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| PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1922. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck) N. D., aw Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN + + Editor _ Foreign Representatives Gi LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO = - = = DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEWYORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. ter season at the opera house.. | operate their share under private | This wag the custom in nearly|}ownership, but that preference need ‘on for the first act, and behind the; for the Canadia ¢ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED | PRES: | (NELLIE a RSIS atic Ee The ABsociated 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, All rights of republication of} patches herein are alsn; special reserved, | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF | CIRCULATION | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE| IN ADVANCE every town, It was a mystery that! not prevent them from joining, has never been solved, how there} hands With Canada in this great were enough minstrel shows to g0. international work. The big inter- around, [ests to which Mr. Bishop refers Among the cherished thrills of think that the time is ripe for going memory, one of the greatest was/ahead with the development, and the moment when the audience sat/are prepared to supply the capital in darkness, the footlights flashed; for it. The time is also opportune government to! curtain rose a plantation melody | take an ive part in the develop- sung by the entire company. {ment of the St. Lawrence deep Do you remember when your! waterways and of the hydro-elec— boyhood ambition was to he the tric energy which is a by-product drum major of a minstrel parade,|of the larger project. — Toronto or to rattle the ‘bon an end-) Globe. . | man and crack the joke about the — i mule that kicked mother-in-law in YOUTH INVADES. | the jaw? Second choice was to he the in- terlocutor, whose delicious ex ence reached its climax with “Gen- tlemen, be seated” The lover of the dramatic in ath- letics—and it has many lovers—} will have some difficulty in choos- | ing between the achievements of Gene Sarazen, the 21-year-old golf — champion, and Helen Wills, the 16- for -burnt-cork| year-old girl who is playing Mrs. It was proper i Daily by carrier, per year,...$7.20 Dail by mail, per year (in Bis- MARGE) boa tsle oe cuiens 7.20 |for the minstrel show is the only artists to “open” the opera house, | Mallory in the finals of the woman’s Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of Nort! Dakot "PAPER | (Established 1873) EA WATER DRUNKARDS | Why bother making wine in the} cellar? Water, drunk to excess, is| an intoxicant. Wait a minute be-| fore bursting into laughter. The) statement, that water “packs a/ kick” comes from Tr, Leonard G.! Rowntree. He is one of the spe- ciaHsts in the clinic conducted by, the famous Mayo brothers, at} Roohester, Minn, Ifere’s how Doc. proyed it: | Ho fed, to experimental patients, extract from a small ductless gland | at the bave of the brain, This was} to incre; thirst, make the patient drink ‘excessively. Then “the patient kept drmking water until he developed marked) ‘claimed as 100 per | stitution. national tennis tournament. By de-| feating French, Sarazen became the/ winner of both the national open; and the professional golf cham-| pionsbips in a single year.. No other ‘living golfer done this. | j Dissociated from personality and jage, Miss Wills’ accomplishment | Was less remarkable as a mere ath-! letic feat, but on account of the cir-/| a eal minstr MK jcumstances surrounding it was} Dan Emmet!’s Virginia Minstrels,! probably the more spectacular of! Which took the road in 1842, the two, She played Mrs. May| Old-timers will remember “Dad-j Stutton Bundy, the mother of four av” Rice. Primrose and West, children and former champion of! George Christy, Gus Howard, The the world. Highteen years ago, Great Eugene and other famous’ when she, like Miss Willd, was six- | burnt-cork artists who made the! teen, Mrs. Bundy won the cham-| minstrel show a great American in- | pjonship of the United States, She| hoped this year to win, it again.; “ | While she has been disappointed, The minstrel show was a train-' she must feel a certain sati§faction ing school from which graduated! in defeat. Miss Wills is i hundreds of the greatest American per own youth returalngats euaay| actors, what she accomplis! 7 It seems to be a vanishing jase | Baate ral plished halfn.gen tution, not that its popularity has! garazen has already put himself form of theatricals that can be cent American. The immortal Billy Birch — of Birch, Wambold & Backus Min-| strels—said the first minstrel act] was in the Federal Street theater in Boston, 1799, when a comedian named Young “blacked up” and sang “The ‘0 Boy.” The first'real minstrel show was ‘ney to invest. rate of interest, buy the plant and| the pipes that the water company now | owns. We won’t waste any money putting in the loop, because if we]! buy the plant we will have to do that anyway. { Then comes the pure water ques- tion. We all should know that we! can spend as much money as we want! \ to in a filtration plant. I think, how-| ever, that it would be well to have}; the chlorine treatment attended to by} the bacteriologist, the salary of whom } is now paid in part by the city of} BEGIN HERE TODAY Bismarck, Many people do not know; Strangely sent to Resurrection that the water company is applying |"Rock by a communication from the this chemical themsel nd not'the| spirit of : chemist. In conclusion, the first thing that we should do is to find out if we can legally issue more bonds; the second should be if we can sell them. Then} I really think before we make a move; he learns the island is located. to buy we should have the loop put} There he mects in in order to establish the value] ETHEL CAREW, daughter of the of what we are buying. slain officer, who is going to visit Yours respectfully, her grandfather, R, L. BEST. LUCAS CULLEN, SENIOR, the grim and hardy old man who struggled successfully in days of violence fer millions’ worth of timber. Loutrelle Icarns that Resurrection Rock is an island of mystery, the mbol of a great wrong in the PHILIP CAREW, an American offi- cer killed in France, |BARNEY LOUTRELLE arrives in northern Michigan and proceeds to the spot in Lake Huron where Letter to Now York Herald As a resident of Deadwood, S. D., making occasional business trips to| New York, I have read with inter-j past and that on it has been erect- est recent letters about pioneer ex-| cd a house never occupied, In periences in the Black Hills and! some way ke feels that his own} through one of your correspondents| mysterious life, his - obscure have just made the acquaintance of | parcntage, his life as a white child| Colonel George W. Stokes, who was] reared by Indians, is linked with among the very first prospectors to) Resurrection Rock and with Ethel, reach that district in the middle GO ON WITIL THE STORY w0's. He left a few years before 1) ‘the sun, only a little lower to the arrived there, and would probably] west, was glaring down upon the now find the services of a guide) snow, and as the road reached the useful in going about the fine city) t,) of a ridge the smooth ice-sheet which has grown. up on and near by! over Lake Huron came into’ view. the mining: camps through which he| “The western rise of the rock, upon once piloted tenderfcet, particularly | which the sun.was shining, seemed casterners, suspected of having mo-! sheey and towering; only about the! base, where the lake had tossed up] | heaps and’ hummocks of ice, and) -upen the top:had snow gathered. In the 81 years since I first went te Deadwood I have witnessed a complete transformation in the life, and with his hands upon the. desk he pushed himself up ‘to his fegt. +; He was still a towering man in | spite of the slight stoop which took more than an inch from the stature | which had distinguished the days of | his great vigor. : | “your father believed he was so ! smart—so smart,” he gloated: over { her. He carried off my daughter jand thought he could win against jme! He sided with John—John,” he | repeated the name of his brother heard the distant ccho of a vigorous voice singing the lively tune of an old French song of the' time of Napoleon: j “.. A Paris, a Paris Ah, j’y etais mousquetair Danger! No fear for him if the danger were honest and open. She glanced ahead and, suddenly saw a dark figure, tall and broad but bent a little, standing with back toward her on the top, of the ridge—her grandfather. | | violently. | about longevity. “Well, it did look like good business then, John seemed to have stronger hold on the property than I had. But your father forgot “John was under the sod before he was seventy. Your father forgot about my sons, too, John had UI- liver—-damn weakiing; so he’s under the sod, too; his wife’s below the waves; and everything they had’s in court. But it’s coming to me! It’s got to come to me!” he repeated, apping off each word short and “Well, ‘my dear, you've here, are fiaJing with his arm for emphasis. you ? Where’s your friend’from the “And you got to come to meif you headache, nausea, a gaitscunsteadiness of muscle, and "ny final stage of the water. jag, ag described by Dr. Rowntree, is campanied by convulsions and other symptoms resembling delir- ium, tremens, 3 Jabr::Barleycorn is not the only intoxiéint. A cup of strong coffee contains as~high as five grains of caffeine. People whose thyroid. glands se- crete éxcessively often get-as_much intoxication from thyroid as they could get out of a pint of whiskey. So-called “inspiration,” when. writ- ers and artists (note the distinc- tion)” are creative, generally is a rod of thyroid intoxication, ju have observed people “drunk on excitement.” Dancing some- staggering ; timeg-goes to the head, particularly | with emotional young women, Base-! hall spectators frequently act like drunken men, The emotions can be worked up to such a drunken| waned, but because a burnt-cork' even with the veteran | : . Z olfers who genius isn’t permitted to work long two years ago had novey heard of | as a minstrel end-man. Vaudeville | him. Miss ’Wills may , lose atoday | and big musical shows grab him.'ty Mrs Malley, but ‘there ae eA A typical case is Al Jolsen—one of | doubt she will he American cham- the best minstrels since Press pion i ; Ee pion in a year or two if she plays Eldridge—who rose to fame as an! a. ; . 9 ing: i acai 23 she has: beenyplaying-”, Phe itwo are acti e 4 i D ‘They're taking away the minstrel drama of changing gato a show, but they can’t take away heroines. No champion lasts for- memory. Gents whose hair is,thin-! ever, The crowd loves to see him ning out on top or getting white can Jast, but it loves, too, to see the feel that they have’ not lived im new champion rise. Sarazen and| vain, since they basked in the gol-: Migs Wilis are probagly ‘ashering | den age of Lew Dockstader, Al G. | in new periods in their-own spheres Field, John W. Vogel,.Neil O'Brien, | of athletics. Widely different as | Charlie Gano, “Hi” Henry and they are in standing, personality, | ‘Honey Boy” Evans. {and purpose, they have the common | nea! jkinship of new royalty. Happily.| ‘both promise to be as deserving of personal popularity as they are ;fortunate in the possession of re- jmarkable skilJ—New York Globe. Comments reproduced-in_ this || s column’ may or may not express |!¢ Pear ans he opirion of The Tribune. They. || — are presented here in order that 4 ats Peauateed raat fa tas ||| PEOPLE'S FORUM | EDITORIAL REVIEW of important - : eink discuss s ¥ the day, UGGESTS A SOLUTION. i Bismarek, Sept. 5, 1922, mining methods and particularly the “Resurrection Roék!” Ethel said,/ train? ‘ 1 “He said to thank you; he'd call later. He wanted to go first to the} “So he'll call later, ch? Now who! is he? I'll know all about that fel-| low.” ‘ Ethel cyes—-1 gazed into her grandfather's fe, blood-shot but keen un-| der his low, bushy, white brows. She said nothing aloud as she closed! her lips; but to. herself, defiance | spoke. ; j “Not from me.’ the unuttered; pfistening in the last rays of the de- words determined. “Never from aaah ; CHAPTER IV | When she was obliged to reply,| she only repeated the fact of her meeting with Barfcy Loutrelle as} she hid related: it over the tele-| phone, ue Everyone was well at the house,! Lucas assired in reply to Ethel’s questions. The persons whom he grouped un- managed.” everything, every- For I’m want. anything; hody’s got to come to me! alive and they're all dead! He jerked about and strode across the room. i Ethel watched him as he went to a window and stoed starting out while he recovered himself. For a few mo- ments, he seemed not to be seeing but simply to be staring. Then he jerked straight, and Ethel knew that he had begun to see and that what he saw was the Rock, gaunt and clining sun, Her grandfather slowly turned about. “You want about two hundred thousand dollars immediately?” “Oiie hundred’and eighty-five thou- sand is the total I put down as neces- ry how, grandfather,” she said. “Practically two hundred thou- sand; call it that,” he corrected gen- crously. “Well—well, it may be He was attempting to ‘transportation facilities of the Da- gazing at it with no necd to point! as they stood upon the top of the! of | * ridge. ‘otas and contiguous portions Hontand ond ree in the lum-| _ Leutrelle nodded, his eyes narrow-, per and iron mining regions of Wis-| im& 4 little as he tried to see it be consin“and Michigan three of us| ter through the glare, =} heard the call of the further west| “Why's the house there?” he, der) and started out in the spring of 1883 manded. He had asked this before, to try our luck in the copper coun-| but not with the present amazement. try of Montana. We took the railroad} “Of course it’s quite different in to the then Territory of Dakota, and| summer. ct during a layover at Yankton heard; “But you said it’s never been oc- from a returned prospector th: cupied, summer or winter, still newer district of the Black} “No never.” — a , Hills gave promise of immediate] “Except possibly,” he said, glanc- large returns. This led to a separa-| ing at her and away to the house tion; all three of us changed our again, “by the dead.” plans, but I aolne decided to strike| Ile spoke in a queer, neutral tone, out for there. neither quite seriously nor at all lightly. Taking a division of the Chicago ‘ and Northwestern railway, just fin- Ethel went ahead slightly, to guide the way. The Rock now as con- ished to Pierre, then principally a : shipping point on the Missouri, now| stantly in sight; and, galncing again the capital of South Dakota,’ we} and again at it, Ethel felt it domt-! came to the end of rail transporta- tion, Throwing in with some others, we hired a four-horse team’ and wa- gon to carry our grub and baggage, nating her mood. The. entered woods again and soon heard a whip cracking and the; voiceof a man calling to straining ‘horses. ' Kincheloe, it had reproduce, now, the indulgent man- ner he, used to take with her long ago when she was a little girl and came to him for dimes and quarters and half dollars for children’s trink- cts. Tle patted Ethel’s arm fondly. “Now, my dear, tell me about that fellow Loutrelle.” She drew back a little from him. i Then it was his sight of the Kock which, the minute before, had changed him! “Why, grandfather,” she said, “L just met him on the train this morn- ing.” - Iie seized her, as the passion which he had with difficully put down rose to mastery of him again. “That's a lie—a lie!” he charged. “You're friends; you know all about him. You’re—friends!” She struggled to break the hold of his hand upon her shoulder, the der “every one” were his wife and/ “Miss' Platt’ and’ Miss Platt’s hus-| band.” Miss Platt ‘had been his private secretary for many years. (, Her salary ‘was ‘sufficicnt to enable ‘her to” attract’ a: lazy. good-looking} youth ‘named - Merrill) Kincheloe, seven years younger: than herself { She married him and therefater sup-| ported him, to her employer's ex- ceeding disgust. Lucas never. let her marriage change her name to him and, when he had been obliged to refer to: been always as “Miss Platt’s husband.” All but Miss Platt’s husband were} at the door as the sled drew up be-} fore the porch; and Lthe} felt a rush of love as she saw her grandmother. She was a little woman, thin and | shrunken: now, but erect, with spirit} unbroken by her many years. pitch that men go mad with the mob‘ spirit. 2ad commit excesses that they would not dream of when emotionally “sober.” The intoxication of excitement is caused by excessive secretion by ‘the various endocrine glands of the = body, especially the adrenals and thyroid. timair wonder, that it is difficult for the nation to agree on what is intexicating. A quantity of alcohol that would put one person to sleep might have no more effect on an- other than a bucket of water on a duck’s back. Tew of us are ever really sober, or normal. One day we are, figura- tively, a couple of drinks below normal. Another day we may be intoxleated without having taken a drink, “Exuberance is intoxication. Who knows but what the bootleg- Ferg one of these days may be sell- ing glandular extract? Li SHANTY DAYS Have you noticed that city boys no flanger build shanties? Ot course, a few shanties tremble here and there in the metropolian winds. But shanty-building, an ancient in- stitution of boyhood, is on the wane, headed:for extinction. It is. part of the jail existence in whigh=the city lad is being walled. If the boys knew what they were missing, restoring peace in the family Would be a harder job than settling the periodical crisis in Europe. ~ j a Py Many a grown-up man would not trade hig delightful memories of inty-days for a large bag of gold. Probably you remember one, and the thrill of creation that pulsated through you and the gang when 2 you contemplated the finished mas- terpiece. The roofing was old lino- Jeum, tar paper or flat strips from tin cans melted apart in a bonfire. * The"lumber came from everywhere and in all sizes, torn from a back fence in emergency. There was all kinds of lumber lying around loose in those days. And: the kind-hearted, understand- ing ,erew at the town planing mill usually were willing to donate z é | igptios which are | cd fin the press of | Editor of The Tribune: ‘NOT PASSING THE BUCK T have read wit much interest the Taking their cue from Senator; Comments of some of our citizens Underwood's charge that by pass—; in regard to the eity water works ing the flexible tariff amendment | and take exception very decidedly to the ‘senate admits its incompetence | the remark that ‘we have heen drink- | to legislate on the tariff, numerous: ing slop long enevgh.” Now, ‘most organs of Democratic opinion! of us who are familiar with wate: | throughout the country are sound-| conditions, even in large cities, know | ing the same cry. They treat the) that at times during the year the peo- amendment as an admission of; ple are urged, through the health failure and attempt to shift the bur-| department, to boil’ the water. This while we walked practically all: the remaining distance, somewhat more}: than 200 miles. It was a slow ‘and difficult journey; at times. it was necessary to stop and pull the hor- ses and wagon out’ of the mad;!and often we cut’ the sticky: gumbo, out of the wheels with a bowie knife. ‘At what is now about the town of Wasta, = >. toe a stage station we ‘bird, not more than thirty and fat were obliged to swim | Cheyenne river, “That’s Sam Green Sky,” Ether in-, formed; and they came upon a Gwhite and roan team. 1 uB'jou, Miss Ethel!” Sam. hailed “and waved. hjs arm,;while he set’ l“about’ turning his’ tedm back into -the tracks they had just cleared. He was a younger man than Red- | and ‘swarthy. “Old man.pretty well; pretty mad Later in the day) Ethel had her, business talk with Lucas. | “Pye come for. money, grand-; father,” the confessed at once. “A good deal of money, some of which 1 need immediately.” i “Well, how much?” { “Pye the. total here; the. dates| him?” , mean the time when I ought to have “No.” es the different ..amounts,¥ she. ex- ane 4 “No” oo plained, trembling’ in spite ‘of her- self. “Those are’ the ‘names of irriga- tion and development companies and water-power plants in Montana and) Wyoming.. I want the, money! right!” he said at lasty pulling her | papers from his pocket and thrust- | ing them. at her. to a push button. blood hot within her. “I don’t lie!” she defied him. “I do know more about him than I told you; but what I said was true. I told you he was gong to the Rock.” “ware you going to tell me about He bent over her. “All right; all He put his hand Ethel could hear den of tariff making to the Presi dent’s shoulders. For .100 years, it is said, congress legislated on the tariff without delegating power to a president and this congress should do. likewise, The argument assumes that all of |has also been done through our health \department, to boit the water. This | has also been done through our| j health department..so you see we are not so much different from other cities in regard to pure water. In regard to our franchise which the other congresses have been right and that the senate is wrong. There is no cogent reason for ad- mitting the assumption. » Other countries have left the adjustment of tariff rates to executive ' power and have found that it works well and, furthermore, even though every other congress has been right it does not follow that this congress would be right in following prece- dent. Times have changed since the last tariff was made and the change has brought about condi- tio: in the foreign trade unlike anything this country has faced heretofore. In the light of after-war condj- we, the people, gave to the water company and extended to the year 1935 in order that you may know the | Provisions in it, will ‘quote: “And said company shall not charge any of the inhabitants o! said city. or any; Personal, company oy corporation en- gaged in selling water from wagons ; to exceed seven cynts. per barrel of forty gallons.” This, you see (with | iyour pencil), figures $1.75 per 1,000 gallons that tps wa Cae capt , charee sug. ‘explain is ae under “our This, no doubt, willexp! the reason forthe recent “adVance, allowed, of 35° per “cent, whighykeeps them, still’ very Tow if propostion, to tions in Europe, this point is<too|the amount-that they toulfocharge. obvious for argument. Nobody|, The writer does agree with one of overlcoks it except wilfully. The} the citizens, in regamd te the matter flexible tariff recognizes the fact! of submitting this to the ttople, The that nobody can foresee what fore|next question is, now intelligently eign wages and production costs, Shall we do it? ©” Va, will be a year hence, and provides| The same: boar that hag! ¢ trol | for that uncertainty by leaving; of and can altow increase“ia ‘rates tariff rates subject to change, but; can also force” fulfillment of ~con- the time during which. that power! tre, I quote again from the fran. is granted, is limited to'two years. | ch “To secure and maintain fa- After that the old way will auto-/cilities for the prenvention and ex- matically returm unless continued} tinguishment of tres.” The writer unsettlement in Europe should in-; has the knowledge from-the office ¢1 duce congress to continue the new] the underwriters that fixes the rates plan.—Detroit Free Press. of insurance in every city and hamlet Swe in the United States which informa- b CE POWER | tion: was before the people of Bi The coal strike in the United; marek in 1915, that a 12-inch main States has directed public attention) is not large enough to supply a ci to the importance of making more) the size of Bismarck with water and use of water power as a source of; protect them from fires: “I also have | slectrical energy. Holland’s letter the information from the same source | “seconds.” Mr. George T+ Bishop, president of Those days are gone. It prob-|the Frontier corporation, is. im- ably would take $10 to get enough) pressed with the potential energy scrap lumber to put up a shanty of the St. Lawrence river between of one small room, | Canada and New York state. Along with the shortage of lum-/ ciated with the Frontier ber is the —the shrinkage of backyards—)pdny, the Aluminum Company of % which makes the erection of a America and the Du Ponts, and Mr. shanty impossible. | Bishop is confident that these in- i .,,/ terests will perfect within four 2When the early pioneers built’ years a ayaten which. will yield , their log cabins, their sons imita-| 2,900,000 horsepower in clectric + tively ‘went into the near-by forest | energy. and constructed their own play-| Tt has been known for a dwellings out of saplings and small | time that big interests in the United logs.*-In this way they learned the States have had their eyes on the principles of cabin construction. Later, in the days when a square tie hs hitherto been published meal still could be bought for a ARsue thee organization tnd plans. quarter, the lads built shanties out | Ty order to prevent the public from of old lumber, incidentally devel-| hecoming alarmed Mr. Bishop adds oping their building instinct, | that, “as the government ae well as The loss in the passing of the New York state will have authority shanty is more than sentimental. oyer the Frontier corporation, in- It isthe extinction of a pastime for qustrial leaders need not fear any eveloping the building instinct in! extortionate monopoly.” ; youth. a There will be no such 7 | this side of the borde: Se a fear Our share NSTREL SHOWS About this time of year, long ago,| developed under public ownership ; the old home town was electrified | for the benefit of the public of Can- i ‘by billboards announcing that ajada. The people of the United minstrel show would open the win-|States may prefer to develop and in the Wall Street Journal says that! that another 12-inch main run from] Asso-} orpora-| ty real estate problem | tion are the General Electric com-| | St, Lawrence development, but lit-| on! the tank and making a loop connect- | ing with the dead end of the one that | we have will give more flow of water | |than a full 24-inch main with a dead | end. This could be done without! touching a foot of the pavement. | Our engineers have tried.to order the | water company to eke up the main | jthat they have any renew it with an, 18-inch main, With these facts | which can be verified at the same office that I received them, or from any hydraulie engineer, Iet me offer | n of the water question so| far as pressure is conéerne | } Ask the railroad commission to| force the company to give us th | |pressure that they have agreed to {give us. If the water company re-} fuses it will be impossible for them | j to prevent us from putting in that} loop ourselves. In doing this we can | |determine the exact cost of laying | |water pipes and mains and it will) [be a guide for the committee in fix-| ing a price orvaluation on the water | This loop, no doubt, could be | for $50,000.00—just a little more} q ‘aid ‘of the St. Lawrence power will be than we spent in litigation trying to! and unbeliev break the franchise. Then follow} your contract in the apointment of| the arbitration :committee, and if, we! wan sell the bonds at a reasonable | outfit across the then a boiling torrent, though at) ti. morning; old_:lady well too.” other seasons of the year it WAS) Groen sky voughsafed. genial infor- often so low that one might walk) vation without urging. ‘Somebody across it without injury to alow) cone ‘to Wheedon’s yesterday; and pair of shoes. We came into Deng oe to eee snan want. to wood in the most Brae and aa know about it; damn mad.” ter of fact way, and I in no s a ; imagined that I would be there 40) Ethel glanced at Loutrelle whom years later. g aut Deadwood was then a wide open/ forsee ol ask the eee town of perhaps 7,000 oF 8,000 peo), (ne BAe OF Te Maes ple, with saloons and gambling oe Ethel gazed at the Rock again gnd es running 24 hours a day and *% satt the blood running a bit colder aed reports would lead the uniniti- trelle who had pulled off his glove ated to believe; most shots were not | to offer his hand. any expected to do any damage and there), “B'jou, Miss Carew,” he said, his was a lot of bluffing. The famous! eyes meeting hers. “You've been Homestake, already the result =") mighty good to me.” seme early consolidations, but no- He turned about once and waved thing compared with the present) a+ her;*then, proceeding more swift- organization and plant, was running) jy, he soon vanished in a ravine. she found gazing at her and waiting a bell ringing in some other part of 4 liate’ to complete the| saver aida , the house and, knowing that she was Mt first five and get them running. I do not do that, the leases—or the purchase contracts—will lapse.” He only grunted as he glanced] over it and. stopped chewing his cigar. “All right; what happens if dismissed, she went out, meeting Miss Platt inthe hall. “Beautiful afternoon,” Miss Platt said agreeably. “Beautiful,” Ethel acquiesced and returned to her bedroom. they lapse?” : “Father's interest— my interest now,” Ethel said quietly, “of course (To Be Continued) = o is\lost, But ‘that’s ‘not most im- ° portant. It’s to see that father’s | A Good Friend | ¢ friends sand our neighbors ou west : ce get their money back.’ They thought] | A good friend stands by you when se ag going to live'and see every-| in need. Bismarck people tell how thing through.” Doan’s Kidney Pills have stood the eae k my| test. Mrs. H. Steinmetz, of 113 Sec- "So you came fo work upon MY! Gia’ st., endorsed Doan’s ten years natural affections for eee 1 sup-| 89. and again confirms the story. Yess” Ethel aie dong that” | Could you ask for more eonvineing jose you may sa : id ypu Pr grandfather slowly drew his tan sesasetae testis fog back from the desk-drawers sud-| (ob 4<05 of Doan’s Kidney Pills from én what would now be called a small) 4 "few hundred yards further on, she * | acer. mining—hand work on the, des, in the streams and gulches | was then general; ‘but quartz min- ing—blasting of the rock and under- ground operations—was then coming into practice. ‘The latter has long, since entirely superseded the former, which would no longer be profitable. | Within my own\ memory at least) $250,000,000 worth of gold has been taken from the Black Hills mining | region and’ turned into the curren: | cy of the country at the rate of $20.67 an ounce. ‘Today . churches, EVERETT TRUE FAMOUS NOW, BUT HG WAS DOING THS \ schools, motion | DON'T Nou KNOW 4 3 ses Heee’S A CITTLE ITEM lw THE PAPER ANNOUNCING THE PRESENCE OF, MR. WORTHINGTON. OF MANVAL Lagor t fenly he ‘Ricked the drawer shutly onort's Drug Store and they eured A~-~ | me of a severe dull aching through the smail of iy back” “says. Mrs. Steinmetz. “I had peen annoyed for some time with a lameness and sore- ness through my loins and a‘ tired BY CONDO HE'S Qutcs _. I KNGW HIM WHEN COMMONSSYT KIND]. VERY ORDINARY, v pictures, phonographs, automobiles / and radio have entirely taken — the place of the~saloon and gambling place. Pullman cars come into Dead- wood by the Chicago and North |: Western and over the Burlington, and perhaps few among the young: | cr generation stop to think that the real pionecrs, like Colonel Stokes, and the second line of pioneers, of | whom I was one, did not arrive in the ame way.—A. H. Oleson. New York, August 9. | “THOUGHT 1 8 The kingdom of God cometh not with observation; neither shal Nt they say, lo here! Or, lo there! For behold the kingdom of God Is within you.—Luke 1720-21. ‘Allis marvelous for the poet; all is divine for the saint; all is great for the hero; all is wretched, mis- erable, ugly, and bad for the pase! and sordid soul. The ‘bad ‘man creates around him a pandemonium. the artist an Olympus, the elect soul a Paradise, which each of them secs for himself alone. We are all visionaries and what we see is our soul in thing: miel. Couss IN! HOWGVER, BONG ENGLISH SHAWLS English shawls, in startling checks able plaids, are being made into sports skirts and coats. The fringe is allowed to dangle from | the collars and cuffs, but,is worked into a lattice effect at the hem. - | MANUAL CABOR MEANS WORK | WITH THE HANDS, But £ DON'T see WHEeS THE Discount THERE 1S DANGER, OF INIVRING THE S| FinGers If vou LAND Teo MRD tu HOAD No man dollar ever before bought as The “Brownie” — Now at all Dealers solid comfort as this It’s a genuine Gillette—using the same fine Gillette Blades. The razor and 3 blades com- plete—$1—everywhere. GILLETTE SAFETY, RAZOR CO., Bostoa, U.S.A. and lanquid fecling. I got no relicf ‘until I learned of Doan’s Kidney Pills.” (Statement given October 17, 1910.) On October 13, 1919, Mrs, Stein- metz, said: “The cure Doan’s Kid- ney Pills made for. me some years ago is still permatent, Iam glad to again endorse them and I always rec- ommend Doan’s to my friends when I hear them complaininb of kidney trouble.” + 60c, at all dealers. Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, VOICES Every anguage and dialect spoken in the world is being re- corded on copper phonograph discs in Berlin by Prof. Wilhelm Doggen. He says the records will lagt 10,- 000 years, » If they do, and are played in the Foster-Milburn N.Y. —advt. year 11922, will anpone except scholars be able to understand them? Ten thousand years from now speech may be a lost art, with people conversing by mental tele- pathy. Tom Sims Says ‘Wise men never make faces ata cop or spank a neighbor's child. If winnter comes, will the plumbers be far behind? German motorless’ plane flew two hours. Widh we could get a motor- less auto to do that. M ‘Shark scen at a bathing beach may have been a hotel man swimming. Beauty seeret: Keeping your nose out of other's business prevents it from becoming flat. Little 1922 booze is aged. in the wood. Many of its drinkers are, Suppose the husbands and ex-hus- bands of some movie star struck out for seniority rights? Stamp collectors met in Massachu- setts, No, they are not postmen, Many a man going along on easy street turns off into Wall Street and gets: lost. War not only threatens in Europe: but a Wisconsin man wants to. con- fiscate spooners’ autcs, Funny things happen. Illinois cou- ple has been married 66 years with- out shooting each other. Wonder iz 2 on ro vsed mo toreyele need; a peddler’s licens South Dakota jail-breaker left a faretwell poem, This is carrying poetic licerise too far. Hunt the bright side. Rail strikes | make ‘mail-order packages late: Professor says there is no sin. Then what is it for some men to take the money? : Some towns have all the luck. De- troit quack doctor got caught. Laugh and who laughs with you depends upon what you laugh at, In the fall a very young man's fancy tins to thoughts of school. Ship captain beat his cook to death, There is more frecdom on the sea than on the land. America’s ‘champ mail sorter is a girl. You haven't seen her picture because she doesnt work in a bath- ing suit. Sixtyfour U. S, college girls went by air from Paris to London and that is higher education. In this talkative age, it is strange that radio men sell.more receiving than broadcasting sets. “Airplanes are safer than autos,” says Admiral Moffett, who evident- ly is a pedestrian. an” much b @yt] SOPe|q ON suinud sepeig 9776]|