The Mustang Mail. (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1903 Page: 2 of 8
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M ustang
MUSTANG,
Mail.
OKLAHOMA.
TWO TERRITORIES IN BRIEF
In ono day an Enid firm wold 17,COO
pounds of b.tiding twine.
Reports of the watermelon crop any
thej will be pl- nty and of good quality.
Enid has a yeast factory that turns
out 500 package of that product every
day.
Bulpl.u hasa daily. The Post o£
that city beguu u daily edition this
week.
THE LION'S WHELP
A Story of Cromwell"3 Timo
3Y AMELIA E. BARR.
'Tlio Bow of Oranfl# Ribbsn." "I, Thovj and tin
"The Moid of Maiden LE.tc.
; yrlght, 1901. \ y Dodd, Mead & C u.n* any. All ilahts rese
CHAPTER XVI.—Continued.
-1 j
| vi'iy mirror of his courageous spirit.
I
Preparations are being made for the
crectiou of a halt plant at Ferguson,
Blaine county.
McDcrmctt postoflico in the Creek
nation has been discontinued. Mail
goes to Okemah.
Rev. J. If. Parker linn been elected to
tho presidency of the board of trustees
of Kingfisher nolle ge.
Fire at Ripley recently did about f2,-
000 worth of damage. It was probably
tho work incendiaries.
"My clear Martha, I did not think of
telling you this j'i 1 yet, and especial-
ly to-day. hut tho words wore at my
lips, and then tlioy were out, without
my leave or license. Now there is 1 like.
nothing for it, hut letting you know, ' any-< aus
plump and plain, that you and 1. in blood."
our gathering years, must up anil out cromwell lia-l hoped that liis great
of England. Oliver Cromwell U dy- | afflictions would bring Ms friends
■ when he is in tho grave, what? bark to ,llg Rl(lo; bul ,.„vv ilatred nn(]
' :ik lie. ome we ak and trembllr
<an t< 11 you one thing, Martha, a
thinking !:<m.i1 is always sorrowful
'•nough, lint when it is a great soul
Oliver's, and it is wretched for
then ev< ry thought draw:
Either Stuart, or civil war. if it is
the Stuart, my head will be wanted;
and as for lighting for Lambert, or
<m-n Fairfax, or Sir Harry Vane I
will not do it^verily, I will not! I
have fought under Cromwll; I will
flght under no less • general, and in I wounded him to tho quicit
no loss a quarrel than he led in. That
is settled. You said Martha, 'for bet-
ter. or for worse.' "
Tishomingo is to vote on tho propo-
sition to i.- su« $50,000 in bonds for
waterworks and schools.
Coyle is rapidly inproving, several
new residences and business bull U
being under construction.
greedy ambition are not to bo concili-
ated. Even at this time Ludlow, Lam-
bert, Vane. Harrison. Marten—all the
men whom he had trusted, and who
had trusted him, stood aloof from his
>rrow; and their sullen indifference
His un-
finished work drove at him like a
taskmaster. He must make great
haste, for he knew that the night was
Sho did not arswor, and he dropped j coming.
her hand and continued, "I will never ! "I am glad he is hack in Whitehall,"
force thee. Martha, not one stop, H i said Martha to her husband, when she
thou lovest England better than heard of the change. "I remember
n" " something that Jane said about that
I don't! I don't, Israel! I love ( old, gloomy Court; he will get better
nothing, 1 love nobody bettor thao in London.
i was thinking o!
Two hundred thousand potato sacks
have been contracted by tho potato
raisers in Pottawatomie county.
A terrible hail storm visited parts of
the Chickasaw nation last we< k, which
did much damage to growing crops.
Chickasha grocers have combined
against a gang of peddlers and agents
who have been at work 111 that section.
Oat harvest is being begun over the
territory as rapidly as the farmers aro
finishing tho reaping of tho hard wheat.
A petition, which is meeting with
general approval, is being circulated in
Cushing relative to a new school bnild-
lug.
Tho dam holding the water in Ellison
lake, three miles south of Guthrie
bursted recently and now tho lake is no
more.
Israel Swaffham.
S waff ham."
"I shall sign tho sale of it to Cym-
lin as soon us Cromwell dies. 1 and
thou can build another Swaffham:
thou art but fifty, and my years are
some short of sixty. Wo are in the
prime of life yet."
"I am forty eight—not quite that
Israel; and Swaffham was very up
and down, and scarce a cupboard in
if. Wherever you go, Israel, I will go;
.your Clod is my God, and your country
shall he mine."
"i was sure of that. Martha. God
love you, dearest! And any country
where your home is built, and your
children dwell, is a good country; be-
e-ides which, this New World is really
a land of milk and honey and sun-
shine. Tonbert and Will could not be
bought back here with an earldom.
"I know not. Martha," answered Is-
rael, sadly; "Fairfax was with him
to-day, and ho might as well have
drawn his sword 011 his old friend—
better and kinder had he done so."
"Kairfax is proud as Lucifer. What
did ho want?"
"The Duke of Buckingham has been
sent to the Tower—where he ought to
have been sent long ago; but ho is
married to the daughter of Fairfax,
and the haughty Lord General went
to see Cromwell about the matter. He
met him in the gallery at Whitehall
and asked that the order for Bucking
ham's arrest should be retraced. And
Cromwell told him that if the offense
wore only against his own life, the
Duke could go free that hour, but that
ho could not pardon plotters against
the Commonwealth. It grieved him to
the heart to say these words, and
something of ■ '/it 11 y said. Pre?.
Truly Dr. Verity joined him. The}
said a few words about the storm,
♦heir words were emphasized by the
railing and crashing of trees outside
tho windows, and by thunder and
!i 1 tring and driven torrents of rain;
and then Dr. Verity said in a low
voice, "Ho knows nothing of this—
he is still as death; he barelj
l>r. at lies; lie is unconscious; where is
he, Israel?"
Not quite gone—not quite here
Is he watching the battle of elements
in the midd darkno . ?" Then foi
some minutes only the pealing thun-
der and the howling winds made an-
sv.« r. But John Verity was thinking,
and as soon as there was a moment's
lull in the uproar, he said. "Oliver is
no stranger to the Immortals, Israel.
They have heard of his fame. In
their way they have seen and helped
him already. While his body lie&
yonder, without sense or motion,
where is his spirit? Is it now having
It ast flght with its great enemy)
Isr;!"l, I was thinking of what Isaiah
says, about hell being moved to meet
Lucifer at his coming."
"But, oh, John, John Verity, all
this great life is to be a failure. All
our travail and toil and suffering to
be a failure!"
"No, indeed! There is no failure
No, 110, nothing of the kind! We
have ushered in a new era of Free
dom. We have made a breakwatei
Inst tyranny. Kings will remem*
ber forevermore that they have a joint
in their necks. Oliver has done, tc
the last tittle, the work he was sent
to do. It is Oliver the Conqueror!
Not Oliver tho Failure. Remember.
Israel, it is not incumbent on us tc
finish the work; we can leave it
BOY GOT HIS MONEY.
Of ;
But Inuendo Forced It From
Parsimonious Debtor.
Edward is a bright "yellow" be
a light, « off --colored complexion,
who assists the janitor in the build-
ing where Harpster had his real es-
tate office. Also he is a "champion
buck and wing dancer." Recently,
while Harpster and some of his friends
were smoking in the office, after hours,
Ed came along.
"Show me some steps," said Harp-
ster, ' and I will give you a quarter."
Ed danced rhythmically and ener-
getically for the company. But Harp-
ster forgot to give him the quarter. A
week passed and he did not pay it,
though the hoy hinted sevc ral times
that the money was due.
One day the same company was
smoking in Harpster's office again
when in came Ed. Now Harpster is
a very dark man, with black hair and
the complexion of a Spaniard.
"Misteh Harpster," began Ed, "is
you gwin' give me that quartah l'o*
dancin' fo' you?"
"Get out." replied Harpster sourly.
"Now, Mistah Harpster," said the
mulatto, "I ain't gwin' get out. till 1
gets that quartah. Ain't I always
used you jes* same like you was n
white man?"
Amid the roar of laughter from
his friends Harpster paid up. X w
York Press.
POWER OF SWAN'S WING.
] SPIDERS SENSITIVE TO COLOR.
Mio Interesting Experiment by College otu-
dent Demonstrates That Point.
A student at the University of Penn-
sylvania prove d the other day that
• piders are not color blind. Into a box
3e put a male and female. The mala
mmediately began to dance before th'j
'emale with great vigor and abandon,
or it is by dancing always that court-
thip among spiders is conducted.
Now the female was removed and
lipped into a little pot of bright blue
lye. Then she was returned to the.
nale a strange-looking thing in hue, to
;>e sure; only, if spiders are color
ilind, as many persons claim, she
jvould not have seemed at all strange*
coking to her mate. He regarded her
'or a moment closely. Then he turned
iway. Ii< would not look at her. Ho
jvas perfectly indifferent.
The female was then removed an.l
•1 a:;cd of the dye, and the male 011
v :■ p'lurn became as ardent as be-
'ore. It was most amusing now to sew
5im dance before her till he fell on
■lis side with fatigue.
The Hindrance to Success.
A young newspaper mail who was
r cently sent to int( r\ lew t he moat
prominent men in the city with a
view to collecting their ideas as to
what had to the greatest extent hinder-
fd them in their careers, arrived in
h presence of Jamej li. Keene. "I
I out time to be bothered," he said
it first.
■ Tv just come from I
• aid the tired reporter.
Ah," remarked Mr.
II vi i \ iniei.sted "and
rv Clews—"
Keene, secm-
what did he
sav was his greatest hindrance to suc-
" Model
-Well.
answered his caller,
remarked Mr. Keene
Strikes Blow Capable of Breaking a
Man's Arm.
"Swans." said John Lover of the
Zoo, "have great strength of wing. It
God's hands. And though we have tc ; is said that wi,h a bIow °r il-s w*ng a |
•\e it boh in 1 us incomplete, Co.V v:in ran break a in;.: k~. and I
vill use it some way and somewhere : *iave 110 doubt this is so. A doctor
' told me one day. a? we stood together 1 ihou* htfully. I hen. pulling his beard,
j by the Zoo lake, that one of his first '1( continued- "If Clews has the
j case? had been that of a man whose U'Tvo to ay that, you may r cord my
I arm a swan had broken with its wing.
| "The accident occurred in Arkansas.
on Swan Lake, a body of water where
\ huntsman was
1 swan, making
for the light, flew straight at his head.
He put up his arm to shield his lace.
Major John Jensen will resign from
the agency of P. ncu Iudiuns mid take
charge as cashier of a bank at Rod
Rock.
The Okmulgee National bank of Ok-
mulgee, I. T., has been authorized to
begin business, with a capital stock of
160,000.
The name of the postoflftce at Doaks-
rillo, Choctaw nation, has been changed
to Fort Towson, with Thomas Fenuell
as postmaster.
It is announced that the land ofTice nt
Tishiiniugo for tho allotment of lands
to tho Chickasaw Indian will bo re-
opened ou July 1.
Elk City has granted a franchise for
electric lights to O. L. Johnson, who
will, it is expected have tho plant ready
to turn 011 tiio current by October 1st.
Geary had a liro recently in which
property aggregating $8,000 in value
was destroyed. A car load of twine and
nineteen single binders were destroyed.
John Wheat was shot and killed near
Sallisaw, by Deputy Marshal F. Priest.
The oflloer went to arrest Wheat on the
charge of introducing and selling
whiskey.
Natives of Kansas now residing in
Oklahoma have formed a temporary
organization with \V. P. Campbell, of
Waukomis, as president. A meeting
will be callod soon when a permanent
organization will bo made and a reunion
held.
and the news will find us, even iL
heaven, and sweeten our happy labors
there. I believe liiis, I do with all my
soul."
On Thursday night, the 2d of Sep
tember, being the ninth day of hit
hard fight, he bado his wife and ehil 'hose lords abound.
dren "a good-bye"; but into thi* lire-hunting, when
sacred scene not even the tonderes*
imagination may intrude. Afterward
he appeared to withdraw himself en-
tirely within the shadow of the A1
mighty, waiting the signal for his
release in it peaceful, even a happj
mood, and saying in a more and more
labored voice. "Truly God is good—in
deed He is He will not- -leave. My
work is done- hut God will bo—with
His people." Some one offered him £
drink to ease his restlessness and
give him sleep, but he refused it. "It
is not my design to drink or to sleep,'1
he said; "my design is to make what
haste I can to be gone." The last
extremity indeed, but one full of that
longing desire of the great apostU
"to depart and be with Christ, whicb
is far better."
The next morning, the 3d of Scj*
tember, his Fortunate Day, "the d?-.v
of Dunbar Field and Worcester's
laureate wreath," he became speech-
less as the sun rose, „. . ... ....
quiet until between three and foui y?nd th® pi"'h "f shade: the llum
in the afternoon, when he was heard I and hover ot ,n8ects vibrated In thf
to give a deen sigh. The pfcywlcian In I alr; and prPS"ntly musicians werc
1 tumbling block as—ei
it. New York Times.
the lack of
and the -powerful wing of the big
white bird struck him like a olul
Both bones in the forearm were
broken. It was a compound frac-
ture.
"If a swan, accidentally, can break
in this way a man's arm, there is. in
my opinion. 110 room to doubt that it
could, if it. desired, break, with a well-
directed blow, a man's leg." Philadel-
phia Record.
An Arab Tea Party.
A lady traveling in Morocco give<
the following account of an Arab tea
party: "Our hc-sc dispensed shcrruh
de minat, the wine of the country,
made from grape ; the little dome
^shaped pewter teapot wa tli*7rv with
its fond associations of Morocco, to
gether with the copper ti ay and circle
of diminutive painted glasse
His Forgetfulness.
Bin it looked pale, wi.ni. and a littlo
dilapidated & he -lowly entered Hick*
by's office.
Hiekby was surprised at seeing the
anfo:;unate looking H111:t and shouted:
"What, old chap! Thought you went
out for a long spin in Bagsby's new
auto?"
Bluit jerked out an inarticulate
"Yes."
Why did you get back so soon?"
"Want to tell Bagsby something—
forget it. you know. What's his tele-
phone number?
"Bagsby just went into his office.
Step over and talk to him."
Xo. ; auks. I'd rather 'phone."
"What's the matter?"
"Forgot fo tell him—hm—well, you
s« e • to teil that. as. I got around
1 iter th.' damned machine blew
Written From
Price
came speech- . , , 1 , Brue.- Price. wk.> sudden death in
k , , geous indolent sun poured down be .. ,111 , ,
na so he lay ^ 1, . ... . i Paris shocked his many friends hen
"Now let me lean on you, Israel.
John II. Galey, of Pittsburg, Pa., an
oil magnate, is in the vicinity of Ard-
more ieapecting the oil land ami inves-
tigating the leases with a view of pros-
pecting for oil.
Frank C. Churchill has been ordered
to Iudian Territory to make the pay-
ments, aggregating 180,000, for im-
provements on the new reservation at
Sulphur Springs.
At Cleveland, Pawnee connty, tho
commercial club is taking steps to cs-
•tablish a free ferry acr< ssthe Arkansas
river. Temporarily it is to l o located
at the Black 1> g crossing near there.
The store of tho Eufaula Hardware
company was looted one night last
week and five Colt's revolvers and an
unknown number of kuives were taken.
This ia the second time this store has
been burglarized in a short time.
James P. Woodall, of the Downing
party of the Cherokee nation, has call-
ed primary conventions of Cherokees to
be held at Afton and Grove in the Dela-
ware district. Tho one at Afton will
bo held July t'th, an I the o jo at
Grove on the 7th of July.
Nowata has organized a gun clnb and
prooured a silver cup valued at f00 to
be shot for at their different meetings.
The cap to be retained by the best
marksman only so long us be i« not
beaten by some one else.
Mrs. L. P. Patton, living n milo and a
half southeast of Kavia was shocked l \
lightning one evening recently and s
verely injured. The bolt struck n o
her house and shocked her into indeli-
bility, She was just convalescent from
11 broke* leg and fell to the floor. .n
daughter was also rendered uncouscion
but waa not severely hurt.
There is anotbf r tiling, Martha, both
if them are golm; to be married.
"Married! 1 never hoard of such a
thing."
"I thought I wouldn't tell thee, till
needs be; but 'tis so, sure enough."
"And to what kind of women, 1
rael?"
"Good, fair women, th<\ tell me;
sisters, orphan daughters of the Rev
John Wilmot. Thou feest, then. Mar
tha. there may soon be three families
coming up, and not a grandmother
among them to look aftt r the childrt n
or give advice to the young mothers.
I don't see what Tonbertwife, or
Will's wife, or thy own daughter Jane
can do without thee."
Slie shook her head slightly, but
looked pleased and important. The
wife and mother was now completely
satisfied.
So the summer days went on, and
England had never been so ? crone and
so secure in her strength and pros-
perity. Cromwell was working fever-
ishly and suffering acutely. His favor-
ite c hild, the Lady Elizabeth Clay pole,
was still very ill; he had premoni-
tions and visions of calamity that
tilled his heart with apprehension, and
kept his soul always on tho alert,
watching, watching for its coming.
It is certain also that he knew the
time for his own departure was at
hand. He said to Doctor Verity, "l
have one more tight. John. Dunbar
was a great victory; Worcester was a
greater one; but my next flght will
give me the greatest victory of all
'the last enemy that shall be de
stroyed is death.' Do you under-
stand?" And the doctor made a move-
ment of affirmation; he could not
speak.
After the death of his beloved
daughter Elizabeth, the life of Crom-
well was like the* ending of one of
those terrlblo Norse Sagaa with the
Additional element «>f a gieat spiritual
ronftict. Israel Swaffham was con
stantly with him Tho two men were
friends closer than brothers. They
had loved eac h other when hoys, and
iheir love had never known a sha
Jow.
"But I am in great trouble about
aim." said Israel to his wife. "It can
uot last. Hlnco l^ady (Maypole's death
(ie eats not. drinks not, sloops not, hi*
lUung, masculine handwriting, the
Fair!:!x saw how ill and how troubled
i e looked. But he had not one word
' courtesy: ho turned abruptly and
• •eked his hat, and threw his cloak
under his arm in that insolent, way
ho was ever used to when in his tem-
pers. And Oliver looked at me like
a man that has been struck in the face
b> a friend. Then he went to his
desk and worked faithfully, inexor-
ably, all day; but—but "
"Rut what, Israel?"
"It Is near tho end."
Indeed, this interview with Fairfax
roomed to be tho last heart weight ho
could carry.
The next da> I10 went to his desk
and began to write, but speedily and
irueutb tailed for Israel Swaffham.
When he answered the4 call, Oliver
was in great physical agony, but he
100k some papers from a drawer and
said, "When 1 am no longer here,
Israel, give those to my wife Thur-
ioe has tho key to all State ques-
tions; he knows 1111 intents and my
judgments on them. And there is
! one more charge for you; when all is
over, speak to the army for mo. Tell
the men to remember me while they
; live. Truly. 1 think the> will. Now
let me loan on you. Israel 1 am go-
ing to my last hard tight "
When he reached his room, he
stc*ul a moment and looked wistfully
round it. It was but a narrow cham-
ber, but large enough for the awfully
close, near conflict that lie had to
He lit In it. For ten terrible days and
nights the anguish of the struggle
went on unceasingly, sometimes the
great Combatant being "all hero" and
full of faith and courage, sometimes
far down the shoal of life and reason,
and wandering uneasily through by-
gone days of battle and distress and
darkness.
He had turned to face his last en-
emy on tho 24th of August, and on
the 30th there was suc h a tempest as
had ne\ er before been seen in Kng
land Whole forests were laid on
the ground truffle
the roads and the streets, and the
•hips from the stormy seas The
ohambers of Whitehall were filled
with the roar of the groat winds. The
guards leaned on their arms, praying
or tnlklug solemnly together 011 the
predigy of the s torm.
(prael sat u«iir the men, and heard
attendance said softly. "Ho is gone!'-
And some knelt to pray, and all wept,
but unmindful of his tears, Israel
Swaffham cried in a tone of triumph:
"Thou good Soldier of God, faro
well! Thou liast fought a good fk'it,
thou hast kept the faith, and ti. re ia
laid up for thee a crown greater than
England's crown, a crown of right-
eousness. which the Lord, the right
eons judge, shall give the e."
But Dr. Verity went slowly to the
beloved Dead; he put tenderly back
^ his long gray hair, damp with the
dew of death, and closed the eyelids
over his da 11 • ; o\.s. and kissed
1 him on his brow, and on his lips; and
| as ho turned sorrowfully away fori
i ever, whispered only two words;
Yale Cromwell!"
(The End.)
PRICES IN THE WIFE MARKET.
Rates Run From a Pair of Shoes Up
to Twenty Oxen.
In Europe, says a foreign explorer
it is < ustomar;. for parents to j:I\
dowries to their daughters when thov
marry, hut in in.< ivil'/ 1 countries
quite a different custom prevails.
In Fganda a man can buy a hand
some wife for four bulls, a box of cart
ridges and six needles, and if fee has
the luck to -o a-wooing when woman
happens to he a drug in the market
ho can buy a suitable damsel fvr a
pair of shoes.
A Kaffir girl is worth, accordlrg to
tho rank of hi r family, from four to
ten cows.
In Tartary. no father will surrender
his daughter unless ho gets a goodly-
quantity of butter in return, and in
certain parts of India no girl can
marry until her father has been pacl- ,
fled by a present of rice and a few
rupees.
Twenty oxen is the regular prieo
for a wife among the Mishimis. but a
poor man has more than once sue
ceeded in obtaining a bride on pay-
ment of one pig
At Timor no girl will think of mar- '
tying a man not provided with a eer
tain number of elephants' tusks and
at Unvote any desirable but impecu-
nious suitor may purchase hie wife
on credit, but will not be allowed to
enjoy her company until he has paid
the uttermost farming.
Among many tribes of Africa and
Asia it is customary for a suitor to
work as a hired man for his future
summoned girls wearing pale froen
jellahs and silver ornamentr. \%ith
yellow handllerc ii< f tv ted around
their heads, men in bright colors. .Sit
ting down between us. each was giv
en a glass of sherrub do minat and by
and-by they began to play. Weird and
wild music it was, that 01 the tareegea
the gimbi anrl the tahr. quaint native
instruments of the roughest « mstroc
tion aiid yet, as music, po
c ination not a little."
: • la.
Didn't Know the King.
While1 King Yieter Emmanuel am1
Queen Helena were re en!l> pa.—ing
in their automobile through a small
Italian village a breakdown o* . 'trrc<;
and a crowd was attracted to the spot.
In the crowd were two English tour
ists. Secure, as they tkou;::ii. in speak
e • ' • gave an original drawing to a
Itn.-sian Hebrew bey, a messenger for
a daily newspaper, who frequently
voi ' i Mr. Price in his office, where
the lad saw and adnrved the drawing.
• 1 •
the architect a letter, which the latter
frequently exhibited to friends. It
"Your worshipful drawing adores
my roc m. My English too barren is
to write much and my heart of etceter-
as too full to speak."
"That letter is a work of art." said
"We've all had our hearts
full of etceteras."—New York Times.
No Use For Increased Salary.
R. K. Munkittrick tells a story of
a cc: lain soldier-author who w as once
me
tlx
was inf
1 ing 111 a : 1 range
carried
"Pret
lady is
eh
tongue, th'-;
on the following conversation
ty motor car." "Yes; and th
pretty too." "Me re thi c < au
of the man. Did you ever :
little man in suc h a big car?" ' I an.
out of brandy. I wond-;- if ho < at
| supply me. Let's a>k. Perhaps he
: speaks French." 'M shall be most
! nappy to oblige you," : aid the king ir.
! perfect English, turning and holding
i out his flask. Then, as he prepared
; to leave, added: "Can 1 be 01 any
'
i your disposal and it is not so small as
' its monarch."
Valuable Shakespearean Relics.
A Shakespeare an relic lately sold in
1 London for $72f was an armchair made
from the wood of tho mu-berry tree
; planted by Shakespcaro in Now Pla< .
: Harden, St rat ford-on Avon. At the?
j same sale an imperfec t copy of the
I First Folio Shakespeare sold with al!
, faults," fetched $1,525. A perfect copy
I of tho Second Folio, 1K:12, in excellent
■ condition, brought $1,000.
Tribute to Common Sense.
The crown of all faculties is com-
I inon sense, it is not enough to do
the right thing, it must bo done at
the right time and place. Talent
! knows what to do; tac t knows when
and how to do it—William Mat
| thews.
t s ho seemed
donishment. 1
ion and appej
morning
rmcd that
i-'!d. For
.1 • d. but
was lost
lmI to be
imetl ing 01
informant
drink
now."-
t, for
with
1 any
any
Now
The
i.tim. C
Objects to Tobacco.
1
■ ill" li • llU l-ill. Hoc Kit-
nn . has resigned his pastorate
ading members of his flock
: ii the ilturu ot to-
Monday Afternoon.
Th.it ■ who curled through thn
' " > >111(1 i a banner with a strang
' 'I hf have a more uplifted
m his far, than a woman Roltin
home witu a bargain?—Atchlion
Globe.
devlc
look
father In law In the eame manner as
«k swept from l*fob worked for I<aban. A errtain
value is set on the rlrl whom he st*
hvu as lus wife, ar.d when h!« wai:. «
amount to that much he getn her, and
not before.
A man who falls In love with a na-
tive Rlrl of the Matunnl territory faroa
bettor, for nil he need pay for her in
two deer si.inn.
A Get-Rich-Quick Scheme.
Parker Is there anything In that
mining scheme of yours?
Kerwin—Is there? Sa\ it's got
highw ay robbery bent a bl(M k
District Well Policed.
The St. James district of i,ondot.
although but seve n-tenths of a square
mile, has 471 policemen
Percentage of Soot in Coal.
A ton .1 ■ ulta fron the bum.
lilt' of 100 touu ol cutl.
NEXT WEEK!
I he Two
Captains
*y W. CLARK RUSSELL
The best story of the sea
written by thiR mastor of
the subject : : : ; i •
NEXT WEEK !
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The Mustang Mail. (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1903, newspaper, July 3, 1903; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc162427/m1/2/: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.