The Oklahoma Representative. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1897 Page: 2 of 8
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THE REPRESENTATIVE
rM1«Hrd Every Tliiir «l«y
GUTHRIE,
OKLAHOMA
CI1A IT EH X XXV.—(Co* n >« k iO
"You!" she exclaimed; "1 thought
you were dead!"
•Truly," he said, and }*ou rejoice to
find that I still live; is it not so, Mar-
jorie?"
She did not answer him; her very
blood seemed to be freezing in her
veins, and her fare wore such an ex-
pression of horror that for a moment
even he was rendered dumb
"Marjorie," he said, "let me hear
your words of welcome. I am an exile
Sam Jones having the first mansion
in Georgia, it would seem that he it
more successful in saving money than
in saving souls.
Rismarck is not light in the declar-
ation that the Monroe doctrine is in-
solence to*Europe. It* is rather a
means of natural protection, and It|
purpose is to prevent insolence from
abroad. It is likewise a guarantee ot
peace without the undemocratic main-
tenance of a great army. The effort
of Louis Napoleon to make an em-
pire of Mexico must never be forgot-
ten.
The Kaiser wanted to telegraph the
Spanish government his congratula-
tions because of what he called its
firmness in its relation with Mr. Wood-
ford. He intended a slap at this
government after the manner of his
rebuke of England through congratu-
lations to t'ncle Paul of the Transvaal.
Happily his advisers talked him out of
it; but his desire to burn his fingers
will be gratified some day. It is
kings, we believe, that rush in wh >re
angels fear to tread.
Every time we raise the pen in be-
half of bleeding Cuba, we hesitate,
thinking that perhaps before our hum-
ble protest has been read by the peo-
ple. the government at Washington
will have raised its hand in the cause
of humanity. There seems, however,
to be long delays, and the patience of
the American people is being severely
tried. If the "comity of nations," or
whatever the anti-Cuban liberty junta
call it. will not permit the administra-
tion to act, then the sooner that this
country discards "comity" the better.
Our hands are becoming stained with
the blood of Cuba. Tx>ok at them.
The attempt to keep young children
in ignorance of stories about ghosts, HHHH
fairies, giants and gypsies would cer- j to m>' home-
tainly prove futile. If they are of £ i *or a moment Marjorie gave no an-
nervous and imaginative temperament ( swer; what could she say or do? No
thev will invent new terrors for then- ; need for him to tell her she was in his
• olves in: tead of the old traditional I Power, she knew it only too well. While
ones. A little girl of six. who had
been jealously guarded against any
acquaintance with nursery bogles and
superstitions, suffered from night ter-
rors of a severe kind, in which she
always screamed out thai she was be-
ing ( hased by robbers. But while it hands and called on God for help and
may be impracticable to protect•chil- j comfort, but no answer came; it seem-
<lp ii from ;i Knowledge of the super- ed that for her there was uo l^elp 'n
natural and mysterious, it is Inexcus- ill the world
able to frighten them with hideous sto- i
rlcs or to leave them a prey to '.he j
terrors of the solitude and darkness, j
Considerable opposition is being man- j
Ifested toward the postal savings bank 1
■ bill fathered by IV Chicago Record
newspaper. Quite unexpectedly this !
•opposition comes from those from j
whom heariy support was expected j
And what would seem more remark-
able still, the bankers, as a class, favoi j
the proposition. It may therefore bf
inferred that the bill contains some
provisions favorable to the men whe
deal in money, as against those who
produce the things for which money
exchanges. Every sensible person
must favor postal savings banks. II
is not likely, however, that congress
will authorize that kind of a postal
savings institution that will be noth-
ing more than a coleeting agency foi
the national banks. The Record's bill
has several bad features. We hope
that these will be amended. We be-
lieve, nevertheless, that the bill has
been drawn up in good faith. Thou-
sands have thoughtlessly signed peti-
tions favoring the bill. These peti-
tions. of course, will have no weight
in congress.
INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION.
rushed forward to meet her; then with
a cry she shrank away.
"•Majorie,' she exclaimed, "what's
wrpng, and—and Where's the bairn?"
At the mention of I/eon. Majorie
wrung her hands.
"He has come back and taken him
from me!"
She looked so wild and sad that the
old lady thought her reason was going.
Her face was white as death, and there
was a red mark on her forehead where
the man had struck her. Miss Hether-
now, driven to seek refuge in Scotland, j ington took her hands and soothed her
to escape the bullets of -my foes. '
"Why why have you come to me?"
"I have come to you for comfort. I
have come to take you with me to share
my English home!"
"To share your home!" echoed Mar-
jorie. "I will not—no. never. You
have done me evil enough already
but I am free. I know you now, and
I will not go with you."
"You are free!" he said. "What do
you mean by that, mon ami?"
"I mean." said Marjorie, "that you
are nothing to me. You have said so,
and I know it. and I wish never to see
your face again."
"Possibly, but our wishes are not al-
ways gratified. I am sorry you cannot
give me a better welcome, since you
will see me not once, but many times;
as to being free, that is all nonsense.
We are in Scotland now, remember;
and you—why. you are my wife."
"Your wife!"
"Yes, my wife—and now. cherie—al-
though I could use force if I chose, I
have no wish to do so. I ask you mere-
ly to fulfill your duty and come with
in France he had the power of turning
her from his door, and heaping igno-
ln> not only upon herself, but upon
her child; in her own country his pow-
er was absolute over them both.
With a wild cry she threw up hfr
CHAPTER XXXVI.
11 ERIE, am I for-
y given?" said Caus-
sidierr, again hold-
/ f
•w
"4s ing
hand
forth his
The sol,nd of h
' voice recalled h<
Qjf ' ! t1 to herself. Sh
The dictum that, while civilized man
cannot live without dining, he might
liv? a good deal longer without so
much dining or, rather, without din-
ing so extensively—may be accepted
without any reservation. A celebrat-
ed physician once said that he had have a right to take him, and to keep
shrank away from
him in positive ter-
ror.
"Keep back," she
:ried; "don't touch me."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that I hate and fear you!
Wife or no wife. I will never live with
you again—never, never!"
Confident of his own power, Caussi-
diere never winced. He had expected
something of this kind, and was not
wholly unprepared for it. He said
nothing, but quietly watching his op-
portunity, he lifted the child in his
arms. Finding himself thus suddenly
and roughly seized from his mother's
side. Leon screamed wildly, but Caus-
sidiere shook him, and bade him be
at peace.
"That is what your mother has
taught you, to scream at the sight of
your father. Now 1 will teach you
otherwise."
"Give him to me."-she cried; "give
me my child!"
"Your child," returned Caussidiere,
with a sneer: "the child is mine. 1
been convinced by circumstances thai
had come under his notice in the coursc
of his experience that more mischiel
in the form ot disease has accrued Ic
civilized man from erroneous habits ir
eating than from alcoholic drink. He
also declared himself in doubt whethei
improper and inordinate eating were
not as great evils as inordinate drink-
ing Many of our best-known medical
men say that the habit of over-eatlnp
is at the bottom of most troublesome : your mother!"
diseases. There is no doubt that the she stretched forth her arms to take
him, too. and that i what I mean to
do!"
"To keep him!" cried Marjorie; "you
would never do that; you do not want
him If yon do not care for him. and he
is all 1 have in the world."
"But I mean to keep him all the
same!"
"Yoti shall not; you elare not; you
shall kill me before you take my boy.
Leon, my darling, come to me; come to
hat't i - mo't often contracted In child-
hood There are many mothers whe
feed their babies as often as they cry
taking it for granted that the baby
cries for food, when more often the
helpless little creature is crying be-
the child, when Caussidiere, livid with
passion, raised his hand and struck
her In the face. She staggered back;
then with a cry she fell senseless to the
ground.
When she opened her eyes it was
c-au>"e they already had loo much food | quite dark all about her, and as cjuiet
When the stomach once liecomes ac ^ the grave.
customed to being crowded with food ; •i.pon," she moaned feebly, but no
if the supply Is out short, there is al answer came.
first a gnawing sensation that is fre- Gradually the dizziness passed away;
quently mistaken for hunger. If peo- j flj,e remembered all that had occurred,
pie who experience this will only perse- | an(j w|th a low moan she sank again
ere a little longer in their abstinence
they will find themselves greatly ben- I
«'fi!cd by it-
It is not unreasonable to suppose
that, as alleged, Spain would give up
Cuba wero it not for the danger of a j
i ■ ,nt revolution at home . It <,
a choice. In either words, belween the
k!lllcg of Cubans and the killing of
Spin lards, and every oody in these
c s prefers the sacrifice of The ene-
my A slight war with the I'nited
Stales would perhaps pacify the Span-
*Hrda . : home anil «pta the way to
b • i:i1c ! ■ nilenc Smut *<•, -ilv
tiumili.'lion of tbi Spunlsh goveui-
upon the ground crying bitterly.
But soon her sobs abated, and Im-
patiently brushing away her tears, she
set herself to wonder again what she
must do. On one thing she was deter-
mined. to be- with her child. Yes: at
any cost they must lie together.
She rose to lier feet again and stag-
gerrd on toward the Castle. H r «eiM-
: Ing tears fell fast, her breast was rent
with sobs; and for the first time in
her life she began to (uestlon the te-
| neflcence of the Divine Father, whom
she had Been taught from her child-
! hood to rev are.
\# r> < hed !he
II-; 1 rington. having
It war lat -
Castlt. MIm
grows lenr'g
gently; when she saw that her ealm-
ncss was returning to her, she said:
"Now, Majorie, my bairn, tell me all
j about it!"
j And Majorie told, trembling and cry- j
| ing meanwhile, and imploring Miss
! Hetherington to recover her child. j
J "Dinna fret, Marjorie," she said, pat-
I ting the girl on the head; "there's
nothing to fear. The man's a kuave, ;
we ken, but he's a fool as weel! Bring i
I harm to his own bairn, not he!—he's !
j o'er sharp to put himsel' into the power j
I o' the English law! 'Tis the siller he
I wants, and 'tis the siller he means to
get!"
"But what shall we do?" sobbed Mar-
jorie.
"Do?—nothing. Bide quiet a while,
aad he'll do something, mark me!"
"But Leon—what will become of !
Leon?" ,
"Dinna greet for the bairn; I tell ye
he's safe enough; after all, he's with
his father."
"But he mustn't stop; I must get him
back, or It will kill me."
"You shall have him back, never
fear, Marjorie."
"But to-night—what can be done to- j
night?"
"Nothing, my lassie—absolutely no-
thg. Get you to bed and rest you, and
to-morrow I'll tell you what we must
do."
After a good deal more persuasion
Marjorie was induced to go to her
room, but during the whole of that
night she never closed her eyes, but
walked about in wild unrest.
When the dawn broke she descended
the stairs, and to her amazement found
Miss Hetherington in the dining-room,
just as she had left her on the preced-
ing night. The weary hours of vigil
had done! their work; her face, always
white, was positively corpse-like; her
thin gray hairs were disheveled, and
her eyes were dim. With a piercing
cry, Marjorie ran forward and fell at
her feet.
"Mother!" she cried; "dear mother,
what is the matter?"
The old woman laid her trembling
hand upon Marjorie's brown head and
smiled.
" 'Tis nothing, my child," she said.
"The hours of the night have passed
o'er quickly for me, you see, for I sat
thinking, and now you see the dawn
has come. Marjorie, my poor Mar-
jorie! I wonder you can ever find it in
yotu- heart to call mo mother!—see
what sorrow has come to you through
me."
"Through you? Oh, no, no, no!"
"Ay, but 'tis so, Marjorie. 'The sins
of the fathers shall be visited upon the
children unto the third and fourth
generation.' Through my sin you suf-
fer."
"Do not say that—it is not true."
"Ay, but it is true. Through my sin
you were made a poor outcast, with no
mother to watch over you, no kind
hand to guide you. When I think on
It, it breaks my heart, Marjorie—it
breaks my heart."
• • • •
About ten o'clock that morning a
messenger came to the Castle bringing
a note for Marjorie. It was from Caus-
sidiere, and dated from Dumfries.
"I am here," he wrote, "with the
child. Do you propose to Join me. as
I can force you to do so if I choose, or
am I to keep the child only? I might
be Induced to yield him up to you upon
certain conditions. Let me know what
you mean to do, as my stay here will
not be of long duration, and I am
making arrangements to take Leon
away with me. "Your husband,"
"LEON CAUSSIDIERE."
Marjorie's first impulse was to rush
to tba place where she knew her child
to be, tri*. Miss Hetherington restrained
her.
"3'.3e wee, Marjorie," she said;
"we'll g-i ,"Sj j.-.'.—■ and not lose you.'*
She dlsmi^V:! • mcsseB
ger, and sent her own servam for Suth-
erland.
When the young man arrived she
saw him alone, told him in a few words
what had occurred and put Caussl-
dlere's letter In his hand.
"Bring back the child, Johnnie Suth-
erland." she said, "even if you have to
kill the father.'
Sutherland t,ook the letter, and. with
these instructions ringing in his ears,
went to Dumfries to seek Caussidiere
at the place mentioned. He was like
a man demented: the blow had been so
sudden that ha hardly realized yet
what It all meant; he only knew that
he ha4 fallen from the brightest hope
to the blackest despair, and that hence-
forth he must endure a living death.
The house he sought was a small Inn
in one of the by-streets of Dumfries,
and Sutherland knew it well. • He en-
tered the place, found a shock-headed
servant girl In the passage ind asked
'or tk- "Freneh m-ii'b n .n vas
is al>sen?a, | rftayln* in the he
"You'll find him ben yonder." said
the girl, pointing to a door on the
ground floor. •
Sutherland beckoned to htr to open
the door; she did so. He entered the
room and closed the door behind him.
Caussidiere leaped to his feet with an
oath. I. >n. who h.id been sitting pale
and tremulous in if corner, rushed for-
ward with a cry of Joy.
But before he could reach Suther-
land's side his fa:!: r t lutch' 1 him a d
drew him back, grasping the child so
roughly as" to make him moan with
pain.
Then, white and furious, Caussidiere
faced Sutherland.
"So. it is you!" he exclaimed. How
dare you intrude here? Leave this
room."
Sutherland, who had placed his back
to the door and put the key in his
pocket, made no attempt to move. He
was able to keep his self-control, but
his face was white as death.
"Monsieur Caussidiere." he said, "I
have come for that child."
"Really," said Caussidiere, with a
sneer; "then perhaps you will tell me
what you propose to offer for him?
Madame Caussidiere must pay dearly
for having made you her messenger."
"She will pay nothing."
"What do you mean, monsieur?"
"What I say. I mean to take that
child and give you nothing for him.
You have come to the end of your I
tether, Monsieur Caussidiere. You will j
find this time you haven't got a help-
less woman to deal with!"
Caussidiere looked at him with a new
light in his eyes. What did it mean?
Had the man really power? and if so,
to what extent? A little reflection as-
sured him that his momentary fear was j
groundless. Sutherland might talk as I
he chose. Caussidiere was master of
the situation, since with him lay all the ;
anthority of the law.
"Monsieur," he said, "you are an ad*
mirable champion. I congratulate ma- j
dame on having secured you. But pray j
tell her from me that her child remains j
with her husband, not her lover."
In a moment Sutherland had caught j
him by the threat.
"Scoundrel!" he cried.
"Let me go!" hissed Caussidiere. "If
you have taken my wife for your mis-
tress, you shall not bully me!"
But he said no more. Grasping him
more firmly by the throat, Sutherland
shook him till he could scarcely
breathe; then lifting him, he dashed
him violently to the ground; then,
without waiting to see what he had
done, he lifted the frightened child in
his arms and hurried from the place.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
^ Y WHAT train of
i| circumstances had
the dead Caussi-
diere again become
quick, or rather, to
express it in cor-
recter terms, how-
had the Frenchman
escaped from the
perils and pains of
death?
The answer is
simple enough. Among the patriots of
the Parisian Commune there were two
Caussidieres, in no way related to each
other, but equally doubtful in their
conduct, and their antecedents; and it
happened, curiously enough, that our
C'aussidlere's alter ego had also been
arrested for treasonable practices.
The Paris of those days has been
compared to Pandemonium; everything
was one wild frenzy of hurried and
aimless haste; and the newspaper re-
ports, like the events they chronicled,
being chaotic and irresponsible, it hap-
pened that the fate of one individual
was confused with the fate of the other.
At the very moment that one Caussi-
diefe was lying dead before the sol-
diers of the Commune the other was
escaping in disguise toward the Bel-
gian coast, whence, after divers vicis-
situdes, he sailed for England, to reap-
pear finally in Annandale, like a ghost
from the grave, as we have seen.
cto hk continued. i
I.itt!«* Attentions.
"Evil is wrought by want of thought.
As well as by want of heart."
If husbands only realized what tho
little attentions mean to their wives
there would be many happier unions.
It is not the cost of a gift that make3
it precious to the recipient. A tiny
bunch of violets brought home at night
I betokens the thought given to her even
while business occupies his attention,
j the most trifling souvenir of a wed-
i cling or birthday anniversary becomes
, a sentiment underlying its proffering.
Women may be foolish, they may be
all heart and very little reason, but
the man who understands their nature
and caters to It is the one who stands
higher in their estimation than the
I one who cc'.a as though all they oared
about was material comfort given with
i any sort o{ brusquerie. Of course there
v.-v.T mercenary women—thou-
i sand* and thousands who can marrv
for a home and for rich raiment. These
pooh-pooh the violets and value only
the diamonds, but the average fem-
inine heart, the sort which a man
wants to beat beside his own. the
foundation of truest svm|iathy and
love, is moved more by the little at-
tentions in which sentiment Is involved
than by the great offerings represent-
ing only a' stupendous sum of money
Involved.
A KeifUh Won>%n.
GMmui—"Women are such selfish
creatures! There was an odd chop at
j breakfast and my wife Insisted upon
I my eating it. It wm all because she
I wanted to revel in the satisfaction of
! self-denial. A case of pure selfislinesV"
Flimm—"And what" did you do?""
Grimm—'.'Oh, I let her have her way
md I ate the chop. There are few
husbands bo Indulgent as 1 am "—Bos-
ton Transcript.
SAME 'ANDX"same """•
What i< the use of straying al' «1 - ■ ' tiuthrie for
A Esal First-Class Short Order Meal
When the Best in the city is always femnel at
ANDY * FRINK'S ♦ RESTAURANT ?
No* in South Second Street. 0
JUST GET A OUP CF OUR COFFlil: REMINDS YOU OF MOTHER,
The Big Collar and Saddlery House,
Wholesale anil Retail Dealer* in
•Saddlery and fiarrjess
Of Every Description.
A. P. -Tl'sr.,
GUTHRIE, OKLAHOMA.
W. HcNEAL, President.
A. J. SliAY, Vice President.
Guthrie [National
CAPITAL - •
SURPLUS
Board of Director* in addition to Dank c>11.• as.
IIOH AC. K SI'MJD HOI'. I . MAUI IN, J. II. CO I 11 NO 11 AM.
$50,000
$10,000
W. J. HORSFALL, CASH.
[)SNNER AT THE R ESTAURANTf
rrOR several years our table
we assure you that it shall
yii/ —
l\ SINGLE MEALS ONLY 15 CENTS —- PER WEEK $3.00
table has pleased the public and
continue High Grade.
Special prompt attention given to Transient and Country patronage.
firs. M. A. Hinkle, Prop'r.
TWO DOORS NORTH CF LILLiE'S. - SOUTH FIRST ST,, GUTHRIE,
ffc
7?
OLD &. OR1C1NAU.
DOCTOR
10 W. Ninth St.,
J Kansas City, - Ho.
Plorser Specialist, Longest Located.
NERVOUS DEBILITY;
ment, backache, quicknoss, d:z/ine>s. spots before
eyes and other symptoms, perfectly cured.
Lost Vitality, milky urine, inconti-
nence, prostatorrhan, cystitis and all
painful urinary troubles quickly cured.
CVpUM 10 any stage, causing: sore throat, falling
u I rniLrj 1 , 1
symptoms, cured permanently without mercury.
Rupture cured without knife or truss;
cure guaranteed.
I/Ampnoci E enlarged v ins of scrotum,
V M.liuUU LLC. causing miss ns, sexual weak-
ness, etc., cured without surgical operation.
PILES, FISTULA, w r°
Book and blank on above diseases free far stamp.
No promises made that cannot be fulfilled.
Medicines furnished at srv^II cost and shipped
secure from observation. Nothing sent C. O. D.
C A ATC °' Interest to men only, sealed, for 6 cents
inl I 0 sUmps. Call or write, free and confidential.
Dr. H. J. Whittier,
10 West 9th St., K<in6ai< City, Mo>
Hkf. so YEARS'
ViSf EXPERIENCE.
BEST TRAINS
ST. LOUIS and
KANSAS CITY
ST. PAUL and North*
OMAHA, NEBRASKA,
CHICAGO and East,
DENVER, COLORADO,
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BLACK KILLS. WASHINGTON,
PUGET SOUND.
KansasCity to St. Louis.
Vestibuled Sleepers,
Free Chair Cars, Dining Cars.
CONSULT TICKET AGENT, OR
L. J. BRICKER, T. P. A.,
823 main st., KANSAS CITY, MC
THE DREADED CONSUMPTION
CAN BE CURED
TRADE MARKS*
DFSICNS,
COPYRJCHT8 Ac.
Anyone pending a sketch and draortptton may
quu'kljr ascertain. *■ Iwther an Invention Is
probnMy patonfaMe. r<>n.inunicatioris strictly
confidential. OMe.n < y f< r«ecurtng patents
ii America. We have * Washington office.
f'ttlents taken through Munu A Co recelt#
special notice iu the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
beautifully illustrated, lnrpe!«t circulation of
bo
Patents Bent free. Adaxuai
MUNN A CO.,
3<>1 flruudwny. N w York.
COLUMBIAN prizewinners;
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CHICAGO
COTTAGF
ORGANS
WERfc GIVEN
Highest AWARDS
Ai 'ihc World's Exposition
for excellent manufacture,
quality, uniformity and
volume of tone, elasticity
of touch, artistic cases,
materials and workman9
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SA'i AL0QUE9 ON APPLICATION PRBI*
Doctor T. A. Slocum, M. C., thk grf.at
Chemist and Scientist, wili. mend
free, to the afflicted, Threr
Botti.es of hisNewlv Discovered
Remedies to cure Consumption
and all Lung Tboublss.
Confident that lie has discover oil a
reliable cure for eonsnmptiou and all
bronchial, throat and lun# diseases,
general decline and weakness, loss of
flesh and all conditions of wastinp,
and to make its great merits known,
ho will send, free, three bottles to any
reader of rhe Representative who
may be suffering.
Already this new "scientific course,
of medicine" has permanently cured
thousands of apparently hopeless cases.
The Doctor considers it his religious
duty—a duty which he owes to human-
ity—to donate his infallible cure.
He has proved the dreaded consump-
tion to bo a curable disease beyond
any doubt, and has on lile in his Amer-
ican and European labratories testi-
monials of experience of those bene-
fitted and cured, in all parts of the
u. rrld.
Don't delay until it is too late. Con-
sumption, uninterrupted, means
speedy and certain death. Address T.
A. Slocum, M. C., 98 Pine street, Ne*.v
York, and when writing the Doctor,
please give express and postoflicc ad-
dresM, and also mention reading this
article in the Representative. 81A- t'.s
For Medical Assistance:
L. Haynes Buxton
8 nc c e t* f..
Physician and Surgeon.
0 ffi c r
Over the Pair Store.
Outhrie, ... Oklahoma.
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Hudson, C. C. The Oklahoma Representative. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1897, newspaper, December 3, 1897; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc94914/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.