The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 7, 1922, Page 5

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N, D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN - - Editor . Foreign. Representatives G. LQGAN PAYNE COMPANY - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK °-. - Fifth Ave. Bldg. Be MEMBEK OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS "The Associated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use or republi- cation of all news ‘dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local “news published herein. ‘AN rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also _ reserved MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF 1 CIRCULATION SURSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE * IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by. mail, per year (in Bi marck) . Daily by mail, in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.! ‘Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota 6.0 . PAPER (ustablished 1873) When annoyed by summer heat, you scowl at the sun, uncomfortably conscious of its dictatorship over life on earth. Up there on the sun, the hydrogen ‘flames are so giant that some of; them rige to a height of 500,000 miles. The heat of these flames is about! 7000 degrees centigrade. That is 70 times the amount of heat necessary to make water boil. One of these flames is bad enough. You get an idea of the combine terrific Zheat traveling ‘toward us when yu stop to think that these giant flames are all over the sun's surface and that the sun’s diameter fs 866,000 miles, against the earth's diameter, of about 8000 miles. ‘With fowerful telescope and spec- troscope; scientists are uncover- ing knowledge about the sun—from | the. safet distance -of- 92,830,000 .iles. The human brain is.getting some- where when it can ferret out “infor-| ‘mation at that stupendous distance. | ““Whileene branch of scientists in-! vestigates ; the far-off, another branch ,finds equally marvelous things here on earth, so small that) Kresge Bldg.| THE BISMARCK: TRIBUNE 7 losing foreign trade. But in the viewing its members in the same fiscal year ended June 30 our ex-/ light as they would view any other ports exceeded imports by a bigger, common strikebreakers?” amount than in any year before the; No attack on the mine occurred war, Our foreign trade in May left) until Lewis’ telegram was received us to the good ubout $54,000,000. | hy the local union. But surely Lew- paren a is did not mean that the men he so MEXICAN PETE | advised should plunge into the worst Jesse Livermore, foremost stock orgy of lynching that this country market operator, denies the Wall) has seen, True, there was not a word Street rumor that he. lost '$2,500,000| in his telegram, advising the keep- ‘by getting caught short of Mexican! ing of the peace, but he may ‘not Petroleum stock. | have considered it necessary. Many times’'that muth, however,|. Whoever started the slaughter, it was lost by the unknowns © who| is 4 black hour for the union miners, guessed the market wrong. for Illinois and its officers and for 4Mexican Pete,” “advanced 70 | the whole country, Will the union seinte in 12Aaya, ‘hdlf,amiltion| HelP, #0 discover and convict the : 5 | murderers? Will the local and state TE ee neratiin the Loutr.| officials proceed as relentlessly as . if the unions wielded no power? ana Lottery was put out of business." Wiu whole country is waiting for | 0 gs! Ve WORK | the answer—New York Herald. Frank McManamy, traffic expert,| WOMAN'S INFLUENCE finds that the railroads have 334,000 | Seca aera : : je 334,000 re warning which Miss Alice Rob- froight cars and 13,128 locomotivge crtson, representative in Congress in “bad order"—that is, laid up for) +01, Oklahoma, gives the politicians reper is crippled rolling stock |W imagine that women can be han- _ Getting this crippled rolling stock qeq jn politics by allowing:them to into good shape again will provide rey ae dat to have its ef. jobs for many thousands of men. feet following the surprises in Indi- In every branch of our ceonomic ana and Pennsylvania, It would it system we have “bad order” equip: the politicians learned readily, but ment—building and repairs needed.) ‘onerally they are slow at that ac- Everything wears out, Repairing oF | Complishment. Probably they wiil re- replacing it is what brings prosperi- ty. The momentum of prosperity is generated in hard times. | peared in politics. | Miss Robertson’s statement that | understand that a new force has up- | FLYING All women will be interested 0 tics because they realize that througn know that the first woman to give’ polities they can serve the interests birth to a baby in an airplane is’ of themselves, their homes and their Mme. Georges Breyer, of Lyons, families is a rational and practical France. Baby arrived while the explanation. | plane, 6000 feet above the Mediter-| Jt js in their homes and their fam- ranean, was rushing mother to the jlies that women are interested, and hospital. | they have seen enough of politics as This is exceptional now. Later) conducted by the men to understand iit may be common, Future gener-| how closely the question of govern- iatéons may tive. in flying houses.’ ment touches those interests. They ‘Impossible? The ‘airplane of today, | are going to use their new power, not {compared with ‘future flying ma-| for the sake of the game that mex chines, is as crude as primitive man’s | haye made of politics, but to get het- | first log. canoe compared with giant) ter and safer and happier living con- ocean'liners of modern, times. | ditions for themselves and their chil- —_—_— | dren. $40,000 | If this purpose doesn’t square with An education increases the aver- | the plans of the politicians for haa- age person’s earning power $40,000) dling the woman vote, then the poli- during his life time. This is the esti- | ticians are likely to have to change mate of experts given=publicity by) their plans—Kunsas City Times. Alice Lakey, editor of Insurance IN Magazine. GOOD LUCK TO HIM Admitting that the: estimate is! John Burke is back in North Da- correct, parents are giving their child | kota, seeking location where he can a mortgage on $40,000 when they/start all over again to build up a | quire other lessons before they fully, | women are taking ‘an interest-in voli-| Early corn is being shocked. Big- ger the bottle the more the shock, What’s worse than changing your mind’ after having your hair bobbed? Detroit man wooed and won a girl in 24 hours, but it took’a bot of co- operation. 1 Times are better. We saw a man in a new silk shirt. 4 Health hint: Never make a girl mad enough to tell the ‘truth, Germany has one of the greatest Russian armies in the world. Turks are still fighting. -What’s a little war to a Turk who has 12 wives waiting at home? ' A cake of yeast that won’t work never raises the dough. Very few married couples dance cheek to cheek. Tight shoes are never comfortable until you’ take them off. Easier a man’s job is the more time he has to get disgusted with it, A girl who runs after a man has to be pretty fast. Place to get birth control recruits is in a crowded street car. ‘Former saloonkeeper in Milwau- kee killed himself. Others, however, still have hopes. Nearly everybody has said “Jazz is dead” except jazz. Mountain in Alaska is getting higher. May be owned by a profi- teer. An optimist is a man who lets the flies eat with him. | We expect to see a flapper get up! and give her street car seat to one Charleroi, EDGAR MASTERS, candidate for Grand Exalted J. Pa, Ruler. Masters a banker was chairman of the Grand Lodge audit- ing committee, 1911-12; served five years as Grand Trustee, and has been chairman of the committee on community welfare. Ram ADVENTURE THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts Eyerybody in all Whispering For- est’ and Bright Meadowland tried to keep. Dr. Snuffles and his helpers, Naney and Nick, from getting as far as Marty Mink’s house, ‘ Marty had swallowed a fish-bone, Dea OF > and. as long as it stuck in his throat he ‘couldn’t eat a bite. That tickled all the wood-folk and meadow-folk mightily for no one’s life: was safe when Marty, was hun- gry. and around looking for a meal. Mrs. Woodchuck saw the little fairy doctor and the Twins coming. She waited until they got opposite her front door and then— «Oh, oh, oh!” she. cried. Somebody help! Quick!” Marty Mink and his fish-bone flew out. of Dr. Snuffles’ head, He hur- “Oh, oh! send them through ward school, high school and college, or $2500 for each the “hunian eye cannot see them. ‘At Nela!Park laboratories,’ Cleve-| year spent in school. Tell this to the child who wants land; bagcina bugs—so small that 1000 of them in a straight line meas- ure only .qne inch—are placed on a ‘Janteri slide. Magnified by miscrosco- pie lenses and projected on a movie, sereen, fiepe boscina organisms are) observed’? Viciously attaching each other. 4 ; to quit schodl and go. to work. On top of the $40,000 is the far greater value of education to the intellect and soul. WINES Weeks, secretary of war, “comes | F ‘A s Other bugs, only a twenty-fifth of out for light wines and beer.” He an inch longs are flashed on the Says he would vote for them if he i i ressman. ovie screen and shown cuddling Were congr on i their young. Suppose wines returned—limited, \Wnother-minute form of life is say, to 10 per cent. 5 i ighown feeding itself with a sort of, It would not be long until the Helis ")\paddfe-wh der its eyebrows. | Wines would be spiked, alcoholic con- spadale-wheel under its eyebrows. (ont rising gradually to the strength What, sclénce sees through its su-| of whiskey and brandy. , \ per-mieroscopes and telescopes, to- As a practical proposition, how day seéms* wonderful. And it\is. But would you suggest. preventing such law practice and win a living. He comes back to begin, at sixty-three, eight, when he pioneered in North the public respect that made him governor and later treasurer of the United States, and that led to his ad- venture in Wall Street where dishon- est associates left him stripped of every dollar he had in the world. But John Burke comes back to North Dakota with one great and un- purchasable asset. He is still “Hon- est John” Burke. His good, name is untarnished. The , confidence his neighbors had in him they still have. made him governor believe in him now. That asset he had yet to win when, an unknown young man, he came into the state in 1888, He won just about where he did at twenty-| of these he-vamps. ried into Mrs. Woodchuck’s hall and “right back te her sitting-room. “What's the matter? Who’s hurt?” Look for the bright side. Ruth’s income tax won't be so big. Dakota and laid the foundations for, Those who believed in him when they, Funny how people pay to practise reading aloud on movie subtitles. In New York, a dancer choked his partner to death.- We thought the’ strangle hold was barred. Many a woman goes visiting and hopes they are not at home. | Always drop some money in the} collection plate.. The change will do the preacher good. As a man thinks so is he unless his wife changes his mind. —— hé’ called. And then he spied Mrs. Woodchuck rocking herself _ back and,forth in a corner and wailing. It’s. my thumb!” cried Mrs. Weodchuck. “I was putting. in a nail when the hammer slipped and— oh, oh, oh, you'll have to fix it, doc- tor.” “My, oh, my!” exclaimed tlte doc- tor. “That's too bad! Let me see it." Why, there isn’t a mark! Are “Of course,” declared Mrs. Wood- chuck tartly. “It’s my right hand, isn’t. it?” ‘Poor Dr. Snuffles fixed Mrs. Wood- chuck’s thumb. ‘Then the three started, for Marty’s hase}, again, F D is crude and primitive to the dis- feoveries that will be made by future 4 scientists. Nature is like a candy box with millions of layers. So far, we have)’ uncovered only the first layer. Oth-'’ er layers will be uncovered, each more wonderful than the one before. Usually, when science finds some-' } thing new, it is regarded merely as / an interesting laboratory experiment. Later it inevitably is put to practical } uses “ |, ‘Thug ignch one of these. ‘discover- i ies affects man’s. ways of living. The’ i futare of; human life is unguessable, | Mut it certainly will be bizarre, ut- erly unljke the lives we live today. I, Mentalfiy:we are barbarians, slowly; ‘oving toward knowledge. Compar- h be ike“oysters compared with the { human brains ‘of today, though Manity mskes this hard to believe or iy admit. 2 < | fas ‘Dr. Casimir “Funk, 10 years ago, Hi discovered the vitamines, cer! ical substances nece: | Five ‘kinds,‘of vitamines a 1 co with -our far-off descendants we lait IES '" VITAMINES have been isolated. Each has its ipurpose.; One, for instance pre-j Hi vents scurvy. ; i} Dr. Funk is searching for a sixth vitamine which, if included’ in .our| food, mjght prevent pellagra disea: Animals need no such research. spiking? Could it be done,'at all? | it, and despite his recent misfortune, Prohibition, like everything else, is jhe. still has it. It is one of the last- (a SOLS YALA S : | “A THOUGHT |). But, some more things were to not real unless it is absolute. PROSPERITY Important, news, for all who work. The railroads announce that in the week ended . June 10 they loaded 846,002 cars of freight. ‘This was 38,797 cars more than in ' the corresponding week of 1919, dur-| ing the big boom. The gain would be around 100,000 cars, instead of 38,197, if coal were moving normally ‘instead of being held back by the strike. Many are wondering if a business boom really is coming. Coming? It here now, in many industries, And it is not a false alarm, HOKUM College graduates get a lot of notion that they are puffed up and s/expect the world to fall at their feet. The Science Monitor Christian tgin- suggests that this isn’t true of the preater evil than college’ graduate. The Monitor probably, is right. Most: generally-accepted notions are- false. Ed. Howe, the famous country. editor, writes: flag. really, annoy a bull? We are always talking about it, but did you after anything red?” A instinct, guides { them’ tp. the foods ‘they need, | when they’ heed them. b4 You havé observed how''a ick cat” 5 instinet{vely hunts catnip. P{ Man, ‘in becoming civilized; has: lost this instinct. Now he seeks. an (| artificial. substitute for the lost \in-, | stinct. That is one more demonstra- | tion that,everything has a price that must be‘ paid—that, when we gain one thing, we lose another. : RADIO Marconi predicts that the best radio equipment of today will be ob- solete in: 10 years, possibly sooner. What will the future be? F) Wireless has extended man’s sense of headidg, thousands of times the the ean-without the aid of Hertzian ‘waves. Soon jrhdio will be extending the j sense of sight, by radio movies. }. notably, the sense of smell? Will i the man-in a city office be able, by radio, {t6 smell the fragrance of meadows and woods? It is not im- [| possible,:save that civilized man has f1 almost, lost the sense of smell. + SCHOOLS Our educational system is not yet it was years ago. One proof of this: Thousands of high school girls and boys are seeking work in vacation. Ask ithem, “What have you been trained-to do?” Most of them answer, “Nothing.” -“Cani you dance?” “Can'T? Hot dog!” iSAPAN IN THE HOLE /, From , Tokio comes a _- cable: | Japan’js{ imports during May ceeded’ exports by 10,000,000 yen. _ EDITORIAL REVIEW ing things which nobody can~ take ‘away froma man; and when a man destroys it himself he parts with bverything worth while. | | John Burke comes again to North Dakota, as poor as he was when he came to it thirty-five years: ago. But he comes with the warm gopd wishes of his neighbors, based upoy utter. | confidence in an integrity which he never would sacrifice fortany price. THE PRIMARY RESULT The nominating convention held throughout the state recently has re- sulted in three tickets, the Republi-| | can, the Democrat and the Farmer- | Labor. The pre-primary candidates | are endorsed throughout the State, |so that this part of the experiment , “kidding” because of the widespread | toward doing away with the loose | primary has worked suctessfully. Its scope should be extended so. (that self nominations will be done jaway .with. There is certainly no self nomination. | The old ‘convention system’ carried with it some evils, but we do not believe they were more serious than | Self nomination. The most incom- “Does a red’ petent in the community can. nomi-; | nate themselves for a given office under the present system, instead of sever personally know a bull to take employing the collective judgment of title of a Fox picture in which that other citizens, and where the num- ber is large enough to split the vot- ers into small sections, it is possible for the most incompetent man to win. It was for the public welfare that 7 easy happen. | Good luck to him!—Duluth Herald.! 4) (To Be Continued.) i Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) ;_ Let all those that put their trust in Thee rejoice: let those that love name be joyful in Thee.—Psalm | @———____—_——- OO I tell you this for a wonder, that no man shall then be glad Of his fellow’s fall and mishap to snatch at the work he had. Today’s word is BIZARRE. It’s pronounced be-zar, the E as the first'e in event, and the A as the ainarm. Accent on the second syl- lable. ¥& means—odd, fantastic, or queer. It comes from. the French, whence it is believed to have been borrowed from the Spanish bizarro, meaning liberal or gallant. Probably it is of Basque origin. 4 It’s used like this—The bright col- Then all mine and all thine shall/ be ours, and no more shall any man crave For riches that serve for nothing; but to fetter a friend for a slave. For all these shall be ours, and all men’s, nor shall any lack a| ors of his :clothing gave him a share, bizarre appearance. , ‘Of the toil and the gain of living inj e “the days when the world| Certain chemicals used in dye- work are now said to have strong enrative values in cases of human ailments. } grows fair. ‘ —William Morris. pa en ee oh AT THE MOVIES | A TET a ES I CAPITOL . i “Strange Idols” is the interesting 00- HOO, capable actor, Dustin Farnum, .ap- pears as the star and which comes; tothe Capitol tonight. The story is; of a love match between two tem- \ permaments diametrically opposed—a , rich lumberman from the forests andi ), distance a sound can be heard by, 2 Will ,it also extend other senses,’ practical} enough, though better than’ ex- ‘This leayes Japan in the hole $5,000,- the Democratic party decided to make its nominations. We need the Republican and Democratic Parties, j and evey if the Democrats are in ; thes minority at the moment, they | should proceed with their future nominations. The third party in the state, at the moment includes all WHO STARTED THE BUTCHERY? the radical voters with the farmers, The eyes of this country are cent-| but all the farmers are not radicals, ered upon southern Illinois. so they do not support that ticket, One reason is that one of our great and fewer of them will support it as states, one of those states in which they become enlightened on the real the traditions” of order and honor/ essence of the alliance with radicals. and power of law should be of the} |Therée is as much: difference be- strongest, remained supine in a eri-/ tween radical labor and conservative tical and tragic hour. | labor, as there is between any’ other | The affair at Herrin was a massa-|two sections of political thought. cre, done not merely. with delibera- The very fact ,that the radical is tion but with hideous pleasure. | seeking the farmer vote is a good There is nothing in the history of reasonthat farmers ‘should fight the United States to’ compare with! shy“of it, just as Mr. Gompers is op- the savagery of the mob that turned posing it in labor circles. the surrendered strikebreakers loose} Those who have the best interest only to shoot themidown; that cut of the State at heart will support, in their ‘throats as they lay wouitded; | the confine campaign, either the Re- that cursed them as they were dying, publicah or the Democratic candi- in the hospitals;~thaét killed women) dates./ _ and babies, and that brought : the! The radicals would like an alliance children into the morgue to “take, with*the Democrats, but we trust the ‘a look, kid, at ,what* your father leaders of the Democraite party will did.” | Bot listen, even if they go to defeat. Not even the massacre at Fort) Jt is orly a question of a few years, | Pillow, the darkest chapter in .the, With this course followed out, that story of the Civil war,.can match! the Democratic Party will again be- the details of the Ilinois horror.’ ‘{/come a strong element in this state “It was just the old story of, aj in opposition to the Republican mob getting started,” one of thé) Party, and such a condition will be union miners explained. What start-| helpful. Therefore, under the same ed it? Was it the telegram from) counsel that led the Democrats this | President John L. Lewis of the Unit>|year to independent action as against ed Mine Workers in which he de-\an alliance with the Socialists—now clared that “representatives of our Seeking recognition as Progressives organization are justified in treat- —let there be a cold face turned Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of, The Tribune, They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. 000 a month. ing this crowd (the strikebreakers) against such an alliance——Minnea- Some Americans wail about our as. an outlaw organization and in polis ,Journal, , i ‘ a beautiful cabaret dancer of gayest} New York; a man in whom the call | of the wild finds a ready response | and a girl to whom the white lights! of Broadway are as the breath of | life. The subject is one in which the’ possibilities for intense dramatic ac-| tion are obvious—and it is equally obvious that Dustin Farnum should handle the star role with great skill and good taste. “ In “Strange Idols’ theater apparently has a genuine; treat for discriminating theater-! gaers—especially since the leading woman is Doris Pawn, favorably known throughout the country. j the Capitol | A diamond is pure carbon that} has been subjected to great pressure. j In Japan keys turn in their lock: in the opposite direction from that customary to us. Not Operation | Successful i LEADERS IN WORLD OF PATRICK J. BRENNAN, son, Tex., candidate for re-election as Grand Treasurer, banker,” nnn QI 120 Sees A sus = BEGIN HERE TODAY DAVE YANDELL, pioneer “dark and blocdy. ground Revolutionary Kentucky, ing guard when WHITE ARROW, 9 boy of fifteen flees to the stockade for protection from his Indian companions. __It is discovered that White Arrow is a white boy who, when an infant, was taken captive ‘with his mother. His Indian captives told him that his mother was killed ahd that he had heen adopted by the Shawnee chief as is son, ‘The indians attack the fort but are n off. In the battle White Ar the Indian who maitreated nd caused his flight. f the of Pre- is mount- at a settler's stockade in a ginian rescuers is’ mort He giv rt ofisurp White A ‘GO ON WITH THE STORY “Never mind now,” said old Joel soothingly, “you ‘must. keep still!” The boy’s eyes had begun to shift under the scrutiny and he started away.” ‘ “Come back here!” commanded the wounded man, and still search- ing the lad he said sharply again: yot' sure this is: the right thumb?) 1.) URS. OBRIEN ! How ARG You “Who is that boy?” Nor woul ave his wound dressed or even take the cup ‘of water handed to lim until old Joe) briefly told the story, when he-lay back on the ground and closed his eyes, Darkness fell, The dying man was laid-on a rude bed within one cabin, and old Joel Jay on the floor close to the door. The stranger lad refused .to sleep. indoors and hud- died himself in a blanket on the ground in one corner of the stock- ade. «Men, women, and children fell to a deep and weary sleep. An hour later the boy in the cor- ner threw aside his blanket, and when Lydia Noe, feverish and thirsty, rose from her bed to get a drink of water outside her door, she stopped short on the threshold. The lad, stark naked but for his breech-clout and swinging his bloody scalp over his. head, was stamping around the fire—dancing the scalp-dance of the savage to a low, fierce, gutteral song. The boy saw her, saw her face in the blaze, stricken white with fright and horror, gay her too para lyzed_to move and he stopped, star- ing at her a moment with savage rage, and went on again. Old Joel’s body filled the next doorway, With an oath /and a threatening gesture Joel motioned to the corner of the —| EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | 2 ° HELLco, BELLO “16 years ago I was operated on for appendicitis and later operated again for gall stones.: Neither did me any. good and I suffered all kinds of torture since, Five years ago I took Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy and-have felt no symptoms or pain since. All stomach sufferers should take it”, It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal. mucus from the’ intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes pr tically all stomach, liver and intesti- nal ailments, including, appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. j | For sale at all druggists.—Adv, he GURBAN BROADCASTING ‘STATION! | JOUR 'NEXT SELECTION WiLL BE A DiALoGus BY THE CHIN. SISTERS, MEMBERS OF | HIS FAMOUS BACK WARD GNTGRTAINERS ONG MOMGNT PLEASES —— Deni- Brennan is a ROBINSON, candidate FRED C. to succeed himself for the nineteenth | time as Grand Secretary. | 1 stockade and with a flare of defi- ance in his black eyes the lad stalked slowly and proudly away. From behind him the voice of the vounéed man called and old Joel | turned. There was a ghastly smile on\the Virginian’s pallid face. “IT saw it,” he said -painfully. “That’s—that’s my son!” | Il. From the sun-dial on the edge of the high bank, straight above the brim ‘of the majestic yellow Jame3, | a noble path of thick grass as broad as a modern highway ran hundreds of yards between hedges of roses straight to the open door of the great’ manor-house with its wide| verandas and mighty pillars set} deep back from the river in a grove of ancient oaks. . The second son of the reigning} generation, one Colonel Dale, sat in the veranda alone. He was a royal- ist officer, this second son, but his elder brother had the spirit of dar- ing and adventure that should have! been his, and he had been sitting there four years before when that/ elder brother came home from his| first pioneering trip into the wilds, to tell that his wife was dead and lcir only son was a captive among the Indians. Two year later still yeord came that the father, too, had met death from the savages| and the little kingdom passed into} Colonel Dale’s hands. Indentured servants as well as blacks from Africa, had labored on that path in front of him; and up it had once stalked a’ deputation of the great Powhatan’s red_ tribes. Up that path had come the last of the early colonial dames in huge ruffs, high-heeled shoes and short skirts. Down it now came a ‘little girl —the flower, of all those dead and gone—and her coming was just as though one of the flowers about her had stepped from its gay company on one or the other side of the path to make through them a dainty, tri- umphal march as the fairest of them all. At the dial she paused. She gave a little gasp, in which there was no fear, though what she saw was surely startling enough to have made her wheel in flight. Instead she gazed steadily into a pair of grave black eyes that were fixed on her from under a green branch that overhung the footpath, and steadily she searched the figure standing there, from the coonskin cap down the fringed hunting-shirt and fringed breeches to the mocca- sined feet. 3 “Who are you and what do you want?” 5 It was a new way for a woman to speak to a.man; he in turn was not pleased, and*a gleam in his eyes showed it. “I am the son of a king.” She started to laugh, but grew puzzled, for she had the blood of. Pocakontas herself, “You are an Indian?” Drawing a letter from the belt, he handed it to her. It was so worn and soiled that she took it daintily and saw on it her father’s name. waved his hand toward the up the path, “He live there?” “You wish to see him?” The boy grunted assent, and with a'shock of resentment the little lady started up the path with her | head very high indeed. i . “The messenger is the son of a} king.” . “Ah,” said the gentleman, humor- | ing her, “ask his highness to be seated.” ! Hig highness was looking from one to the other gravely and keen- ly. "He did ot quite understand, ‘but he knew gentle fun was being poked at him, and he dropped sul- lenly on the edge of the porch and stared in front of him. | The little girl’Saw that his moc- edsins were much worn and that in| one was a hole ‘with the edge blood-stained. And then she began | to watch her father’s. face, jwhich showed that the contents of the let- | ter were astounding him. He/rose quickly when he had finished and | put out his hand to the stranger. | | “Jam glad tosee you, my boy,” he said with great kindness. “Bar- | | bara, this.is a little kinsman of ours | from Kentucky. He was the adopt- ed gon of an Indian chief, but. by blood -he is your-own cousin. His | name is Erskine Dale.” | NOW FEELING AS SPRY AS & BOY Ten Years of Troubles Brought to an End by Tanlac and He Is Like a Different Per- son, Declares Elogren. “Tanlac put an end to troubles that have pulled me down for ten. years and I’m now feeling as spry as a boy,” said Axel Elogren, a paint- ing contractor of St. Paul Park, Faul, Minn, “My kidneys were all out of order and I had a continual pain across the small of my back which some- times felt like it would break. I had a bad case of indigestion, a poor ap- petite and gas would form on my stomach so I could hardly, breathe. , At night I often suffered so with my stomach I had to get up and pace the floor. My nerves were on edge all the time. I had severe, dizzy head- aches, and just seemed to have play- ed out altogether. : “Since Tanlac fixed me up, my kid- neys ate in fine shape, the indiges- tion, nervousness and other troubles are gone and I’m in tip-tip shape. It does me good to tell people about Tanlac. It’s'a world beater.” Tanlac is sold by all good drug- gists. SS ————— aaa Iv. : The little girl rose startled, but Aer. breeding ‘wds' too fine for be- trayal, and she went to him with hand outstretched. “The boy ‘took it as he had taken her father’s, limply and without rising. The father frowned and smiled—how could the lad have learned manners? And then he, too, saw the hole in the moccasin through which ‘the bleed- ing had started again. “You are hurt~you have’ walked a long way?” + , The lad shrugged his shoulders carelessly, “Take him‘into the kitchen, Bar- bara, and tell Hannah to wash his foot and bandage it.” The boy looked uncomfortable and shook his head, but the little girl was smiling and she told him to come with such sweet imperious- nesg that he rose helplessly. Old Hannah’s eyes made a bewildered start, ~. Swiftly the old negress bound his foot, and with great respect she led him to a little room in one ell of the great house in which was a tub of warm water. “Ole marster say you been trav- elin’ an’ mebbe you like to refresh yo’self wid a hot bath, Dar’s some o’ little marster’s clothes on de bed dar, an’ a pair o’ his shoes, an’ I know dey’ll fit-you snug.” She closed the door. Once, win- ter and summer, the boy, had daily plunged into the river with his In- dian companions, but he had never had a bath in his life, and he did not know what'the word meant; yet he had learned so much at the fort that’he had no trouble making out what the tub of water. was for: For the same reason He felt no sur- prise when he picked up the clothes; he was only "puzzled how to get into them. The boy began putting on his own clothes, ;. Outside, Colonel. Dale and Bar- bara had strolled down the big path. to the sun-dial, the colonel telling the story of the little Kentucky kinsman — the little gir] listening and wide-eyed. “Is he going to live here with us, papa?” “Perhaps. You must be very nice to him. He has’ lived a rude, rough life, but'I can see lie is very sensitive,” At the bend of the river there was the flash of dripping oars, and the song of the black oarsmen came across the yellow flood, “There, they.:come!”: cried; Bar- bara. And trom his window the little Kentuckian saw the company coming up the path, brave/with gay. clothes and smiles and gallantries. All the men were dressed alike and not one was dressed like him. Panic assailed him, and onc more he looked at. the clothes on the bed, and then without hesitation walked through the hallway, and stopped on the threshold of the front door. A quaint tigure he made there, and for? the moment the gay talk anu laughter quite ceased. No son of Powhatan could have stood there with more dignity, and young Harry Dale’s face broke into a smue of welcome. . His father be- ing indoors he“ went forward with hand outstretched. a “I am your cousin Harry,” he said, and taking him by the arm he Jed him on the round. of presenta- tion. ot And the young ladies greeted him with frank, eager interest, and the young gentlemen suddenly re- pressed patronizing smiles and gave him grave greeting, for if ever a rapier flashed from a human head, it flashed from the piercing black eye of that little hentucky :back- | woodsman when his cousin Hugh, with a rather whimsical smile bowed with a politeriess that was a trifle too elaborate. Harry was quick to notice Hugh’s attitude, 2 (Continued in our next issue.) SENSIBLE, THINKING WOMEN no longer doubt the efficacy of that old-fashioned root and herb medi- cine, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, because it removes \the | ailments to which they are afflicted. In almost every neighborhod there ‘gre living witnesses of its wonderful effects. Therefore, if. you doubt its |‘value or power to help you, ask your neighbor. in nine times out of ten she has been bénefited by its use or knows someone whp had. It will pay you to give this root and herb medicine a tri Each walrus furnishes about 1,500 pounds of meat, 1,000 pounds of. oil and 600 pounds of leather. et oat

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