The Mulhall Enterprise. (Mulhall, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 4, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 20, 1897 Page: 3 of 4
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^ novel by
wslkii. collie.
INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION.
CHAPTER. XVIII.—(CONTINI «u.)
The question was a dangerous one
lo answer. Steventon left it to Cray-
fcrd to reply. Once again he answered
evasively.
"It doesn't follow, my dear," he j sake?" she said to Cray ford.
uat the two men were missing
together, because their names happen
to come together on the list."
Clara Instantly drew the inevitable
conclusion from that ill-considered re-
j\y.
r rank is missing from the party of
relief," she said. "Am I to understand
that Wardour is missing from the
huts?"
Both Crayford and Steventon liesl-
Irted. Mr* fv«»Word cast an indignint
look at them, and told the necessary
lie without a moment's hesitation!
"Yes!" she said. "Wardour is miss-
ing from the huts."
Quickly as she had spoken, she had
Ptlll spoken to late. Clara had noticod
the momentary hesitation on the part
of the two officers. She turned to
Steventon.
"l trust to your honor," she said
quietly. "Am I right, or wrong, In be-
lieving that Mrs. Crayford Is mis-
taken?"
She had addressed herself to the
right man of the two. Steventon had
no wife present to exercise authority
o\er him. Steventon, put on his honor
and fairly forced to say something,
owned the truth. Wardour had re-
placed an officer whom accident had
disabled from accompanying the party
of relief; and Wardour and Frank
were missing together.
Clara looked at Mrs. Crayford.
"You hear?" Bhe said. "It Is you
who arc mistaken; not I. What you
call 'accident*—what I call fate-
brought Richard Wardour and Frank
together as members of the same Ex-
pedition after all." Without w.iiting
for a reply, she again turned to Stev-
enton, and surprised him by changing
the painful subject of the conversa-
tion of her own accord.
"Have you been in the Highlands of
Scotland?" she asked.
"I have never been In the High-
lands," Steventon replied.
"Have you ever read, in books about
the Highlands, of such a thing as 'The
Second Sight?' "
"Yes."
"Do you believe In Second Sight?"
Steventon politely declined to com-
mit himself to a direct reply.
"I don't know wnat I might have
done If I had ever been in the High-
lands," he said. "As it is, I have had
no opportunity of giving the subject
any serious considerations."
"I won't put your credulity to the
test," Clara proceeded. "I won't ask
you to believe anything more extra-
ordinary than that i had a strange
lirti.m in England not very long since.
My dream showed me what you have
just acknowledged—and more than
that. How did the two missing men
come to be parted from their C3m-
panlons? Were they lost by pure ac-
cident, or were they deliberately left
tehind on the march?"
Crayford made a last vain effort to
check her inquiries at the point which
tney had now reached.
• Neither Steventon nor I were mem-
bers of the party of relief," he said.
"How are we to answer you?"
"Your brother Omcers who were
members of the party must have told
you what happened," Clara rejoined
"I only ask you and Mr. Steventon to
tell me what they told you."
Mrs. Crayford interposed again—
with a practical suggestion this time
"The luncheon Is not unpacked yet,"
she said. "Come Clara! this is our
business, and the time is passing.'
"The luncheon can wait a few min-
utes longer," Clara answered. Rear
with my obstinacy," she went on, lay
ing her hand carelessly on Crayford's
shoulder. "Tell me how those . two
came to be separated from the rest.
You have always been the kindest of
friends; don't begin to be cruel to me
now!"
The tone in which she made her eli
treaty to Crayford went straight to th<
sailor's heart. He gave up the hope-
less struggle; he let her see a glimpse
of the truth.
"On the third day out," lie said
"Frank's strength failed him. He fell
behind the rest from fatigue."
"Surely they waited for him
"It was a serious risk to wait for
him, my child. Their lives, and the
lives of the men they had left In the
huts, depended, in that dreadful eli
cato, on their pushing on. Rut Fiank
was a favorite. They waited half
day to give Frank the chance of re
covering bis strength.'
mere ^e stopped. There, the im
prudence Into which his fondness for
Clara had led him, showed itself plain
ly, and closed his lips,
It was too late to take refuge In si
Jence. Clara was determined on hear
Ing more. She questioned Steventon
rcxt.
.via Frank go on again after the
halfday's rest?" she asked.
"He tried to go on '
"And failed?"
"Yes."
"What did the men do when he
failed? Did they turn cowards? Did
they desert Frank?"
She had purposely used language
which might irritate Steventon Into
answering her plainly. He was a
young man; he fell Into the snare that
she had set for him.
"Not one among them was a cjwaid,
Mist* Burnham!" he replied, warmly.
"You were speaking cruelly and un-
justly of as brave a set of fellows as
ever lived. The strongest man among
them set the example; he volunteered
to stay by Frank and to bring him on
the track of the exploring party."
There Steventon stopped, conscious
o'i his side, that he had said too much.
Would she 88k him who this volunteer
!solved the fi ti re.
JOHN C BULLITT'S PE-
MARKABLE SUICIDE.
Thought l)«>i
Tli .tii lire
liKporlH
had put yet—referring to the volun-
teer, as if Steventon had already men-
tioned his name.
"What made Richard Wardour so
ready to risk his life for Frank's
Did he
do it out of friendship for Frank?
Surely you can tell me that? Carry
your memory back to the days when
you were all living In the huts. Were
Frank and Wardour friends at that
time? Did you never hear any angry
words pass between them?"
There Mrs. Crayford saw her oppor-
tunity of giving her husband a timely
hint. "My dear child!" she said. "How
can you cxpcct him to remember that?
There must have been plenty of quar-
rels among the men, all shut up to-
gether, and all weary of each other's
company, no doubt."
"Plenty of quarrels!" Crayford re-
peated—"and every one of them made
up again."
-—a every one of them made up
ngain," Mrs. Crayford reiterated, in her
turn. "There! a plainer answer than
that you can't wish to have. Now are
>ou satisfied! Mr. Steventon, come
and lend a hand (as you say at sea)
with the hamper—-Clara won't help
me. William! Don't stand there do-
ing nothing. This hamper holds a
great deal; we must have a division
01" labor. Your division shall be lay-
ing the tablecloth. Don't handle it
in tnat clumsy way! You unfold a
tablecloth as if you were unfurling a
sail. Put the knives on the right and
the forks on tho left, and the napkin
anu bread between them. Clara! if
you are not hungry in this fine air, you
ought to be. Come and do your duty
come and have some lunch."
She looked up as she spoke. Clara
ppeared to have yielded at last to the
onspiracy to keep her In the dark.
She had returned slowly to the boat-
hcuse doorway; and she was standing
alone on the threshold, looking out.
Approaching her to lead her to the
luncheon-table, Mrs. Crayford could
ear that she was speaking softly to
herself. She was repeating the fare-
well words which Richard Wardour
had spoken to her at the ball.
'A time may come when I shall
forgive you. Rut the man who has
robbed me of you shall rue the day
when you and he first met.' Oh. Frank!
Frank! does Richard still live—with
your blood on his conscience, and my
image in his heart?"
Her lips suddenly closed. She
started, and drew back from the door-
way, trembling violently. Mrs. Cray-
ford looked out at the quiet seaward
view.
Anything there that frightens you.
my dear?" she asked. "I can see noth-
ing—except the boats drawn up on
the beach."
"I can see nothing either, Lucy."
"And yet, you are trembling as if
there were something dreadful In the
view from this door."
There is something dreadful! I
feel it—though 1 see nothing. I feel
it—nearer and nearer in the empty
air, darker and darker in the sunny
light. I don't know what it is. Take
me away. No, not out on the beach. I
an't pass the door. Somewhere else!
somewhere else!"
Crayford looked round her, and
noticed a sccond door at the inner
end of the boat-house. She spoke to
her nusband.
"See where that door leads to, Wil-
liam."
Crayford opened the door. It led
into a desolate inclosure—half garden,
Tialf yard. Some nets, stretched on
poles, were hanging up to dry. No
other objects were visible—not a liv-
ing creature appeared in the place.
"It doesn't look very inviting, my
dear,' said Mrs. Crayford, "I am at
your service, however. What do you
"Wrho are you?"
He answered in a hollow voice:
"A starving man."
He advanced a few steps, slowly and
pcinfully, as If he was sinking uuder
fafigue.
"Throw me some bones from the
table," he said. "Give me my share
along with the dogs."
There was a madness as well as
hunger in his eyes while he spoke these
words. Steventon placed Mrs. Cray-
fcrd behind him, so that he might
be easily able to protect her in case
of need, and beckoned to two sailors
who were passiug the door of the
boat-hou^e at the time.
"Give the man some bread and
meat," he said, "and walk near him."
The outcast seized on the bread and ,
meat with lean, long-UAlled hands that near thi bed upo,. which tho corpse
,h„ l»v. A letter found In Hie apartment
addressed to Joshua F. Rullitt, jr.,
SEA COAST DEFENSE.
Jeneral Mile*'
K squired
!. — Secretary
'htimati'H for
submitted by
will be snb-
Nkw York, Nov. '.ft. — John C. Bul-
litt, jr., of Duiuth, Minn., was found
dead to-day in a room at the Central
Railroad hotel on Liberty street The
man liad apparently committed sui-
cide, as bottles containing hydro-
chloric acid, cynadido of potassium
ami nitric acid were found on a table
looked like claws. After the flist
mouthful of food he stopped, cons d-
ered vacantly with himself, and broke
the bread and meat Into two portions.
One portion he put into an old can-
vas wallet that hung over his shoul ler;
the other he devoured voracici My.
Steventon questioned him.
*»nere do you come from?"
"From the sea."
»? recked?"
"Yes."
Steventon turned to Mrs. Crayford.
"There may be some truth In the poor
wretch's story," he said. "I heard
something of a strange boat hiving
been cist on the beach, thirty or forty
miles higher up the coast. When were
you wrecked, my man?"
The starving creature looked up from
bis food, and made an effort to collect
his thoughts— to exert his memory. It
was not to be done. He gave up the
attempt in despair. His language,
when he spoke, was as wuu as his
lccks.
(TO BK continued.)
Rig Stone Gap, Wise county, Ya., read
as follows:
"Dear Joshua:—I have decided to
eud it all. You will, 1 know, be in-
terested in knowing how a person
feels, who is about to stop into the un-
known world. Hence, 1 will tell you
what my feelings are.
"1 wonder, I doubt, 1 hope, but
over all the wonder ami the doubt and
the hope, a feeling of intense ci ri-
osity prevails. What is the future? 1
believe 1 know, but it is only a belief
1 am very curious to verify it. The
feeling* of fear is absent 1 am going ■ proaciiea i0
from here to the Eden Musee to play (iaiveston, Tex.. 8112,000
chess with the automaton. This fact : L ul San Franc
illustrates my mental condition, per- , >«i,ooo; Couinbia river, 8tl
haps, more than a volume of my writ- | Sound, Si, 140,000; Lake
its, 000.
In his report to the secreti
eral Miles made no reference
Ktcrftury Alter Approves •
Kst lin*t <-*—Largo Kumi
Washington, Nov. 1
Altrer has approved the
the coast defense work
General Miles, and they
initted to ( hairinan Cannon of the
House committee on appropriations
some days before the opening of tho
session. In accordance with the law
the expenditures at the different sea-
ports are itemized, but the secretary
will ask for authority to spend tho
money In lump sums, so that work on
any particular defense may be hurried
to meet emergencies
General Miles divides the fortifica-
tion appropriation as follows: Mouth
of the Penobscot river, $170,00 >; mouth
of the Kennebec river, Sl'.iS.OOO; Port-
land, Me., 81,175,000; Portsmouth, N.
II., 8.">77.000; Boston harbor, 81,347,000;
New Bedford, Mass, $.'04,000; Narra-
gansett bay, Svlii.OOO; defenses of Long
Island Sound, 81,070,000; eastern en-
trance to New York. 8480,000; south-
ern entrance to New York, 81,409,000;
approaches to Philadelphia, 8411,u00;
approaches to Baltimore, 8490,000; ap-
proaches to Washington, D C., 8004,000;
Hampton Roads, 8403.000; approaches
to Wilmington, N. C , 8073.000; Charles-
ton harbor. 8130,00; approaches to Sa-
vannah, Ga., 841.'1,000; Key West , Fla.,
850,000; Pensacola harbor, 933,00u; ap-
proaehes to Mobile, Ala., 8307,000; ap* |
New Orleans, 8310,000;
x . 8l 12,000; San Dicg
Get the pipes an
protected before frost
and doe* some dnin;<i
hydrants all
weather comes
• before vou are
it.
A nttb
proves very expensive
Another victim of slugbali has been
put under the soil, llis name was An-
drew llasche, and his nock was broken
in a socalled game at Steinway, N. .
recently. It is said that he was a "tall,
well built young fellow of 10, a fast
runner and a splendid player. How
many more lives must be sacrificed in
this brutal and degrading sport before
public opinion will suppress it.
Rook agents are supposed to be very
smart, but they are not in it with deal
ers in Christmas goods. No oi is |
compelled to buy subscription books,
unless he wants them, but everyone
must buy Christmas presents, of be
tabooed by society.
Inventors in India are not as slow a*
might be supposd. A cooking box.
introduced by a Hindoo, is run by solar
heat It i* 1 inert with mirrors, concen-
trating the rays on a heater of copper,
covert l with glass, ami performs its
work quickly in boiling, baking or
ii with*
If the
idercd proper to leaut
foetball game is play-
football by the Prim
parents may as
fort with him m
o be inveig*
he game of
Indents, his
?! 1 take all the com-
that they can get.
ing.
In these days
essential to ha
the lights. Tin
which can be a
made to turn oi
desired hour.
\ < ilimteli
Tho franchise of «
ctrcity it
somebody turn out
switches art; made
ichcd to a clock and
electric lights at any
Ah a result of rtvent games of Har-
vard several of the football men have
been put on crutches or sent to the
hospital. An endowment for a foot-
ball hospital seems lo be one of the
chief needs of universities of today.
The Prince of Wales spends many
hundreds of pounds a year of diamond
and other pins, brooches, and so forth.
They are presented to all sorts and
conditions of men and women for
trilling services and eat largely into
the pojal pi Ivate income*
The whole coast of the Gulf of Cali-
fornia nbounds in pearls, and last year
- ;mmioo worth was harvested in Lomer
California alone. Pearl fishing is the
entire occupation of the natives, and
La Pez, the headquarters, a city of the
peninsula, with about 200'I inhabitants,
is solely dependent upon the industry.
Dead heats stand so well in some
eoinmunities that they expect an apol-
ogy every time they are thinned.
.Mi-.
sts refund money,
good swallow-
SURPRISE FOR THE OLD MAN.
Tl»e Punching Hag Elasticity Was
Wholly Unexpected.
One of those big, hardy men who got
Into the pine woods early, endured the
hardships of a pioneer, finally made a
fortune and then came to Detroit as
one of the favored spots on earth ir.
which to live, has a young son who
aspires to athletic honors nnd has a
big room in the barn equipped as a
gymnasium, says the Detroit Free
Press. The old gentleman was a pow-
erful man in his day and had to deal
with refractory woodsmen who yielded
to nothing but muscular suasion. It
is difficult for a person like him to
realize ' hat age draws on strength and
activity
One t.fternoon last week the fatliet
went by special invitation to see the
gymnasium. The first thing to attract
his attention was a punching bag. one
of those arrangements that comes back
when you hit it, and comes back harder
the harder you hit it. When its uses
were explained to the old giant of the
woods, he promptly announced that
he'd either "bust the thing or knock it
through the c;iling."
Drawing back as if to fell an ox, the
father let go, and there was a thud as
though a trolley car had collided with
an elephant. Refore the air had
ceased to quiver there was a quick,
but subdued biff. The bag had come
back, driving the puncher's cigar half
way down his throat, filling his whisk-
ers with hot ashes and starting the
blood from his prominent noce. With
such a whoop as used to waken the
tciioes of the north woods the old gen-
tleman went at the bag. And the bag
stayed right with him. It was literally
give and take, the maddened puncher
tearing around as If he were fighting
bees and throwing a ton into every
punch. The coachman and the stable
boy had to be called up to he'.p part
the old man and the punching bag.
Then the son had to hide the shot-
gun, for the pulling, used-up father
vowerl all kinds of vows that he would
get even with that "autermatlc slug-
ger."
rit-
ing would. Death seems to me to be j
merely an event of no more import-
ance, say, than breakfast. I love I
life and hate to leave it, but tho sum- |
mons has been served and 1 must
answer. And now, good-by. Wc will
meet again. Your brother,
John C. Rullitt, Jr."
REVOLT AGAINST SIMPSON.
>, Cal., Si,-
i,00i); Puget
Chauiplain,
Defeated
th Ku
pul lit* In So
Counties Sore at Jerry.
Hutchinson, Kan., Nov. 15.-The op-
position of Judge McKay, Senator Ti-
tus, W. L. Rrown nnd Warden Landis to
Congressman Jerry Simpson had been
discounted by their known personal
hostility to him, but now they
have been re-enforced by the Popu-
list candidates of Rarber, Harper,
Sedgwick and other counties of
tho Seventh district, who were de-
feated in the recent election and
who openly charce their defeat to the
revolt of the followers of Simpson.
In Sedgwick county the anti-Simpson
Populists are aggressive and in Iteno,
Harvey and McPherson counties,
where heretofore a word against Jer-
ry hatl been considered treason among
Populists, there are all the elements
for a revolt against the old leader
The free silver Republicans, who are
a part of the allied forces, never were
Simpson men and they will nut only
be willing to make a change in stand-
ard bearers, but, if desired, they will
furnish the new man themselves.
ble complications with Spain, but said:
"Although tho general desire of our
people Is to maintain a condition of
peace with all nations, and the policy
of the government is one of good will
and peaceful relations with all others,
yet nothing could be more injudicious
than to remain in a condition of inse-
curity, peril the lives of millions and
the accumulated wealth of many gen-
erate ns to be destroyed or endangered
by any foreign power with which we
are liable to come in contact, and the
general plan for defense which has
been adopted by the government
shculd be steadily pursued until tfie
nation is in a condition of security and
safety which a due regard for self
preservation would demand."
TRIES TO BUY A NAVY
from Linton, <>
nf sixty-five tierc
eat has just been se
to Rotterdam.
• lllontl Deep*
mis n dean skin 1
"iiM'arots,( aihlv « 'nthn
,,1 ami keeps it 'clean. I
liver and driving all ii
the' bo.lv. Heginto.ln
People don't look-as j
ing raw oyMers as they feel.
TO CI III: A COLD IN ONK DAY.
! Take Laxative 1 train
Druggists refund the mi
Lots of people are robbed win
say anything about it.
had a friend who did not
bullish pimples, boil*. blot.-lie- t.laekliei.d-.
nnd that sickh biliouscomplexiou b\ taking
(Warots. beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists* satisfaction guaranteed, IQc,95c,oOo.
Daniel Webster: "God grants liberty
only to those who love it and arc al-
ways reatly to guard and defend it.*'
CURES RHEUMATISM. ETC.
\ lie
ery Tim
Working
Spain Negotiate* for the
llattleshlps.
DUN'S TRADE REVIEW
(older and Stormy Weather Help
trlbutlon of Wli
Xkw York. Nov. L"
Co."s Weekly Review -
Colder and more stormy weather, so '
long needed to accelerate distribution
of winter goods, has materially helped !
in some quarters, and tho result- j
ing improvement in retail trade is !
mentioned in nearly every Northern i
dispatch this week, so that orders I
to fill stocks have been encouraging.
and in some branches the multitude j
of demands for immediate delivery
shows that the distribution to con-
sumers has already gone much beyond |
the expectations of dealers. Rut this
is ii >tyet the general rule, and with
many complaints of delayed trade
from other quarters there still re-
mains the extensive shrinkage caused
by fever and quarentines at the South.
GORMAN IN A NEW ROLE
London, Nov. 15.—In connection
with Spain's hunt for warships, Amer-
ican diplomats have learned that
l Spain recently endeavored to make an
I arrangement with Japan whereby, in
i the event of war with the United
I States, the thirty or so warships now
building in various shipyards for
I Japan would be transferred to Spaiu
Upon the failure of the negotiations
the Spanish government entered upon
i a deal with Chili for the transfer to
i the Spanish flag of several vessels
j about completed for the Chilean re-
public.
The diplomats referred to express
| the opinion that from tho standpoint
j of international law, the completion
fc"*i»c I of such a deal might bo regarded a?
— R. t.. Dun & I __ »
f Trade says:
an unfriendly act toward the United
States.
Resides the Rothschilds, other prom-
inent financiers of London and Paris
have entirely cut off the monetary
supplies which Spain has hitherto suc-
ceeded in obtaining.
CLEVELANDON INN ISSUE
by-
i View#.
Times-Her-
The most prevailing afflictions that
for a century have been engaging the
most scientific skill of the medical
world are rheumatism, neuralgia, ca-
tarrh, asthma, la grippe and their kin-
dred ailments. The country Is full of
sufferers from these complaints. Al-
though the most learned experts of tlie
medical profession have labored fur a
century to produce a curative, until
quite recently no positive results were
effected. To the Swanson Rheumatic
Cure Co., 167-69 Dearborn street, Chi-
cago, belongs the credit for having
produced the new remedy. It is being
extensively advertised under the
trade mark of "Five Drops." Tho
trade mark is self-explantory. Five
drops make a dose. '1 he effect is mag
ical. In days gone by other alleged
cures have been marketed with the
promise to take effect in thirty days
or more. Five Drops begins to cure
at once. Immediate relief is felt. In
order to more effectively advertise its
merits the company will for the next
thirty days send out 100,000 of their
sample bottles of this positive I
cure for 25 cents a bottle by mail pre-
paid. Large bottle, 300 doses, $1 (for
thirty days 3 bottles $2.50.) Those Buf-
fering should take immediate advant- /
age of this generous ofTer and writ-
them to-day.
SI,00 FOR YOUR PHOTOGRAPH.
PROPOSITION I.
SQI'AW VINE WINE CERTIFICATES.
Write us 1st How Ions you have uned or
•••I l l»r. siiuiaoiiH Squaw Vino Wine. 2nd
S- i l>i.,< ns, s it cured. 3d t.lve Humeri of
it i-iin.l. Illi Stain the dlflerenc#
In! \\ ii ii it; htreiifcta nnd notion snd the
Hr« nulli nn.l aetloa «>f Mcl-Uree's Wlno of
t v lui. on receipt of letter endowing re-
n nth till, n l lu»toi;rnph we will m-im1 you a
01.00 iiottlc Bquuw Vino Wlno (FltKK).
PROPOSITION 2.
I,1 YEll MEDICINE CERTIFICATES.
Wrlto us 1st How long you have known,
ti' • or sold Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Mcdl-
eine. 2nd state DiseaueH It eared. 3d (iivo
name.-! of those cured. 4th Sin to tho differ*
• m o helm-en its strength and netloa and
t!;«■ MretiKth mid notion of J. II. Zellin
nnd tho ( hiittn-
:i, . Mid ii-inc < I'.'H "Mack UruiiKht," both
'I f. .lit Jl : II \\ ll'i.' • "I l.'""l • II lid
Mi i.i.i of lh il>H, nnd have sold at ahout S
ct t . i • r pooling-, nnd should not retail at
. vei- lu cents if eoiiNinners aro not Imposed
• i- ma sin mons Liver Medl-
cine, mado from tho purest nnd moHt enre-
I:ji 1 y selected l>rii^h, re^nrdlehstif cost, with
the lhilba of tho Hoots nnd Stems of the
II.-rhs hy our secret process extracted and
i Tli.it
She offered her arm to Clara as she
spoke. Clara refused it. She took
Crayford's arm, and elvg to him.
"I'm frightened, dreadfully fright-
ened!" she said to him faintly. "You
keep with me—a woman is not protec-
tion; I want to be with you." She
looked round again at the boat-house
doorway. "Oh!" sue whispered. "I'm
cold all over—I'm frozen with fear of
this plrc?. Come Into the yard! Come
Into the yam: '
"Leave her to me," said Crayford to
his wife. "I will call you if she doesn't
get better in the open air."
He took her out at once, and closed
the yard door behind him.
"Mr. Steventon! do you understand
thif ?" asked Mrs. Cravford. "What
car she possibly be frightened of?"
She put the question, still looking
mechanically at the door by which her
husband and Clara had gone out. Re-
ceiving no reply, she glanced round at
Steventon. He was standing on the
opposite side of tho lurc'.ieon-table,
with his eyes lixed attentively on the
view from the main doorway of the
brat-house. Mrs. Crayford looked
where Steventon was looking. This
time, there was something visible. She
Fay the shadow of a human figure pro-
jected on the stretch of smooth yellow
sand in front of the boat-house.
In a moment more, the figure ap-
peared. A man came slowly into view,
and stopped on the threshold of the
door.
Maryland Senator llat III* Eve on Con-
Kre*A and on ttie White llou*e.
Hai.timohk, Md., Nov. 15.—Senator
; Gorman's close political friends have
had a conference and decided to run
; him for Congress next year in the
j Fifth district They say that at the
s lie will come out strong
A Picture of Medieval KitRland.
Not seldom 1 please myself with try-
ing to realize the face of medieval
England, writes William Morris; the
many chases and great woods, thfi
stretches of common tillage and com-
mon pastures quite unenclosed, the
rcugli husbandry of the tilled parts,
the unimproved breeds of cattle,sheep, proper ti
and swine; especially the latter, so | for silver.
lank and long and lathy, looking so i If elected to the house of represent-
strange to us; the strings of pack | atives and the house has a free silver
horses along tlio bridle rodes, the Eean- majority nothing In the world, it is
tiness of the wheel roads, scarce any claimed, could prevent his being
except those left by the Romans, and | chosen speaker of the Hfty-sixth con-
these made from monastery to monas- tfross- *n this position, with the
tery; the scarcity of bridges, and peo- fatronago and power of the ollice in
pin using ferries instead, or fords : 'I'0 c^utuumi °f tl,u eQmimttees of
where they could; the little towns well , the ho"f' ho, "ou111d 1,6 n, ,°™l<'able
bechurched, often walled; the villages I comPetltor of Mr' "r-v'ul ,or thc Dem"
just where they are now (except for
The Ex-rrealdeut Oeelitres
terle* Cannot Alter I
Chicago, Nov. ly—tin
aid prints the following:
••Pbikckton, N J., Nov. la.—To the
Editor: 1 do not care if all the synods
and presbyteries in tlie country were
to offer an adverse decision, it would
be no good reason why I should alter
my opinion. I aiu very sorry that I)r.
Shields has been bothered over this
matter, as he is an old and very dear
friend of mine. Otherwise the action
of the presbytery does not affect ine
in the least. When I signed the peti-
tion for tho liquor license for the
Princeton inn I in no sense committed
a wrensr, and if the same proposition
came up for my consideration again I
would do the same thing.—Urover
Cleveland."
There are two kinds of robbery; law-
ful and unlawful.
No-To-Uac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
1 pure. 5(>c. (I. All drugglvts.
men strong, hi
Human pat
nnot ho wold nt lehs than 2ft
cenis. The ro'ison of thc difference Is this:
on June .".'th, IH.1.1. the Supreme Court
enjoined J. 11. /.ellin X Co. from manufnet-
i. : i j ii ixl eeliliiK medicine under the name
of or. SIuiuioiim' Liver Medicine." #
/. illu'Hanswer toour bill wild, the medl-
ci.H was designed nH "cheap nepro modi*
cine lor tho negroes of the MlHRlmlnpl Val-
I. v." And /.ellin'Hmanager testltied in the
ciim?, nnd /.e|lln'HadvertlM.'inenteBald "that
nil tin) Liver Medh Ine they make Is mado by
the mi formula." What rat)re conclusive
n idem •* could there bo that all their Liver
Medieiuo is "chenp negro medicine?"
Again, tho l'nlted Slates Court, In th®
Xi iliu ease nt KnoxviMe.Tenn.,enjoined the
old proprietors of tho article now called
'• IJlark Draught" from perpetrating fraud
l y u-liig tho words constituting our l.ado
mime, and "lllack Draught" was not known
till after lsT'\; yet they falsely advert! no that
It v. iiHestiiidished in 1840,and lilcho.ir tri<de
!i,M"U i;ii; thi-ir cii*t>.m.'i-s to untruthfully
r<" present it ns thOHiimo iih our genuine nrti-
ele. tlicv giving color of truth to tho dc-
ei-plI' u by publishing tho ploture of a Dr.
• i: -nons on their wrapper, thereby asso-
rhi ti Mi; their nrtlolo with our Dr. >1. A. Sim-
mons' Liver Medicine, which lie established
in l*l<>, and every pn-kago of which has
boruo his picture sineo IRoO.
on receipt or letter enclosing a recently
ta!.' n Photograph wo will mail you a $1.00
Package Liver Medicine (FPKK).
C. F. SIMMONS MED. CO.,
St. Louis, Me.
RUSSIA BLOCKS
TURKEY
unity Arrenrs
ocratic nomination for the presidency.
CHAPTER XVIII.
HE man was a sln-
[ *y* later and terrible
object to look at.
His eyes glared
like the eyes of a
wild animal; his
fc that have nothing but the ohurch
left to tell of them), but better and
populous; their churches, some
bic and handsome, some small and
curious, but all crowded with altars
and furniture, and gay with pictures
and ornament; the many religious
houses, with their glorious architec-
ture, the beautiful manor houses,some
of them castles oi c\ the survivals from
an earlier periou; some new and ele-
gant; some out of all proportion,small
for the importance of their lords. How
strange it would be to us if we could
be landed in fourteen century Eng-
land; unless we saw the crest of some
familiar hill we ehould not know Into
what country of the world we were
come; the name Is left, scarce a thing
else.
Ka»r»
This Is a d*y of all sorts of advertis-
ing competitions. One of the oddest
is reported from England by the Lon-
don Telegraph;
A traveling circus recently paid a
visit to Clltheroe, and as an attraction,
offered a prize to the man who could,
as the Lancastrians term it, "pull th'
ugliest mug "
The rules laid down were that each
person should have "thiee tries." Com-
petition ran high, some of the contor-
head was bare; his t|ong being horrible to behold. After
long gray hair was I alj done their beat, tte clown, who
torn and tangled; j Lcle(j as judge, coolly confronted a
TO SEIZE BOLIVIA
Reported Drelhuntl of Chile, Pern and
Argentine.
Nf.w York, Nov. 13.—A dispatch to
the Herald from Valparaiso, Chill,
says: "A plan for a tlreibund of Chili,
Peru and Argentina is in existence,
which, if adopted by the three govern-
ments, will wipe Bolivia off the South
American map. Chili, l'eru and Ar-
gentina dividing her territory."
Itrjrmi Honors (ieorge.
Nkw York, Nov. 12.—William Jen-
nings Bryan has contributed 8100 to
the Henry George memorial fund.
He telegraphed that it gave him great
pleasure to add his name to the sub-
scription roll. Many of the subscrip-
tions that come in are from children.
his miserable gar-
ments hung about
him In rags. He j
stooii In the doorway, ti speechless fig-
ure of misery and want, staring at the
was? No. She went straight on with the well-ipiead table like a hungry dog
>mo«t ambarraaslng question Uiftt she Ste\enton spoke to Ulm.
man sitting In the audience, who wag
noted for his ugliness, and said
"Tha e won th' prlzo, owd mon."
"Me?" said the aatonished Individu-
al; "wha' aw Worn't tryln* for't!"
"Tha'd no need to try," said thc
clowu; "tha's won It wl'oul.'
Stricken While at Dinner.
Nkw York, Nov. 12.—Henry August
Hurl but. one of New York's leading
tinanciers, died at the dinner table
last evening at his home, ill West
Twentieth street, from heart disease.
Piatt Name* Illi Men.
Washington, Nov. 13. — Senator
Piatt of New York had a long confer-
ence with the president yesterday, in
which the New York political situa-
tion was gono over and the Senator
Indicated what he would like to have
done in the matter of appointments.
rnyiiient of Old War Indo
Most Precede Navy Reorganisation
Constantinople Nov. 15.—The Rus-
sian embassy here has notiticd tho
Turkish government that, if Turkey
intends to apply part of the Greek war
indemnity to an increase of the Turk-
ish armaments, Russia will demand
the payment of the unpaid arrears of
the liusso-Turkish war indemnity,
amounting to S'1,500,000. This has
strongly impressed the diplomatic
corps, who believe that it is directed
against the plans to reorganize tho
Turkish navy.
protects many a
chump.
Piso's Cure for Consumption h the best
nf all cough cure.". - -George W. Lot/.,
Fubuclier, La., August 26, 1»»5.
No man is as good as a good bond
i.igned by several good men.
FITS •Vrmunently' Jure*!. Nofits orno~»ousn«Mafter
«.l Dr. Kline h Great. Nerva Restorer.
When two brothers marry girls in
the same family it is a sign that if
there are any more girls in the family,
they are worth going after.
Rail's
Vegetable Sicilian
ibairrmewtrff
It is a renewtr, because
it makes new again.
Old hair is made new ?
the gray changed to the
color of youth.
Knockoeud, by Lumbago?
It*a because you don't cure It with ST. JACOBS OIL, which pen-
etrates to the seat of tho pain and subdues, soothes, cures.
"V
Meel Tubing Combine.
Tolkdo, Ohio, Nov. 13.—At last a
itrong combination of steel tubing
manufacturer* has beep perfected,ami
the new corporation will absolutely
represent Do per cent of the tubing
put put r*f " • Wv
Vesuvius' Latest Caper.
Napi.es, Nov. 13.—The eruption oi
Mount Vesuvius which began on Mon-
day last, is increasing in activity. Tho
spectacle is grand. Columns of smoke
and tongues of tlamc are belching from
the central crater, while showers of
cinders aro falling.
The Thread Monopoly No Success.
London, Nov. 15.—Shares of "The
Coates," as the great thread monopoly
company is known, drooped eleven
points to-day on the presentation ol
an unfavorable annual report, allow-
ing that the profits during the past
year have fallen off 81,500,000.
Miss Perkins lleeomes Mrs. Lett*.
Washington, Nov. 1:1. —Cora Perk-
ins, daughter of the late ex-Senator
Perkins of Kansas was yesterday alter-
noon married to Colonel Frank Craw-
ford Letts of Iowa, at the church of
the Covenant
candy
cathartic
r ^ ^ cathartic u
cure constipation
ALL
DRUGGISTS
Death of Note'l Prelate.
Madhid, Nov. 15.—The bishop of the
dioeese of Majorie, lieleario Isles, who
last September excommunicated Senor
•I. Navvarro Evereter, minister of
finance in the cabinet of General Mar-
eelo do Azearrago, for an alleged eon-
version of church property to govern-
ment uses, is dead.
CURE YOURSELF!
I n.* Hi# Ci f..r unnstnral
I dim lunges, In limn uihI i>'in,
| irritutii'iia or ulcerations
11 uco us meuibrunes.
11 less, and not astria*
\\thcevuis Chemical Co. «'"t m poisonous.
Wold by IlrngflsU,
or sent In plain wrapper.
cpsld. fo#
FREE! FREE! FREE!
A hnn.1w.nii' Knnk"l>l.mondHlni{ or Pin ilven
(re.- with I'll. 11 uriiiT fur tin) lii-uutlful iilcturn,
ROCK OF ACES
'hes. Palnte'"
colors and copied fr«»
original painting
fre<'. Every family
ant28Inches. Painted by hand In 18 different
colors nn.l cu|il.-.l frum (V url~ -
Only $1.00each delivered free.
KliotildliMveone. Don't delay. ™,.„ »
im,ti* nt our rink Money returned If not
•ntllifii''1urv MANHATTANTHJBLISIIINOCO.,
61 Warren Street, New York City.
IMustrntfnl American Sold.
Nkw York,Nov. 15,—Lorillard Spen«
cer, fore eight years proprietor of the
Illustrated American, has sold the en-
tiro property, including plaut and
good will, t~ a syndicate o' <iap'*»l*
Utfr
a | a H I | Itflswllef it* SMilr?
Alaska Gold ssaSs
Handr.d.of KpacUlttss allsss thsa wSolssUs prtess.vis:
K««lM SMfclMS, HUyMss, 0r«»««, Sllfr
I •rrlaar*. t arts, S«««Im, llsrMM, Ssfes. Ssss. BUls,
teistar fes
Imanii: Mill*, tr.« Ihn, Ml»ri, WstshtS,
IU|, Si,,rV. Kl»?fti«r, a«lln*il. ruifurn »»d t ousUr ■' >1 MS.
^ S*MI ferries
Ill S»«U l.f.r... SI. tJIIUIKI KALI CO., Ckl««% Hfc
SOUTHERN
• ■ I IA !J.
I.vi ry bomeeeeker should address slther J. W.
MKKKY, A. O. I'. A.. Manchester, low as W. A.
KKI.LONO, A. O. P. A., I.oul«*llls, Ky., or 8. O.
HATCH, r>. I'. A.. Cincinnati. O., for a free ropy of
"lie II.M XOIH I'KM'K %li RAILKOAb'S
80UTUKHN HOMKHhl KERS' tlUIDK.
Health's Complexion
" Hathene " Is not a nicdlelaa. It to
Nature s pure antiseptics, prepured In tabiei
form to in! dissolved In tlie bath
bowl. It assists Nature in cleanain* »•
skin and keeplngit healthy and sweet ltd^
odorizes persplroUon. Send live ^-t'ent stamps
and wo will send you two dor.cn tablet^
IlofBKHoi.n Nki k-vmry to.,
bSjrru
In time.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Scarr, James H. The Mulhall Enterprise. (Mulhall, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 4, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 20, 1897, newspaper, November 20, 1897; Mulhall, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc285729/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.