Cheyenne Sunbeam. (Cheyenne, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1896 Page: 2 of 4
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i '
Cheyenne Sunbeam
CHEYENNE OKLAHOMA TT
c!du
S -W CarrfHHT w
CHAPTER XVI— Coxtinubd
Wilders' loss had created a stirring
sympathy In the neighborhood and
no one's kindly emotions were more
aroused than Mrs Whltford’s Like
many others too this good lady had
suggestions to make which to her in-
tenso disgust nobody would pay seri-
ous attention to To her the solution
lay in a nutshell At Marquette was
a wise woman an old crone who told
fortunes and revealed the past and fu-
ture an exceedingly sagacious person
who did a roaring business in the
divination way
To this ancient Sybil the worthy
dame resolved to go on her own ac-
count and probe the mystery of the
lost boy to its bottom so accordingly
she has impressed the corporal's serv-
ices and the twain have started for
Marquette leaving the house in charge
of Jacob Gregson and Mr Dodd who
do not seem to be having too pleasant
a time of it
U naccustomed to the severity of such
a season they are sitting shivering
over the big stove cursing with much
heartiness the intense cold and wish-
ing themselves a thousand miles from
the desolate country
“That gold mine didn't pan out as
you expected" Mr Gregson cheerfully
observed
“So” snarled Dodd “they knew too
much to bite"
“Been there too often eh?"
“Guess so"
“Well what’s the next move?"
“Skip"
“I would if I were you I heard yes-
terday of a fellow who salted a mine
here once an’ they caught him an’ sat
him down on a red hot stove an’ held
him there till he confessed an’ then
took him out on’ hanged him"
”Cgb! The savages Say Jake I’m
off as soon as it is dark’’
“Sorry to lose you Tony but the
best of friends must part-"
“It’s a bad time to be hard up Isn’t
itr
“It is" Gregson replied impervious
to the hint
“You'li let me have a hundred dol-
lars?" “Can’t possibly”
“Must Xo bones about it I say you
must"
“If thirty would do Tony I could
manage ltr
“It will have to do I suppose” Dodd
said without much expression of grati-
tude in his tones
“Well then I’ll go to my room an’
get it for you an’ while I’m gone just
mix us a couple of stiff glasses of hot
grog an’ let us try to thaw ourselves
out My bones ache with the cold"
As he turned his back Dodd's eyes
gleamed with satisfaction
The big whisky bottle was on the
table in a minute flanked by glasses
and sugar bowL
Mr Dodd was very careful -in his
preparations
First he mixed the sugar and Bprits
then poured on the boiling water and
-added bitters— then doubly anxious to
gratify Mr Gregson’s taste he took a
small phial from his pocket and poured
ten drops of a dark siruplike fluid into
that gentleman's glass -remarking to
himself with a chuckle:
“That’s good for twenty-four hours'
solid slumber anyhow— now see if I
can’t improve the opportunity”
Gregson returned shivering but cheer-
“Here you are old boy I’ve made
it forty dollars but it will be a pull on
me"
“You’re a brick Jake and here’s
your jolly good health"
“Same to you Tony!” He took a long
draught as he spoke “Bah! man
you've put too much bitters in it"
“Pshaw! lts more whisky you want
Help yourself"
"Do you know" Gregson said as he
took the hint “I'm deuced sorry you’re
going away Tony”
"You always had an affectionate dis-
position Jake" Dodd sneered
“But I say mate you won’t be up to
no tricks with me you won’t be nosing
around Xew York after Elsie?”
“You forget my dear fellow that
she’s gives us the slip Haven’t you
been trying for months to get her ad-
dress and failed?"
"That’s so Have some more punch
—don't sit looking like a— what was I
goin’ to say — if it isn't — headache— room
all swimmin’— drugged by heaven!”
Gregson fell heavily forward in a sense-
less stupor and Dodd with the remark
“Wliat a simple fool you were to go
back on a man like me" arranged his
body comfortably on a sofa rifled his
keys from his pocket and went up-
stairs to ransack his portmanteau lie
returned with a largo roU of bills
“I do not think poor Juke could
speak the truth if lie tried to" ha mut-
tered counting his plunder “his moral
obliquity is something fearful to con-
template nerc's enough for another
campaign and I've not requisitioned
more than half his store Only forty
dollars you could spare for a friend in
need! Oh Jake how could you be so
penurious?"
A knock at the door startled him
It was only Joe Smith a rough lad
who gained a precarious living hawk-
lug newspapers around the town and
who was perhaps the one human be-
ing who held Archibald Dodd in lov-
ing reverence for the adventurer had
ox OX HE KX0WS HOT WHERE
ever heavily equipped In furs and
wraps carrying too some heated bricks
in a sack to keep his feet warm he
slipped out of tho house
It took him but a moment to lock the
door and fling the key into the snow a
piece of sheer spitefulness which put
the Whitfords to much trouble ou their
return home
By this time night was approaching
And such a night
The howling blast swept over the
barren moor whirling the snow in the
air in blinding eddies — a night to ap-
paU s stouter heart than Dodd's
“Joe" he cried as he took the reins
from the shivering hoy “here’s a five-
dollar biU for yon I’ll be back to-
morrow TeU Nicholson not to worry
ahout the team if I'm not home early"
Joe gazed wistfully after the cutter
which drawn by two swift horses soon
disappeared in the blinding storm
So long as Dodd kept the road the
traveling was not so bad It was only
when he bad turned the horses’ heads
southward that he realized the peril ol
his journey He was skimming along
one moment over the hard smooth com-
pact snow at the next his -horses would
plunge np to their shoulders in a drift
while to add to his discomfort he
knew that the surface of the land was
honeycombed with half-completed min-
ing shafts utterly unprotected by post
or sign
Then the biting cold It seemed as
though the blood froze in his veins
Again and again be stooped over the
side of the cutter to catch in his hand
the snow with which to rub his aching
face The wind cut like knife
Now a broad lake is reached
The horses dash bravely down the
bank on to the ice across which they
skim like flying phantoms but the
clouds of night are darkening over his
head and the howl of a stray wolf tells
him that ere long he may have another
foe to encounter
Up the steep bank again and off over
tho moorland skirting a pine forest
among whose naked trees the wind
moans dismally Stiles he bos traveled
yet the horses breathing that clear
sharp air are ss fresh as when they
started
But with night comes the snow The
cruel snow Falling not as it does in
more temperate climes In pretty flakes
but mixed with cutting sleet wind-
driven and furious it heats against man
and horse
ne is breasting the steep ascent of
hill For a moment his horses flagand
for the first time the whip touches their
heavy flanks
The rebound of tbu whip strikes the
driver's eye which quickly fills with
tears
What matter! The crest is reached
and tho bounding horses fly wildly
down the steep declivity
Only a tear
Chemists have analyzed it: poets
have sung to It Dodd was to learn
wluit awful terrible suffering can He
hidden in tho crystal drop men call a
tear
The tear has frozen
Little blocks of ice which in vain
he trit-u to tear away hang to his eye-
lids Tho other tye lu sympathy is wet
and freezes
Maddened with pain and fear sight-
less be sits behind the flying horses
expecting each instant to be dashed to
pieces
On on on he knows not where
Suddenly sounds reach his ear the
busy hum of human life buzzes round
him he feels hands laid ou him then
a numbness steals over his brain and
he is lost in dark unconsciousness
Nearly a week the poor wretch lay
hovering between life and death with
one frozen foot amputated
But the tear — the cruel tear— its work
was done too well for forever the
sight had fled from his nervous eyes
forever the world was dark to him
Yes the flat had gone forth from tho
unseen Judge — an awful terrible con-
demnation: “Lame asd blixd pod
LIFE"
CHAPTER XVH
ESIB P1XD8 BOMKTirlXa
Life bed so long flowed on pleasantly
been kind to the boy and kindness was at the Fifth avenne mansion that Elsie
unfamiliar to Joe thought that fate was tired of perse-
Tho boy wu out of breath with run-1 cutlng her Her pupils were all she
Elag could wish loving affectionate dutl-
“Say boas” ho cried as soon as he
I could speak “there's a gang o' fellers
down at the hotol as says theyt goin’
ter hold a neck-tie social with you
a-doln’ the honors"
"What do you mean boy?"
"Why bang yer o’ course I"
“Whon?"
"To-night at seven sharp Thought
I'd crme an' toll yer so yer could get
yer shootiu’ irons ready"
“Good boy Jool Now do you want to
earn a couple of dollars from me?"
"Cert mister!"
“Then hurry down to Nicholson's
livery sable and fetch mo the team 1 or-
dered Stay you’d better drive on the
road to Marquette and pick me up near
tho gravel pit"
Though Dodd had no heavy baggage
to carry he had many preparations to
make for a long drive over such a road
as lay before him was a serious
thing to contemplate Presently how-
ful her eccentric mistress had not only
token her into favor but had aotually
mode a pet of her admitting her into
the family circle — nuy oven into the
sacred precincts of dining and drawing-rooms
on gala occasions Only last
night she hod been present at a grand
baU given in honor of the eldest daugh-
ter's attaining her majority and the
dazzle of the brilliant scene hod hardly
faded from her imagination than she
found herself crying her eyes ’out in
the keenest distress
That very morning it hod all hap-
pened At an early hour Mrs Grindlay
had demanded an Interview with her
in hor boudoir where she was sitting
flushed nervous and terribly out of
temper
“So Miss Whltford yon have condo-
pcended to come at lost” had been El-
pie’s greeting
"Really madam I made all haste'
the girl replied
“Of course you know why I have sent
for you?”
“No madam"
“What after yonr conduct lost
night!”
"My conduct lost night!"
“Oh you are oU innocence I suppose
nm alluding miss to your disgrace-
ful carryings on with Adolphus Gib-
son" "What the fatuous youth with the
eye-glass? Why I talked to him out of
sheer pity"
“Fatuous young man indeed! Do you
know Miss Wliitford that that young
gentleman is worth one hundred thou
sand dollars a year?"
‘I’m glad to hear it for his sake for
it would be difficult for him to earn his
own living"
“That is aU very fine" Mrs Grindlay
remarked severely "it is just such
treatment as that — for men are such
fools— that drove Mr Gibson to take
the step he did last night"
“May I ask what step he took mad
am?”
“As if you didn't know WeU if you
mnst hear it then be actually asked
my permission to call and pay his ad-
dresses to you I really never was so
shocked in my life"
“Does the shocking character of hit
proposal reflect on him or me?” Elsie
asked with provoking innocence
Mrs Grindlay flushed furiously
“I do believe you have no conception
of the word propriety You forget youi
position you forget his"
“And you yours madam”
“What you are insolent— and aftci
aU I have done for you You wUl seek
another home this day month Miss
Whitford"
“No madam to-day"
“Oh yes go off at once and leave me
with those tiresome children Then I
suppose you will pose as a martyr be-
fore Uncle Woodgrove and I shaU
never hear the last of it"
‘Do not fear that Mrs Grindlay I
wUl not stay another night in your
house but I will not carry my griev-
ances to that good old man”
“And as for money Since you are
so reasonable I will gladly give yon—”
“Just wbat you owe me nothing
more"
‘Then I think Miss Whltford it
would be as well not to say good-by to
the children it is no nse stirring up a
fuss over such a trifle"
"Not the slightest use" Elsie as-
sented and left the room dismissed
Back to her old lodging again
Then came a time of adversity of
perpetual daily disappointment enough
even to crash the high hopes of this
courageous girl Advertisements she
Answered by the score Now it was a
public speaker who wanted an amanu-
ensis an office that needed an attend-
ant a correspondent for a new com-
pany bnt the burden of their story was
Always the same — the advance of a few
hundred dollars as an assurance of
good faith— not on the part of the
bogus enterprise bat on behalf of the
anfortanatc applicant who was to em-
bark her services with very dubious
ibance of ever receiving payment
To add to her trouble her stock of
money was getting daily more and
more attenuated and in the midst of
All these worries an adventure occurred
co her whlch only plunged her deeper
into difficulty
One cold blustering day she was re-
turning from a fruitless hunt after em-
ployment when her eye was attracted
to a tall slouching man apparently a
(ramp in a very dilapidated condition
leading by the hand a very tired little
hoy
The child looked at her with a pitiful
fiance which went Btraiglit to her
leart Notwithstanding his dirty
clothes and nnkempt hair it was appar-
ent that be was a lovely boy
The man noticed her wistful glance
and looking round to see that no po-
liceman was in the neighborhood be-
gan to whine forth a talc of suffering
"Is this little boy yours?" she asked
“Weil no miss I’m a kcepin’ tho
kid for a gent as was to meet me hero
an' pay for my trouble but lie ain't
come nn’ if he don't turn up aforo
night by thunder I — "
The little fellow bad never taken his
eyes off tho girl’s face Suddenly he
snatched himself free from tho man's
grasp and flung himself sobbing upon
Elsie
‘Ob don’t you know me— don't you
know me— I’m Willie Wilders of Ore-
town!” "WHlio Wilders!" Elsie cried In
dazed wonder turning to the man for
explanation but that gentleman was
flying as fast as his lumbering feet
would carry him out of the way of dis-
agreeable questions
When once Elsie Whltford put her
band to the plow she did not stop to
coant the furrows so controlling her
curiosity sho bore her prize away to
her lodging where after pacifying her
landlady and enlisting the sympathetic
services of the domestic she plunged it
in a bath of hot water whence it came
forth pink dimpled and pretty as a lit-
tlo Uve Cupid Then she fed him and
when he had eaten to his heart's con-
tent sho counted her money and went
forth to purchase suitable clothes for
her poor little pensioner Not tlU then
did sho begin to ply him with questions
Ho could not tell her much The bad
man he said seized him when he was
walking In the woods ever so long ago
and had brought him by boat and train
n great dlstanoe Oh no the bad man
had not been very cross with him until
quite lately nor had they wanted food
until a few days ago
Tho next thing to do was to telegraph
the prospector but here another ob-
stacle was in the way A terrible storm
had swept off miles of wire so no mes-
sage could be got through nor was it
likely the clerk said that communica-
tions could be made under a week at
least She could write of course he
suggested but he was pretty cer-
tain that the railroad was blockaded
and he did not think a letter would fare
much better
This would not have been ao serious
only tho poor girl found that after her
rocent outlay she had only four dollars
remaining— not a very princely sum on
which to keep two persons in a city
like New York where everything is
always at war prices
Next day was Sunday Early on
Monday morning Elslo was trying to
resolve herself into a committee of
ways and moans The more sho pus
sled her brains the greater seemed her
dilemma— dollars were not clastic and
tb) wisest head could not make more
than a hundred cents out of them
“Thcro's a lady and gentleman down
In ( the parlor for you miss" It was
the friendly handmaiden who bore the
Bummons
Fully believing thoy were some peo-
ple whose advertisement she had am
swered sho bade' Willie keep out of
mischief and tripped downstairs for
tho Interview
Bnt she had hardly entered the room
than she found herself in the grasp of
a friendly hand and a pleasant voice
rang in her ears
“So we’ve run -you to earth at lost
bnt dearie mel How pale and out of
sorts you ore looking What a naughty
bad wicked girl you are to run away
lilce this"
’Oh Mr Woodgrove! I’m bo glad to
see you!" and the poor child's eyes
danced with unfeigned delight
Then a white-haired elderly lady
came forward and took tho girl's hand
with such a sweet look on her benevo-
lent face that Elsie involuntarily
raised herself on tip-toe and kissed her
a proceeding which seemed ao htigely
delight Mr Woodgrovo
“Didn’t I teU you so ma?” ho chuck
led “Told you you’d take to my little
governess the moment you set eyes on
her didn’t IT
Mrs Woodgrove laughed
“He's quite in love with you dear so
you must excuse his gushing manner
she said sweetly “Now tell me have
you secured any other position?"
“No” Elsie replied with tears weU-
lug “Hurrah!" cried Mr Woodgrove
“that's all right then so aU you've got
to do is to pack up your traps and come
along with us"
“Go with you sir — wljcre?”
"Why where would yon go buthomc
of course To Buffalo my dear Well
leave by this afternoon’s train for
“IS THIS LITTLE B0T YOUBS?”
dare say you'll be as glad os I am to get
away from the big city"
“Oh hut I'm afraid I cannot go with
you" Then Elsie told all her troubles
from beginning to end winding up
with tho exciting recital of her discov-
ery of Willlo Wilders who was forth-
with fetched downstairs and exhibited
to her wondering visitors
Mrs Woodgrovo of course fell In
love with him at once and kissed and
crooned over him as though ho had
been her own little lost darling a
course of petting to which the young
gentleman took with intense satis-
faction You say ho comes from Michigan?"
Mrs Woodgrove asked
“Yes from Orctown In tho upper
peninsula"
“From Orttmen ” ejaculated tho old
gcntlemnn “Why that's the very place
from which Frank Grey hailed"
"Frank Grcyl" Elsie cried blushing
crimson "Do you know him Mr Wood-
grove?" "Do we know him? nark at her
mal Do we know Frank Grey? WeU
I guess we da Why my dear child U
Is the comfort and hope of our lives
lie lives with us aud is as good as a son
to us Isn’t he Dorothy?"
“Indeed ho is" Airs Woodgrove as-
sented warmly
“And he once lived with ns" Elsio
murmured
“In a large wooden house on tho
top of a hill near a dreadful miner
Mrs Woodgrovo asked to Elsie's aston-
ishment “Yes indeed Those were very happy
days"
“So he seemed to think Oh now I
see it all 'If my stupid old man had
just condescended to give ns your
name when he first began to rovo
about you— for rove he did my dear—
instead of constantly alluding to you
as his ‘little governess' how much
mystification wo might have been
spared”
" ‘If is a big word though it has only
two letters" Mr Whltford sententious-
ly remarked (“However sU’s well that
ends well I have to do some business
In the city bo IH leave you to make
preparations for the journey I know
my wife does not want to come with
me for she's dono aU her shopping nnd
nothing will please her more than fix-
ing you and tho little chap for the long
Journoy"
As ho left the room his wifa ran Into
the hall to have a word with him
“One moment Marcus” she cried
laying her hand on his arm
“Wliat is it little woman?"
Then with beaming eyes Bhe impart-
ed the momentous secret she was burn-
ing to tell him
"Oh my dear old mnn she’s the very
identical girl that Frank Is in love with
Think of that nowl"
"No!”
"I'm certain of It"
“Why that’s the grandest Joke 1 ever
heard of Won't we have some fun
DoUy? The young dog to think he
turned np his nose at my pretty gov-
erness! Eh but I'll pay him out for It
when I get home"
It seemed to Elsie like a dream as
tho train bore tho happy party far
away from' a city where she had seen
so much disappointment to— aye to
wliat?— the future was so full of fate
so big with doubt
Nevertheless the dream was a golden
one
CHAPTER XV m
DODD FATS A DEBT
Of course at tills season of the year
the train which bore Elsio and her for-
tunes westward was snowbound and
equally of course Instead of reaching
Buffalo in tho small hours of tho morn-
ing it never rolled into its destination
tlU the day was well-nigh spent
As Frank Grey knew nothing of their
intended arrival he was not at tho sta-
tion to meet them so that sly old gen-
tleman seized upon his absence to malco
his preparations to explode that glo-
rious joke on his young friend he bad
been chuckling over ever since it entered
his head '
Thus when the borne was reached
and they had all rested and refreshed
themselves after their long trip he set
about putting his plans into execution
Willio was tired out and was put to
bed forthwith Elsie was consigned to
a cozy hreakfast-room at the back of
the house where she would he out of
the way till the critical moment arrived
—told to rest but you may be Buro
her little heart was beating too bois-
terously for any chance of hor obeying
such thoughtful orders
“Now my dear" he said to his wife
"you come with me for I can't trust
you out of my sight You’ll go and
spoil it all by telling him I know you
will"
“You dear old goose I sbaU enjoy
tho fun as much as you wUl I wouldn't
spoil your plot for a farm"
It was lucky that Grey was prompt
In his return from business for Mr
Woodgrovo fidgeted up to the window
a dozen times to see if he were coming
"He’s hero my dear! Now Dolly
behave yourself"
The young mnn burst Into the room
with a cry of welcome: “I'm so glad
to see you When did yon arrive? It
has been so dull without you"
He grasped the old man's hand and
shook it warmly but ho took tho old
lady in his arms and kissed her loving-
ly on both cheeks
“Oh Frank!” she cried aU radiant
“We've Buch a surprise for you"
"Dolly” Mr Woodgrove cried ap-
pealingly “remember your promise
Como and sit down Grey I've some-
thing of consequence to say to yon"
"A surprise for me!" Frank said "I
hope it Is a pleasant one"
“That depends on your own good
sense I’ve brought my wise little gov-
erness home with mo Frank"
“Oil I'm so glad"
“And ma and I think that if you arc
only amenable to duty she need never
go back again”
“I sir?"
“Yes you sir Fran!: it is timo yon
were thinking of gettihg married and
now is a splendid chanco for you”
‘You mean that I should marry this
lady?"
"If shell have you yes"
“But sir I cannot"
“You moan you will not"
"Well if you choose to put It so
strontrlv 1 will not There is not! li ra-
in this world I would not do to show
my gratitude aud affection for yon and
your noble wifo — nothing but this one
thing"
“Why?" '
“Because with aU my heart and soul
I love another"
“I don't believe it"
“Oh sir"
“So you distinctly and absolutely re-
fuse to ask my little governess to marry
you?"
“I do"
Hero Mrs Woodgrove could control
her good nature no longer
“Oh Frank wait tUl yon have seen
her”
"Bah" Shouted tho old roan “I'm
not going to have my little governess
nut on exhibition for approval"
to ns connsrrD1
Fend Bottled by Marriage
A feud lasting over ten years in which
blood was twice spilled once on a
church step has ended by the marriage
of William Ilyiund and Jessie Hotter ut
Maidstone Ont A decade ngo William
begun to court Jessie And her parents
seriously objected even to the point of
kicking Hyiund from the bouse setting
the dog at him blazing away at him
with a shotgun and later attacking Iiim
ou the church steps The church even
was divided on the affair: families were
set against each other and two or three
court eases grew ontof It Ilyiund had
ierseverance and Jessie was constant
and despite the combinations of clubs
shotguns and fierce dogs they succeed-
ed in ending their ten years' courtship
hen Jessie’s father nnd brother heiird
of the ending they decided that Hy-
liind hnd fairly won his bride nnd sent
word to him to come over to the bouse
that nil was forgiven Maidstone peo-
ple are singing psalms of rejoicing oer
the happy culmination of the long fight
— Chicago Chronicle
“In Italy he was tolling her “they make
Hour out of choatnuts" “Do tlieyl" she
answered sweetly “what n bonanza you
would be to them'1— Dotrolt Free From
8ns— “Papa has consented to a conserva-
tory off the ballroom and I've boon plan-
nlnglt" He— “Indeed I What is it going
to be filled wlthl" Bhe-“Sofas "-Truth
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of toe (cap or plain) size nnd
width Our Custom Dept will fill
a order Send for new Ulus- I
Catalogue to lioa tt
W L DOUCLA8 Brockton Mass
The Greatest Medical Discovaiy
of the Age
KENNEDY'S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY
DONALD KENNEDY of ROXBUHY MASS
Has dlscoyered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor frim the worst Scrofula
down to a common Pimple
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor) He nas now in his
possession ovr two hundred certificates
of its value all within twenty Miles of
Boston Send postal card for book
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle and a perfect cure Is warranted
when the right quantity is taken
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains like needles passing
through them the same with the Liver or
Bowels This is caused by the ducts be-
ing stopped and always disappears in a
week after taking it Read the label
If the stomach Is foul or bilioui it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary Eat
the best you can get and enough of it
Dose one tablespoonful in water at bed-
time Sold ty ail Druggists
This is the
CUPID
hair pin It has a
double set of spiral
curves and will not
slip out of the hair
It is made by
Richardson & De-
Lon Bros manu-
facturers of the fa-
mous DeLONG
HOOK and EYE
A
THE AERMOTOR CO SM half tbe world
windmill tnul mm Muon It hi teduoed me com of
Wind poww to liOihu It was It bn mu brmnch
wltouiM end uppUM Its surd ud repurl
V vi four door It ran ud duM furnlib a
A T bolter IrticlQ foe U mnn hw
O tt ftllkaa Dnmnlna
i ”V1 — www iuuuv uisil
utbon It ub Pumping end
W VT-r - Ouued Stool (ilrmnliodfter
Completion Windmill Tilting
iV ind Ftied Stool Towen stoolBun 8w
Frame stool Feed Cullen end Feed
WjRarlnden On ppllnUon It will name ono
III ( tbiuo orticlf mu it wtu furnlib nnui
ginnur lit u 13 lb uiut prim It utw dun
Turin ud Pump Of 11 Hud Send for nulwu
Itditri Ulb SocbwU od FtUow Strati Cblcaju
Treated free
CCEB
idi Vtte8l
Han
nnd MAf tfcoo
ma4 eatet pc
ntmeM nflMin Proto Irtt don iTwptw npidly dmppetr
nd in In day at Wist two-Oiini of all fip(oai art rrmovH
OOK nf Uitimonlila 1 nlurulou cure m pRIg
TREES 70 TBIU
1 KIIaLwniIhki ud (ik
FRUIT
akrn wiU4 hr
60LD plan U
Stark UililtM
I KukporMUi
Complete hWorjr of the great
rnuii with rur M MUcoU
nflfwr 8 mm lor & lu
Uluuud Wt klr Denver ( ol
ADIIIYV Cured In 1
ftfOFO
fAiiS
' u Ti
8t Cututb fiyrup
In lima Bold by ilnio
7
“L77T
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Morris and Harrison. Cheyenne Sunbeam. (Cheyenne, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1896, newspaper, March 20, 1896; Cheyenne, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2332835/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.