The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1916 Page: 4 of 6
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THE NEWS. DOVER. OKLAHOMA.
?!
■] The Heart of By Vingie E. Roe
If
i i
i
II
fl
it >
Night Wind
Illustrations by Kay VValte
.'"'"ft ■urroimdad wlta tern*. when srter #er. roomin ttr a I ftVI lljnil i Itrilffl linrr-n
< jjj t'e caught the sound of voices They Ittli* rolling of all tali auge s,.sel *. UKL/HuM 1 NEWS NOIF^
|| ' am® the <lense wall of the woods i cast a lowering glance backward at I —-
j at tils right and unconsciously he IK 1 the man
? 5 '®ned| "PP'ns his head and straining I The Incident had taken all the help-
j ,) his ea-s Presently a look of blank | fulness out of the day and the wilder
* k! Iuss si'"ad upon his face. ; nPsB, and Sandry wended his way slow
' 'ti ""e °' "le v"'cps was familiar, sort j Iv back to camp, arriving just in time
* .',j and ""ding with minors, the voice or for supper Siletz tended the table in
{ ,1 Hi.- girl Siletz. and she was speaking ' her usual silence, but when she
'i't Jargon. reached him she was
rs
SHADOWS OF COMI.MG events.
'-18—Sale tr Indian Ian is 0f
* ^hlcKiuwa
^Jty*rcb '*#—tdve«ioc* Snow. Oklahoma
Owlrhoma'cTty'V' *'01 k a,,ow anJ «■ ' .
J2-13—Stephens county fair.
Sem ! •-"OUl.ty fair.
^ t i. ia-. - Comanche county fair.
v I a ^ r-, w 1—- reached him she was constrainedly *>vL, JL-7U ;i°lancn« county fair.
#| A ^IUkY OF 1 HE ClPRAT l\ir^n>^UI w/r-c-— ! " a" ,hl8 Hma"ng knowlp"S« aloof, as If fearing to break a spell bv -*o. ok,b,,«.„. city.
■ft ) X 1 j t 1 WES 1 I !t was horn<1 1,1 uP°n llitu the 'angle a word or touch Once he looked up
ir; Ij! a,"l sl|e stepped out before blrn at her. striving for recognition, nut | A Shawnee factory turned out dut
31.i* X Siletz. squaw followed her. a short she avoided his eves and to save nis ing 'he fast year $2.">0 000 worth of
U|,yr«iii b> U^J. 'k^'d* Li * ■"* •*• .V ,v.ili brown creature of comely features. Hfe he could not repress the wild ' derails and Jumpers.
SYNOPSIS.
—3—
SH ti nf Dully'* lumber camp directs
" imp Walter Kandrv
IntloducBs films. If in John Dallv n.re-
7'.le Dllllngwiutli I.innl.fr Co
with Y?' ' ■' -« a. quaintance
."''J ' r "'"'P "•' '!"■ «'.rk lie (ins come
rrom ifi.- bast to superintend and mak«
and found a state of things sufficient
to raise the Ire of any rlverman or
tlmbcrjack.
W here the track approached the roll-
way it had been torn up bodily, the
ties and rails thrown into the narrow
.U.-J-MMC1I. He write niB father thai f'""Kh' 88 evidenced by a few pro
srsyjcfiftrtfttst."
lad in brilliant flannel, a towe
nan looked at him imjutr
CHAPTER V—Continued.
Sandry was enjoying her succinct
precision of knowledge and expres
■Ion.
And you ve Bpent all these years In
the midst of this wet-blanket eli
mate?" he smiled, "How In the world
did you do It and keep your cheer
fulness?"
"Son." said Ma Daily kindly, "you
can knock the country to me. but
don t you go doin' It where the men'll
hear you. Us web feet are used to
the rain, bul we don't like to hear the
Easterners talk about it. It s a chip
on every Oregonian's shoulder. You
don't want to queer yourself."
There was a note of genuine good
advice In the words and tone, and
Bandry got a sudden insight into sev-
en* little happenings that had puzzled
him—for Instance, the emphasized
wearing of blue shirts In a rain that
had soaked his overcoat, and a few
remarks about the fact that Oregon
rain didn't wet through.
Thank you. Mrs. Dally," he said
earnestly with a sudden feeling of
friendship between him and this
shrewd. kindly old general of men.
He turned presently to the girl
busy In the lamplight, her black head
shining. a shadow over her eyes.
"By the way," ho said, "If you rare
to you may ride Black Bolt whenever
you wish."
Bhe nodded quietly, without a flicker
slanting door of logs some two feet
thick supported on a group of gradu-
ated piles, sagged in the center where
two piles had been cut and pried side-
wise. The lower edge also drooped
for the same reason. It had been the
work of pure malice, that he saw at
a glance.
t ollins, he said as the men came
up in a sullen group, "get to work and
see If you can raise those sawed sup-
ports and pry tbem back on their
bases."
The gang went slowly down the
sharp bank of the tidewater slough
Johnny Eastern," said one softly,
all right, all right! Prize up a roll-
way! My Aunt Maria!"
Sandry stood near, realizing his llm I
itatlons ami raging helplessly, watch I
Ing them lazily testing and pushing
here and there.
lladn t we better Just spike 'em
on to the sides?" asked Collins, with a
droll upward glance.
Sandry was about to reply when
John Dally slipped down from the track
beside him under the lee of the dam-
aged rollway.
"Collins.'' ho said sternly, "you get
back to camp and bring tools -peavies
hooks, a couple of chains and some
picks. Bring a couple of axes, too
What do you mean by such business?
^Orders," said Collins with a grin.
"You see, Mr. Sandry." said Dally
apologetically, "there's no tixin' such
timbers as them, not when they've got
to carry such weight.
would leave the slough empty here for
the time between high tides Could
you get the timbers out in a few
hours?"
Daily's experienced eye had already
taken in every detail of the possiblli
lies as Sandry talked.
1 hat s a good scheme. Mr Santlrv "
ho said slowly. | believe it'll .,rk'
So it was that the lirst practical sug
gestion ol the new owner was set into
action.
The whole crew of the camp was
brought out of the hills and si t to
«ork and the damaged rollway was re-
paired as good as new, the break in
the west bank tilled, the slough run
nmg full again and nothing io show
for the trouble but the Hooded Held or
tules.
I nder Walter Sandry's — ■'
ering thrill that had betraved him in the |
pyramid of baskets slung to one shoul , hills, though he was conscious of an- '
(1 i. Nosing eagerly at tile girl's el , ger Hushing hot upon It. lie guttered j
bow stepped Hlaek Dolt, while Coos- a very real Humiliation In that he Had
nab brought up the rear They per- j so far forgotten his training, ins sense '
ceived him instantly and the Indian j of the fitness of things, as to kiss this !
Id mountain creature. His ances I
I blood rose up in condemnation.
The for
ingly.
"That left bank of the slough up
there is In the form of a ridge Don't
you think we could set a crew at it at ,
low tide and dig it through, turning 1 woman turned away with a few gut wil
the water Into the Held yonder? That | ,lirals which Siletz answered gently tra
Hut In the moment that she had con- j The next few days were crowded
| fronted him. Sandry had seen her face | full to overflowing with work and ne
and received a shock I laid aside all personal perplexities
Beginning just under the lower lip , Tile flrst raft of logs, a great cigar-
and running downward lo the base or ] shaped monster, laced together in all
he chin there stood out three blue ! its length and breadth with giant
j bars each composed of minutely tat- j chains, lay in the backwater at Toledo
tooed designs I nconsciously his star- readv for its voya
I tied eyes Hew lo the dark face of the yond
lyage Into the world be
meanor there
satisfaction,
was a small glow
a sense of having in a
pected In the light of her seeming pas- j set."
new ones
■lonate love of the animal, but a slow,
wll Hush spread upward In her dark
wee and her lingers trembled a bit he
™ eled. on the reeds.
They trembled In all surety the next
morning, when, with a bridle of colored
and woven horsehair over her arm, she
entered the lean-to.
Black Bolt was a gentleman born.
Though he was wild as the girl for
the free air. the green slopes and the
yielding sod under his feet, he stood
•till while silo came up lightly, as a
eat springs, with a little soft alighting
and they were gone, down over the
amooth slope of the valley toward the
lower rollway
There were two interested specta
tors to that splendid flight—Ma Daily
from the cook shack porch, who wiped
her eyes a bit and said aloud "Bless
the child! Wild-wild! But Its nat-
ural, and Walter Sandry standing at
the south window of the office.
Did you like It?" Sandry asked her
"I didn't know." returned Ssndr.v
frankly; "wont they hold back the
work?"
"A day or so, niebbe. We can take
the fullers out an' put them on with
Collins an' the rest. There's enough
down to keep the buckerg busy a day
or two, anyway We won't lose much "
Do you think this is tho work of
the Yellow Pines people, Dally?"
"Sure." said Dally with certainty,
"they've done worse than this before
now. C ut our best cable two years
ago and twice they've run the dinkey
off the track into the slough. They re
bad actors."
"But what's the use? What do they
gain?"
"They want to run us out of the
hills. Been at It for ten years. They're
Just givin' you a hint as the new
owner."
The repairing of the damaged roll-
way was another revelation to the
way redeemed himself
At supper time Siletz, moving be
ween the tables, laughed to herself
softly, and her dark eyes under the
little shadow of her parted hair held
a sparkling gleam as If she had seen
that conflict and enjoyed it.
Siletz," said the owner, coming in
suddenly from the east porch after the
men had tramped heavily away to the
bunkhouae. whom do you know out
side this camp?"
She was alone In the big spotless
kitchen, her sleeves rolled up from her
arms, slim and brown with a smooth
color that was of the sun's giving.
"Outside the camp?" she asked, turr :
l R to him for a moment, stopped i
some task of the aftermath of th
meal, "why—nobody."
••Don't you ever go down to Toledo"
Sundry was leaning In the doorway
Ills bright blue eyes upon her
"Sometimes."
"Have you no friends there? No
girl friends?"
She shook her head and he noticed
the clean profile, the shape of the
small pointed chin, the good forehead
conflicting with a vague suggestion of
fleeting wild Ihings in the velvety
eyes 7
M
There were UoO Marriage license-; is-
sued and 114 divorce actions tiled in
Dewey county IhsI year.
j Prof. Lly Griffith, former head of
j the Weatherford normal, is now leach-
ing in the Oklahoma City high school
A 100-barrel oil well has been
brought in by E. E. Redding and asso-
ciates on the Barber farm, near Law
ton.
James Y. ( allahan of Woodward
was nominated by the president tor
registrar of ihe land office at Guthrie
Okla.
Ihe wife of a Hobart farmer sold
during one year $069.50 worth of milk
butter and eggs. The woman owned
six cows and 100 liens.
J A crew of river drivers was picked
j from among the men and e'l was in
readiness save for a draft of direc-
tions which wai to be given, along j ' he safe in the postolfice building at
I with tho raft. Into the custody of Cap | dustin was blown open by robbers and
. tain (iral'tz of the long dun colored j Jl0° in money, $25 worth of postage
steamer that would stand in across ' stamps and several registered letters
j the bar at Newport on the twenty I ,ai<pn-
\ sixth „. ,
! Sandry thrilled with contemplation I Ep copal chnr,'.!'^ "n
of the great reddlsh-brown lioor. Kence of l mnn h 7/"Bftfr an a"
slightly raised In the center, sloping ! he vlMtcd A^ u" R Wh'°h
gently to the sides. Us building had j has relumed loM^i"^! Muskoge^
One entire family and a total of
| been a thing of wonder to him It
would in all probability scatter to the
ends of the earth, and its worth ran
well into live figures. He watched its
departure, an impressive matter of
sluggish rising with the tide, of al
most Irn.ijrceptible motion and then of
majestic speed that carried it west-
| ward toward the ocean. Then he
! turned hack to his logging camp with
a heightened Joy In the new life.
That night he wrote to the white-
haired gentleman who was then going
to bed under silken covers with the aid
of the faithful Higgins; and his letter
was long and brilliant, touched with
that cheer and hope, that light of
awakening strength and ability which
I waB beginning to stir his heart to its
j foundation
Ah! said Mr. Wilton Sandry when
he got that letter, looking down on Ihe
pageant of Riverside drive in its win
hand
H'or a moment Sandry's Head whirled
and a sort of nausea came over liira.
... , Then hB became conscious of her dark
s there no one with whom you as ' e>'e8' level al'd calm, upon his face and
soclate outside the camp? Think "
Suddenly there passed over her fea
Watched Her Turn and Ride Down , ...
One of the Mysterious Paths , " * he W,la' a
j son! The melal is beginning to ring,
girl. There, on her lighter skin, tell- | lTO BK CONTlNUEU.i
tale in its truth of outline, was the be- ]
ginning of the same mark, broken In
CARING FOR THE UNKNOWN
its inception by some mysterious \
Patriotic Work Undertaken by Ger-
man Women That Is of Real Serv-
ice to the Fatherland.
seven persons have died at Guywon
within the last week from scarlet fev-
It is believed Ihe disease was con
tructed from a Shetland pony recently
shipped there.
A correspondent of the Companion
through tho eating room
"Yes," said Siletz with her belying
Quietness.
I I've found a studv," he
said to himself as he went on. "a
worthy Btudy in human nature,"
And Siletz had found a new heaven
and a new earth. Something wild with-
in her that had ever moved restlessly
broke forth, a glorious (lower of cc
Btasy. Day by day thereafter she1
loosed Black Bolt and sped into fields
Of Klysium. lost to earth. Intoxicated I
mad with the rush of wind and rain.
Always when she came back there
was the dusky flush In her face, tho 1
Sieopy look of intoxication in her eyes
ihus winter closed In on tho lonely
camp in the mountains, blue-black and
gray with mist and rain and vivid 1
green with (he new grass of the coast
country.
CHAPTER VI.
Trouble With the Yellow Pines
Wa ter Sandry sat In the office at 1
the sloughs edge busy with tile and .
ledger. Two months had passed and
something had lifted from him |n '
these two months; a weight had light
ened. Where had been a huge dis
gust, almost Intolerable In lis m
tensity, for this rain soaked land, there
had crept in an Insidious admiration
Often now he looked down the
ly underpinned. Then with pick
Hires a quick change, lie could liken
it to nothing but a wind on Ihe surface
of water. Just a breath of change.
"Only the Preacher." she said with
a swift slurring of softness In her
voice.
"The Preacher?"
"You don't know him. He only comes
sometimes He was here just before
you came."
^ "Who is he?" asked Sandry curious
"I don t know. Nobody knows But
I love him."
' The Preacher," he said to himself a
little later in the bare south room un
•ler the dripping eaves. "H"m! The
liible—of course."
With a new interest he picked up
the quaint old book of Holy Writ and
let it fall open in his hands as tt bad
a way of doing
"ut from dial marvelous song of an
inspired soul the Psalms, iliere looked
hie
other day. the truest answer that could
have been given to his
I a thrill that sent the blood pounding ; in Germany writes of a touching tiling
in his veins shot through him The i ,hat ,he lonely women of the nation
mighty trees around them, the eternal I 'lave done—women who have no sons,
majesty of the hills under the intimate no husband, no brother, no father in
gray sky. the girl in her trim, sensible ,he war; who are perhaps too old or
attire of blue shirt, short skirt and J 100 feeble to nurse or to be otherwise
boots, with that sudden revelation of 1 active. No one knows where the Idea
the w-ild about her. combined to sug | started, but some women of that sort
gest the unreal the mysterious, the made inquiries of the regiments re-
awless; in a Hash he understood her Barding soldiers who had no father
faim' 'U'r °<<;a8'°nal .or mother; they begged to be put in
. speech, and ner communication with those soldiers
The names of soldiers were sent to
5 why- S letz!" he stammered, j these women, this strange name and
foMowing out the train of his illumined i that, the names of men whom tliev
. are y0U? Wh0 an' <l,d not know 8,1(1 "ever seen':
wind i ® arm the dusk! The night j Each woman chose one or two sol-
wind In the pines!" Idlers to be her especial care. The
Jn the Hush of the pregnant moment i childless mothers sent girts, and
dor hlf,hland on her bare arm un- sewed and knit for the motherless sol I l'l,rl,ire <)f forecastersTs $825 "a
e rolled-up sleeve-her soft arm. diers. Sow and then came, in return, to ,),e s,ot machines is $2,610.
Alvin Daugherty, 3-year-old son of
Mr and Hrs. H. Daugherty, met in
slant death at Drumright when he fell
into a tub of scalding water. The acci
dent occurred while ihe child's mother
was c leaning house.
The hunting season adde I another
victim to Its accidental list when Joe
Hendricks, the 18-vear-old son o: a
widow, of Durant, was accidentally
killed by Bransford Mason, (he 13year
old son of a grocer.
Secretary of Stale Lyon, In his finan-
cial repori for the year just closed,
shows that the total receipts of his of-
fice aggregated as compared
with $€2,256.11 for liilV showing a
gain for the year 1915 of $9,937.
Governor Williams honored a requi
sition ftom Ihe governor of Texas. a*k
Ing for L. (". and Henry Turner. They
escaped after their conviction on
charges of gambling. Both men are
under arrest in Jackson county.
Vernon Kiker, charged with having
embezzled $419 while deputy county
treasurer of Seminole county, has
made bond in Ihe sum of $2,600 for
his appearance in district court.
Kiker is al present county assessor.
January 25. 2fi and 27 have been
fixed for (he annual winter reunion of
Scottish Rile Masons of the McAlester
valley, Indian consistory No 2 at
McAlester More than one hundred
applications for advanced degrees have
already been received and nearly one
hundred more are expected.
A loss of $3,335 |s 8j,0wn on okla-
homa City's books for Ihe past vear
on account of ihe law forbidding for-
tune tellers to operate and making the
use of slot machines illegal. The an-
^"" ..!°™_.ln."c?n8e fBes due to the de-
and
wet with the mist—closing his tinge
strongly upon it
a grateful post card from the field !
For the enchanted fr ni the adopted son. Once I read" ' OiaM-'wenty-six men
present she was romance and inys- °11P of the cards. in ih . bar examination
tern\Un<! ;SanClry WilS bel,eath ita 8PBl1 Many thanks, dear friend," It rear. , former!v of'i m l,H "" """i °WPn
i, "Ptz lo°l<ed from his face "for the package of warm things ! est en.H r'r V, ' eceived the high-
s answer as he was to know In an- J"" to the hand upon her arm. The Imagine mv surprise' The ma ar few we k l,,f« a
blood rose slowly in her dusky cheeks. 1 rived! 1 expected nothing buM was ' purnose of T •Momana for <«"
and when she raised her eyes again ' 'he only one to receive a package- law He La ,!7'.'!V "!'aC,ict' ()f
they were dim with the same look of, 1 alone, the orphan' • — ■' Great Falls.
intoxicati
ness of
Holt's back. j Right davs later (he orphan soldi r ' , T',erf' is now 111 'he banks of Okla
JXXS„r;=„r,n; - r1« x&z&sszxzz "T
J 1 dldn t I just heard the words in that bound in imagination a worn- i
| my heart They are right." an's silent life with (he mightv fate!
lie did not remove his hand, and ! of her country. She who had never !
I Silence fell between them while they h cn a mother had become a volun |
teer mother.—Youth's Companion. 1
is question:
ii urend into ilie hill „r o.*
V'o shall stand Iri his holv
•hat bath clean and
" ll" ' ■«,h "<>« lift- d up hln
•iiuti nor Kworn deceitfully.
•'■e dim with the same look of ' alone, the orphan! I'rom vou I re Owen s ' * ['a"K Mr
tion as had come with the mad ceived the only package I ever eot In 1 of Oku h a';"'11'' nf 'he University
the rushing wind on Black my life!" 8 " ROt ,n , of °k|ahon,a. class of 1910,
more than at
CHAPTER VII.
Night Wind.
Prom that time forth Sanilrv
"I Don't Just Know '
green shovel the men went at the
little valley sharply defined i,„,"„, .'i " """ wetu at the work of
lu UIQJI,,. hill, a,,.] Ie], t(lB «"TI
r: zzsrz r£rrz r-&•£--
.... "• " "•* lb.". .. U. dlggln. Iron.
Suddenly there came to him niQ « / 8^Pf R,(,° at ,ow t,de; l)Ut on tne
or of voices, oaths and the n.r .J y he s,ood lo"K running his
tones of strong me,, l„ ' r , " " * m""' tbrhis hai
i 1 ln ""Ker 1 I' fr°t>i , Ills custom when perplexed
iV " Kr"U" of Sandry had comedown from
, , began stood gazing Into each others eves
. e a keener interest In Siletz for j Sundry saw the heavy look in hers, (lie
cu'n j!,6 notlced that everyone 1 dull fire that bespoke a verv drunken
called her S letz with a sof, slurring ness of emotion, and
' f the first syllable, and he found h
in another mo-
self using the name which he 'th'ought "hough," h,B head." wt">out j Bends out ihe somewhrf
particularly beautiful
population of Oklahoma City t"o be
but S0.000, $.-,9.6ti was deposited for
every man, woman and child, while
rlorfid' To,al 'leposits reach
$1.1.033,895.06, which would mean there
is S2J7.92 on deposit in Oklahoma Citv
for each Inhabitant,
as simply as the first runner ! report that old Vulcan
name of the M,,r,. ,"aS th" i ? tho6e forests tool< what he wanted
name or the reservation to the north he leaned forward and kissed her
emls^Arlbe11!! tfBrt th" '"l(l8 a'"' 8°ftly' ou her smooth cheek
thrown in there by n Her eyes darkened
I he next distribution lo Ihe various
counties and first ,'a.,* citie8 of th„
!l"!e !"!m. the. at'tomobile license tax
In
the lower rollway
came stalking in th
ir, as was
eir spiked hoots ( office and
k4 ,„ : uBiKeneu perceptibly and
Other n ffovernment What was ber j she covered her face with her '
other name? lie had always thought |
of her as Ma Daily's daught
'"":k °' U'ihBart POUU,,,ng an" ma"hood al
c itvtr seemed akin to the easy ready upbraiding him lie searched
so like'the'oh'l'w "rain for some word or
to b<^h wl.h her snences h WaS a"Rn "°mo -session, but
Behind them .Murphy rocked excitedly
along m the tiny locomotive
Sandry shut his ledger and stepped
OUtdoCTB.
"What's the matter, Collins?" be
asked of a huge man in tho lead, a
perfect type of the logger of the great
Northwest, sun-browned, hard mus
cled. wiry of figure and with the en
durance and power of a bull elephant
"Matter enough. Then, damned
Yella Pines a sawed Ave piles In th
rollwa/ an- tor* up tw« lengths of
tXMk."
wmmt Awi th* mu
above the
now stood on the track
rollway looking over the
wet country below. At the rollway s
root the sluggish ribbon of tidewater,
sullen and discolored, wound up from
the south. To the north the valley
lifted gently toward the camp and the
wilderness beyond.
Suddenly, "Dally," he said, "what
are you going to do about it?"
I don t Just know. The men can't
work In tho water, and them piles have
got to come out. But there's a way of
doin' It, of course."
"Of oourM,' said the easterner "and
whj not go at It from abovet"
thn uei U mu;
cal speech and her look of hidden ti
One day in the late fall,
white mist and the
The LI J on Mt. Lassen.
The government geological survey
reassuring
has clapped ! collected by the slale dennrtmam .
the lid down on Lassen peak. The , highways will be made in a few davs
great eruption In May seems to have a,ul- according to (he estimate of Con,
spent the energy of the volcano, md j missioner tleorge Noble will amount to
the general Indications are ,hn, |t I about $25,000. It will beT
.. w,n cause no more disturbance uu, i months of October and November
,„.,s ,a sudUfl *r,,at embarrassment | s"ason Though tLe mountain may estimated that Ihe nmnh^r
. .. ! . .rV 8t°? silent beside her. his continue to be an active volcano, the 'omobiie licenses issued ti i -
report says that it |8 believed thai it i "ould reach 30,nnn," sai() the cnmmTs'
will not develop !,, a devastating Moner "1 now prepared ,o re^ 1
fury, after the manner of Vesuvius j ,h" estimate, as I believe the first „r
th n b ' a8kh" vo|canoes or ,he year will find the tola) figure about
other well known foreign volcanoes" 27.000. The total income !!,
hile lessen In a rage makes quite ' Issuance of tpgs this yea,
..i . . about $17.ri,000."
bauds.
''' whlmsl- I found none, and the
(ire
next moment
I could not in any case have spoken it;
1. when Ihe for Siletz lifted her face and It was a spectacle of Itself, tnd while a'vol
forest had got on h^nlr!-!?' 'bfi plorllied" The intoxication had drifted ra"n in eruption adds variety to th-
ahlv, Sandry left the office an I ar away from her featurus, leaving them "ttractlons that " see America Hrs. '
the shed for Black Bolt only to" no 1 ",n!.PllcU'V "f 'h" "rt ' ""T, T, " "°U'd K(" alo"« ^
him gone, lie had meant to r d ^ ? W()maM' a"d th<,rB "as in tbem "H " v'"cnn keeps the .(d screwed
the fit of blue. Falling that h dec^d " u !." Be'f urr«"d". I a"d « "Khter. no. ,han ,,
ed to walk It ofT and struck V.n .hT ." 1 . " " word—and Sandry knew I 18 ln a grea. many trutilcpalities.
green valley to the north ' I ,nKtlnctlvel>- «"e could not speak
Almost immediately the tumbllne r i"n turned tohB1 ck B°lt. threw the
hills closed In upon him and hi ^ ^ u! °V8r Ud beside
himself in a wilderness of t ' °n 8 "" °' moss and leaped
"rs, of drip^ng vL laplel and m"" ^ h" "nd ""
terlous paLiis lost In tho crowdlnr im^hl ke,e<' wlth "'at In-
ferns He w*. standing at reTm S ? °f 1116 W"d' tUrn and
—1 -1^ wrpeted with w
Parental Cruelty.
"What's worrying you?"
"Father says he a going to cu« mf
allowance down to a point where peo-
pie won t say that I have more mm,.,
than brains "
"O* you'll starr* to -h tt
4m> UM " *
year I estimate at
Prank N'o
oe, county treasurer of Seni
L" <'om11'"V suspended from of
fee pending investigation of the
charge of corruption in office, and ha-
b^.n succeeded by Houston Miller dur-
charge "vn'k'n°V."f "rarin« "Pon the
(harge. No complaint lias been sworn
out agains, Noe. An Investigation hi"
been ordered by the state
- examiner"
office and a grand jury h* bee,, called
or this week, the order therefor hav
Ing been issue,1 by Judge Tom 1) Mc
sor°WHn' I"rn0" K'ker' COUmv asses
sor, has been arrested, after a bit
shortage was found In his books
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Hofer, H. C. The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1916, newspaper, January 13, 1916; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136450/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.