
the latter case, of course, business doc-
uments are written largely by persons
who have little other qualification than
the possession of a clear handwriting.
Obviously, a medical man cannot carry
his own clerk about with him to sub-
stitute a leisurely and legible writing
for the hurried characters of the busy
medical man, so that the performance
of the lawyer's office will always out-
shino the scrawl from a patient's
house. Yet the matter Is really one
admitting of such serious accidents
that medical men should take special
pains to write clearly. Some persons
believe that prescriptions are badly
written on purpose, that they may con-
vey no meaning to the' patlen' y that
his faith in the medicine, in fact, may
not be Interfered with by too close a
knowledge of Its constituents. Such
an object, however, can be equally well
achieved, if It Is ever desirable, by
submitting elaborate chemical denom-
inations for simple and more common-
ly used names of drugs. As matters
lire at present we have a shrewd sus-
picion that It is often only the sagacity
and carefulness of the druggist who
dispenses a prescription which prevent
the concocting of something far differ-
ent from that which the hurried and
illegible writing of the practitioner in-
tended to convey.
Food Adulteration.
The American public will not se-
riously dispute the statement of Sec-
retary WlUson that It favors the purity
of the market basket. The only pos-
sible difference can be as lo method.
The adulteration of food has reached
that point where the people have a
right to complain. Prices have risen
enormously within the past few
years, and adulteration has became
more frequent. Since It is generally
Lettered that the purity of the article
U destroyed in order that addition \1
profit may go to some one other thau
the consumer, it can readily be m en
that the people lose at both ends of
the bargain. State laws have been
effective In some Instances. In I'enn
sylvanla many dealers have been pun-
Ished for selling preserved sausage,
but It Is possiuie that many others
have not been brought to Justice. Hut
sausage Is not the only food adulter-
ated. Foreign subBtances are declared
by chemists to have found their way
Into many other articles found on the
ordinary table. So carefully Is this
uil'tlieralion carried on that It is cot
alwa>« discovered until the party who
proilts becomes careless through con-
tinued success. Without considering
the moral phnse of a practice that al
lows a man to cheat his neighbor, the
e\ll effects of adulteration might well
le considered a field for national legis-
lation. What the Influence of politics
In the state may conceal it Is more
than probable the effective work of
federal officers will uncover.
Barefoot Soldiers.
Rarefooted soldiers may soon fo m
a novel feature of the United States
army. At any rate. Inspector (Jencral
Burton has suggested that the e elm
cy ot the Philippine scouts would be
improved If they wero required to go
without shoes, especially In the field.
That would be a return to the primi
tlve state and customs of the scouts,
who in the old days went about scant-
ily attired, with no notion of stock
Insa and shoes, to say nothing of th
military leggings which now grace the
shanks of that valuable agent of the
government. It may be advantageous,
it Is pointed out, to have the scout
equipped with a light cahvns shoe for
garrison use, but he is considered as
at present altogether encumbere I with
the weight of what most people would
regard as the necessities of life, espe-
cially of the life In the field. It Is re
ported that beyond th clothing on the
back of the scout, he does not need
more than a blanket In which to wrap
himself at night. Altogether there Is
no more economical employe of the
government, as far as requirements of
the person are concerned, than thli
same scout In tne Philippines.
Walter Christie, a noted rnriern au-
inlst, was on a run near Cape May not
long ngo and just as dusk was bigln
nlnit to fall discovered Tie had lost hi«
v ay. At (he crossing of the romls he
stopped, not knowing which to take,
and shortly a boy appeared, driving s
row 'Say, my lad," Mr. Christie
ealltd, "I want to reach Cape May ami
I don't know the road. The lit tie
fellow calmly surveyed the stranger,
spat through his teeth and answer, d
"Wtll, mister, you Jest follow that
Cow. Cap* May's where she Uvea,"
PECK'S BAD
BOY WITH
THE CIRCUS
By HON. GEORGE W. PECK
Author o/' Peck Bad Bey Abro d." Etc.
<Cu|o rl«lil by J. U. liuolt-o
Pa Takes the Place of the Fat Woman
with Disastrous Results—A Ken-
tucky Colonel Onuses a Row—Pa
Tries to Roar Like a Lion and the
Rhinoceros Objects—Pa Plays the
Slot-Machine and Gets the Worst
of It
This has been an eventful week with
the show. We have had h<-at prostra-
tions in Kentucky, nearly tho whole
show got drunk on "5-year-old whisky,
and If It hadn't been for the animals
keeping sober this show would have
been pulled for disorderly conduct.
Nobody knows how the row started
but pa says every inan In Kentucky
carries a blue gun and a bottle of red
llcker, aiul they wear white hats, so
the red, white and blue business Is all,
right, only It is a combination that is 1
death on a circus. I think one of the j
ushers, at the afternoon performance,
told, an old colonel that he must move j
fat woman on the platform with thr
freaks, as the fat woman was over-
come with the heat and had t<> stay in
the car.
The way tbey flxtd pa up to resem-
ble the fat woman was scandalous
They have some rubber things in the
wardrobe tent th.it you eta blow up
and make a big arm. and a big leg.
and a big stummtck, so anybody
couldn't tell the difference, and they
fixed pa up with bbwed up clothes of
flesh colored rubber, and l^it for his
chin whiskers you couldn't tell him
from the fat woman. He said he
wouldn't cut off his whiskers for any-
body's circus, so they fixed' a veil to
cover part of his fa<e and put the fat
woman's dress on pa. and put him up
beside the skeleton, the midget and
the giant.
Pa said he didn't want to do It
'cause it seemed too much like fraud,
but they told him the. fate of the show
depended on our all belrg willing to
take any part assigned to us, and so
pa sat down and began to fan himself,
and tried to look tilrty like a woman.
The other freaks never noticed but
what it was the fat woman until the
show was half ove*. It was loo much
for me. and I Just bffed at pa. I got
up behind him and told him in a whis-
per that I wanted a dollar to play the
slot machine, and he told me to go to
thunder, and get out of there. I
couldn't stand it to be insulted by my
own father, so I toon a hat pin out of
the hat of the boarded lady and
punched It Into pa's blowed up rubber
shirt, and pa began to sis, like a soda
fountain, and the wind struck the liv-
w
< *
I Punctured Pa's Tires.
along quicker, when the colonel began
to talk back, and s.'.y, "Who Is you
talkln' too. rah?'' And the usher stood
it as long as he could, whea he took
t!ie colonel by the collar and sat him
down so quick he didn't come to for u
couple of minutes, and when the
colonel got his senses, and found that
tin- usher had ushered him into a seat
between two gaily decorated colored
women the trouble began The colonel
never forgot that he was a gentleman,
for he rose up, took off his hat to the
colored women, and said: "You must
excuse me. ladles, but I shall have to
go and kill the scoundrel who sat me
down with niggers." and he got down
off the seats ami stnek the usher with
his cane, and the usher yelled: "Hey,
Rube!" and all the circus people made
a rush for the colone-l. The colonel
said, "Men of Kentucky to the rescue,"
and before I could crawl under the
seats the air was full of baggage,
seats, tent pins and white hats. guns
Were fired, and blood flowed, and the
Ing skeleton and blew him over like a
cyclone, and by that time pa was
blowing off wind In a dozen places that
I had punctured, ami he>w«5 scared for
fear there wouldn't • e anything left of
him. and the giant uaw the fat woman
slowly fadinn away, and the coward
had heart failure and lay down on the
platform. Somebody shouted that the
fat woman was all melting away, and
a fellow who was watering a camel out
of a bucket came to the rescue and
threw the bucket of dirty water all
over pa, and then I thought I better go
away In tother tent and see the light,
but pa was taken to ihe dressing room
and rescued from the shrinking rub-
ber balloons that were busted, and he
said he would hunt the man that punc-
tured his tire to his dying day, but he
didn't know It was me.
Gee. it looks to me as though pa has
been engaged to act as the easy mark
in this show. Say, they got pa to
practice on roaring like a lion, so he
could stand behind the cage when the
Chased by Police.
police pulled everybody, atid the eve-
ulng performance was given up.
One of the proprietors of the show
got n w n on his head as big as a foot-
ball from being struck by a handle of
a revolver, and Ihe io|.<nel who started
lite row was knocked silly by a tray of
red lemonade which the butcher
smashed him with, and the colonel
cried because the lemonade was all
water, and he was afraid It would
soak Into him and cause him to warp.
When the lemonad* butcher apolo-
g! «• d and the imher told him It was nil
a mistake his being sealed with the
nliv-i'M, the colonel wept on their
necks and Invited the whole crowd to
■>< to his distillery and help them-
selvrn.
When we got to tli« next town every
ms'i In the xliow It.i.l n gr.ntili and a
Kauenjnmmer and ilirlr hair was so
sore it was murder and suicide com-
bined to comb It,
The way pa escaped Inltiry wm
oausf he b*4 ty lake tho place of the
lion has a sore throat an.I r.ia., and
I scare folks, and pa has been going
i around behind the cages, every eve-
ning, when the menagerie Is closed,
and the crowd in the main tent, mak-
; lug noises that have* made the animals
look at each other as much as to say
"Well, what do you think of that?"
The rhinoceros was so disgusted at
I'aducah that he reached out his nose
and took pa on his horn and held him
up to the scorn of the other unlmals
until pa's pants gave way and he was
a sight, and he waa so scared that he
got out of the lent and made a run for
our train, chased by the police, who
thought he was a burglar that had
been eat by a houso dog.
The worst thing we have had on pa
wiw at lioulsvllle, where we stayed
lover Sunday Anoloer fellow and I
got a system on slot machines, and one
day we beat the tn.il bines out of a
shot bag full of nickels, and when we
showed up at the tent all the fellows
watil«4 tv know hvw w« 414 It, pa
It was csmbllng. and we ought not
to do it, but he also wanted to know i
how we managed to «rin. and when we
told about it pa said it was no sin to
beat a slot machine, 'cause it was an
inanimate thing, just a machine, and
anybody who could beat a nickel in the
slot machine at his own game was
equal to a Rockefeller.
So after everybody had got excited
about our nickels I told them how to
beat the mac hine. I told them I didn't
get excited and go rushing in where
angels fear to tread, and feed the
slot machine on good hard earned
ilckels of ray own.but waited until the
countrymen and tenderfeet had fed It
on nickels until it was too full for ut-
erance. When the machine swelled
out like It was blowed up. and it kind
of wheezed, like it was ready to cough
up. and was only waiting for an ex-
cuse. I put a cough lozenger about the
size of a nickel in ihe slot and turned
the dlaphram. The machine shud-
dered a minute and ;hrn had a regular
hemorrague. and coughed up a tin cup-
ful of nickels into r.n hand and the
machine seemed to rest easy, nnd take
nourishment again t'rom th* silly fel-
lows who thought they could beat It.
Well, sir, the whole crowd was so ex-
cited they could hardlr wait to find a
slot machine, and flnnlly they bought
nearly all my cough lozengers, and
went out into the night, and pa and I
went along, 'cause pa said he under-
stood all the slot machines were
owned by Rockefeller, and he made
more money on them than he did on
Standard oil. and the money that he
gave away to schools and churchen
was from his rake-off on his slot ma-
chines. I'a said It would be a good
thing if someone could break up the
reprehensible practice by beating tho
blasted machines to a finish.
So pa he got a bafc to bring back the
nickels in, and a bunch of us went to
a store where one whole side of the
place was filled with slot machines,
and the way the people were playing
the game was scanda'ous. Pa watched
a machine until the players had fed it
so it seemed as though it would die un-
less it got air. and ue stepped up and
put In a lozenger and turned the wheel,
and held the bag under the spout for
the coin, but it duln't come. Some
more fellows put in nickels, and the
machine gave little (lackIng coughs and
coughed up three or lour nickels, but
nothing that seemed at all in the
nature of a financial hemmorague,
when pa took another lozenger and
put it In, and by <ing?r the machine
began to henve up nickels like it was
in the trough of '!i< sea.
Pa was so excited he forgot to hold
the bag, and nickels wevt all over the
floor, and everybody made a grab for
them and pa was • noved aside, and he
swore he would have ihe place pulled,
and just then a law offlc r took pa in
charge because he had put a cough loz-
enger In the slot machiue. and he
searched pa and found a lot more
bronchial trochee;, and pa was in for
It on a charge of malpractice, for giv-
ing cough medicine for the stomach
trouble of the slot machine, instead of
pepsin tablets.
They took pa in a back room and
searched him some more, and found
his roll, and then a man who said he
was a lawyer offered to help pa, and
keep l^ni out of the penitentiary. He
told pa the law of K ntucky made the
crime of trifling with a slot machine
the same as breach of promise, or ar-
son, and that he would he lucky If he
got off with ten years In the pen, with
30 days' solitary confinement In a
Turkish bath cell, with niggers for
companions.
Pa turned blue and a^ked the lawer
if there was no way out of it. and the
lawyer told him that for 1120 In spot
cash he would let him go, and fight
the case after the :>ho\v had got out
of the stale. A huadrcd and twenty-
five dollars was ihe r.mount they found
on pa. and ho told ti.em that Inasmuch
as they already had It, they better
keep the money and let him go. and
he would be always a living example
of the terrors of gambling.
So they let pa go. and all the way
to the train he told us ne hoped this
experience would be a lesson to us not
to covet the money of the rich, and as
far as he was concern'd. John D.
Rockefeller mild go r'um to thunder
with his money after this.
Then we got to the car, and found
about a dozen of the circus men who
had been out to beat tne slot machines,
broke flat, and I had to divide my shot
bag of nickels wit'u th^m. that 1 had
won before I let them Into the game,
before they would let me go to bed.
Dad says this circus life Is making
me pretty tough.
BEGINNINC TO DOUBT.
Former Legislator Who Feels That
He Sold His Vote Too
Cheap.
"It beats all about this political cor-
ruption," said the old farmer as he
laid aside his country paper. "Every
week there 1j something about expos-
ing some big mnn who was thought
to be perfectly honest, and It's getting
?o you don't know whom to trust."
"Were you ever In politics your*
self?" was asked.
"Once, and that's what's bothering
me now. Yes. I was elected to the
legislature once. While 1 was serv-
ing as a member a fellow-member
came to me and said that my aunt In
Inwa had died and left me |2,0UU, and
he paid the money over to me. I had
never heard about the aunt, and I
lon't know how he got the money for
up. and I am just beginning to doubt."
"To doubt what?"
"Wall. I voted for a land grab apd .
we carried It by only four majority,
and I'm Just beginning to doubt If ( I
got enough for my vote. I think If I j
had held out a few dnys I'd have ftad |
an unci* die, too, and got as much as
$3,000 out of th* thing."- iialllniwrs
American. .. |
AWFUL ITCHING ON SCALP.
Hair Finally Had to B« Cut to Save
Any—Scalp How in Good Con-
dition—Cured by Cuticura.
"I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment
for a diseased scalp, dandruff, and con-
stant falling of hair. Finally 1 had to cut
niv hair to Have any at all. Just at that
tune 1 read about the Cuticura Remedies.
Once every week I shampooed my hair
with the Cuticura Soap, and 1 u*ed the
Ointment twice a week. In two months'
time my hair was long enough to do up in
French twist. That is now five jeiri
ago, and I have a lovely head of hair. The
length is six inches belaw my waist line,
my scalp is in very go >d condition, and no
more dandruff or itching of the scalp. I
used other remedies that were recom-
mended lo me us good but with no re-
sults. Mrs. W. F. Oriesn, Clay Center,
Neb., Oct. 23. 1905."
Commercialism.
*T)o you think this government i
safe?"
"One of tne best investment* 1 know
of," i-nswered the sordid politician "Its
possibilities for paying dividends I. cn't
been m latched as yet."- Washington Mar.
♦ ■ ■
Grand Prize Alfalfa Seed.
The capture of the Highest Award at
the St. Louis Exposition by Messrs Me-
llcth &. kinnihon, of Garden City, Kas..
the well known dealers of alfalfa and
other seeds, was a notable achievement,
as the competition 'ncludcd not only
every state Hi the I'nion, bul all alfalfa
growing countries of Europe. This proves
conclusively tliat seed from that part of
Karwas, where all conditions are most
favorable to the growth of this remark-
able drouth resisting forage plant, is by
far the mist valuable.
♦
It ;s a bad idea to put friendship mid
love to the test. It is better to believe
that they really exist.--St. Louis (Jlobe-
Democrat.
N W. Aver iV Son, Philadelphia, tho
" Keepiiig-hvor-Lastincly-At-lt" advertis-
ing agents, have sent out their calendar for
liMl \vlii«.4i as usual is a very handsome and
useful office accessory. Theedition is limited.
While they lust copies may bo had by seud-
iug ccuts to the firm named above.
•
Ever notice how much harder the
wooden pew of a church is than ihe
wooden ehair in an opera house?
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxativ* Rkomo Quinine Tublets.
Pruggists refund money if it fails to cure.
E.W. Ciitovu's signature is on each box.
Don't spoil your clothes. TV Red Oo*
fiall Hluc and keet> tnein nbhe as snow.
All giwers, 5 >ent« a'package.
Simple Process.
I fvcirpe—Want to borrow my pistol?
What for?
! s in pie- To blow out my brain*
"P if! A pair of beiloWi will do that!'*
-N. V. News.
*
f
A
..d as I
until
A preferred creditor i* be>t tlcsi libeil
one who makes no fuss about waiting ui
you get ready to settle.
You always get full value in Lewis' Sin-
gle Binder straight 5c cigar. Your dealer
or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Id.
- ♦
Clothes don't nmke the man; they make
the man's friends.
- ♦ - -
flood housekeepers use the be*, iliat's
why they buy Red Cross liall blue. At
leading grocers, 5 cents.
—«.
Heaven won't lie nearly exclusive enough
to uit a lot of people.- N. Times.
Lytfla E, Plnkham's
Vegetable Compound
is a positive cure for all those painful
ailments of-women. It will entirely
cure the worst forms of Female Com-
plaints, Inflammation nnd Ulceration,
Falling and Displacements and conse-
; qv.ent Spinal Weakness, and is peculi-
arly adapted to tho Change of Life.
It will surely cure.
Backache.
It has cured more cases of Female
I Weakness than any other remedy the
| world has ever known. It is almost In-
\ fullible in such cases. It dissolves and
expels Tumors in un early stage of j
development,' That
BoarSng-down Feeling,
causing jwin. weight nnd headache. Is
instantly relieved and permanently
cured by its use. Under all circum-
stances it acts In harmony with the
female system. It corrects
Irregularity,
Suppressed or Painful Periods, Weak-
ness of the Stomach, Indigestion. Rloat- .
ing, Nervous Prostration, Headache, ~i
General Debility. Also
Dizziness, Falntness,
Extreme Lassitude, "don't-care" and
[ " wnnt-to-be-lcft-ulone" feeling, excit-
I ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep-
lessness. flatulency, melancholy or tho
| •' blues," and backache. These are
| sure Indications of Female Weakr.e s,
J some derangement of the organs. For
Kidney Complaints
nnd Backache of either sex the Vegeta-
ble ComiK>und is unequalled.
Yon can write Mrs. Pinkham about
yourself in strictest confidence.
LIDU E. I'lNKKAJI KED. CO., Lynn. *•«.
I
DOES YOUR BACK ACHE ?
Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will
Never Return.
Only one sure way to cure an aching
back. Cure the cause, the kidneys.
Thousands tell of
cures made by Doan's
Kidney Pills. John C.
Coleman, a prominent
merchant of Swains-
boro, (la , says: ' For
several years my kid-
neys were affected,
and my back ached
day and night. 1 was
languid, nervous and
lame in the morning. Doan's Kidney
Pills helped me right away, and the
great relief that followed has beeu
permanent."
Sold by all dealers. T>0 cents a box.
Foster-.Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to ^ .
their sex, used «3 a doucfee if marvelouUy iuc-
ccsstul. Thoroughlycle«nccs,kiil disea2ogerms,
Itops discharges, he..l inanimation a:.d Leal
•crrness, curcs lcucorrhcea aU nasal catarrh.
i'jxtinc is in powder t arn to be dissolved in pure
water, and is far r.ure ctean;i::g, healing, germicidal
and economical than liquid antiseptics lor all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL I'SLS
For talc at druggists, SO cents a box.
Trial Box and book ot Instruction* Free.
the ft. Paxton Company Boston, mass.
t^aDaySuroKES
111 IRJB w absolutely ire
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ftUUL MA.UUUlklMj 1lioi 1370 Dctruit, Hie*,
Prove II
By fhc Oven Fire
KG
UOUHCES^
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kCH.CACO .#1^
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BAKING
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K C Baking Powder is two>
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K C Quality. 25 ounces for
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JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago
fftnd a I'oitul for
"Book «.f INvmui*."
MAGNOLIA BLOSSOM
FOR IVIRV WOMAN.
p ot lemale complaint?
Da m Sullrf with My torm ot lemale ron
Then wliy not ul*e m n iliniit o to euro ton.
|t tint* >ou nathlnd to twt our mefliuil; Jui
nil im Ik \ ii liflllm liiinlr niUlnal ..i
r'
*111
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«aa trfnt yciursfll |>rl'
cure /on In no eliort a
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hi iv tiox olthla gjmple ale borne remedy with Whlrliy.iti
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time ti..!! It w ill iimnjt'yn
%ui«> j«m in irvj Riiurv n iimr mm it will ntunic JOu.
11 oa aatter «« form of (ciunlo complaint ran yon non*
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MIME,
V'. . "J '""f■ """ w" «uw /vu
qnlrkiy, pleantnlly nnd nerwiRacnlly.
TliotuasdR of ladlt'N liave already ivm-pted tree nltef. har«
teet-d the MuiIbuIU Morrow yvllhont rbv com wliiit" , r. hav.
Imtu convinced and have beet cur'l,
aiuiukkh woman*' MrOITAt, kept., JO,
80UTM BEND REMEDY CO., . South Bend, Ind
AMTI-GRIPIKE J
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE '
6RiP, DAI) GOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
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The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1906, newspaper, February 8, 1906; Guymon, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc274599/m1/2/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.