The Collinsville News. (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 6, 1910 Page: 2 of 10
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*0ba4Ub (old—you—nothin*^ fc*
naked iscrediiloooly-
“Not a *ord about you or Manoo
except (bat Mario* was the »■*»
•erecth wife- Bat be hinted at many
aad kept me oo the trail, al-
i poignant in its wretchedness that the i
•erred her there waa a ehffl-
slklvs: sri
vagw suggestions. the &«f* J* “*
sr r “ ¥£» p-tt-sm “«* "n?;
*«» » •*=*=*«* ’*•• ■*7Uh“<^ iS. Wtat <«• It •« ■*■»* V"
the enthusiasm in t.s -e-a. He ro.M w mu Strang? Why-
sere that he was near tha «wtatiOB | “•£ towSipted him with a crt ao
the aysterfees events in which he tad *eu
become iardTed. and yet this knowi-
tdge brought with it something of ap-
prehension. something which made
him anticipate and yet dread the mo-
ment when the fugitive ahead would
stop in his tight, *»* he might. as j J" ^entaiiy_Toa helped
him those question* which would at waa o-.y
least relieve him of his J*1”1** “ j _0nly accidentally that I helped you
doubt- They bad traveled a Marion-~ Kattaniel
through (crest unbroken by * hfcd NeU’« band in both bis own
road when NeU halted on the edge of * betrayed more than be
a Uttie stream that ran into a swamp, and fc-s eyes beirayeu
Pointing into the tansled fen with a
confident smile be plunged to his
waist in the water and waded slowly
j through the slough into the gloom of
? the densest alder. A few minute* later
he turned In to the shore and the soil
bog gate (dace to arm ground- Be-
last question died upon his Upa
“1 thought that the councilor bad
told you an.” be «*id- "» UiOU«ilt 7™
knew" The disappointment in bis
voice was almost despair. ‘Then—it
FORYEARS
Cored by Lydia E. Pink*
ham’sVegetableCotnpouiid
Park Bapids, MintP—*‘I
would have said. T ee got an armed
ship and a dozen men out there and
blowing
hardly hbla to bn
around. After take
in* six bottles of
Lydia E-Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com-
pound 1 gained SO
pounds, am now
able to do my own
work and feel
well.”— Mr*. Ld.
La. Doc, Park Bap-
m’s
tf I can belp Marion by
St. James—I'll do it!”
For a time only thejense breathing
of the two broke the silence of their \ 1--------
he aw his compfcisn drop to his of the passum ^ ^ &o^tlng * J T‘ 10
knees beside a lalle- i<* *ad w »s If he vert trying to find in this
be came up whim fgH mans eyes the friendship which he SffbrtST^lfOL B- KlXSiaoS.
! *WST. i. T -! J- - —■— * *" Com.
sinr-si 2-“ r«si££K*|sswftg
; -rs^ofsc-T^.0' * »—«■-—! %
! Sggggg |“=£n___I ®*«ssss
r„°.“ 5E , SrUnam «« con. B ** ad
are on file in the Ptnkham laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., from women who bare
been cured from almost every form ot
tered the swamp.
he Suddenly the memory of Obadiah's
M-COUMiE of
(fUPflM
forth a small box.
, “Powder and ball-and ^b- “J - 07e “shot' in to Nathaniel's head, the
! sat ■ ":s srr
J.'Sr-ilM:! =.T^7^-wr-
! J 6 t hare come to you, but new—it is im
1 ■>-“ He Tea: |
'Lin*'S^tm. j *iZ T.M
^Sksssss
It is tree and always belpfuL
FREE
There was no excitement in Neil’s began to
- -v „= i,e c rnA c-ecL The smile j and sat down beside Xeil.
voice as he s.cod erect. ^ be ,
did not leave his ups. But in b,s eyes^ ___
there shone that which neither words
SYNOPSIS.
Capt Nathaniel l’ *m. of the aloop
Typhoon, land* secretly on Bearer bland
stronghold of the Mormon*. He l» «ud
fler.ly confronted by Ofradiah a
eccentric old man and a m‘-tn.>er or t..
Mormon council, who tells him that beta
expected. - Price Ignore* Nat * Pr jle*^d
tlons that he ha* got the wrong man. ano
bargains for the ammunition aboard the
eloop He bin'is Nat by » ^
deliver a package to Franklin tnerce.
president of the United Slates. Near
Price's cabin Nat sees the frigntened face
of a young woman who disappears in t..e
darkness, leaving an odor of
develops that Plum’s visit to the island
U to demand settlement from the king.
Btrang. for the looting of his ■b»p some
time previously, supposedly by Mormomr
Casey, the male, has been leftincimrge
of the sloop with orderB to bombard s^.
James If Nat does not return within a
certain time. Price takes Nat In the
darkness, to the king* , home, and
through a window he sees the king and
bis wives, among whom Is the Udyof
the lilacs, whom Price says Is the sev-
enth wife. Plum cal.s at tr.e king s of-
fice. where he is warned ly a your.g
woman that his life is In danger. Strang
receives Plum cordially, profes&es Indig-
nation when he bears the captain s gn*' -
a nee. and promises to punish the guilty.
Plum again recelv « warn.ng of his dan-
ger He rescues Neil, who is being pub-
Bcly whipped. The klrg orders Arbor
Crocbe, the sheriff and father of Winn-
eingle glance over bis shoulder as-
sured him that the mr.n whom he bad
saved from the prophet s vrraib was
close at his heels. Mis first impulJfe
was to direct his flight toward Oba-
diah's cabin; bis second to follow the
nor smiling Lips revealed, a reckless,
blazing fury bidden deep.in them—so
deep that Nathaniel stared to assure
himself what it was. The other saw
the doubt in his face.
“Tomorrow I shall kill Strang, be
repeated. “I shall kill him with this
from under tl» window of his
house through which you saw Mar-
Damages for a Bale of Morphine.
An important decision with refer-
ence to the sale of morphine has re-
centij been given by the Teeth Cham
oath that led to his snip. At this hour «'Marton»- exclaimed Nathaniel.
“Marion— ’ He leaned forward eager-
ly. quesitoning. “Tell m
some of his men would surely be
awaiting bim in a small boat and once
aboard the Typhoon he could continue
h.. campaign against the Mormon king
with better chances of success thaq
bre Correcdonnelle. A pharmaceutical
chemist having sold morphine without
a medical prescription to a student at
Nancy, the latter gave it to one of
his comrades, who as a result of ta
king it contracted the morphine hab-
it. The father of the „ victim then
brought an action for damages against
the chemist, who in his defense said,
in the first place, that he was respon- . ^c»rf*. »* w»u*or "rsvrz
sible only for his own action, but not j
for the action of the student who had |
given the morphine to his comrade, j The*. lov«ir ££d
, x_ ------a -1----k,f had ! in b^nUfol f<^TS *nd
5 Beaitifol Post Cardi
These Are the Very Lmteet
Post Card Designs
“My sister, Captain Plum!
l,-.-. It seemed to Nathaniel that every
^ nber in his body was stretched to the
as a lone fugitive on the *slanc. Be- ,eakj point. He reached out, dazed
sides, be knew what Casey wou.d do ^ what he had teard and with both
at sundown. | h'an(j5 seized Neil s arm.
“Your sister—who came to yon at
the whipping pest T
. ,, , “That was Marion.”
“I’ve got a ship off there, he caded. -And—Strang’s wife?”
pointing inland. “Take a stor cut for ? cried NeiL “No—not his
the point at the head of the island. wif;.„ He drew back from Nathaniel’s J ~ stance without a
There s a boa w ^ng _. touch as if the question had stabbed TTjp<lidaj DrescriDtion knows that he is
him to the heart. The passion that
had slumbered in bis eyes burst into
To aoiekly introduce our no*
sundown.
At the top of the slope he stopped
and waited for the other to come up
to him.
and in the second place, that he had
no direct connection with the injury
sustained by the consumer of the mor
phine. The lower court upheld this
view, but the higher tribunal ordered
the chemist to pay 100 francs fine and
4,000 francs damages on the ground
that a pharmaceutical chemist who
d*rin*.eoiapris*ih» Mt
fr^UTBeoHeMion ever offer**! W”*‘ "**?!*
w< iorithle onr spscs*!
Post Csrd Albata mad *
emrds of your own election rKKB-
ffi iiasiwd Bdvertisini effer soodonlr»
Write im»edU»ely. _t*e th» ronpon bjH
Thl« »pe*-
riswSSS’
aTutniiMBieF*"31 mtmaibmd.
some, the girl who warneJ
Sue and kill the two men.
CHAPTER V
The Mystery.
Hardly bad Nathaniel fought his
way through the thin crowd of star-
tled spectators about the whipping
out his hands to Nathaniel, they were
luminous with the Joy Oi his deliver-
ance.
“Thank you. Captain Plum!”
He spoke his companions name
with the assurance cl one who had
uea -----* i known u for a long time. “If they
Dost before the enormity of his offense
. *_____*tKn bInor'fl InctirP lOOSe *
Neil came up panting. He wa3
breathing so hard that for a moment
he found it impossible to
in his eyes there was ^ ^ ______
his unbounded gratitude. hey were ^as ^hatred there such as Nathaniel
clear, fearless eyes, with the blue . ______„„ ranvinii* tvitiless
glint of steel In them a:d, as he held
,ookT,1 tm *"*** »“ie.ani lu:*'?ce..bfiam““£:
intemiptlng the king’s Justice
dawned upon him. He was not sorry
auu«u »» — o
loose the dogs there will be no time
for the ship,” he added, with a sug
sorry . buncb Qf bis naked shoulders
that he had responded to the mute j
appeal of the girl who had entered so 1
denly terrible to look upon. There
r wmn- bis unbounded grauiuue. -kj - > wag_____
Nat. to pax* „i„„, foorio^a pvcs. with the blue never seen; a ferocious, pitiless
hatred that sent a shuddering thrill
through him as he stood before it.
After a moment the’clenched fist that
had risen above Neil's head dropped
to his side. Half apologetically he
held out his hand to hi3 comptmion.
“Captain Pium, we’ve got a lot to
thank you for. Marion and L” fce said.
tremble of the passing .emotion In
bis voice. “Obadiah told Marion that
help might come to us through you
and Marion brought the word to me
at the Jail last night—after she had
seen you at the window. The old
councilor kept his word! You hawe
saved her!”
I “Saved her!” gasped NathanieL
From what? How?” A hundred ques-
barriers” which in cooler moments j * ”n”d “TV^g thZir danger- | ti°n8 seemed leaping from his heart
would have restrained bim. and which d^, 1 “tim thThe was^ right and he to his lips.
fixed in bis excited brain ODly th®! “llo^d cio?e behind without ques- “From Strang Good God don t you
memory of the beattiful face that had dozen up the patch Neil understand? I tall you that I am going
sought his own in those crucial mo- _ dense thicket of briars to kill Strang’.
of Us suffering. The girl had j and (or ten minu.es • NeU stood as though appalUd by
plunged through the pathless his companion’s incomprehension. T
J-ngleP Now and then Nathaniel saw am going to kill 1 tell/°“\.
the three red stripes of the whippet’s he cried again, the fire burn mg deeper
her hair as he severeu toe pnsouv. » shoulders of the through the sweat of his cheeks,
thongs, he had caught the flash of her j lash upon^ h^h ^ Bho^ gtep Nathaniel’s bewilderment still shone
eyes and the movement of her lips as “ wounds made by in bis face.
he dashed himself info the crowd. And ^med to dd out upon ’’She is not Strang’s wife,” he spoke
he soed swiftly u. the slope he j the thorns. As they cam ^ a3 i{ to himself. “And she is
an old roadway the captain str^p face fiushed as he nearly
off his coat and Neil thrust himself words. -0badiah lied!” He
into it as they ran. ■
medical prescription knows that he is
liable for whatever misuse may be
made of it, either by the fiis* recipient
or by the next person who comes into
possession of it-—Paris letter to the
London Lancet.
iUim.
strangely into his life. He rejoiced at
the spirit that had moved him to ac-
tion. that had fired his blood and put
the strength of a giant in his arms;
and his nerves tingled with an un-
reasoning Joy that he had leaped all
barriers which in cooler moments
There was no alarm in his voice and
Nathanial caught the flashing gleam
of white teeth as Neil smiled grimly
back at him, running in the lead. From
the man’s eyes the master of the Ty-
phoon had sized up his companion as J
a fighter. The smile—daring, confi-
Not Very Accurate.
Senator Root at Senator Depew’s
farewell dinner in his honor in Wash-
ington, said. anent‘his European tour.
“Well, I hope 111 gather ever there
more accurate information than that
which Lady Salisbury's housekeeper
used to give her American visitors.
“Lady Salisbury had a housekeeper
who, in showing American and other
visitors over Salisbury castle, would
always pause before a painting of
Catherine d’Medici, sister of Venus
d’Medici and say:
- ‘This lovely painting is a portrait
of Catherine d'Medici. sister of Venus
d’MedicL* *
METALLIC
HEELS/%and
ments „ —
turned to him and to him alone among j
all those men. He had heard her 1 el
voice, be had felt the soft sweep of
her hair as he severed the prisoner’s
as he sped swiftly u, the slope he
considered himself amply repaid for
all he had done. His blood was stirred
as if by the fire of sharp wines; he
of their
, , — 1 Even in these first minutes
was still In a tension of fitting ex- Natbaniel was thrilled by an-
citement. \et no sooner bad he fought .
himself clear of the mob than his bet- other t oug
ter Judgment reaped into the ascend-
ency. If danger had been lurking for
him before it was doubly threatening
now and he was sufficiently possessed
of the spirit of self preservation to
exult at the speed with which he was
behind them. Whom had he saved?
Who was this clear-eyed young fellow
for whom the girl had so openly sac-
rificed herself at the whipping post,
about whom she had thrown her arms
and covered with the protection of her
looked squarely into Neil’s eyes. “No,
I don’t understand you. The councilor
that of the peril | said that sh^-that Marion was
enabled to
With hit Xw »t bMlac I
Strang’s wife. He told mo nothing
more than that, nothing of her trou-
ble, nothing about you. Until this
moment 1 have been completely mys-
tified. Only her eyes led me to do—
what I did at the JaiL”
Neik gazed at him in astonishment. I
COUN
A Godsend.
An esteemed German who draws a
well earned salary from the city of
New York, says the Sun. was talking
about a case of sudden death the oth
er day. It was due to an accident. It
was nobody’s fault. It was a veri-
table bolt from a clear sky. All this
had impressed the German deeply.
“Vy.” he said awesomely, “it vass a
regular Godsend.”
For Miners, Qnarrymes, Fi
All Mea Who Do Ros|h Work
They save you shoe money. Will out-
last the shoe! They are easy to attach.
Your shoe dealer has shoes already fitted
with them — if not, any cobbler can put
them on.
Art in the Kitchen.
After much meditation and experl
ence, I have divined that it takes *s
much sense and refinement and talent
to cook a dinner, wash and wipe s
dish, make a bed and dust a room as
goes to the writing of a novel or
shining In high society.—Rose Terry
Send for booklet that tells all about them.
UNITED SHOE MACHINERY CO.
BOSTON. MASS.
OLD SORES CURED
S
Cooke.
Here’s Another Purist.
This verbal diagnosis
I make for thee. O s!s;
Don’t say ’apotheosis,”
But apotheosis.”
murVaSi .
iSgSSgBtg
1 <Bc.m4SWW ----
PATENTS^
#-*hr
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Wright, W. L. The Collinsville News. (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 6, 1910, newspaper, October 6, 1910; Collinsville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1173271/m1/2/?q=green+energy: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.