The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 16, 1920, Page 2

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Me \ 4 ~ odium, BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE‘ BETRAYED WIPE OF BLEYER WILL ~ DESTIFY AT INQUEST 10 PROVE _HBWAS SLAIN BY HIS PARAMOUR Chieago, March 16.—Captain Clifford M. Bleyer’s crime of disloyalty to his wife and two little daughters is’ to be repaid him in death—strangely, By good for evil. “e Wife and kiddies -were cast aside for a poetess-divorce of cafe notoriety —whose climatic act to an illicit love for a man she stole was to murder him and kill herself. Death. was his penalty, And now Mrs. Bleyers, humbled © and _heart- broken, is going to show the dead recalcitrant the -full measure of real |. love—mercy. She is going to humble her pride and be a witness at the inquest to- morrow, to help the authorities estab: lish that Ruth Randall’ murdered Blever asa relude to suicide. It’s for the sake of -little Paulette and Jacqueline Bleyer. . They can’t understand this ghastly thing that has happened to their Dad- dy. But. they gwill’ sometime, And the mother wants.,to save what few shreds are left of their dead father’s name. She wants: to prove that he, at least, was. not a murderer and a suicide—but was the.victim of a wom- an, in. life called “Kitten,” in death a tigress. ‘ ‘ ‘ Bleyer, army cangain, wealthy ad yertising man, was shot while he slept in the Randall woman’s apartment last Sunday... Her ‘dend. body’ was found beside. hin,.u pistol pointing toward her head. 2 This’ tragic discovery and_ later developments. revealed to Mrs. Bleyer the whole story of her husband's thre years’. unfaithfulness. In’ hér. blind confidence she had worried over his absence from home for two days and, had asked police to hunt him, LOVE FOR CHILDREN WINS Embittered-by ‘his .crime of dis- loyalty she’ first refused to have his body brought home where two little girls talked of Daddy and wrote him letters, kisses.” But the wother-love wor, and now the man who gave her evil in counter- feit of. love’ may. come home—to_.be buried. i Meanwhile morbid people discuss the tragedy—especially this death poem “Kitten” Randall left, behind, sending him “many, many ~ Sleepy-my beloved, sléep! Be patient!. We shall keep Our secret. closely hid Beneath the coflin lid. Sleep, for my hand ‘is. sure; The cold steel bright and pure Strikes through thy heart and mine, Shedding our blood like wine. The coffin lid does not hide their secret, nor Smothéer the , tragedy’s __ It. spreads. it broadcast: and draws shocked. eyes to this pathetic little letter : Dearest’ dady 4 yesterday we had a lovely time grandpa got doles and candy and , lich and little’ play flower pots too.” we went to the movies and we’ are. going today to. -he got> joequeline a doll with a print dress..and me oie in blue I am much satisfide with .it—and so is Jocqueline_ We are-going to -see WM S hart in \branding broadway monny:monny kisses , Paulette. It was the la&t letter of love Bleyer got from one ¢of his little girls, It came tthe day hefgre he died. Cast aside, it. lay, among the diaries an.J letters in the Randall woman's apart- ment, telling of her scarlet past, PRESENT WAGES FOR LUMBER JACKS WOULD ASTOUND OLD TIMERS Ashland, Wis.. March 16,—Wages for employes in lumber camps, e upled with food attractions capable giving an__old-time lumberjack heart failure, promise to make history for northern Wisconsin this winter. Many woodsmen are said: to have carned-more money in a month than they: would. Have collected in an en- tire season a couple of decades’ ago. _ Labor was extremely scarce early. in the winter, ‘but intreased’ wages attracted men to the woods, according to lumber ;company officials. The minimum wage for common laborers “was $65 per month with board and lodging. Top pay was about $150. three meat meals: and lunches com- posed the food allowance-iun most of ‘ the .camps. A few years ago prunes was. one of the food staples, “In those days the fruit was bought wholesale for a,few cents a poufd. w meat is cheaper, it is claimed. GRMDMOTHER KNEW There Was Nothing So Good for Congestion and Colds : > * as Mustard But the old-fashioned _mustard- plaster burned and \blistered while it: acted. Get the relief and help that mustard plasters gave, without. the plaster:and without; the blister. - . Musterole: does it. It is)a clean, sthite ointment, made with oil of mus- - tard, It..is scientifically. prepared, so that it works wonders, and yet does not blister the tenderest skin, " Gently massage Musterole in with the finger-tips. See how, quickly it brings re- lief-how speediiy the pain disappears. Use Musterole for sore throat, bron: Fearn will depend -upon accurate, chitis, tonsllitis, croup, stiff, neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges- tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, iumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, \sore ‘muscles, bruises, chil- blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest *t often prevents pneumonia). * ‘30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, ‘MEREDITH. POINTS | Idaho, is $: Mya? WAR INSURANCE CARDS ISSUED Indentification cards, similar ia those used by men in the army and navy, are being issued to former ser- vice men who retain their war ris« insurance, The cards, a number of which have already been distributed, are to-aid holders to give correct in- formation regarding their insurance! when writing to the bureau ‘on any matters. . The cards bear the name and insur- ance number of the owner and will prove a great help to ex-service few when sending remittances or seeking information from the war, risk insu.- ance bureau. They will also serve as idemtification in case of sickness or ac. cident. \ Many of these cards are being re- turned to the bureau by former ser- vice men instead of being retained. all former, service men who received these identification cards to keep them. é : INDUSTRIES SHY ADMINISTRATION ‘Attracted by North Dakota’s Re- sources! Repulsed by Her Radicalism 3 Mandan, March 15- ment? is doing to yetard the deyelop- ment of. some of the state's greatest Yesources js. indicated in a letter just received, by local parties from ‘the W. Dickey Clay Mtg. Co. of Kansas City, Mo. ; This firm is one of the greatest manufacturers of clay products iu the west if not in the United States, this womart TO IMPORTANCE OF | COMPLETE CENSUS * Washington, -D. C., March 16—Ed win T. Meredith, secretary of agri“ culture, has ~appeled --to ‘\farrrers to srive their hearty co-op- eration in secnsing a full and aecur- ate cénsus of the farms. The’ depart- ment of agriculiure has been ‘in- formed by the bureau of census that the work of taking the farm census i8 not proceeding as wellgas had been hoped, partly owing to the ‘winter weather as contrasted to the: spring and. summer, days when the census has -been-taken'in past years. “If one‘farm is missed in the cen- agriculture. “It is the public duty, as well. as to phe individual benefit, of every. farmer to have> his farm represented in the census.” = All farmers are’ asked to assist the {census enumerators to ‘obtain com- plete figures for their own and their ‘neighbors’. farms. If it is believed ‘that any farm! has ,been missed the local enumerator should be notified. |A note mailed through the postoffice simply to “the United States Census ;Enumerator,” will be delivered to the {district supervisor ‘and Tecgive prompt Jattention. , H ! Farmers are teminded that, ac- jeording to;law, information they fur- \nish the chneus enumerators is abso- jlutely confidential and ean not be ‘given to Income tax collector@ or tax ‘assesscrs and must not be used for jany. purpose other than the compila- ;tion of census reports. Cerisus enum¢ erators are prohibited by law from making public any of the information they obtaim jin their official duties. | | ‘The delay and difficulty ‘in. the jwork of enumerating the. farms is a jmatter of serious concern to ‘the de- ‘partment of agriculture. The census shows the changes of the past , ten| years, the present conditions, and fu:nishes other. data which is essen- tial to‘the satisfactory consideration of many important problems in the field of agriculture. The census fig- ures are particplarly useful to. the Bureau of Crop Estimatés, because they are the basis “of the government reports until the next census is taken. The census report of acreages~etc., by counties, is the . foundation on) which is.built up the structure of es- timated production and supply, upon which. prices depend and -upon: which | in. turn’ depend*the welfare’ both of |the farmer who produces the supplies and of the general public -that-cqn- sumes them. Intelligent action: on suck matters as farm tenancy and ownership, economical marketing of farm products, and other important reliable census.returns, Boise, Idaho, March 16.—Contracts for Idaho highway projects: totalling 290.6 miles, will be awarded befare June this year, according te announce- having plants all the ; way from Omaha to Mexico City,-manufactur- ing brick, tile, coping pottery, sew- ‘er pipe, ete. apd the ability to in- terest them in the. clay’ deposits in Western North ~ Dakota would have meant a wonderful ’ development : of this latest resource, and the estab- ishment of many factories througn- out the staté, A_letter was addressed to them local parties who were anxious to have parties with experience and capital takes .un the working ‘of the clay ‘beds just. south of -Mandan along the Ft. Lincoln’ road,. which deposits were discovered by A. E. Thorberg some two. or three years ago, Sumples of the clay which ex- ists -in “an - almost. inexhaustible quantity “were sent for analysis, dud the most favorable kind of: report was reqeived, from. the chemists, * WON'D TAKE ‘CHANCES Here’{is the reply received ‘by local parties, « c Gentlemen: ~ This will. serve to acknowledge receipt of yours of Feb, 27th... We might be’ interested in -the . general proposition of a. cjay working plant in. North Da- kota, but in. view of present. condi- by Americau,| tions; especially those -peculiar — to | your own state, we rather feel that it, would be inadvisable just) now ty make an. investment. of this char-, acter. « _ It hasbeen brought to our: atten- tion that Townley and: his friends, comprising the ,Soetalistic element, have to. all intené, and purpose, .ob- tained control of your state, as well as industries. The triter ha: a number of art! read in the past (which, later go. busted). flour milis, retail. stores and various other in, dustries...I know of certain elay work‘ The director: of the. bureay requests Ss AT RISKING RED | | neutral “stundpoin Hl —What our So- | cialistic, “revolutionary state govern- les regarding the} sus: cnumeration the returns’ will be} Program as laid out by. the coterie; incomplete,” says the. department of | of #entlemen ,for state owned (banks | RUSSIA'SRED ARMY INCLUDES WHOLE MANHOOD, Every Able-Bodied Citizen der Age of '35 Has Been / 4 Impressed i \ —T - The-.Hague, March, 15.—-Russia has been entirely moébitized, the soldiers up to 35 years hnd the officers regard- ia MARCH 16, 1920" TROPHY EXHIBIT A big United States Army recruit- {ing corps composed of fifteen enlisted men, two officers, an exhibit of tro- phies and relics of the™late war, and # jazz band, will invade’ Bismarck on reeruiting drive here for, the entire week. The’headquarteérs of the paxty, where the exhibition ‘will be display- ed and'\the band give concerts. wil be the Baker-Toppins, Co. store. oi Main and Third streets. : “A fine jazz orchestra will give con- officers and’ men will tell.the péopic an enlistment in the army,” said Colo- less of age, writes. a staff correspon: ent of the Amsterdam Handelsblad. who his just returned from a tour of lec Russia. “They are foreed to fight under the permanent. superyision of commis who are Bolsheviki to the backbone,” he adds. ., y Simple: A. sol- dier who’ betrays ‘tt! Bolshey: or foresnkes his, duty is shot; or, if he sutécevds in escaping, nis family is ‘kill- ed in his place.” The correspondent who from articles appearing in hts paper, apparently tried to view things from a fair and dined with several Bolshevik offic m while en route to Moscow from the Polish front and had an opportunity. to study the Red Army in detail. “The soldiers,” he says, “are very ploite and’ there seems to be a quiet and xgreeable, discipline.; The pay is 800 rubles a month, gor a soldier, 3,200 for a company jegd& and 4200 for regitnental-leadergy The former genor- als of the Czar's amy, of whom are now. serving on 4'rotzky’s stautt, get. 6- 1000 Tobies a ontli Nobody in Rus (receives x large salitry, with the ception of Lenine, who now gets 8,000 rybles a month. x Livery Red Army. corps has a board of commisars, and’ besijles there is a | commissary for ever ion, brigade and as a distinction ‘a a. They Wear | star, on the left ‘mer and a plough with-a’silver laurel j branch all around-and-under ft, the dis- tinetion of their arms; a,smallmachine gun, 2 crossed sabres, ettes s The officers in this army are called leaders, and they wear, an arm band herring the Soviet cout of-arms,-and embroidered (beneath are the. grade markings, one, two, three or four gol- den blocks. “The Red army,” he says. “is not led by the young.proletariat but by the decadent burgeoise.” : DOGS OR EVERY DEGREE TO RUN katchewan riven It is a no-stop race will be declared the winner, Previous races haye been’ run in iblizzards making the trails blind and the going very rough, tiring the dogs and cutting down the time to 15hours. With anything like fair weather con- and the first over >the finishing line} mel~T. J, Rogers of the army recruit ing service for this district, with head- quarters at Aberdeen, S. D. Colone: Rogers. was in theseity today complei- ing plans for the invasion of thé re- cruiting party. FROM EVERY CLIM&* In the part yof enlistment seekers; will be men who have served with the army in England, Frdnce, Germany, Italy, Turkey, Siberia, Honolulu, Alas ka, the Philippines Panama, Cuba and Mexico. There will tries where American soldiers are sta- tioned,” and the advantages of an-en: listment in Uncle Sam’s new. peace lime.army. . ' ing that. organization to’ cooperate creating a sound: public opinion favor able to. army, enlistments. The four main factors of the pres ent drive for recruits‘are as follows: £% PURPOSES First: next Monday and stagg an intensive, certs and courteous and: considerate! of Bismarck about the advantages. 02; - | Raoxeveit’s be. represented | all branches of the service and be able: to tell prospective recruits the advant- ages of each, the various foreign coun- Colonel Rogers. has communicatea : with thé Bismarck lodge of Bliks ask- with the army in diaseminating the ad- vantages of army life, the need for men for the army, the purposes of the | Slum, HoHand, -Teamark, Norw new peace time army to train the Sweden, the Colonel wrote ‘that the men in ‘professions which will be fi- naneially helpful to them when they{him every courtesy and civility but leave the service for the. purpose of. that, ¢ ‘ I To recruit the army to" ajcia bregst on which*aro embossed a ham~jistrength. necessawy for the proper | rather thansa ‘tr: AMERICAN NAVY | SURPRISED HUN 'Von Tirpitz Told Roosevelt He Didnt Believe We Could Circle Globe . New York, N. Y., March 15.—An inti- {Mate peiltpicture_ef the former Ein- peror Of Germapy, drawn by Co!diel | Roosevelt..in a letter to Sir George Otto Lrevelvan in 1911, which shows him. in the light of an “adorer’ of Eng ars in the March number of Magazine. the. concluding “portion per'sc OO0-Wword count of his. trave’s: in “egypt dad | Europe following this return from ‘his memorable African hunting trip. * The former- President wrote that William agreed with him, during’ the | course of a long interview at Potsdam, that war between England and “Ger- Tany would be “an unspeakable calan ity.” The Colonel said that) Prince ! Henry of Prussia, of whom the then [Ka er fas “rather jealous,” was “a mcre really powerful adn cold-blooded ; mah’ than. the Emperor and that of the two, he was the moré-hostile to Eng- tidand. of nee VISIT TO BERLIN. |“ Referring to his visit to: Berlin, ‘fol- \lowing “delightful” receptions in Rel- yo and German authorities amd people showed xcepting the university folk, { “they really did not) want ta: see me.” America, he said. was very unjoular jin Germany. The upper s | garded democracy, he said, as. “irre lar, unnatural and debasing. "The low- e es _on the other hand, were So- 's who r nd. The middle class and efficient performance of its pres- looked upon me as a representative: of ent duti Second: the country to an understandin: the advantages vocationally, ment in the new army. / Fourth: humanizing effect of an entfstment in rades who welcome the recruits as brothers and who give them more painstaking attention and careful con da; which chunks of moose meat lay. Thi camp probably had. been fhe rendez- yous of a number of trappers, but the man the detectives had been chas- ing, who was fleeter than they on snowshoes, had given the alarm, ant all. the. poachers had fled. To educate.the psoplé of! ness ri of, ing and obno; the needs of a national peace force |, the young men ofthe country -ayita| inauy educa-' wa tionally; morally and physically whica : inten are open to them through an enlist) the American. battlefleet around. the To etsablish irrevocably dent that; in the hearts and minds of parents the; the army under officers and with com- ys and came upon ;a_eamp about; {an America, which als who delight on Von Tir- uted the rtuhless submarine Von Tirpirtz, he said, was ely interested jn the voyage of | warld. and he teld the former presi- he had not belieyed «we could do it ssfwily” adding that the British nm 1 and foreign officers had félt the same way. “He sai expected Japan would attack the flee: while it was,on its way round. zarded me as- an eneniy ? consisted of busi 4 ivalry was irritat- si “men. But they have the most nenvine- ~ ‘IT’S UNWISE | | to put off to-day’s duty until to- | ee If your stomach is | | acid-disturbed take Ki-MoinS | | the new aid to digestion comfort taday. A pleasant relief from the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. MADE.BY SCOTT & BOWNE 1 |. MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION i V\ ——_—_—_ j very, very slight undertone of: vailed truculence in their communications ie Vconnection with things that happened - 4on the Pacific slope; and 1 finally ' made up-my mind that they thought 1 was afraid of them, - i *Byery particle of trouble with the : Japanese” government and, the Jap- anese press stoped like magic a: nn as they found that our fleet wl y sailed, and was ob in good trim. “As 1 told Von Tirpity, 1, thought ‘it a good thing that the Japanes? should know there’ werg fleets of the “white races which: were totally (ifrer- ent from the flest of poor Rojestven- Von Tepite and, Willlam, ae snid,.told him that: they regarded. the ‘yeyage of the fleet as having “de more for peace in the Orient than any thing else that could possibly have hap- pened.” P : + Other, portions of thé Colons!'s letter to Sir George teem with anecdotes and reference.to his association with, Buro- ‘pean royal The simple, una ed, democratic simplicity of the rilers i sseqp himedeeply.) “At 1 ws were -gentine: whon we left them, to think that we would never see thety again; : Norway decid a turn Republic ould love to haye them come to Ii sagumore Hill. NORWAY “I iDOM”" orway is as funny a Kingdom as ever imagined outside” ef -oner’ fe—although it isn't ppera boutfe for the Norwegians are h fine, powerful lot of men and wo- mis. ly democratic society to be found in and the aims of our new peace time pitz, then the Secretary of War, was Kuyope: not excepting. Switzerland ; army. __ | afforded by the colonel’s reference to there only two or thre states i Third: To thoroughly familiarize an inteview iwth the man who Tater the American Union which are . demorcracie: They have no nobles, birdly even gentry ; they are peasants and small townspeople. ail- ors, fisher foTk.-mechanics and s traders. On this communty a ro; family is suddenly plumped. It is much as if Vermont should offhand try tue experiment of having a King. Yer ‘jt certainly seemed as if tbe experi- ment were entirely guecessful.” Thompson Falls, Mont. March 16,— Hard have we worked and we've~con- Guered, i Conquered the Red Man—the sod; _ Over the. primeval prairies é Forward and onward we've trod; Fought we with sword) and ploughshare ~ with, | es our pockets And all our efforts seemed vain. + Glad have we been when the harvest Yielded an hundred fold, ing the debt and the mortgage, with goid. Yes, we stil love North Dakota, /| Knowing she'll compensate well ay p | “I told hiya.” he wrote, “that I had : ' \ : sideration than: they could possibly not expected such-an attack; but that! Carroll Norton went through the great ji hope for tadet any other conditions I-had thought it possible; in other War as an atrman and_came home ( J | of livelihood—to make the parents ap; words, that | thought the chances were tebe accidentally shot and killed at ay a MALAI) | preciate the clean moral and physica.! against-it, but there was a chanes for a Charivari party. Paar, ‘ conditions that surround their \boys it. My point of view .at the time the |. Norton, who>was 21 years of “age, V ‘ ae at ‘all times so that they. need have fleet sniled. was’ that 4f the Japanes> Was the son of C. 8. Norton ‘a promi- Malmutes, Collies, ‘Greyhounds, mo, hesitancy about advising then lo, atteeked it, it was a’ certain , nent stockraiser of nl Sanders coun- + - af enlist to learn a trade or better their they were intending to attack.as a ty. .The boywent with some other i Sheen Dogg-and Huskies education. 25) <. | first favorable, opportunit {young peonle to, charivaricat sWhite- f i i ‘ Ba ts ES “py TT DANES: pine. ‘ ® = Entei ¥ in Rare Tt IDAHO CHARGES THAT ° » en see Te ao) are wSE | The men took guns along, to make y i % cent had been doing my best to be bo; ; some noise and in the shooting. in. / 4 The Pas Man.,*March 16.— Alaska / MONTANA TRAPPER S ARE Hye ae Ava RUUD Ha ly the darts Noston swags side through a is Man.;- 3 5 8k: ; < | Dec omtortebly conscious Q malmates, cols erayhou ids, sheep VIOLATING “GAME LAW Zh aed conscious of a the forehead and ae instantly. Si > dogs .and_ northern. huskies . are. the " fs [ > species of animals. entered in. the ; | WE WHO HAVE LIVED IN DAKOTA | & : Hudson Bag dog derby classic which| Missoula, Mont., March 16—That “S - — | will be held here on March; 17..-The} Montana trappers, given permission | We who have livedin Dakota . Yes, we'vé weathered the blizzards; ' :race is run from The Pas'to Sturgeon|to work in the forésts just across | We who have loved her right well, | Crop failures-many we've known, : | Landing ‘and return, a distance- of|the Idaho line, nre violating the gam2| We who have known her and'tried her’ arly and late we have labored, { 100 miles, for a purse of $1,000 and| laws “is the charge of two slcuths| Marvelous tales could we tell; Molt the cold wind to the bone, \ the Derby ‘gup. ,The teams will be|who have just returned from a lon) Tales of the Sioux and the Mandan, ,| Glad have we been when uur neigh= sent away from scratch after dark| chase iii the wilds, on snowshoes, | ‘Tales of the Grosventre as well; H bor re on Tyesday, March 16 finishing it is| a¥ter suspects. i Tales of braye, Custer and Sully ‘ Garnered=the golden grain, expected 12 hours later on the Sas-) ‘They followed one trapper several; Fain unto you/we would tell. Knowing our mortgage was unpaid ~ > | ( ditions this time may be’ bettered by three or four hours. ‘The entry of ing plants in your state that in the past year or so have been shut down a large part -of the time on account of. the uncertain business conditions and. lack of prospective development. Some,of the -recent. Jaws :passed. by your legislature-provided, as I under- stand it. for -state “owned packing plants, railroads, mills, .ete., and also remove the state debt limit the ex- penses incurred therewith to be ’met by taxation. s Most, ‘sections. of this';county ware at present fertile fields’ for the de- velopment: of -a manufacturing en terprise such as you suggest. but it seems to me‘ that the conditions now existing in your own state are not those that would tend. to: attract. any considerable .amount , of, capital. We-appreciafe, however, your tak- ing the, trouble ‘to write us and ‘will have the matter in mind-in the future. ‘ Yours very truly, KENNETH DICKEY. MONTANA OFFERS JOB FOR GOOD WOLF SLAYER S Livingston, Mont., March 16.—Want- ed—one. wolf slayer. The ranchmen. in the Melville. dis- trict will pay.salary and expenses \to any: mighty hunter, who, will rid that district".of wolves. Tyee ' The Job will ‘last while the wolves last and judging from their numbers, that should be some period.~ Losses of stock have become so heavy that :the.ranchers have clubbed together to bear the expense of*‘put- ting a professional ‘hunter- on the “Any’ aspirant for the place may learn details by communicating with the secretary of the Livingston Cham- ber of Commerce. Bite Italian Finds Germ" of Sleep Malady. | -Rologna, - Itely—Another of man’s Ps | —+ ment by tlie state director of highways. The total allotment of federal aide to | 3.360.000, Projects: approved | before Dec. 31 last, have used up $2, $80,000 of this fund. During the past! year county and highway districts haye issued bonds for about $12,000,- | 200. for highway improvement; disease enemies has “surrendered ty science. Professor .Arnaldo Maggiord ofthe Institute. of Hygene ‘here, ‘has isolated the germ of sleeping sickness and: is busy preparing a serum to con- bat the malady. The sleeping sickness germ was,one.of the most illustiye in thB-history, of bacteriology. 4 Walter Oerne, the Alaska number, iwith his string of :malamutes has ‘made it difficult to select the favorite jEliminating Gerne from consideration {experienced dog’ men. believe — Larry iMcKay, of: Grand Rapids, looms "y ALBERTANS ASK! —— a ; ae jthe most promising. McKay finished | ~ Ep! 5 Tal ‘seeond {n last year’s derby. He drives | ‘a wild Barren Lands Wolf team, nerv- ‘ous and fierce ‘with enough fleetness race if they can be controlled and kept to the trail. The. Hayes and Campbell brothers are wél! drilledin derby fixtures and like. the other Jarge\ number of en- tries they are keeping to the ‘bush, training ‘their teims: and laying low jfor surprises. So far the: entry list comprises the following well -knoWn mushers: Larry McKay, Joe ‘St. God- dard, Jack and Bill Hayes, Gabriel and Bateese Campbell, Chas. Dysart, Bill Grayson, Vernour Walker, Walter Broosk, J. Bjorkman, Jack Quickley, Billy Rusick, Walter Ross, Chas, Part- Sam. Pranteau,* Harry. Sanderson, Johnny Turner and ‘Silas. Partridge. ee gue TWO MEN SEEKING FISH FOUND GOLD IN BUTTE IN ’68 Butte, Mont., March 16.—Two men who sought -fish discovered gold in Butte in- August, 1868,.and had not ‘| their-zeal as nimrodg led them to the site, of what is now tne,Gagnon mine, this tremendous: body. of .ore, over whieh Butte Jies,.might yet be un- found. \ Ole Humphrey and Williams Alli- son were. -the -discoverers, ‘according to data just submitted for preserva- tion in the state historical brary. Dennis’ Leary, now .of Omaha, Neb., furnishes the facts. 1. 7 near In a letter Leary says: he, Allison, Humphrey .and two other men had been fishing in the Deer Lodge river on their. way- home :to Virginia City, after a prospecting trip. Fishing Was poor, so they wandered ‘alohg what is now known as Silver Bow creek, lying in. the: heart ofsthe city. The men. found. ore tracings, bur thought little of it, although they -took a few samples to Virginia City ‘for analysis, The assay greatly excited the pioneer capita] and the rush to Butte followed. j {of foot to outdistance anything in the DEVELOP 4 MET. ALS ridge, Billy Lundy, Adam Ballentine, ; jseverely. J: H.- Clark, dyputy supervisor of the Ritter Root forest reserve, and | Andrew ‘Hjort, a deputy. game warden | from Idaho, were the men on the trail. GOVERNMENT. TO Great Mineral Resources Should; Be Put on Market-With Prices at Peak Calgary, Alta., March 16.—Bankers mining men and other persons inter ested in finance and metals are urg- ing the government to bend every effort to develop Canada’s gold and silver resources, while demand for these metals is gt/its peak... One set of figures presented to Ottawa de- clared that _$30,000,000,000, worth ‘of unbacked: nates. are in circulation in the Various countries of the world. Despite governmental efforts to conse Re, silver and gold, it is claimed that the visible supply in Canada is constantly heing reduced. Large a- mounts of silver have found their way across the border and to China and India, it js asserted. ji = Production of gold in Canada last Year was worth $16,275,000. The total for 1918 was $14,463,000. For the nine months ending December 31 last, Ithe export of Canadian gold totalled $3,384,000, and, as usual, the bulk was sent to the United, States. Last year $8,567,000 worth of (silver was shipped to the states. It has—also been pointed out that |Canadian “ treasyry machinery has “been running on its own.” For eight months the royél mint at Ottawa has ;been running over time on Canadian coinage. During the war it minted, (for ‘the British goyernment, several ‘hundred million. dollars worth of gold from the-South African Rand and this money was sent to New York to sup- ;port the British sovereign. . It. is claimed that since this work was com- pleted, the British pound has suffered ’ Wresting our-breai from the clod, # } Virgin and untouched we found it As left by the hand of our God: ose who are willing to try her, summer and wistter her well. | —HULDAH LUCILE WINSTED, State Normal School, Minot,-N. D. _. Children’ “\ The Kind You Have Always Bought, czd which has been "in use for over thirty - years, has borne te sicaature of \ , EE. and has" been mace wader his per. | Sonal superyicica eiace “its infancy, Aaa , Allow no‘one to Ciccire you in this. Fecha . “Ail Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Juct-co-oed ara: put : Experiments that trifle with and ‘endanger heath of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castcr.' 0:1, Parevoric Orops aud Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. t+ cuatalng ueither Opium, Morphine nor other natcotic substance... Its tge is its guarantee. For more than thirty reais it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipativa, Fietulency, Wind Colic ana Diarrhoea; allaying *Feverishuess aristay ‘ . therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, 2:45 “the assimilation pf Food; giving healthy and natural Sleep. = ‘Fae Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. - : ceNUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of THe CENTAUR Commany. Wew ¥. =l oak erry:

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