The Beaver Herald. (Beaver, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 23, Ed. 1, Thursday, October 10, 1901 Page: 3 of 4
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Copyright 1869 br J. B. Llpplncott Con
panr. All right reserved.
CHAPTElt X. CoaTl.tUKD.
Aa Frances hurried homeward
(baking; and tick with her sorrow
the found herself en light In the whirls
ind eddies of a great crowd nnd borno
slontr lielDlesslv ttnut her street. Men
rnrrled torches and were cheerlnfr
themselves hoane. while horns added
their din to the condition. Upon
every lint wcro the red letter "M.M."
It wns n demonstration by the in-
mous "Minute Men" who rote In
every southern city ns they had risen
nearly 100 ycivra before wheat the
drums beat. Suddenly he wan
Jammed against a carriage the projf
mil nf which had been stayed by the
crowd. Its sole occupant was a pale
silent man. In the glare of the
torches his face exactly tilled linen
Indelibly fixed In her memory by the
brief flame of n match; It was the
face of Iltcliard Homers cold nnd Im-
'mobile. Upon the feat by his side
was a traveling-bag; his ejes looked
out calmly almost coldly aver her
head. Ho wiih not southern he wan
not a Vlrgtnlnn and the -hour 'awoke
no response within his heart. Impul-
sively and forgetting she stretched
her hands upward but memory re-
turned nnd checked the words that
rote to her lips. Only an Inarticulate
ery burst from them a cry low nnd
half smothered -in the roar of voices.
Yfct low ns It was It reached tho oc
cupant of the carriage. Something
In that voice a tone a vibration
touched n memory-cell. He turned
quickly and looked back; a girl hold-
ing desperately to the arm of nn old
ncgrcss was being borne along by the
tumultuous human wine. For an in-
stant only he snw her white face up-
turned to his the loveliest saddest
face lils ejes had ever gased on anil
from her lips he heard cotnu back one
word
"Farewell!" Forgetting all but that
he was leaving his life somewhere in
the fierce passions surging behind him
he mads a desperate effort- to alight
from the vehicle but so dense wns the
crowd the door would not open. And
thru angry men selxcd the rearing
horses and forced them out of tho
way. When he was free again only a-
sea of flame In whose depths human
figures seemed to march met his gaze.
It hnd swallowed up the woman's
while face. A great transparency
swojlnfj and wavering like a drunken
man thrust Itself before his vision and
blotted out the toe lie. Upon it was
the legend: "Down with the Yankees!"
CllAPTEnXI.
Sorrow unmixed with remorse is tho
soul's education. The soul of tho
woman who grietcs in silence broadens
and deepens sending down into bcr
own life far-reaching roots and un-
folding upward rnre auxiliary blos-
soms that fill the life about her with
divine breathings. Such was the ex-
perience of Frances llrooktn. Thrown
back upon herself conscious of Inno-
cence and feeling always the presence
of sorrow the sorrow of a great dis-
appointment she saw her girlhood
slipping away faster than time itself;
for It Is true that age is the sum of
experience rather than years and all
of life may be lived between the set-
ting and the rising of the sun. But
.with Frances this change was not the
"shrinking of the soul into forgetful-
ncss; it was an enlargement of view
'and perspective in which old headlands
assumed smaller proportions. New
imperative duties they seemed arose
and met her; new responsibilities pre-
sented themselves; she faced them all
bravely hopefully lovingly. The fine
quality of her soul proved itself in the
easting out of all the bitterness which
had la the first hours of her misfor-
tune stormed its citadel and raised
somber banner: there. The victory
over self wup hy this frail girl was so
marvetousiy .-cn;i':e that uo cynicism
supplanted hei InAUv'eni faith in the
eternal existence 1 truth and good-
ness and their ultimate triumph over
evil. Her touching acceptance of life
in its new aspect wns not born In n
day. There were weeks of anguish;
there were months of dull heartache
mod loneliness; there were tear-wet
plllowsandnlghtsofcryingout against
fate; for the death of an ideal is the
saddest death in all the universe since
for this there is no resurrection. The
girlish ideal of Frances Brookln was
dead at last and slept under the petals
of faded white rose. Itlchard Somers
was out of her life out of her heart.
The man she loved had never existed
she told herself. He was a dream a
romance an Immaculate conception of
a virgin mind. The real man was the
unworthy offspring of base worldly
passions; he was nothlug to her but
a name.
Political events hastened the girl
Into womanhood and towards that
large tolerance with which the strong
soul at last invariably encysts the In-
explicable and unwelcome facta it can-
not avoid. With one leap the fierce
south entered the arena of war and
Virginia hills echoed the. mingled
cheera of contending armies and the
thunder of nighty guna. Richmond
eeemed to have become as In a day
tie center of intrigue and of action
On every side flatbed the gold and sll
ver of war's rick trappings. Flumes
danced In the breezes and the confed-
erate gray net the eye rest where It
would. From the capllol the banner
f a new nation floated proudly and
beneath It echoed the framp of march-
log legions the galloping hoof-beats
of horses through all hours of day and
night. Men In this hitherto atald old
eHthera ety hurried under the spur
ef emotions that seemed born of a con
tagien In the air and anxious women
went about with willing hands to aid
la every department they might iu-
vude. Among these her life adjusting
itself easily and gratefully to the new
demands was Frances Brookln the
tenderness ef her fine faee aoftened
and deepened into divine womanliness
the lava-ray eloquent la her melting
ye.
Swiftly the hellday side of the war
had faded oat of view. Agonised at-
knee swallowed up langkter. Far the
: fa f rota waere tae
h-
baaa t Haa m
man forms enee freighted with life's1
rarest merchandise. Soon every hos-
pital every available tpace in church
and public building and the most spa-
rlous of private homes were to hate
their quota of the wounded the djlng
and the dead. The southern w omnn was
entering upon that field of labor In
which she achieved her noblest dignity
jier fame Its immortality. Foremost
among those who first gave their en-
ergies their whole lives to the allevia-
tion of suffering the Inspiration of the
hopeless and thedespnlring was Fran-
ces Brookln. Free to dispose of her
time as she would and with an abun-
dant means nt her disposal she made
herself a ministering angel wherever
a soldier suffered Day and night she
labored sustained by boundless patri
otism and an elation for which she
could not account try an she would.
She failed in her self-analysis from
Ignorance of the fact that a voice that
has once spoken to the heart is never
quite silent afterwards nnd that
youth when it buries Its dead tramples
not the sod above ft. Fiery hatred of
the invader possessed her ns it did
her sisters; bred In the bone nnd nour-
ished with the mother's milk It could
not be quelled except by jearnof gentle
association and a common cause but
by a strange paradox this bitterness
excluded every stained and bloody
blue uniform or haggard northern face.
Out of the fight these were ever out of
the sweep of a southern woman's ven-
geance. Upon the suffering prisoners
Frances delighted to lavish the tender-
ness of her nnture now broadened and
deepened by its own ministry; and
something touchingly humnn carried
her among them although she was not
conrclous of It.
For this had come to pass: within
the henrt of Frances Brookln there
lived a fiction the Itlchard Somers of
her girlish dreams: Itlchard Somers s
she had seen him face to face one night
under the burning match his voice
ringing strong nnd true and tender
upon her hearing. Before him shut-
ting him Into the sanctity of her room
she had dropped a veil of Iridescent
gossamer and within thnt room seen
only through the veil the man lived
and reigned and had his kingdom.
Through this veil too stiried by the
breath of the suffering and the dying
of ills own country he spoke gently
tenderly to her in the lonely hours of
her vlgllit. The other Itlchard hnd
been dismissed not harshly or hastily
not in anger but sadly n man un
worthy; n man t war with the truth
and nobleness ot her nature and at war
with her people. No one knows hovr
such fictions come about but the
henrts of most women enrry them.
And time had helped Frances for
looking back she re-established many
vital facts that lessened the sadness of
memory; the man must once have been
noble his deeds of mercy and gentle-
ness proved that; innately noble he
must have been when she met him for
in the face of a great temptation he
hnd kept his promise to his friend even
to the extent of shutting his eyes
against the girl whose arms had been
about him whose lips breathed love for
him. And somewhere despite nil the
trickery there was still nobility for
silently he had ridden away faithful
to his friend. He had lain under her
HI
"ASK WHAT TOU WILU MT CHILD."
hands wounded by the pistol shot and
no woman ever hated a helpless suffer-
ing man. As for his deceptions his
plots some fearful necessity must have
compelled him. The other woman?
She had been too base for him she had
been at henrt a murderess. She it was
who had dragged him down. And was
he not cariug for the child? Frances
wduld not have admitted it to herself
had she realized It but In the depths
of that heart she had forgiven Itlchard
Somers. Her heart was big enough to
hold him and all his weakness. Was
there a loss ot something from her na-
ture? Or was there a gain?
2v"o message hnd ever come to her
from Somers no good or evil report.
None? Yes just a scrap soon after the
wnr begun. From some one Brodnar
probnbly since bis name was upon it
she had received a northern paper giv-
ing in its war gossip information that
Itlchard Somers had been reinstated in
the army and promoted to be captain
of artillery.
But one day early in the spring of
1802 when the great federal movement
against lilchtnond was beginning and
when every train was bringing in a
bloody harvest she leaned above a
wounded enemy. The question so often
asked "To what command do you be-
long?" drew forth an answer that
filled her with excitement. She felt
ber heart begin to beat madly and her
limbs yielding to a sudden excitement.
"Your captain! What Is his name?"
"Richard Somers inissl" How
strangely thrilling sounded the name
thai mornlngl It was the first time
she hsd hesrd It spoken since Its besr-
er had said among the flickering shsd-
ows of ber room: "If to carry In mem-
ory the living record of one face will
help you take mine and wlth.it right
or wrong the love of Itlchard Gamers."
The scene never dimmed In all the
months that had passed stood forth
again Illumined like come stroug pic-
ture under the swift msglo ot the light-
ning. The wounded man saw In ber
fsce tho glow of Its reflection. Tri-
umph shone In her eloquent eyes a
sudden agitation locked the soft white
hands.
"Bo you knew him miss?"
"IT Yeyel Is he well Uheaafo?"
Tha man read mere than she suspected
and inraesVUa ejesawar embarrassed.
lie we stag' helpless from his
mercy. Her woman's instinct dis-
cerned hit thought; her lips moved
without sound but her sotil wst In the
appealing look riveted upon him
"1 think not" he said reluctantly
at Inst. "In net 1 know that be is
wounded."
"Dendl you meanl" she gasped In
the struggle to conceal her anguish.
"No miss not exnclly that; but bad-
ly wounded very badly I am nfrold."
"Where Is he?" She made no effort
then to ccnccsl the truth. She wss on
her knees her ejes close to hi. "In
Clod's name my friend tell me tell
menlll Can't on see? can't you see?"'
Sbe covered her face unable to con-
tinue. "1 can only tell jou what I know
miss. He was not dead when 1 sswhim
latt. Our guns were In the line when
the charge en me. The tine wns broken
nt both flanks mid the jelling confed-
erates wereswnrmlngnliout us. Kvery
horse we had was down when word
came for us to look out for ourselves
and bnck we went to escape capture
what was left of us. rcll miss some-
body said then thnt No. 3 hnd been
left loaded double-shotted with can-
ister; the man at the lanjard hnd fall-
en dead just as he lifted his hand to
pull. And so the gun stood ready to
be t timed upon u. Then Capt. Somers
tutted and looked about for some one
to send back; but I think miss he
u utt have seen thnt the chnncc was
d sperate. It wns only an Instant and
In wouldn't order any man to go; he
r tshed forward over the SO vardi
reached the gun and selrcd the cord.
He was my captain nnd I couldn't leave
him there you know so I hnd followed
lit in too. Then up In front nn army of
grnj sremed to rise ns from the ground
and they fired n volley us he pulled on
the lunjurd. 1 threw mvsclf on my
fnc-c nnd escaped. When I looked up
the crowd ahead was disordered and
torn but still coming on; nnd the cap-
tain Iny by his gun. I crawled over
nnd laid my haud upon him.
" 'Tom.' he snld cool ns I nn right
now 'I'm gone but if you get out take
the papers In my pocket and my watch
to my mother!' 1 took them ns he told
inc. He fainted' J think nnd I 'was
nfnilil he wns dead but he breathed
again. And then miss I hadn't tried
It since I was a boy he was Jj lag upon
bin face nnd rolling over I lay upon
him back to back locking my arms
through his. Turning over suddenly 1
hnd him on meadead weight. nnd then
somehow I got'tip. The whole thing
wns not a minute long. The confed-
erates gave me a cheer instead of a vol-
ley till the boys rushed back to meet us.
I got it in both legs then and tills shoul
tier anil down we went. The bov took
til in and left me which was right; for
four men had died there to have him
and 1 looked like the fifth." Frances
wns kneeling by the wounded man
when he finished stroking his cheek
and brow her frame trembling.
"Oh. brine! brute!" she cried. "God
bless jou and keep j on nnd keep
jou!" she sank her face beside him
sobbing for joy. "The watch the pa
per.!" she cried excitedly remember-
ing his commission. "Oh sir 1 nm his
-I nm his nearest relative southl
(live them to me give them to me!"
"In my coat" s.ud the stranger
gently n wnn nolle upon his pule fnce.
"Don't worry miss; I guess the enp-
taln'll pull through Jill right." The
watch was there and there too were
the letters sealed for his mother ready
for delivery If he were picked up dead
by friend or foe. No line for her the
woman who loved him racr loved him
as she had known him. Upon the inner
care of his watch was his own name
nn.d address; and still no line for her
the woman who held hi in so dear. But
In the locket dangling from the chain
there were two lines cut into the vir-
gin gold:
"Frances my wife.
"Ttlchmonil. April Uth JM1."
How roseate then grew life for '.he
girl. He remembered! He had kept
her words with him night and day.
He loved her; he had told no false-
hood for the value ot her father's
wealth. As she stood by the wounded
soldier his eves resting In sympathy on
her her own seeing nothing but the
face in that halt-lit room where her
shrine was raised all that was left
of resentment vanished out. of her
heart. When afterward she realised
this she was amazed and troubled.
One federal soldier nt least In all the
hosts that fell Into confederate hands
had no cause to complain of his nurs
ing. A hospital stretcher bore him to
the home of Frances Brookln and into
her room. It was her whim nnd the
stepmother wus Indulging her whims
In those dajs. There Frances and
mammy with William as n helper and
Brodnar ns an occasional odviier lav-
ished on him such care and attention as
he hod never dreamed was possible for
he was one of those homeless waifs to
whom wur had promised nothing but
excitement and change. It wnn all a
mvstery to him but he questioned not.
He accepted the girl's simple statement
as to Somen and was content to let
the sun ot his prosperity shine on.
One day when the soldier was able
to limp about the garden upon his
crutches and sit in the shade by ths
plashing fountain to read In the Dis-
patch of the greut battles being fought
around the endangered capital of the
confederacy Frances bearing the
highest testimonials from surgeons and
hospital officials as to the conspicuous
and devoted aervlce she had rendered
went to the executive mansion and se-
cured admission to the preseuce of its
great chief. Mr. Davis courteously
read her papers and looking into the
earnest face ot the fair girl sitting be-
side him gave graceful expression te
his appreciation of Iter patriotism.
"Ask what you will my child" he
said "and If 1 may consistently grant
It your wishes shall be gratified."
"It s the parole of a private soldier"
she ssld "and a safe-conduct through
our lines. He la wounded but hao re-
covered aufflclently to travel. He will
not enter the service agsln sir; his in
Juries Incapacitate htm."
"And Is that all?"
"AH!" t
To B Continued.!
NO FENCE COR-
NER FARMING
The very eee I
Lena atrelaht
Ortat Plate if hat
Maen far the
t Piarrowa and
sat FiMs That Ar a rtatur
ef wtrn Canaa ram.
CURIOSITY and a lore of travel
combined caused me to take an
extensive trip through the ag-
ricultural sections of Western Canada
during the past summer and while
there I was given the best of opportu-
nities of studying and judging for my-
self of the condition that exist In thst
'extensive section of our continent.
After I had traveled over a few mil
lion seres of Western Cansds and
watched and studied what at first
seemed to me an extravagant waste ot
lend on the part ot the farmers I be-
came better acquainted with condi-
tions and the very good reasons for
this seeming wastage.
I had been used to the farming oper-
ations of the more thickly populated
States where to make farming pay it
was necessary to cultivate practically
every foot of groand; where it was the
rule rather than the exception to go
to the length of blasting out if neces-
sary heavily rooted trees or large
bowlders; where much of the farm
land was secured by clearing it ot tim
ber and stones which had been accom-
plished only after years of toll and
privation on the part ot the first set-
tlers. There traveled with me over
these millions of acres of Canadian soil
a gentleman who had been reared upon
just this sort of s farm In Michigan
and. a he expressed it "land was so
scarce and so valuable because of its
scarcity that we hnd to cultivate even
the corners of the rail fences."
But in my journey through the agri-
cultural section of Western Canada
ranging from Winnipeg on the east to
the Rocky Mountains en the west and
from the International boundary on
the south to the Saskatchewan river
and beyond on the north I saw noth-
ing that savored of our method ot
"fence corner farming" and In time
I learned the reason for the little un
cultivated tracts.
Time rather than land Is the valu-
able commodity in Western Can ida. In
a country where the soil is sufficiently
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A Heaater
"Make good use ot this penny" said
the practical father. "You must learn
to put your money where It will doable
andtrlblc."
A few hours later tho boy came la
and said:
"Paw there was no end to the in-
vestment I made with that penny."
"I ana gmd to hear that ay soa."
"Yes. I bought a eruUer."-CaJUaf e
Mtjr Mm ' "
"Th Western Osn4 Farmte Oultlmta His
Land Upon Wholstnl Msthess."
fertile to produce thirty and forty
bushels of wheat to the acre from less
than a bushel ot seed; where the gov-
ernment gives everyone desiring It a
free homestead of 160 acrea of this
land and where more may be bought
at from $3 to $1 per acre; where one
year's crop will much more than pay
for the land upon which it ia grown it
is a wicked waste ot time to cultivate
the "fence corners."
Before I hsd acquired this Informs.
tion I was on one farm where a road-
way cut off a smsllcornerof landfrom
the remainder of a field of wheat.
There was I should say nearly an acre
in this little plat ot neglected ground
sad I asked the owner of the farm why
It had not been put under cultivation.
"To undertake to plow that little
three-cornered strip of Isnd would
tsko fsr more time than the land is
worth giving both the present market
value. To add it to the remainder ot
the field would necessltste a longer
way around from the main road to the
house. Lying just across the Toad
there Is 160 acres of as good land as
this upon which I have this year grown
more than 30 bushels of wheat to the
acre and I can buy that land of the
railroad for It an acre. It wonld take
as much time to plow that small piece
in its present shape as it would to
plow two acres of the land across th
road and to would be what we in this
country consider a watte of valuable
time."
Straight furrown and long ones Is
the plowing rule In Western Canada
and the gang plow is the favorite meth
od of turning the soil. The Western
Canada farmer I found cultivates hit
land upon wholesale methods. No
matter where he may come from no
matter what the methods In vogue In
hit native place mny raave been the
farmer in Cnnndn soon learns that It is
w holetale methods that pay best there
and for this reason it is Western Cana
da that is the home ot every Improved
agricultural machine that tends to
the speedy handling of grent harvests
cr '.is production of them. These ma
chines are not always the product ot
Western Canadian Inventors but the
Western Canadian farmers are among
the heaviest buyera otthis cists of g'
rlcultural machinery in the world.
'Die Canadian farmer never becomes
laud poor as doe the fsrmer in the
States When he buys land he knows
that it will bring him uihquste returns
upon his investment snd that his gov.
ernment will not put a burden ot taxes
upon It. As a sample of what is postt
ble with the progressive farmers in
Western Canada let me cite the case ot
one living near White Plaint in Mani
toba a Mr. Winslow by name. During
the past season this one man had 2700
acres of land planted In wheat and har
vetted 67500 bushels. He makes farm-
ing on these fertile lands immensely
profitable by going about It In a whole
sale war.
Do not however. Imagine thst ii is
only ihe wholesale methods that pay
well in Western Canada. I saw men
who owned only the 160 acres of lsnd
the government had riven them as a
homestead who claimed to ba making
tmter living tor tnemoelves and their
families and saving more money than
they had ever been able to do la tht
States on the same amount of lano.
Practically every one of these compara
tively smsti fsrmtrs wkom I met as-
sured m that It was thslr amWUea te
r"
yareaase mere lead as rapidly as Hie)
eeuld aeeamulate the mesne with
which to buy. They fully realized thnt
they could not gel too mvtf.h of what
they knew was a good thing. There
Is a vast amount of difference in buy
ing productive land at $3 to M an
acre and at $30 to $40 an acre. .
The atralght furrows and the long
ones are possible In Western Canada
where as I know from my own invest!
gallons made during the past summer
farming psys and pays well.
WK1Q11T A. PATTKnBON.
RIDE IW STRAHOE DiLKMMA.
Caaaeeileet Wesaaa tssvtt Haskaafl
ease Ike Caaaaf 1ll Mlsa
ireta Mia slrathar.
Pretty Mrs. Louise Zevin bride of
three daya ot Louis Zevin a wealthy
merchant of New Britain Conn. has
?ene home to her mother In New
erk.
"My husband Is a triplet" she says.
"Ha has two brothers who look se
asarly like him that I can't tell one
from another. It's too much of a
pusxle fsr me so I think I will be
happier with my mother."
The marriage three daya ago was
celebrated with great ceremony but
the honeymoon was of brief standing.
The two brothers whom she saw for
the first time at the wedding were so
nearly like her hunband In looka that
ahe confessed to her frienda the pe-
culiar predicament she found herself
in when the three wei about at the
earn time.
MRS. ARMOUR JR. MAY WED.
Ransr That th Prettr Wliiw I
Marrr P. A. Valeatla Cobii
from Scraps.
No denial has been made at Chicago
sf tho oft-repeated rumora that Mrs.
P. D. Armour Jr. and P. A. Valen-
tine treasurer of the firm of Armour
k Co. are engaged to be married.
The couple are now in Europe hav-
ing sailed on the same steamer and
are known to have visited London
ind Paris at similar perloda.
Even before their departure for the
old world the names of Mr. Valentine
snd Mrs. Armour had been linked by
their mutual friends and acquaint
snees. Mr. Valentine had been a
guest at more than one house party
given by the widow of the great
packer's favorite son at her city
home and in Oconomowoc. The re-
telpt of letters from both post-
marked alike in London and Paris has
lent strength to rumors.
Tret la Caaaia.
Altogether Canada sella about $80-
000000 a year ot products from its
farms. That is only about one-tenth
ot what the United States does in the
same department but then it must
be remembered that Canada's popu-
lation is little more than one-fifteenth
that of this country. In the
exportation of fish Canada leads the
United States In the proportion of
?10000000 to $6000000a year.
ji
ti
t
Ufrid
ptAiL MJCKttt-
U sua as mm tm -----
r - """' s
.". aa. . . A wtu.
tfh vouika It air1" J '!
. "Not here sir" asld thk... .. -J.-J
hew offered a steady job fv ""
im aoiet ii i can iera rri t-.l
"Jht Pari is full ef Freaeh " i!5
il. ...n.. .in u qae oi i
nv ivnunHa. x m Hiram jou ft I
ctived." .ij I IteM
"Ob bo sir!" Mid th man. wiV"
esraTstneM and absolute sinttticityTx
a aerfectlr straight thin. Tka nt-nm
I the hotel ui ths mltfr h his -
understand French as w PhUdlphUn.twTeaoh Fewest
peak lt(nd thst's whst M want at nrYYwill r -"
few Ha Was nt.
Several ladles and their children were
strolling through a etmttery reading In-
scriptions.
"Ob mamma" cried little Agnes stop-
ping at a grave "u're's torn one sent
O. O. D."
The horrified mother turned to chide her
daughter. butpauMd at she read: "Jtmes
Brown Co. VS." on th hesditoae Chi
cago inuy Ac s.
Wisconsin Paras Lena's.
The best of fsrm lands ran be obtained
bow in Marinette County Wisconsin on the
Chicago Milwaukee A St. Paul Railway at
S low price and nn very favorable terms.
Wisconsin is noted for It fine eropt excel-
lent markets and healthful climate. Why
rent a farm when you can buy one much
fheaner than you can rent snd In a few years
t will be vour nirn nronertr. For narticu-
lars address F. A. Miller. General Passenger
Agent Chlcsgo Milwaukee ft St. Paul Rail
way uoicsgo.
What's In a Haw.
"Ah!" he-tithed after she hsd blurhles
ly whispered "Yes'' in bis bosom. "My own
Mahltsbel! O! that name's so forms. Sure
ly your friends use some shorter one; some
pet name."
"Well" she murmured "the girls at
Wrding school uaed to call me 'Pickles.' "
Philadelphia Press.
Raer of the Aatrallaa-l.na!oH Mall
is graphically described In No. It New York
Central' "Four Track Series " Every
person lnterestca in uw growin oi ourcom-
pierce shonld read it Bent free on receipt
of two-cent stamp by Uoneral Passenger
Agent New York Central New York.
Very Saapilrtaaa
"My daughter you have been out with
one of thoe football players again" ssld
the watchful mother.
"Why how do you know mamma?"
"Why I found a long hair on your blue
hirtwalat." Yonkers Ststesman.
Sozodon
a' iv
La Bvm mmsamm
"-
- --?mm
ntalstVIatT - A
flfcssaFims I JH
tt . I tj
I V fsasmV 1 i "M
L mVW 1. " I -fl
X jV
fc H. StaUM. AMka aa t Wataaa f. ..'
faeM raw ro44ria tickMa aoJaaT aJT IFaaaaB
WVnVB Mil wSemaMsni
far aaa.latl asm
Satara't ewn lafamtitt fata far SUM
Idaar. MxMtr. Skin. Mood uwt Ki
Kot bnntlral lt naaa Ulanrata nafaalaa aa
c. n. Cfaf fj eW . n.
tfjeseft
aaaataaa.eti
aBaajaai.
Loss af Tolleta.
A floor wslker in a Broadway (New
York) house aays: "It is nelther'new
aor uncommon for dressmakers to
favor particular friends with the loan
af somebody's toilet for a few hours'
wear of an afternoon or eventng.gre at
care being taken to keep it out of range
at the owner's clrele of acquaintances."
Aattrlaaa taall la Iwdis
Sweden Is anxious to Introduce
American quail as game birds and
J.eoo bob whites in a lively and
healthy condition are now being sent
ovsr to that country t a cost oj
about $3300 wlta the expectation
that further shipments will be mada
A Deafctfal Coaapllaieat.
Lady I always come out so plain In my
photographs plainer even than I ami
Photographer (gallantly) Oh madam
that is impossible! Moonshine.
a
Craahe A gal a.
Drummer (In train) Is this seat en-
gaged T
Coy Country Maid No but I am. Judge.
Dropsy treated freo br Dr. H. IL Green's
Boas of Atlanta Ua. Too greatest dropsy
specialists in the world. Read their adver-
tisement in another column of this paper.
A Blank Day. First Friend "Die birds
are terribly wild to day." Second Friend
"Not half so wild as our hoit will be if it
keeps on like this." Punch.
Sweat or fruit acids will not discolor
goods dyed with PUTNAM FADKLESS
DYES. Sold by druggists 10c. psckage.
- m
"This ancient umbrella" rematked Squil-
dlg "belonged to my grandfather." "Ah!
One of the shades of j our ancestors" sdded
MiSwilligen. Pittsburgh Chronicle.
The Puhlie Awards the Palm to ITsle's
Honey ot Honrhound and Tar for coughs.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute.
If a man wants a iiiurter for an article
and you are not tilling to par that much
don't haggle; let him Leep it. Atchison
Globe.
m
Pito's Cure for Consumption is an infalli-
ble medicine for coughs and colds. N. W.
Samuel. Ocean Grove N. J. Feb. 17 1800.
WISE PAINTING
Not much wise painting
done; poor paint mostly; to
cheap. Nobody wants it
poor; everybody wants it
cheap.
Devoe ready paint is cheap
because it isn't poor; it's un-
like any other; because we)
guarantee results instead of
materials.
Wise painting is Paiat im
the fall and use Devoe.
Aak yoar dealer; he'll gat It for yaa.
a painting fre If yoa mtatloa tklaaafar.
GOOD-PAINT DEVOE CHICAGO.
WMNHALfACDmW
Z&L
OUtCUAstJJITtt
THE GENERAL MARKETS.
Kansas City. Sept. 2S.
CATTI.E-Beef steer MM
Native mockers 2 30
Western steers 3 00
IIOUB &
BI1KBP iW
WIIEAT-No. 5 Imrd 63
No. ! red 70
COIIN-No. S mlxc.l M
OATS-No. 2 mixed SS
IIYK-No. 3
FLOtJIt-lIanl wh't patents. S 20
Soft wheat patents... . 2 K'.
HAT-Tlmothy 6 0)
Prolrlo if CO
DRAN-Cscked
BUTTKH-Cholce to fancy
CHKUSK-Kull cream . .
EGOS
POTATOESWrs'lVrn '".'.'.' ' 100
BT. LOU 1 8.
CATTLE-Niitlv it stttrs ...3 60
Texas una lixlluu steers 3 10
T7'it
14 U
10
tf10
W4 00
((SS
r 7 10
3T5
V "0!
u a
tl 33)
S7
O230
W3C0
1M4S0
tlUU)
78
16
12
13
l IS
HOOB Packers
BHEEl'-Natlve
FLOim-Wlntcr piitcnU
WHBAT-No. 2 red . ...
COilN-No. 2
OATS-No. 2
RYE
BtJTTBil-Dalry
DltV 8 ALT MEATS
IJACON
CHICAGO.
CATTLE-SUer
HOOB-Mlxed and butchers
BlIEEI'-WeMrrn . . ..
FLOUlt-Wlnler patents
WHEAT-No. 2 led
COItN-No. i
OATB- No. 2
RVE-Bept ember .. . .
LAHD-Hcpt inner
POIUC-BepI ember
NEW YOtlK.
CATTLE-Natlva ulcers
JIOOB-Weatern . . .
BHEEP
wheat-No. 2 red
COItN-No. 2
OATS-No. 2
013
to
340
CI
S6Sr
.toon
U4M
tl 4 2tf
(rCM
ute
it JS5
70
37
i
O 17
tea w
110 2J
soo
870
32S
sa
70
57' IM
3 0
i45
7 15
f 3U
3W
ir TO
ir
39
St
10 00 10 10
.14 K'.itH 95
4 S 0(00
S71
tsoiu
'liif 7n
oi
fair Waralaar.
Time 11:43 p. m.
A sound resembling a distsnt peal
iniinder 1 heard distinctly overbead.
"What was that!" asked the young man
as he started up from tli parlor ofa iu
alarm.
'That!" echoed the fair pride ot the
household. "Oh that was only papa drop-
ping a hint."
And hastily gathering the hint unto him-
aelf the young man carried it out into the
gloomy night. Chicago Daily News.
Martyr ta Lava.
Pearl Bat are you sure tbst he loves
her?
Itubv Loves her? Why. he actually let
her sketch him in crayon; and ahe has only
taken a two-weeks course too. inicago
Dsily News.
When Staai Arc Saaree.
Mr. FerUns I had to do tire men's work.
Mr. Simpson Urinous! In your office?
"Oh no; st that summer resort." De-
troit Free Press.
a
In .Tack's Case. "Is your soa .lack going
back to college?" "Nn. The college presi-
dent seems to agiee with Mr. chwali about
it lieing a waste of time." Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
"I am tired of this monkey business" .
claimed the Irritable citizen. Then he went
nut and chased the organ grinder from the
door. Indianapolis New.
a
The early morning bath hath gold in it
mouth. Franklin.
A FEARLESS PHYSICIAN.
Denton 111. Sept. 30th. Much com-
ment has been caused by the nut ion of
Dr. II. II. Dunavvay a 11I13.MCI1111 here
who for over a jear past has been rec-
ommending Dndd's Kidney Pills to
those of his patients who Miffrrt-d frum
lOicmnatlsin llriltt's DUeiihe Dia-
betes or other Kidney Troubles.
Dr. Dunn way also published nn open
letter last May stating positively that
he himself hnd been cured of Diabetes
by Dodd's Kidney PilU and that after
he had concluded he was going to die.
He is a well man to-day and fcnvs he
feels It his duty to do as he has done
snd is doing because Dodd's Kidney
Pills saved his- life.
anaa-ana
6LIClEfi
OK COAT
wuamrmnm
KSWJIA
HM
mum
spaaaate sseess
Batty f see
Vavta- (T TraUrs
atasta 4r sTsaaiae
KTO
MEMPHIS. 6 EAST
and SOUTHEAST.
Pullman Buffet Sleeper Free
Reclining Chair Care.
TarausB milssan BuSit Slataar M
MAP CITY ana hot smi
uiaars its
aa. eallr. arriie
ssoraUg.
C a Haar an. wml Aft.
OkUBosuCUy.aT.
Jo V. Tsdvosd. T. P. A..
OBO. R. LSC Oen'l P. T. A
UtUKaskArk.
"COSY HOMES"
50S
TTI
tmmMUmi
eaavMia s scare
Jnstoat; has ever H avs
Sre ItTdeslgasol hosas free
a U.UMeej rail f ee
leas tor aiaaaMf a keen.
A. 114111 llvMMTM
mtlusUTritlUtlt.XJs. Ammivsct.
KKAIIiniS OI- TlltS PAI'BR
IlKfllllNO TO BDT ANTTUIXS
AIlVKnTISKO IM ITS COLUMNS
tUOUU INSIST L'l-O UAV1SQ
WUAT TIIKT ASK KOK UCTL'SIXU
ALL SUBSTITUTES Oil IMITATIONS.
l PHOTO
Itu inttiiKtiMiliv
altfilnatlUtf i
for lt iKo-titt tmt.
VWIJMIT VW.
UnlarKcmcnt of aajow
tiiaila from sin nfaAUi est- Unlr
.tmAWiifas9wl
it r.i Kitiuaniif
naitv
IIS.US WmS Jarkwa Plttt Cklcaca IB.
CTARK TflsV borttTaaa-n vuaa
XB rstrrr Boo tm. Wt.lT'tUsei
tOmf Vf tar MOHK saiaaaaa P ATWaiS
VP STABK BtOI. UatUaaa. Ma4 tWaVB.X V4SI
nDHDCV " Discovamr; gtva
URVr9 quirk niulawl cam n
.. Booker UillnHuiUN and 1 . trjaUaaa
rrrr. Pr M. H. I.BSU a sots Bwx B aHaST. aa.
Bia PAV LIOHTWORKi either Sex. Urowa'
rtikCu 4a .N. rranclMoAfaCbkaol
A. N. K.-ll
1888
HNti vviutiku to Anvurrisae rutssa
Mala that )M aaw ILa AatartlataMal la SMs
71
au
YOU
LOVE YOUR
HUSBAND?
Yes. of course you do and you want
him to live and enjoy life the rood thinri
you can five him? Then help him live
right 1 When his skin rets yellow and I
ne iooks diuous nis eyes rca ana waiery
his breath smells bad 99 times out of 100
his liver is lory. Now. if you want a mata
to look welt feel well and be well. Insp
him in regular habits 1 Give him pUt
wholesome food and make him take Caa-
carets to stir up hk liver. Bir doata af i
salts and stronr medkkies make Mm weak
and leave him worse than ever. We make the best bowel and liver tonic for man woman
or child Cascartts. They arc easy to take eat them Wee candy. Cascarets arc made of
bark roots and herbs; act ust like nature acts. Get a box on our hvh and if you arc not
pleased you can have your money back. That's fair isn't k? We sold over atix sntiim
boxes test year. Our laitttMst is Mr. tnc latitat ot its hm tne works iney teat Jti
25c and 50c a box. A 50c box k a month's trcateaent lor the want aacc af bad Mvar afM
bowels. Rsnembertletiafnc--CuU-Mch ta k tawMii C. C. C Get
and if the dealer oakrs you mmmiitmjtm fust aa food las. we
what you avAJar and you wsl be iitiilid;
S
..
'-'fc
''S
to
.
3
'i
J
'See?'
j i
.
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7?
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A 4.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Daves, N. F. The Beaver Herald. (Beaver, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 23, Ed. 1, Thursday, October 10, 1901, newspaper, October 10, 1901; Beaver, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc68373/m1/3/: accessed May 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.