The Hennessey Kicker. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 220, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1899 Page: 2 of 8
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USES PE-RU-NA FOR CATARRH OF
THE STOMACH.
ft
j2pj5nyaffil0
Jliliiii)
>T0 LONGER ASLEEP. [ T!'° f"!h ,ate of New "
I is about 0 per 1,000. Improved drain*
I age conditions will lower It easily to
few Orleans Beginning to Recog- !": L',J,"pleilon of the sewer
5 6 | "I-"' " d paving systems and an abun.
| dantsupply «>r pure water would, speu)t
i"W from scientific experience, reduco
nize Her Own Importance.
.'iiatom* nn«| Condition* BtiiiInK for
IvDturlcM tilvlBK Way to Muil-
*rn Ideas mid I'p to Uat«*
Iuiproveme nt*.
(Special New Orleans (La.) Letter.|
New Orleans has been the Kip
lan Winkle of American cities. For
years she has slept and allowed
?reat opportunities to pass her door
jnheeded. The good things that
might have been hers for the asking
were waved aside with indifference,
sometimes with contempt. Blessed by
it to ten or even nine per 1,000.
Preparatory to these far-reaching
innovations the city council has caused
the telegraph, telephone and electric
light companies to place their wires
underground, so that in the space of
half a decade New Orleans will have
evolved from the slowest to the most
progressive city in America.
The public buildings, many of them
old and uncomfortable, are about to
give place to modern and architectural-
ly perfect structures, and the parks,
unequaled in point of natural beauty
are being improved at a rapid rate
The Frances Willard Hospital, Chicago, III.
tuarkable cures of eases of very obsti- !nst* came suddenly
Miss (ieorgiana Dean was for three
years missionary in Liberia under the
M. K. Church from the training school
in Chicago, After her return site stud-
ied nursing, graduating f m the pres-
ent Frances E. Willard National Tem-
perance Hospital of Chicago. She is an
enthusiastic friend of J'e-ru-na, as is
evident from the following letter:
Chicago, III., Jan. 20, 1809.
lV-ru-na Drug M'f'g Co., Columbus, O.:
Gentlemen—You will be glad to know
of the happy results obtained from the
use of Pc-ru-nn among the patients uu-
der my care whenever prescribed by the
physician. I have seen some very re-
HARD TO GET.
Th® Calrla Were l.earntnft to .Wait*
tlalr Flow-era and They
Wanted White.
providence with a geographical location I Audubon park and City park, by the
which, fur purposes of commerce, has ! wil-v' llre famous for possessing the
no equal on the American continent, | "u,h' e*'t isite oaks in America, some
her people clung to the traditions of the |cf.V"' trees bci"gr 100 •v,'ars ol<1
past, to unwholesome sanitnr\ eondi- 1 h t the cominei-eial development
tions and unprogressive municipal gov.' w"' ".lore ,lln" B° hand in hand with
ernment, which frequently was tainted sanitary improvement can
with corruption and premeditated uiai- , for "" ills,u t be doubted. New Or-
administration of affairs I leans lla* always been the great cotton
Hut the day of awakening I,rn<le t,entur "f Ameri<'n' u,uJ '"> ''an-
airs.
nine nt !
unexpectedly.
nate catarrh of the stomach, where Pe-I *Vt>w blo<)(1 was introduced into the
ru-na was the only medicine used. I i col,nt-H chambers, men noted for en-
consider it a reliable medicine. terprise and honesty, young men filled
(•eorgiana Dean. w'th local
The symptoms of catarrhal dyspepsia ; "ie city most crying
are: Coated tongue, pain or heavy feel- | • to make its laws and restore it
ing in the stomach, belching of gas, | to ,tH proper position as the metropolis
A venerable white-haired elergyman re-
cently preached in the church of a friend
lie had hardly got hack to the vicarage
from the church when the door bell rang
and a youug lady asked to see him. He re-
eeivcd her. They talked about tho aermon
and other things, until finally whe asked.
dithdently:
Oh, won t you please give me a lock of
your hair?
t ertninly, my child," Raid the old gentle-
man, Mattered at the requeut. "I'll send it
to vou to morrow." And he did.
On his return to hia own home he hail
live more reque ta of the same kind, and
he proudly lw>a*ted to hia wife that he was
*la<l to see that he had not yet lout his
power to please. All went well until his
Wile received thin note
"Dear Mrs. Fourthly: Won't you pl, a e
ask your husband to send nie just a lit tie
lock of his hair? We have all Wen taking
lessons in making hair flowers. So many of
the other girls nsked him, and he sent it to
them, that 1 thought 1 would rather ask, —
you to get it for ine Won't you please do 8,n" to 8et t,, t funny look in her eyes.—
this for me It is .so hurd to get white hair Atchison (Jlobe.
for lilies of the valley."
This was a terrible blow, and the Jess I n,",, Pr**cp|Pf "■ * «* nulla,
now said about locks of hair in that old a bottle of Okovb's Tasteless
gentleman's presence the better.—Cincin-I ,LL 0!fI0, 8,H1Ply Iron and qiiinino in
nati inquirer. • tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Pricc.ftH .
%moiiff nia imprdlsifnis. | Oeorge Saxton fooled with s buzz saw,
"You've got a lot of baggage," remarked *ftn^ j11*, *?rf- ^a4ter,' Pooled with
r . w-jjo accom nw "" ' " A* 1 - - L
dizzy head, sometimes headache, de-
spondent feelings, loss of appetite, pal-
pitation of the heart and irregularity of
the bowels.
Send for a free book written by
Dr. Hartrean, entitled "Health and
Beauty." Address I)r. Hartman, Co-
lumbus, O.
The I9n«(llali of It.
"You Americans call things by such queer
names," hskI the lOnglishmau
"What's wrong now?" asked the New
Yorker
J'W by call these things elevators, when
* 1 e people down as often as they take
what do you oall them in your
"Well
country
"We call them lifts."
"Well, I can't see that the word lift ex
presses their use any better than elevator."
"Oh, yes, it does. Dun't you know you can
lift persons down as well as lift thera upv"
—Yonkers Statesman.
9l*ns of Spring.
Atchoo!
The popularity of the shady side of the
street.
The flowers that bloom in buttonholes
Absence of furry garments.
Open spring coats.
The advent of the shirt waist girl.
The posy hat .—Philadelphia Press
Who's to niame.
When a girl graduates she has an ambition
to show the world what a noble woman,
with a high purpose in life, can do; but she
meets a man and marries him, and soon !>«?•
died immense quantities of sugar and
rice in addition. Moreover, it is the sec-
ond largest grain exporting point in the
oncHiy, young men tilled "i,U'd ■!" trade.in manu-
™l pride and an ,g I . ' ' K™"1* «" manufacturing
city's most crying were "f ^''^lopnient.
Capital has been kept away from the
city by its unsanitary condition, and
the same cause bus hampered its ship
ping interests. Situated nearly loo
miles from the inouthof the Mississippi
river it possesses a harbor which, at
comparatively small expense, could bo
made accessible to our modern ocean
leviathans. The United States govern-
ment is fully aware of this fact, and has
just let a contract for the construction
of the south, the gateway to Central
and South America and the islands in
the Caribbean, the great trading center
i>f the American gulf coast.
For 200 years the surface drainage
of the city was emptied into Lake Pont-
ehartrain, a beautiful body of water
just north of New Orleans, but a little
over a year ago the city council began ..fa steel floating dry dock, to cost $600,.
the Washington friend ....„
Pauied him to the railway station.
ics, responded the retiring congress-
man, hut 1 carrv something on my mind
t/i.it weighs me down more than all this
fctufl out together."
."at inquired the other.
my '®x-' the departing KtAtes-
man, with a dry sob.—Chicago Tribune.
Tipped Off.
I am accustomed to receiving a tip from
customers, ' said the waiter. |
"Oh, really," wud the broker. "Well, all
Jit .l*. V ! fliup Plav Rapid Transit!"—
i ni.adeiphiH North American.
love, and lost his life.—Atchison Globe.
I How ^fy Throat Hurts! Whv don't vou
u!f J'8'/1 * Honey of Horehound and Tar*
f'tk*1 s Toothache Dropn Cure in one minute.
| When a farmer waters his stock thelaml
get the least of it; when a broker waters his
stock it's different I. A W Bulletin
PIso'h Curo for Consumption bus no equal
as a Cough medicine !•' M. Ablmtt,
Seneca Ht , Ruffalo. N Y . May 18 4.
A recent advertisement in an Irish paper
announced that Mr. So and so extrac ted
teeth with great pains.
HEALTHFUL
OLD AGE
A CHARMING grandmother!
What a pleasant influence in the house is a delight-
ful old lady in good health!
Mrs. Moli.ie Barker, St. James. Mo,, writes: "I took
I.ydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound during change of
life, and have passed through that
critical period safely. I suffered for
years with falling of the womb and
female weakness. At times could
hardly stand on my feet, also had
leucorrhcea. I tried several good
doctors, but instead of getting better, grew worse all the
time. A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's Compound.
I did so and after taking six bottles, was cured of both
leucorrhcea and falling of womb. I am now enjoying good
health and feel very grateful for
the good your medicine has
done me. I would recommend
it to all women suffering as 1
was."
Mrs. N. E. Lacey,
Pearl, La., writes:
" lliave had leucorrhiea
for about twenty years,
falling of womb by spells
| for ten years, and my
bladder was affected, had
backache a great deal.
I tried a number of
doctors. They would re-
lieve me for a little
while, then I would be
•worse than ever. I
then thought I would
1 try I.ydia E. Pinkham"s
Vegetable Compound.
Eleven bottles of Com-
pound and one box of
Liver Pills cured me
and I am now sound
It helped me through the change of life period.
am fifty-five years old."
The women of advanced years who are healthy and liapp'
are invariably those who have known how to secure helji
when they needed it. Mrs. Pinkham will advise any woman
free of charge who writes about her health. Her address is
Lynn, Mass.
| was perplexed and frighteued by his
T. « « ti £ now surroundings. The children quur-
Ine Cottage on the Fell re.,, over their games and their
m t mother usually quelled the disturbance
By J. T.Stanley Tarpey E J? out "j*? >"• 0
° r hand. Don came in for a share of these
ttTtTfTfTTfTTTT'rtrttttyt«< with the rest; lie was missing soon
| after and was not found till nightfall,
OX TilF. old road between Langtou i '«"•« «®l«--ep on hiai mother's grave. Mrs.
and Fazerley, half way up the fell, j
there stands the ruin of a pret
SIDNEY STORY. ONE OF NEW ORLEANS' PROGRESSIVE LEADERS.
the construction of a drainage system
which will take care of all the storm
water and drain every inch of soil be-
tween the Mississippi river and the lake
and reduce the moisture in the soil ful-
ly six feet. The tirst section of this
system will soon be finished and will
drain the entire business section.
The draiuage canal proper is 30 feet
wide and 25 feet deep, built of brick and
cement on a concrete foundation, and
covered over with asphalt. This work
has seemed a wonder to all who have
investigated it, and is one of the great
engineering triumphs of the decade, of j sordid competiti
which its originators, Maj. Harrod and art and letters i
L. W. Brown, have ample reason to be
proud. To build a canal of the dimen-
sions indicated in some places would be
hi Id's play, but to construct miles
upon miles of monster culverts in the
soft soil of New Orleans seems little
short of miraculous. Recently a party
of engineers and representatives of the
press descended into the culvert at
Canal street and walked a distance of
000, which portends the establishment
of a navy yard and the deepening of the
river channel. Once a thoroughly
healthy city, free from the incubus oL
quarantine. New Orleans will command
the trade, by force of location and su
perior facilities, which it now seeks to
control by other means.
Manufacturing enterprises are natu-
rally attracted by sanitary surround-
ings and shipping facilities, and the
New Orleans of the nineteenth centuryl
a town of sentiment and tradition, will
volve itself into a mighty mart, where
tition will be tempered by
rs and the high breeding
of its social leaders—a typical twen
tictli century metropolis, cosmopolitan
in population, international in com
mercc and thoroughly American in cit
izenship and higher civilization.
The writer has dwelled at some
length upon the material aspect of the
present condition of the city of New
Orleans, because higher development
depends upon material surrounding
miles upon a surface wide enough [The women of New Orleans recognized
to accommodate three teams driven I this inalterable fact long before their
nbreast. That these underground j husbands and fathers, and were among
the lirst to advocate the construction
of the great drainage canal already de-
scribed. 1 heir efforts were ablv sec-
tourists were more surprised than
when they took their tlrst boat ride in
tin* great sewers of l*aris is not surpris-
ing. It will require fully five years to
mplete the work so auspiciously be-
gun, and a total outlay of perhaps $S,-
000,000, of which $2,000,000 have already
been expended. When completed, the
system will carry off the drainage
to the (iulf of Mexico, by way of Bayou
Hienvinue and Lake Horgnc, thus keep-
ing uncontaminated the waters of Lake
Pontchartrain, one of the most pic-
turesque lakes in the United States.
The system of sewerage and of re-
moving the night soil is still as primi-
in New Orleans as when Hienville
onded by the press and by the younger
element of business and professional
men who realized that the future of
their city depended upon progress,
both within and without. And among
this coterie of bright and promising
public men none is entitled to greater
praise than Mr. Sidney Story, who, as
a member of the city council and influ-
ential club man, crystallized sentiment
into action and made the dreams of
others a reality. Young, ambitious and
singularly devoted to the city of his
birth, he overcame obstacles which
and well.
A Natural Black is Produced by
Buckingham's Dyew.Tr.
9Qct$. of drugf i,ti of R. P.Hftll li Co.Niibwa, N.H.
You will never know what
Good Ink
is unless you use Carter's. It cost;
no more than poor ink.
Funny booklet " How lo Make Ink Pictures " free.
CARTER'S INK CO., Boston, Mam
murclyd across the swamps from Hiloxi fortified by the prejudice of cen
and planted the standard of France I t an<' coerced cooperation when
upon the banks of the Mississippi. The I s',,,l)'t' reasoning failed. Opposition
vaults are emptied twice a year, and the j ^ uPon sputiniental grounds, he
offensive matter dumped into the river, ' to 'n season and out of sea-
producing a condition at once unsnni- I so,,: ')ut e,1(' ',as justified his ef-
tary and offensive. This fact has at last J"OI^s' Jlm' ^ hen the history of New Or-
bcen impressed upon the people, and j a,,s,'s written his name deserves a
even those most stubborn ly opposed to 1 Pro,,,inent l>l ce on its brightest page,
progress are beginning to realize that ! " nu' ntime he merits public rec-
in order to avoid quarantines and their ' °tfm,,on at the hands of his fellow citi-
attendant evils and business depres- ! /c.Ill,H' um! ""''cations are that be
depres-
sions, and epidemics and pestilence, the
will re<
a use must be removed. A campaign j
was begun a short time ago for the con-
struction of a modern sewerage svsteiu,
a thorough system of municipal water-
works and an adequate s\ stem of street
paving; and it is almost certain that the
people will vote in favor of inning
bonds Nr that purpose. Such improve-
ments would not only redeem thecitv
from filth, but make it at once the
healthiest and most beautiful muni-
ipality in the south and the greatest
port outside of New York.
Mve it, as well as those who
with him for the good of the
Ut C^V" (J w WE1PPIERT.
Ilnr<! 1.1 lien.
j First ltov (gloomily) I've got to eut
I kindlings and enipt.v three buekets of
I ashes and linild two (ires and go to the
j store on an errand and then fill the
coal box.
Second Roy (enviously)—You've got
a reg'lar picnic, you have. Just think
of me. Mother said when I came home
from school to-day I'd got ter hold the
baby.--llarlcm Life.
little
thatched cottage. Roses and honey-
suckles twine over the porch; and,
though there is no garden to speak of,
the old road is so overgrown with grass
and flowers that it is a garden in itself.
There is no traffic this way now, ex-
cept on market days, when the carts
from a few scattered farmsteads go
past Fazerley; so the long, green
ribbons on the road and the wide bor-
ders gradually encroach year by year,
until in some places they meet in a
level stretch of grass. The heather
comes down the hillside almost to the
wall, and through it, laughing and
dancing, runs a little beck, which
crosses the road a few yards below the
cottage.
Some ten years ngo the place was oc-
cupied by a young widow and her twin
children, a boy and a girl. She bail
come there with her babies five years
before, on her husband's death, and had
earned a scanty living ever since by
working for one of the shops nt Fazer-
ley. She was either too shy or too
proud to make friends easily, and no
one knew whether she had friends or
kindred elsewhere. On market days
sonic one of the passing farmers would
bring her small purchases up from Fa-
zerley, or take her bundle of work down
to the shop. The bustling farmer's
wife at the Fcllside farm had always a
kindly word, and sometimes a bun or
an apple, for the twins, when they
went to fetch the milk two or three
times a week. The old shepherd, when
his sheep were on that side of the fell,
liked to have a chat with the little ones
in passing, or to have them trot beside
him for a mile along the road; but
thcfle were the nearest approaches to
intimacy the country folk had with the
occupants of the cottage. The chil-
dren always looked clean and neat and
rosy; the cottage was a miracle of or-
der and trimness; and no one guessed
till it was too late the terrible poverty
that had been hidden under this cheer-
ful air of independence.
During the winter and spring the
mother had been constantly ailing; she
had a troublesome cough, and more
than once when the farmers passed on
market days the twins had taken mcs-
from her in bed. It was
matter of surprise to Farmer
leasdule, therefore, when, to his
usual inquiry one morning in Au-
gust, the little girl replied that
"Mother was poorly, and nothing was
wanted." When he passed back in
the evening the two children were sit-
ting on the doorstep contentedly eat-
ing bread and gooseberries for their
tea, and sharing a mug of milk be-
tween them. They had played about
the cottage and the lane all day, pay-
ing tiptoe visits now and then to their
mother, who was strangely quiet and
had taken none of the tea they had so
carefully prepared for her. The twins
slept at their mother's feet to make
more room in the narrow bed, and when
it grew dusk they crept quietly in with-
out disturbing her. In the night the
boy awoke, crying, with the touch of
something cold.
'Muirly, Mairly, what is it? I'm
frightened!" he sobbed.
"llush, Don! Don't wake mother,"
whispered the little girl; and so, eud-
dling close together, they slept again.
Early in the morning they were
wakened by a shaft of sunlight through
the eastern window, when the sun rose
over the fell. They sat up together,
feeling lonely and frightened; Don be-
gan to cry.
"Why doesn't mother wake?" he
sobbed, lie crept along the bed, and
patted her cheek gently: at the touch
he screamed and slid to the ground.
Mairly, Mairly, what is it? Why is
mother so cold?"
sages
lie
151
An hour later the two children were
found by the old shepherd, barefoot in
the road, clinging fast together and
rying bitterly. When the doctor came
it was found that the mother had been
dead some hours.
Two weeks afterwards the future of
the twins was already decided upon, ami
they were told to bid good-by to one
another. They had been living at the
Fellside farm since their mother's
death, but the vicar had interested him-
self in them, and he had decided that
Don must be near the school; so, a
small subscription .having been raised,
he was to board with a family in the
village until he could work for a living.
Mairly was to go to an orphanage some
30 miles away, where she would event-
ually be trained as a servant. More
than one house would have been open to
the children, in the first tide of pity
and wonder at the tragedy, but the
vicar thought that their future welfare
would be best considered by this ar-
rangement; and when he took the mat
ter up no one ventured to protest
Smith considered she must break hiui
of a bad habit, so she beat him again,
and told him he should not see Mairly
if he went there any more. That night
lie cried so that the other children
could not sleep, and after a week in
which blows, scoldings and cnjolings
all failed to "break him of the habit,"
he was put to sleep in an out-building,
that the household might have peace.
For the rest he was dull und docile
enough, listening with pathetic credul-
ity to Mrs. Smith's assurance that Mair-
ly would come soon, which was her
formula when she wanted to be kind.
Mairly had been taken by the vicar
to her new* home. She looked such a
quaint little figure in her long1 lilac print
gown and white apron, the tniform of
the orphanage, that the vicex's daugh-
ters culled her a "sweet little dear,"
and gave her silver six-pences, and the
servants kissed her and cried over her.
She was some years younger than the
usual age of admission, and the girls
at the home seemed very big to her. The
long rows of lilac print frocks and
white aprons bewildered her, and the
sameness of voice and expression never
ceased to perplex and distress her. If
there were some who were inclined lo
tease and torment her, there were others
who would have liked to make a pet of
her, but Mairly never distinguished be-
tween these; she suffered the caresses
of one in exactly the same spirit as
she endured the petty tyranny of an-
other.
The teachers found her good and obe-
dient, and she went through the daily
routine with immovable patience, but
without interest. When there was some
unusual sound in the house, or a visit
from a stranger, Mairly's face sharp-
ened into a look of intense exj ectancy,
and then settled back in awhile to the
same dull patience. One day, when a
visitor had come and gone, Mairly's
disappointment expressed itself in a
sudden demand of the matron:
"Please, ma'am, when shall I see
Don ?"
"You will see him some day, if you're
a Rood girl," said the matron, kindly.
"Hut when, ma'am, please?"
"I can't tell you that, Mary."
"It's much easier to be good if I
know when," pleaded the child; but
the micron could make no promises,
and Mairly abandoned her hope from
that. day.
One night in the early spring, she
awakened with the sound of Don's voice
in her ears, crying "Mairly!" most pit-
eotislv. She lay quiet until the usual
time for getting up, and when the
household assembled for prayers she
went up to the matron with the custom-
ary bob and curtsey.
"Please, ma'am, I must go to Don."
"You can't do that, Mary, I'm afraid."
"I must go, I must go!" sobbed the
child, her fortitude giving way for the
first time. "Don wants me, he keeps
crying and crying; he waked ine last
night with his crying!"
It was in vain they tried to comfort
her—Don was in trouble, she must go
to Don. She kept sobbing this out, till
at last she was pronounced "naughty,"
and put in a room by herself to get over
it.
Mairly was very quiet when she wnr
let out, and by evening the scene was
forgotten. In the early morning she
awoke again, and sat up listening, but
without making any sound. She crept
out of bed and put on her clothes in
the dark, pausing now and then to hear
the stendy breathing of the sleepers in
the long dormitory; then she took her
shoes and went out along the corridor,
past the open door of the teacher's
room and down the creaking stairs. In
the basement she got her cloak and
bonnet, and, by standing on a chair,
shot the heavy bolt of the playroom
door, and so into the yard. There v^as
no way out of the grounds, but at the
end was a space railed off for hens,
and out of this a small opening had been
made for them into the field beyond.
The door into the hencoop was only
latched, and, by dint ofagreat struggle,
Mairly was out through the hole, leav-
ing part of the lilac print behind her.
it was some hours before Mairly'®
flight was discovered at the orphan-
age, and at first she was only looked for
in the grounds, for it was thought im-
possible she could have got out. At
length the piece of torn lilac print in
the hencoop gave a clew, and by noon
she was traced to the roadway station.
The booking clerk had booked a half-
fare to Fazerley by the workmen'?
train; he thought the child was with
some workmen; he had seen one of
them lift her into the carriage. At
Fazerley the porter remembered that
a workman in the early train had asked
him to show a little girl the mad to
Langton; he had put her on the way
when he went to breakfast.
The matron drove to Langton; and
j it was only when she arrived with tlie
The twins parted quietly, without I ^'•Vs'fHsc^!\e**tIlttt I)on a'alj8enc«
tears. Mrs. llleasdale had trie,I to mit- I ." j ,l,0""ht "f fr-
igate what she eoasidered "a ernel I 'Z , , «■
shame" by whispering that it would i |. a'-aiii in' il "'"ff °U "
only he for a little while, and thev In,- I t|^ ^ ^
plieitly believed her. Indued, the past I .t hitter • «,' ' "'l 'V. ' "lc,'e wu
two weeks had seemed lo then, like an iro^i„"oaharW b ow'"f «n«7
ugly bustling dream, and II,ev hardiv ! v ill-^ tn-1 , ", °'e
realized that worse eoul.l befall them, j went up to 4e fe T
It was only at bedtime, when he found fr.d less se,,I T" llOUrH
himself without Mairly, in a room with - - U*' Were
three or four other children, that some
sense of his desolation burst upon Don.
He lay sobbing far into the night, and
refused to be comforted. Mrs. Smith
had every wish to be kind to him, but
she had a houseful of unruly children
to manage, and Don's ways were strange
to her. She complained to the neigh-
bors that lie made himself "fair silly wi'
frettin'." When he was not crying lie
wait for daylight, when they set tc
work, reinforced by help from (he
countryside.
They found the children by the heck
400 or nno yards from the cottage,lying
"> the heather tightly clasped in encli
other s arms. They were both dead;
but II,e brown elouk of the orphan,,™
was round Don, and it seemed as il
Miurly had been trying to keep him
warm.—London Speaker.
XI
f
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Campbell, J. B. The Hennessey Kicker. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 220, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1899, newspaper, May 5, 1899; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc88817/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.