The Payne County Populist. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1900 Page: 2 of 10
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PAYNE COUNTY POPULIST
WRIGHT BROS.* Eds. and Prepa.
STILLWATER,
"ugl, Pitzer, of Oklahoma, has
clerkship in the interior depart
mcnt.
The work of surveying the pasture
lands of the Osage nation will be com
fdeted April 1st.
Two hundred farms in Garfield coun-
ty were deeded during the vear ending
February 1, 1900.
The K. of P. convention ball at
Woodward is now having the brick
made for its erection.
Edward (i. Mdntire and wife of Ye-
Wed were the first persons to be mar-
ned in Woods county.
There arc a number of Oklahoma
I*'0?1"' interested in the American col-
ony at (ilorica, Cuba.
Sheriff Pierce, of Kay county, has
quarantined 34« head of cattle which
■re afflicted with ticks.
A gain in population of between two
and three thousand during the past
year is claimed by Guthrie.
The Blackwell, Enid and Southwest
ern railroad, recently chartered, it is
Mid will be built by the Frisco.
Would be land office clerks must go
to Kansas City and pass examination
The date has not been fixed.
Many, probably nearly all of the
Schools of Oklahoma will observe Arbor
Day in work on their school grounds.
There is a scarcity of teachers
Lincoln county, so many of them have
#one into active business enterprises.
The capacity of the Guthrie water-
works is 150.000 gallons in 24 hours.
One-half of this amount is the average
1 ort Gibson i.i to establish a cottoi
gin-
Ardmore recently organized its firs
Sunday school.
(*rain dealers at Enid buy an averagi
of 34,000 a day.
A commercial club lias been organ
ized at Woodward.
Indian Territory has been divide*
178 census districts.
Vinita* 84,000 deficit is the prevalent
subject of discussion.
No quarantine exists now on tin
Osage Indian reservation.
South McAlester has a new dailj
paper callcd the New Era.
The republican convention in Indiat
Territory is to meet at Purcell. May 3
The territorial supreme court will
meet March 23d in adjourned
I rod Gieverflaie's Adventure. s
Ak By Seward WI. Hopkins* A
gk Copyrighted, 1690, by Robert Bonner's Son*. mk
Hum ha of ,Ui|o
Contrary to the general 0D
people go n;ad durlnc
ih„ .... °e tui
Qion.
sion.
Oklahoma r
ron
used.
Lamont is assured of the extension
of the Blackwell, Enid A- Southwestern
railroad, and is destined to make a
pood town.
A soldier from Manila found a de-
serter in the Osage reservation and
started back with him to l>e tried bv
his own regiment.
A. W. Westlake, a teacher of Ly
Vnile.r district. Kingfisher county
challenges the world and Kingfisher
county to a mathematical contest.
_ 'grand commandery of the
Knights Templar of Oklahoma and In-
dian Territory will hold their annual
meeting at Stillwater on April 10.
J he Salt Creek Cement company has
acquired 1,200 acres of land in lilaine
county, which contains a large supply
of material for the production of ce-
ment.
The livestock board lias removed the
embargo from a herd of cattle under
quarantine at Ponca City, provided the
cattle pass a satisfactory inspection
ami a l>ond is given.
It is .said that where Indian and
white children attend the same school,
- he Indian children come clean and
well dressed and that they excel the
white children in writing aud drawing
The mill fire at Newkirk damaged
most of the 18,000 bushel stock of
wheat.
newspapers, many of them
are in a campaign against' carrying
weapons.
Captain Remington, who lives eas1
of Muscogee, claims to be the invento)
of the Remington gun.
One firm shipped 300 wagon loads o:
goods from Ponca City to Gray Horsi
during the past pear.
Assessors were early at work arnonf
cattle, to catch them before rer—"-
from their jurisdiction.
The sixth annual convention of the
Epworth League for the two territor-
ies was held at El Reno.
Seven eases of export beer wer«
stolen from a ear at South McAlester
The thieves are in custody.
Supervisor Itallard of the Creek
schools has been visitiug schools at Sa
pulpa and the country adjacent.
Indications appear to be against tin
cattlemen's introducing as manv cattli
into the territory this season as usual
A patent from the I'nited States tc
the city of Guthrie for Highland park
has been received. This tract contain;
07 acres.
(rank Xiblack left a legacy of ?ii,v
to the Presbyterian church at Chandler.
It is to be used to erect a belfry and ti
buy a bell.
Petrified branches of a black jack
tree were found near Iowa City eight
cenfeet beneath the surface, in dig
ging a well.
Davis, I T., has had an Ss.000 fire
with little insurance. Ten plai
business were burned; all siua
two stores.
. At a mass meeting of Kiowa 1
citizens. Judge II, p. \Vnr,i „..ls
dorsed for principal chief of the ( I
taw nation.
The (
CHAPTER XII.
When his task was ilnished Rob
was very nervous. He did not know
how these letters were going to reach
the post. There was no station near.
Elvln came riding In—he had been
to Buenos Ayres—about supper time,
and came in where Rob was, still
wearing his high boots and carrying
his whip. Rob shuddered as he thought
of what that whip would do if Elvln
discovered the letter to his uncle.
Finished?" asked the Englishman,
looking at the neat lows of letters Rob
had arranged.
"Yes, sir."
Elvin took up some of the last ones,
and looked them over. He nodded,
and went to his own room. He had
not touched the letters among which
was hidden the one to David Horton.
Now, if it only gets into the post
■efely! said Rob to himself. "But
how is it going to be done?"
No more was said about the letters
that night, and Rob did not dare put
his plan to escape into execution. He
was so eager to have that letter off
safely that he resolved to remain an-
other duy and watch events. And he
knew that if he escaped before the let-
ters were mailed Elvin would suspect
something and examine them all. So
he slept that night again in the little
room off the office.
The next morning at breakfast El-
vin called a man who was working in
the stables. He was a short, ugly fel-
low, almost black.
Govino, said Elvin, "you see those
letters in there on the desk?"
"Me see plenty," he said. "Many
letters."
"Saddle a horse and ride to Dolores
Go to the postofflce and see Negora.
Negora is with us. and will send the
letters without allowing the fact to
become known. Do you understand?"
Govino went out and saddled a
horse, and then came in and got the
letters. Rob breathed freely when he
saw the man ride off, for even if he
read your fool cipher and sent the
whole story—about me—and ali—to
Horton. He wrote a letter of kls
own, and sent it along with yours."
Richard Elvin quivered with eaco-
tlon.
"Has Horton seen it?" he managed
to gasp.
"No. I caught it just in time. I'll
tell you about it later. But where is
he now? I will make sure of him now.
I'll kill him within the next two min-
utes."
With trembling finger Richard Elvln
pointed toward the door of Rob's room
,"In there!" ho whispered.
With an oath Starne drew a knife
from under his riding coat and leaped
toward the door of Rob's room. He
flung it open. He stood there with the
knife In his hand, Btupefled with
amazement. The window was open.
The room was empty.
The boy he was to kill in the next
two minutes was not there to kill.
art I
He said the boy insletod upon being
one of the crew of the "Black Cat.'"
"Put it is certain that Torrevo lied,
for no one but Horton's nephew could tl,au ln usualiv ,
have written that letter.- ?nd du'! "10ntll of Movent
"True. Stay! The first time th« boy r a"d when times'
came to Black Cat Bay, Torrevo beat °
him. This time he did not It may
not be the same boy."
"It was the same boy. Torrevo Is
no doubt playing a deep game. I think
!'\T*e,: ,he, W"°.lc ,hlng' Th9 and that sulclde—which lg M*
Black Cat happened to be near when form of Iniinitv—i. ■
I threw the boy overboard, and picked lcnt Uurlng the 1Ummer° m0rei
told Torrevo who he was, '
genera' condition*
more conducive to insanity . ■
In this country, hut also
era, it Is found that mori B *'i
mad during May, June and j!?
during any other portion of th"
and that mirtHo ..n
"utica,
him up. He
and Torrevo agreed to help him. Of j D.| ran.r«ToTt
course, knowing our power, Torrevo Paris Cor. Pittsburg
would not dare do anything while that There Is a curious little sr,
power existed. It was agreed between fashionable world. It
them to have the cub remain with Tor- *°mo time tinee
a company
sppeari
did read the
names on the envelopci
It was not likely that he would know
that Horton was not to receive one.
And perhaps he could not read any-
thing.
Elvin remained all that day around
CHAPTER XIII.
For once in his life, Hlchard Elvln
was staggered.
"He's gone!" yelled I.emuel Starne.
The elder man made no answer.
'lies gone!" shouted Starne again.
"Don't you see what a fool you've
been?"
Richard Elvln was at all times quick
to resent a taunt.
"Fool!" he echoed. "Why have I
been a fool? The boy may be outside."
"Yes—a good way outside," replied
Starne, in disgust.
"Well, what do you mean, anyhow?
You come here like a bellowing bull,
rush around to stab people, and howl
at me for being a fool. What have you
learned?"
With a sneer of bitterness too deep
for words Starne drew a folded letter
from his pocket.
"Read that," he said.
It was Rob's letter to his uncle. With
trembling fingers Elvin held It, an.I
read it through. He returned it to
Starne without a word.
"Why don't you speak?" demanded
revo till an opportunity arose to warn temctery for dogs, so that
Horton what was going on. This would which had been a friend fur
place Torrevo In the light of being true ,h°uld not be thrown in dust '
to Horton and the government, and it 'a'hlonable Indies, however
we failed, he would not be punished. lhe ldea further, and when thtlri
He would be rewarded for his aid. lled Issued funeral cards The i
This Is clear enough to me. it wai a ,erv|ces were held In drawing
put up Job." , A Jay or two since a dog fun",.,'
"But how could it be? Torrevo did ,fnt out hy a titled lady
not suggest the boy to do the writing. blshoI . ho took It upon
I did. I saw the tally of the last rargo. leIul a s,ll'lflnK leproof for the
The boy did It at Rio, I suppose while ?" ,C!|rl"t.lan ""Ice. The i .
Torrevo was drunk."
(To be Continued.)
him*.)) I
THEIR OWN MIXTURES.
Hlnok.r* Who Have Tot,aero Compound*
to Butt Th.lr Tuim.
The young and Inexperienced are
ever ready to smile Incredulously at
the seasoned smoker who offers hli
tobacco pouch with the remark. "Try
some of my own mixture." In some
cases "my own mixture" may really
bo only the smoker's "own" In the
sense that he has paid for a few
ounces of It, but In spite of the copy-
righted and much-advertised special
mixtures In these latter days. It seems
from what one of the most popular
downtown tobacconists says, that the
habit of buying one's own exclusive
mixture" Is not so extinct as might
be supposed, says the New York Trib-
une. "Here Is a list of the special
mixtures we make," says this authori-
ty, taking from a corner a large card,
"you see, there are about fifty of them
on this card. Each mixture Is noted
down, all the Ingredients and the pro- |
portions In which they are to be used,
and over each one Is the name of the
except
E. Haraill, from Oklahoma, has a
number of restaurants in the I'hilin-
pines.
The Methodist ministers met in Ok-
lahoma City to receive propositions
from cities desiring to obtain the ].<
cation of the Oklahoma M. E. college.
Ihcrc was quite a number of ministers
present but no successful results were
arrived at, although plans in regard
to it were discussed.
"r Barnes has appointed ,-i
•trong delegation to the trans-Missis-
fcippi commercial enn-rres. et Houston
April 17-31.
The Indian ofllcc has opened tin
bids for building the liiversside school
at the Iowa agency. A firm at Wei
lington, Kansas, made the lowest bid
•12,004.
The government report issued Jan
Ifives the total number of cattle in Ok
lahoma at 333,971. The bigger porti
of this herd is held in the
counties.
western
Isaac II, Little, an Indiaua veteran
whjse home has been in Oklahoma
committed suicide at the Leavenworth
Soldiers' home.
David Warrior and Miss Hclle olvc-
water, l'onca Indians, are to be married
The bi ide has been a student at Has-
kell Indian school at Lawrence, Kan-
aas.
Attorney General Strang is of the
opinion that a county treasurer who
held his office for a portion of a term
"ot eligible for election for the next
full term, under the law.
. ks say they object totheabo-
lition of their tribal courts l>ecause t<
consent would be a reflection upon
their honesty.
A fat men's club has been organize,
at Wagoner. To be eligible one must
"cigh at least three pounds for even
inch of his height.
The hod carriers on the new
Luilding at I'ond Creek struck for an
advance in wages which was refuse,
by the contractor. Other men wrrt
engaged.
Flans and specifications for a Sloo .
000 steel railroad bridge across the Red
river on the territory line have been
prepared und accepted bvtlie Bock
Island railroad.
I nder a new regulation all Osag
annuitants over 18 years of ag
and female, must be
the roll
i#ned for all under VI
I he Seneca Telephone company has
>•11 granted the right to construct and
operate a telephone line between th,
towns of Seneca. Mo., Wyandotte. I. T.
Orand River, Fairland, Oseuma, Aftor
and Vinita.
Leading farmers und cattlemen have
appealed to congress to ,l,.fe,lt ,|lc
Watt bill which would require th. 1
fencing of grazing lands and woul,
make void all land leases in th,
anil Chickasaw country.
1 erritorial Superintendent
Hopkins, President David I.
the Fniversity of Oklahr
male
present and sign
payments. Heretofore
parents have si
IS HE"
HE GASPED, SEIZING ELVI.VS ARM
.he j^p. p, and Rob found no
the son. "How" do you feel, now that w/v'T/T. 7^ nr#t Unl"r"d " Th*
your foolishness has upset the whole V that " SDKj|<er makes hli
experiments on different combinations
scheme?"
"But has It?
upset the whole
asked Elvln
Of tobacco until ho hits upon some-
j thing which Just suits him. Some-
times he buys the Ingredients and
mixes them himself, but people hav.
so much to do nowadays that mor«
Often they tell us what they want and
we do the mixing. It takes weeks
sometimes for a customer to get to
Just the thing he is aiming at and
"f course, It Is all guesswork ln tha
m*«ntlme But you might be surprised
t(- know bow long a man will go on
u lng the same mixture, once he has
out *'l>at suits him This first
n*ue on the list does not belong to
till mixture we have been making th
or'K-st; It comes first because the
lis, la alphabetically arranged, but
recipe has been standing here for
teD years to my knowledge It wai
fir* ordered by an Englishman; hi.
name still goes with It and he is still
using It. but scores of other people
a SO use It who have never heard of
Ko' >'° 8"*, It Is possible for a
man to be using another man's 'par-
ticular mixture' and go on using it for
>ea-«, thinking It his own exclusive
ralrture all the time. The way some
of these mixtures gain popularity
j°!d ,hp thing was general. Th.rL!
he wrote in a religious publi.au-,,
I llrade against the lack of de,,
Ilo* on "'e part of modern
u°men. and the whole thine
ted quite a little mmUon
J Verdict of a rural Jury:
lu- man who stole the horse not
j Spring
| Medicine
. Then-'s no season when (jo...;
t Iclne It much needed a.i In - rinf I
and there's no medicine whlth .1
I
Rarsapariiia. In fa. t. - ■
cine 1^ another name f r HoihI i *ar.
'aparilla. not delay taking it.
!>on't put it of? till your health : «
4,-rti too low to be lifted.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla \
Will fire you * ,1 appetite, parlfi
•I i f b I ■
I
' a . . f
Ii«' mm t«> a k f. r BOtID*I 81
sure that y«nj pet Hood'*, th* t -
med'rlne money ran buy. Get a t
tic TODAY. A li BU Prli i j. J
Th* above lilt
ttammoih i> i
Mall i r«|, r l|.
Company of ch
third
In bu
Mny ha*
« *mj|| «
*>n in tlHHH
«ldenln* their fU*i.|'
nc rn< '
«tration how
■ Ki occupied b>
of the Joh.i
cago.
of
by
,t W hob'
I Hr .r. .
pr.<
>ear* ugn they b^ran «
... A. r FU'<>,11/ ... "^tpfneri with an Ili i«tr.«i
sh^ts that it Isn't quite exactly ,ru,
tunity to get away. He feared "every I Iliw>',i!ll0."?bt.'h.e.!tllow wafi 8,1 right.
that there are as many different tastes
as tongues, for sometimes what eg.
actly suits one man seems exactly to
suit a hundred others When we fiad
mixture becoming widely popular
wo sometimes make It up in quantities
hut only rarely. And that. I su
Is how new mixture)
market."
pr t
on
•ting the loi
k'crythlng t«.
uperlor pro.-.
Kat.
uppose,
get put on the
: ' • • Hy
r>hotofraphjr they ||; i .tr
SToijdit in natural colora. brlngtuit
rich color . tine of curtain* ,
iMperlo „„i ,i,.,i,n, ,,
tc.,_ thus enab'lng th.* m>
tnnt to todect
(iiowlng l ) ti
and prlc the
or mile
moment that Lemuel Starne would re'-1 ""V" y°U grt thlfl lpt,er
turn and recognize him. And now , blnoe " bwame known—or
When there was such hope „f rescue! j ; "" ""8 that Hot,
. Lleverdale was lost overt,,,-.r.i
la b
hoct
lioyd, c
.. 4 ,, r,nja. and Pro
.dent K. I). Murdaugh, „f the terri
>«>l. are attending th
the National
oeiation in Chicago thi-
torial normal seln
annual convention
Teachers'
week.
*l Trad, of
Hecent investlg.tlon o, ,be
John Hurrell McKinley died at Mine.
"vedVthk' "•'1V"S" "'"l ,,a-'
lived there eight years. ||c n,
spoke of his relatives.
The two home missionary board
he taptist church engaged In „-ork 1
the Indian territory, arc irving to ad
just all differences and unite under on
management.
Six deaths have occurcd from searle
• >er in the ( hicltasaw nation. I',,I
lie and private schools are being closed
and precautions taken to
spicad of the disease.
prevent tic
Kurope and Asia Minor in" nMhT*.1""
times leads to the ro^usTon ^
•bout 1,000 years h.r„r, th '
of the Brittah Isle,, „-,.Pn , , ' hp 111
l nd to the Aegean sea The .n"""
tlon of the anchor led I'('Ven
years ago to the opeain* of *"'00
route between Fngl lnd ( '"arln.
Wiryjlans controlled the n! 1 ""
with their ships Thl i "'"d<
nllhf. of north mil i """mm
the wondorg that ^Jreoju I%°
day. of Homer *"d " '■
Colonel Boy llofTmai, .1, to deliver
the annual address during th,. com-
inenccine'lt exercises at the Edmond
formal school.
The oil company holding oil |ol
" 11,0 reservation, has sunk
three wells near Bartlesville. i. t
with very promising prospects.
The total valuation of taxable prop,
art. In \ inlta is ..70,800. A ten-,,,111
lovj has been made for the current
.H r four mills for the support of p„b.
lie schools, which will cost about .
lhe town owes 93,.1A1(
/
he did not want Starne to know who
he was and to be killed when every-
thing was going along so well. He
was glad when night came and he re-
tired to his room. It wan a warm
night, and while his door was open
and the lights still burning, and while
Richard Llvln sat Just outside smok-
ng, he opened his window. Elvln
heard it. but suspected nothing
Then Hob put out his light, shut his
door and pretended to go to bed.
That night about twelve o'clock the
furious hoof-heats of a rapidly ridden
horse sounded near the house. Some
one leaped from him and thundered at
the door. a moment later Lemuel
.Starne, with white face and panting
bosom, stood before the astonished
Hlchard Elvln.
"Where Is he? Where Is he?" he
gasped, seiling Elvln's arm.
"Where Is who? What's the mat-
ter with you? What's happened?"
\\ here s this fine penman of yours' I
W here'H that lovely nephew of TorreTo I
who was educated In New York?"
"In bed. What the mischief has rot
Into you? Aro you mad?"
"No, but you are. Da you know
what you vo done?"
'I generally know pretty well. To
what special act do you refer?"
SI ,rCfeii.t0 >'°"r exrell''nt Private
setretary, gasped Starne, almost ehok-
Ing with rage. "That cub! That-that
—where Is ho?"
1 tP" you!" roared Elvln.
What about him?"
"IIP is no more the nephew of Tor-
£vo th , H„ „ ,ho n ' ror
navld Horton. ile Is the very cub I
''Vf'rl,"^r', ,r"m th" K yal Mall.
He was u good private secretary, H*
blnir h<
drowned, old
lost overboard and
i , Horton has been so
broken In spirits that he
attend to business.
he ran scarcely
Ho had to have
Here Is a nice, creepy story told h
the son Of Sir John Mill.,Is. says th.
„w °rk Commercial Advert,-er
There was a dinn-r party nt the Mil-'
lals house, and when all were seatcj
-— - a l*dy 'remuously observed that th.-r.
.someone near him whom he could *'Cre th|rteen at table. The palnt.r
\Io!:e ,hat 80Ineone Wa myself. ask.p;' hl" """ to 'line In another p-m,
ZZT. m"Z 11V" ' Worked "is anrt '1P «'■ ""hen dinner was over
f t, 0f lal" he has not been "" "ne ,e*med anxious to be the fl,-t huv* ,dv*r"*"
fee'lng well, and I have attended to 10 «" Matthew Arnold, whn wa 1
mill ver,rrPOn.^n'e' ,he Iaiit "n" °[ ,h0 suggested that h, !
nn f ®tcr(,ay this letter came, i un(1 tWo stalwart undergraduate
Imaalne " ? nm"y °""'r" Yuu r'"> "" " «l«aneou,|y Th,
Imagine my feelings when I read it ,hr<,e I'd so. Within a year each '
about "u* i"" Horton '"em was dead-Arnold by h«n
find that h ''I*""' '"r,'c"y l"'r,' "> of "lp hy suicide the
with th, "" n'"h hlm Bl,t "w '* by drowning. Dut why did' not1
irirv. i Si""8 Bt,lpl"',y 'hat has "te sel,!® "P°n Mr. Mlllals who left
th fl 'yoUr C0UrB® 'n the matter from ,he ta,,Ie and by all the rules t
the first, you have let him escape." juperstltlon should have paid the for
Perhaps no harm has been done 1 " wlth hl" llfe? Perhaps ho was
seen w°" l6"*r no °"8 else has "I"1? h'8 """ahlllty |„
"But If i, , °av ng the table to pleaso the worthy
But If he sent one to Horton, why *"°'° who rttlled attention to the risk
't to the president or anyone else'" y wer* " r"nnlng.
hundred
at hi* own 11
•crlptlon. Illustration
of KO...H h- rnav , ,,k ,
Thl* feature or th. Ir b.i*ln^«
inK more and more popular
• or It not only b'na und ti # -
r.,lima,I Journeys |, „ ,«"* "2r„! ,
raven out thv« profit of fhr
r. the i ••taller. tb«> • .
rommerciil traveler, th. K«nfrHi ,
thf Rtib-aK^nt and tin. eflinlri.i!f< f
n„p I., f.,„r |,r<in, . It,I, .
for „• , ,, i„.,., |n „t„,ri,
whol.'snte .tor. broiigh, ,!, :
lhe mammoth caul,.*,,,, „.f,ri, ,
.nth . ,i,,„ry dlctl'in;ir> ..f
1he lUunniJon t,oi,,« ikon tb.
„.i "Id. .1 *t
I I '- «UC. •.,f ,),tH > nr.-m
crcllble. ronslilrrlhtf tti,, f,, t ,tllt .
Ilttl., Their «ptr.
not
asked Starne.
I don't think so. He wrote that to
No Ti U° brlDK hlm 10 rescue
b||n,| thin^ "• arf "« ' afe. I was
swore h?. Hut Torrevo
th.D n""heW' Torrevo,
tnen, must be a traitor."
"Where did Torrevo find him' I
am sure there was no craft near when
' threw lilm overboard, still, I m|ght
have been mistaken. The 'lilack Cat'
sslls swiftly, and it wns n dark night
She would have no lights showing."
, "I don't understand It," said Klvln
rorfevo brought hlm bore-to the
lib TO?b H *""" Plfture,1"® Span-
Irt garb. He seemed to look upon Tor-
treated"hi T"' T"rr"v"
"* ted him like a nephew, for he teat
untuerclfully with a rope's end
How Dog. root On. A„„,|„P.
A correspondent noticing my ,tur,„
of "Daxle." twho "make belUi" In
order to draw off each other's atten-1
tlon from desirable things, and to ou.t!
each other from comfortable «rm
.•hairs, promising burrows, and so !
forth make, the following remarks: |
1'addy and the retriever pretend at1
When h°lel!i JU",t y°"r ll°* 'fends. !
When one dog Is st the hole that th« ' «
W In !!"h" ',l,k,ell",t' Ul" (1°K who I.' JSffiSSWi— Industry In the secret of
out In the cold,' as It were Kets un a thiy i,"",''1'"1 'he nu.niliy of it
•eene, and thus humbugs the do, l! ' =
P'liaession, and then slips Into hi. fr«l fit r.t." low"*1 c""
Plnce. —Ixindon News. from'ih.'ST,?,* ,n ,,h" rou.h ,r. eomi,
the I..VL « " faet°rte. In the I " ,
"The .uperlor man I. mm aJ ^'HZl JJ'SuflVJ
composed; the m,.n man ta Mwayt' '? J
full of dlatreM." Su"d* In'alteSJi.or u"v "
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Wright Bros. The Payne County Populist. (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1900, newspaper, March 29, 1900; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117154/m1/2/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.