Garfield County Press. And Enid Wave-Democrat (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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I
Garfield County Press
■KID,
OKLAHOMA
E?«7 time i** c«£ d Heiif
Gm: 43iiit* &er fl* !it i® Hobckea.
®e
Bel
#v*. t=l(j )oc*e* v ■ t. ?jware** « ttt 1 *roc tie norA La "—tfee =a.!2*n who of tram f'^ks: - ree !>e i Wl_4
>!*• tr r: «ard ium kiovlr had gr:*wa to wo-mtabood ere thy re- ror do I ::. z.k *hat t-.-re be an) he.
swaying u gracef-il u a {in, awe tare froc. \ky travels to take up thy to stop Et
baasliful than any wes^an be ted mi father s crown? ... A:e' Tboo ( He wheeled about, prepared tc fight
H* breath eacgfet la hi* can&t ce*er loryt, beloved though bis way out of the pa!a
k&ova
■ fhKttt ft
There
•bovt a
t Je
LOU IS JOSEPH VANCD
AUTHOR or "THE. BRASS BOWL" ETC.
r .ti,, r: 1,•;.. ax I. J ■ s
for sbeer * c r ier at 'vi Incom years aad the acliitaAe of faces have
kneflMM come U*!*tec as as a veil, thoo dest
■e he coc'xi collect his wits sfee waxober—er« as tkoa d'-dst remen-
tde kie. captive—tad •Hfecn.'! ber when the message of the Be
r -ast be fipen b r laes cane tu thee ar. ; i: great hU<i
t ja *rv1 ^;rii-c*ed both hit vticn and thoa didst team that the
If need be
indeed. it was in his mind that a death
there were as easy as an hour altei
sunrise: for
that he was
durate. and
he had
to die if
set
doubt but
it remained ob .
ality of the ra;
1 elect him the ,
pon the marbi'
But the woman
and caught bis arc
rhe begg-d. breath!
5; ace a.ntil i taee
ang
t*r him
bast
he truti
mgbt
what
then
CHAPTER XV.
am I
CO*
A Sew York
thai ant i: tift
for a ra.5? t j
m as «tl rt
r fbere are *
aeed to be broke
sited to go as far
g Singh ra
:and c alling
; _ierb brutes
A wcxaa tat be^a r .• to 5&- " • *
conn. Pa, for throw ng a ttoee a' a
fce«_ She ■i.ist t ' h;t something
reparea
For v 3
The sew eoo«t eta be s#*n 5a the
ea Ttj a orr tog feovra. say tteat three
o'clock. Fee. however, harry ap to
•« It.
Chicago ts cow ta'rrg abctrt a If!
story skyscraper The proposed oae
la New York scott he eclipsed la mat
way
Pitts barga has decided to fu!t drob
p!ng ber ""h ' It la hr ; ec England cray
aot decide to regard this as an an
friendly art
CHAPTER XIV. (Continued)
what do you
)rovght me here1
When a farmer drives into 'own
writh a load of potatoes be may be con-
sidered gailty of an uaneceftsary dis-
play at wealth.
thine own wil
It the will of
**Oh, damna
on beating r<
You know *
what do you
tbou didst cow
—thine own will, w
he Body, hasoor!"
[ion! Why d'you i
iund the bush fore
ll why I came. )
rant T*
aside
door 1
room. w\
by huge.
ke^ft!
III at
tis
c!aio of this goldc
gently agi
mbcliv -itsma
found h
a
e!y
itys
vice forgiveness a
avoid her: in a
ca t sob like
that' W
"hat u
rider
thrown herself u{>
m s the trot]
*t pie
his arms and cru
Good Lor
d! what a
o do
nis.
his lovely It
'natic?"
"Nay." she mu
ogb in
ime the
fiercest
wrong tbee. belovf
rsm of ber
passion p
as^rd
end
told him. archly. *
>bs diminish
ed in vie
>!-ce.
she
e when fc-
lifted h
er in
his
of thy wits—and
The error
was fata
had
O wordless one?
J to get 1
er cn he:
feet
and
-one wi'b joy. as
tand away
But no s
ooner
had
smitten dumb by
sed her and
succeed e<
:sen
Aho, Lalji! was
bis hands.
than s
oft, n
sund
for words to vo
were claspe
d tightly
And nestling to hi
and her fac
e—if poss
ible.
ncre
,y. with a note a.
ing in tea's
than wb
n firs
t be
as the r 'joing of
een it—pllk
tared on
lis bx
east
.nate.
or the first
time she
«i*k.
"Nay. but there
!' she w
ailed, tr
usly.
>nd would have
Now Is ti
e cup of
my h
appi-
! but she held Ugh
full to brimi
ning. now
that
thou
thy busbar. • nor
remrned to
me at last. O
my
:rom America, th<
xrannanded
t fcrr.L.'eat and doomed!"
i!ig S.ngt ^Doci^ed*"*
> refute the ~Aye!" And there was real terroi
loaal w \o ;El 12^ eye? and voice "Doomcrd tc
shaciL He pcr fijcce I am a wide*—sincc
.ghast But thou dost maintain thou art r.ot my
>gion. star t. us band—then my face hath beer-
tier look of looked upon by a man not of mine own
cn-r of dl- people and I am dishonored. Kira
lesion. And alone can cleanse me of that defile
t^sck or to ment—the pyre and the death by
§ she had flame"
pax. was is "Good Gocf* you don't mean that
Surely that custom has perished!"
Thou shouldst know that it dieth
not Wfc'ct to us women in whos*
bodies runs the blood of royalty, if-'
an e^ict of your English government*
What the Sirkar itself to us in Khan
da^ar* She laughed bitterly. "I aiii
Hob ilia, a daughter of kings: my dte
honor may be purged only by flame
Arre" that I should live to meet with
such a fate—I, Naraini. to perish in
the Cower of my beauty. . F°r
I am beautiful, am I not?" She dropped
the veil which instinctively she had
caught across her face, and met his
gare with childish coquetry, torn
:hough she seemed to be by fear and
olstake." He disappointment.
peech tardily. 7Tbou an assuredly most beautiful, j
Ranee Amber told her, with a break
in his voice, very compassionate And
simple truth. "Of thy
is none more lovely in the
:hlng Ler lips ^pon Sur<
! Ferchance she
or in ttis garden
hath robbed thee
:y tongue a= well.
Or tbou art over
am overcome, and
it, as 1 am not?
er a woman at loss
e her happiness?"
1 she laughed quiet-
tender and sweet
l wood-dove to its
Headache
is just a symptom.
It is Nature's way of
showing a derange-
ment of the stomach,
liver or bowels. Help
Nature with the best
system-cleaning tonic,
OXIOiNE
—a bottle proves.
Tb< Specific for Malaria. QaBs utd
te-.'tfiad a rch*U« rcoecy foe
ail (L*e**e due to da*
ordered brer, ttomach,
bowel* tud bdoeya.
£0c. At Your Druggist*
THE HAPPY MAN.
a
spoke
kind
—H3
Former Pittsburg Is new -Pitts-
burgh " The PltJaburghersaave plrked
up the H that some careless person
dropped years ago
e -rf
bC
ulptt
hich
fit
Hln
ful, i
nsist
br
axier
•ver?
an
Now,
a
dais
S|
;ure#
ed
be pie
ckfutC
they
eU as
Many a man. after a week's vaca-
tion. is willing to testify that tie
passed ten days of fhe lime buttoning
up his wife's dress
Scientists may be able to photo-
graph the soul, but they would have
a hard Ume trying to photograph the
average citizen s bank roll.
A New Jersey man wanta • divorce
because nit wife, aged 60. It s flirt At
CO flirting ceases to be a disgrace; It
becomes an accomplitbment.
If all California plumj were ss <le-
Uclous to the palate ss they are de-
lightful to the eye how rich the fruit
dealers would speedily become!
the
ard with
ered.
"My lord, I move, it seems, in t
ways of error. A little time ago the
words of the Voice were made known
to thee in a f. r land; thou did-1 an-
swer, coming to this country. A few
days agone 1 myself did repeat to you
the message of the Bell; the. did*t
•wear thou wouldst not answer, yet
art thou here in Kuttarpur. Am 1 to
be blamed for taking this for a sign
of thy repentance? . . . Hasoor,
the liody is patient, the Will benig-
nant and long • jfferitg. Still is de
Gateway open
"Is that what you wanted to tell
me. Saligh Singh ?"
"What else
a madman. *
fhouldst venture hither with a heart brusquely, "if true
hardened against the Will of the wanted to show me?" ,
Body? I s*ek but to serve the« it "Nay/hasoor not this alone Com-
tbus daring thy displeasure Why The rajput led him out of the ball
chouldst thou come to Bharuta at all by way of a small doorway behind the
If thou dost not intend to undergo the throne, and after a little turning and
A bltbop tell* us that to b« good Orde.1 of lh- Am 1 a fool I twitting through tortuou. pauages
standing g
"There is no n-ed perhaps, t
thee, hazoor." Salig Singh mut
bending to Amber s ear "that s
upon this throne, in this Hall of Au-
dience. for generations thy forefathers
ruled this land, making and admlnit
tering its laws, meting out justice,
honored of all men—and served, my
lord, for generations by my forebears,
the faithful stewards of thy house;
Am I to believe thee even as 1 would ptove faithful'
.ry of life, tbaf tbou Interesting Amber interrupted
Is this what you
In Chicago Is to be lonesome, but we
bare never met a Chlcsgoan who ap-
peared to be particularly lonesome
The police force of Evsnsvllle. !nd„
had to arrest a swarm of beet the
other day after the Insects bad aet-
tled upon a fence post As h<u; been
previously said, the policeman t lot
la not a happy one
I say it in all respect, my lord— they began to ascend again, and so
art thou?** went on up. erer upwards, the flight of j
"From the look of things, 1 fancj steps broken br other . orrldor?. other
the epith' t flts is both Sallg Singh apartments other e*tler!ec srd car
Tou refuse to take oir word for It that d.ns until at length they fiLergtd
I know nothing of vour Infamous Gate- j Into a garden laid out In the very top
war and have no Intention of ever , most court of aN—the loftiest spot in |
approaching it. that I bate not a dro( all Kuttarpur
of Indian fclood in me and am In no It was a very beautiful garden a
onnected with Har Jungle of exotic plants and shrubs |
way related to
Wo hare It on the word of s Kan
sas fisherman that a catfisb will purr
when Its scales are stroked the right
way If the scales are stroked the
wrong way we presume that it will
hiss and scratch
is dead—"
lieve what
know to
Vacations have not lost their popu-
larity despite the ridicule of pesky psr
agrapbers We know of one man
who sprained ms arm In order to
get one
Doctors bare discovered the human
anra When a patient dies tbo doc-
tors will probably consider themselves
justified In sending In a bill for the tow,ar<j
removal of the aura
Aeroplane fiighta over cities must
be discontinued, according to the edict
of tbs aero c!ub it ruffles an aviator's
dignity to be caught by the seal of bis
apparel on a church steeple
Chicago is framing Its atreet-car
conductors to be polite to the public
by offering prises Consequently, cltl
tens of that enterprising town can
board cars without being ordered to
step lively
The msn who Intends to swim
across the Atlantic ocean promises
that be will start Feb. 13. 1V13 It
will have to be admitted that be is not
superstitious, however faulty bis judg
ment of the public's needs may be
Dyal Pftjtton.
"I may not
be untrue
"You'll have to learn to recognise
the truth I'm afraid For he final
time 1 tell you that I am Dav'd Am
ber. a citizen of the United States of
America, traveling in India on purely
personal business-""
Th* Rajput inclined bis head submis
lively. Then is my duty all but done.
hazc<-r Thrice hath the warning been
given thee Th*re be still f< urand-
twenty hour* ^r. which. I* may l>«
thou shalt leani to see clearly My
lord. I ask of thee a single favor
Wilt thou follow me?" He motioned
relied entrance to the
passageway.
"Follow thee" Amber at length
dropped into I'rdu, unconsciously
adopting the easier form of communi-
cation now that, be felt, the is«ue be-
tween them was plain, that the Rajput
labored under no further misunder-
standing as to the reason of his pr- -
ence in Khandawar "Whither?"
"There is that which I must show
thee."
"What?"
"My life be forfeit If thou doat not
return unharr • d to the rest hi ;*e ere
tunrisf- WlH thou come*"
"To what end, Salig SinghV
"Furthermore,"* the Rajput persisted
stubbornly, bis bead lifted In pride
j and his nostrils dilated a llttl
scorn—' furth* m.
threaded by narrow walks that led
to secluded nooks and unsuspected
pleasaunces, and lighted by low-swung
festoons of dim lamps, many-colored.
"My lord." said the mabarana, paus
ing, "if thou wilt wait here for a little,
permitting me to ezcuse myself—?'
"All right." Amber told him toler-
antly. ' Run along "
Sal:g Singh quietly effaced himself,
and the American watched him go
with an Inward chuckle. I presume
I'll have to pay for my Impudence in
the end ' be tho ;ght but it's costing
Salig Singh a good deal to bold him-
self in." He moved away from the cis-
tern, Idling down a path in a direction
opposite that taken by Sallg Singh.
An abrupt turn brought him to the
« uter wall, and he stopped to ga'e
leaning upon the low marble balus-
trade
Amber turned away to rejoin Sallg
Singh by the clatern Put the rajput
was not there; and. presently, another
path tempting blm to unlawful explo-
ration, he yielded and sauntered aim-
41
d!" she
there n
?ss then In yc
caught him
Who is thi
roman across the seas who hath won
by love? .. . . Aye. even that I
mow—that thou dost love this fair
aughter of the English Didst thou
set lose the picture of ber that was
aken with the magic box of the sa
;ibs? . . Is It for her sake that
hou dost deny me, O my husband?
s she more fair than I, are ber lips
"I am not thy husband," he declared
vehemently, appalled by her reversion
to that delusion. "Till this hour I
have never seen thee; nor is the sa-
biba of any concern to thee. Let me
go. please."
But she had him fast and he could
not have shaken her off but with vio-
lence He had been a strong man in-
deed <vho had not been melted to ten-
derness by her beauty and her dis-
tress She lifted ber glorious face tc
him, pleading, insistent, and played
upon him with her voice of gold. "Ye*
a moment gone thou didst tell me 1
was greatly gifted with beauty. Have
1 changed in thine eyes. O my king?
Canst thou look upon this poor beauty
and hear me tell thee of my love—and
indeed I am thine, altogether thine
Lalji!—and harden thy heart against
me? . . . What though it be as thou
hast said? What though thou art of a
"Susie's getting married."
"Who's the happy man?"
"Her father."
"WHY SHOULD I USE
CUTICURA SOAP?
••There is nothing the matter with
my skin, and I thought Cuticura Soap
was only for skin troubles." True, it
is for skin troubles, but its great mis-
sion is to prevent skin troubles. For
more than a generation its delicate
emollient and prophylactic properties
have rendered it the standard for this
purpose, while its extreme purity and
refreshing fragrance give to it all the
advantages of the best of toilet soaps.
It Is also Invaluable in keeping tho
hands soft and white, the hair live
and glossy, and the 6calp free from
dandruff and irritation.
While Its first cost is a few cents
more than that of ordinary toilet
soaps, It is prepared with such care
and of such materials, that it wears
to a wafer, often outlasting several
cakes of other soap, and making its
use, In practice, most economical.
Cuticura Soap is sold by druggists and
dealers everywhere, but the truth of
these claims may be demonstrated
without cost by sending to "Cuticura."
Dept. 23 L, Boston, for a liberal sam-
ple cake, together with a thirty-two
page book on the skin and hair.
A Reply Was Revised.
"They have grown very touchy on
Alaskan matters in the interior depart-
ment since the trouble of the Cunning-
truth not of the bouse of Rutton. nor ^m claims," said a coal man the oth-
vet a rajput" Let us say that this Is er {jay
so, however hard it be to credit; even
so. am I not reward enough for thy
renunciation?"
"I know not thy meaning. Ranee.
I—"
"Come, then, and 5 will show thee,
my king. Come thou with me. . . -
"I had occasion some time ago to
write to the department about an
Alaskan subject that had no bearing
on the situation. I have juBt received
an answer that does not commit any-
body, but It had on it the Initials of
at least six persons, showing that the
•tOtyfefKr
he Scarlet Lips Curled and the Eyts Grew Cold and Hard.
lord! Well-nigh had 1 ceased to hope
! for thee. O beloved; well nigh had
i 'his heart of mine grown cold within
rajr bosom, that had no nourishment
-ave hope, save hope! Day and night
! have watched for thy coming lor
| many years, praying that tho i
-houldst return to me ere this frail
prettiness of mine, that made thee
love me long ago, so fade that thy
> heart should turn to other women.
O my husband!"
Husband' Great—heavens! Look
here, my dear, hadnt you better come
o your senses and let me go before—'"
Let thee go. Lalji. ere what? Ere
! an}
should come between husband and
wife in e 1 h^ur of h- >r reunion
after many years of separation? Is it
not known—does not all Khandawar
story and deny me—why, I know not,
unless it be that thou art unworthy of
thy linkage, a c<yrard and a weak
ling!" Her small foot stamped angri
ly and on every limb of ber round
body bracelets and anklets clashed
. and shimmered. "And so thou hast
me to disturb us. returned only to forswear me and thy
kingdom. O thou of little spirit!" The
scarlet lips curled and the eyea gre
Nay, why shouldst thou falter? There reply had been thoroughly considered
is naught for thee to fear—save me and revised before it was started in
She tugged at his hand and laughed my direction. I gues they are on tht.
low. In a voice that sang like smitten lookout for bombs."
glasses Come, beloved'"
Unwillingly, he humored her This
c ould not last long . . The wom-
an half led. half dragged him tc the
northern boundary of the garden.
where they entered a little
buiided out from the walls over an two manufacturers, one author, one
abyss fully three hundred feet in doctor and four members whose call-
cepth And here, standing upon the ings are not given. Of the four farm-
ned rr.e that thou wouldst tell this verge of the parapet, with naught but ers. two are from the same state,
a foot-high coping between her and South Carolina. They are Tillman
the frightful fall, utterly fearless and and Smith The lawyers clearly out-
unutterably lovely. Naraini flung out number all others.
a bare jeweled arm in an eloquent
gesture Coachman Had to Earn Bequest.
TO "BE • CONTINUED A quaint paragraph appears in the
husband died Nay. It dotb
pain me to hurt thee so. Ranee, but
the mistake is not of my making, and
It hath been carried too far Thy hus-
band d.ed In my pres'-ncp—
"It Is so. then'" she cut him short-
And his ants were suddenly empty,
to his huge relief. "Indeed, they had
A Senate of Lawyers.
In the senate of the United States
there are 61 lawyers, five bankers,
eight business men, four farmers,
turret three journalists, two mine operators.
A Chicago taxi cab driver who has
made 111.000 In a Loo Angeleo real
estate deal has decided to ciing to bit
)ob bera. Evidently he It one of the
people who have decided that ti 1,000
can not be considered a fortune
word of a Rajput Thou art my gue«t,
sin<e tbou ' ha\e it * No harm
shall come to thee, upon my honor."
Curiosity triumphed. Amber knew
be so. tell me. why hast thou returned
at all? To die? For that thou must
surely come to. If It b* in thy mind
to defy the behests of the Voice, thou
king without a kingdom* . . .
Why. then, art thou here, rather than
running to hide in some far place. *
thinking to escape with thy worthless
life—worthless even to thee, who
She released him and p' a pa< e an t( craVen to make a man s use of men |n the mine were doomed to suf
or two away, draperies tw.riing. jew ^—jrom tbe Vengeance of the Body? focation The heat in the hoistinf
' . , . els scintillating cold fire in :.opeless Dost think 1 am to be tricked m-ftrks drove out every one but Tom
I offer th-e th« garbed In indescribable splendor-and .?mulalJoll of lhe ^.nce of her tear Rnd hoodmlnM-i WorkS dr°Te
gemmed eyes.
Naraini?"' stammered Amber, re-
calling what be had heard of the worn
an. 'Naraini'"
lessly away A sudden corner cloaked fcno* how I have waited for thee, a!
most tby widow ere thy aife, ail this
weary time? Or is it that
tby heart hath forgotten thy child
bride? Am I scorned. O my lord—I.
Naraini? Is there no love in thy bo
*om to leap in response to the love
of thee thst is my lifer*
with foliage brought him to a little
opfn space, a patch of la*n ov*r
which a canopy had been raised. Be-
neath this, a woman est alone. He
halted, thunderstruck
Simultaneoualy. with a soft swist
of draperies, a clash of jeweled brace
lets, dull and musical, and a flash c;
coruscating color, the woman stood
fore him. young, slender, graceful.
Hied
For the space of three long breath*
th Virginian het:fated. unspeakably
amazed. Though she were veiled, it
will of Mrs. Julie Hall of Brighton,
England At the reading of the will
Engineers Brave Act the other day jt wa8 foun(j that she
Tom Shaunsey was running a hoist bequeathed £100 to her coach-
ing engine in a Nevada mine, when man. provided he is in her service at
old and hard with contempt tf that thret hundred men were employed Om her death, and *if I do not die
day. Just after the twelve o clock shift through or from the effects of a car-
had gone down into the mine and riage accident when he is the driver."
were well away from the main shaft
at work, it was suddenly discovered
that the hoisting works were on fire
The building was old and dry, and
burned like tinder, and, notwith
standing all efforts to quench it. it
burned so fast that it seemed as if the
Never judge the strength of a man's
character by the size of his muscle.
whose heart
thst he had exacted the mo ft honored were deep dishonor for a «oman of t
A man was arrested by s conductor
th# other da? for drinking wblsky
from a bottle on a train in southern
Illinois. The drinker tried to escape
by crawling through a car window
but be was so fat that he could not
get out. Fat people continue to labor
under serious d'.advantages.
pledge known m Rajputana His ap-
prehensions we'* at rest, nothing
could touch him now—until he had de-
turned to the bungalow Then he dl
vined. It was to be open war—himself
and I^abcrtoucbe plttfv! against the
strength of the greatest conspiracy
known in India
But for the prevent
t him in any place where he might
encounter an inmate of the zenana
Yef the mabarana nm«< have known
. . Amber made an Irresolute
the days of 57 movement, at If to go But it was toe
o pledge at any Late
aort bad beci; *xa, t*d of bin, With a murmur. Inaudible, and t
-So tw it." be assented on ImpulM. swift. Infinitely alluring jrsi ure, thi
"1 follow "
rajput s household to be seen by i ' Aye, my lord thy wedded wife,
stranger It seemed inexplicable thai The rounded little chin went up a
Sallg Singh should "nave unwittingl) trifle and her eyes gleamed angrily.
■ Am 1 no longer thy Naraini, then?
Or. wouldtt thou deny that thou art
Har Dyal. my king and m> beloved?
Hast tbou indeed Jprgott-- the child
tfc*t was given thee for Mfe when fhy
father reigned In Khandawar. and thou
wert but a boy—a boy of ten, the Ma
haraj Har Dyal? Hast thou forgot
woman swept the veil away from her ten the little maid they brought thee
A teacher in Georgia with an extri. =
ordinary memory baa * >ld her brain
to a* institute of medical research for
several thousand dollars. It would b«>
the Irony of fate If she should outline the peep|t ef Constantinople Ac conflagration! are mott frequent in rei*y
Blame Eggplant and Stork
the particular •clraliata bo nego
tlated I lie purchase
A French aviator sailed over Paris
the other day. In spit: of tne tact that
the police had Issued orders prohibit
In* airmen from flfln* obore th«
count for the Frequsnt Fires
In That City.
Constantinople is noted for Ita mar.y
and destructive Area, which tho fatal
1st Turk regards as something that
'ant be helped, but which probablr
In pans perched prerloualr on the stork baa planned the fire, and so pectedly courteous, eren polished
ron!. Theae are easily upset, the ol' takea a blazing stick In her beak to manner; but he became more like his
catchea Are and there it a conflagra set fire u> this neighbor's neat In re j ordinary self later on. On the second
tenge j occasion he seemed to mc !be great
More often, however, the blaring j est bore that a country house could
V
Rustia Is Roadless.
Russia Is a roadless land It Is in
conceivable to the foreigi visitor who
has ever left the beaten track of tbs
railways In Russia now a great empire
can have subsisted so long snd so suc-
cessively amid the competition of the
rival states beyond Its borders with-
out even a pretense at roads
The secret, of course, lies In tba
Shaunsey. who stood by the engine
thine linage hath been enshrined these wlth tfce lever in hia hand, steadilj
many weary years? watching the cable as It ran through
"I neither think, nor know, nor tbe pulleys, with s speed never knowr
greatly care. Ranee.'' Amber inter- \ before. The men yelled to Tom tc j
pc -• d. wearily Doubtless I deserve rotne out. but he only replied witt fact that for five or six months In the
thine anger and -• rn, since I am not 1 a wave of his disengaged hand, un F*ar Nature herself provides roads
he who thou wouldst have me be If : til the last cage-load of miners was over the greater part of the expanse
death must be mj^'Portion for this of- hauled to the surface. At the sam< of all the Russians, admirable smooth,
fens*- for that I resemble Har Dyal ' time part of the roof fell in; but Ton glsssy roadways over hardwom snow.
Rutton' th*n It la written that got out. with his right arm ter The traffic it further cheapened over
I am to die My business here In ribly burned and nearly choked Tc
Khandawar hath concern neither with i ^y that the miners were gratefu
thee, nor with the state, nor yet with would be tuperfluoua, add betweer
the Gateway of Swords—of the very | them and the mining company th<
name of which I am weary brave engineer was handsomely re freight as possible, and it is the prin-
Now," with bis mouth settled in lines ' warded. cfpal reason why Russia, in the Twen-
. tleth Century, Is still a roadless land.
these roads by the susiitutlon of
sledge runner for the wheel and axle.
This brings the cost of land carriage
as near the cheapness of water borne
the months of Au -_st and September. But ti e present chief of the Ere d
and the Turks attribute thi. increase partment-auch aa It la -de lares that bunch la dropped on a roof, ana aa at tolerate ' But Carlyle amused him b,
to tbo fondness of the Inhabitants for they should not blame the laoSen.H. 'Hat time of year everything s dry as gravely hopping up and down in or
«_ ...—■— ... - — der t0 t<wp W4rln Qalton was ths
to the lODUur Ol m«r munuuauw vi i iu*; . | . _
egg plant This is a great aainvj In egg plant >ut ahould accuae the stork tinder a D.g fire U burning In a few
Constantinople, and it usually friad In Instead reasont that the ttork min jre«
oil builds her cest on the top of a chlm
When It Is plenty and cheap. It It ney A tpsrk sy ^ afire tbe dry ^ ^Carlyle
Bound to Qet Even.
A 14 year-old French boy, angered
ths other morning at being awakened
too early by bis mother, revenged
himself by breaking up the furniture
In his room, afterwards mounting to
the roof of the house snd throwing
tiles at the people below
town. Luckily he was not a German . nations do not accept with equal prepared In almost every household, branches of which 'he Mil I® bulM; Wr
aviator If he had been the polics ea|mncgs and as the kitchens ef the poor are the stork, lng'.ead. thinks t.cr neighbor i i^
only man who ever got Herbert Spen
cer to the Derby. Spencer said that i
the crowd of men on the grass looked
like flies on s piste and that ths i
I>erby was jutt like what he
Special PrlvlleQS.
"Isn't It against the law to be loud
and boltterout In the street ?" "It
Chu
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Garfield County Press. And Enid Wave-Democrat (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1911, newspaper, September 28, 1911; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc159826/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.