The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 30, 1923, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMAR Entered Ay the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. JK ‘TRIBUNE Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO fs Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITI DETROIT Kresge Bldg. { NEW YORK ifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are! also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION H M ci resigned, Over in London Bonar Law has | which reminds us “Who « remembers the bonus law we plan-/eral-an acknowledgment of gal- hed to pass?” (lantry in action, And the answer: : “You had better do it quick. H © is losing control of his troops. ay be “Westward, Ho,” for Ho. t Bryan, Wm, J., asks public offi- | ¢ als to quit drinking. We ask them |} Sts 's news from China, General | T iwith the Johnnies as good shots as By NEA Service. Grand Rapids, Mich, May 30.--The life of a nation is at stake— Cannons roar and muskets crackle— Blue and gray armies are in bat- Petersburg passes into rebel hands n. More fierce fighting, and the s und Stripes again wave proud- | i as the smoke of bat- vy over the fie ¢ clears aW Comés word from General Han- ock of a promotion to brigadier gen- | ere’s no telling how long T’'ll last he eneral Byron R. Pierce, oldest urviving Union general, puffing ontentedly on his after-dinner cigar, ives again through all the “fury of 7 ——_—__—— — | to quit acting as if drunk, | thes pattie nal.” SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | ae | _ Daily by carrier, per year............. 5 ae + $7.20 | A couple of quacks got chased out | « Lives Past Again. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) ............... 7.20} 0! Buffalo, N. ¥., because they were | Through wisp: nice DLA Daily k il, pe 4 : * BGO roe cmare ducks the glorious charge. Then the more daily oy mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... . 5.00} i i aaeG iieyet are ae tintnes Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. . seeeeeees 6.00] tere's news from Italy. When in |— wounded men suffering gladly for | : aa cS Sapa ipereapee lara aa = ve zs j Rome, a slight earthquake did as the | their cause. And dead men dotting | ‘ THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | Romans did, Both shook, the trampled battlefields. (Established 1873) —_— | Tears for his fallen comrades come cone _ ——————--———|_ Prof. McDougall of dear old Har- | welling up in the oid general’s s MEMORIAL DAY vard wants society divided into | Most o° the boys are gone, But he | No national holiday can be closer to the heart than See : te art DAML lane, by a) CCPH Eo A) Memorial Di . Those men who died to preserve the Union General Pierce, now 98, is spending | were the first to be honored by the setting apart of this day Badnews from Paris. Fat- wo- his last Reed's Lake’ Sani- | of tribute to the dead so that the living might gather fresi|men may come back in style. It / tarium, ne: He was born inspitation from their valiant deeds and supreme sacrifice. | costs more to feed the fat ones +Sept, 20, 1829, t Bloomfield, | The Spanish American War deepened the significance of the} Ontario) County) N, day but with the World War the shrines of the heroic dead | hailowed many lands under several flags, giving the day an | international significance. Europe in 1920 caught the inspir- | ation of the occasion and began. in cooperation with the American Legion the decoration of the foreign grayes of the | fallen heroes. i i | But the duty and obligation of the living do not end with) the mere decoration of the graves, a beautiful custom to be | sure, but as Alvin Owsley, national commander of the Amer- | *! ican Legion, has so forcefully stated, the duty of the living |" is to “revive the flame of pgtpiotism.” | The flowers of remefiberance that freshen the grave) th today ; the pilgrimages to the hallowed shrines in this land | and others; tributes upon.the high seas and public exercises |, under whatever flag held, are all.in vain unless they stit ‘anew in the breasts of all that patriotism which made these | amen lay down their lives for their country. | This nation needs constantly to be rededicated to the | ™ hu de si in co. 2 we ative Sweet of Towa retary. Of course he on their honeymoon. Represer his They ar 1 People picking presidential pos- bilities are working on the old say i y boy has a chance to be me president f ev Kansas needs farm hands. We are f Entering the Third Michigan In- | t the outbreak of the war, | captain of Company K, he rose .y leaps and bounds. When he was stered out, he was a brevet major eneral. Genera] Pierce was rst ber. In diffe a fighter of it engage- ments he was wounded in-both legs At both arms. ir Oaks his ways lending Kansas an ear, and | horse was shot from under him, ow she wants our ds, Hectaiecaenentint One American soldier is still on In his youth, General Pierce was oe Rhine: CUSiRRNY ‘employed in his father’s wooten | i : mills. ‘Then he became a dentist. | Tam Edison wants-to. use movies |. Alter the war, he entered the cloth: | sehoole. Maybe thé bathing wikia | (Ne Duemece with a beowmtce dni Gian | niilatvencni guy Rapids. From 1487 to 1891 he was | commandant of the Michigan Sol- Miss - ich. Ma has ane of been a bridemaid Bessemer, | 184 Y diers’ Home. Twice he mander of the Michigan Grand Army fae 4 , i : times, without any luck of her own. f wause of Americanism. Every national day in which the |‘’"* “owt any luek of her own or he Republic. For many years | ‘glorious past of the Republic is extolled must serve to fortify, New York beggars make from $15 | Me iaiae eal the ne toys eos America against the propagandists who would impose doc-| to $200 a day. Their hardest work i a ae | snes which strike at her ideals and all that Americans 's ‘to keep locking bad. “A brother, Frederick, died in the ae een. A mn : | Hindenburg says it will take Ger- | Service during the war, Another ;_.The ranks of the Civil War veterans have thinned.) many 100 y: to get back where | DTO'lem | or wie, A third brother, *Within a few years they will cease to feature the Memoriaij she was before the war. We say Tee al ane piace Shee Day program. but the lusty American Legion will carry on{ she shouldn't go ba ieeeauals ; ' *the work of the noble G. A. R.; preserve its ideals and see sthat the last surviv still have that respect due them for ‘gallant services performed. = . The American Legion has a broad vision and is under wise leadership. Its program is constructive. Its demands of care insistent for the welfare of the disabled soldier. _With- eee Saiieetsyoulues ee eae out this organization, the work of rehabilitation among the pit ee To the in Men of eee ATL | “soldiers, the welfare of their needy families would be|\, Anything can happen now. Massa- | GRNTEE Ae Re niaaN eee slighted. All honor to the American Legion. “husetts landlord left all of his |” "1 want each and every one of 'you | Hats off to the few remaining veterans of 1861. Hea fo bis | to write Gov. Nestos demanding, that Support and encouragement to the boys of the World; War who must carry on after the “Boys in Blue” have gone. MR. MAN : The word “Chinaman” suggests a very definite picture to you—yellow skin, slant eyes, expressionless poker face, islow walk, dragging feet, inscrutable eye expression, easy- going placidity. The picture comes to you because it’s a icomposite of the Chinese you have seen. You can, with equal ease, picture the typical Japanese. ‘Other races come less clear! Americans? We haven't de. as blo is ‘veloped a typical American. He’ll come later, when our| 1008 Sth street, Mrs. G. N. Kenis- { biggest tribute is taken from the :country ages and the melting pot finishes its work. Ons 5-30-Iw | farmer by Heder) ene e any mes vi a af . h iene process in the h g Sometimes you marvel that there can be so many mil- | eemerams ; \ parmcran Bre dnetiand!handedito: the ilions of people on earth, each different from all the others .—excepting doubles. Yet, after all, we are very much alike “in at least nine-tenths of our make-ups. | . . This similarity makes us do most of the things of life in ‘much the same way as others. Physical actions, think- | : Ing also. , { 2 SE Humanity as a wWhole—or, at least the people of a coun- | iry or geographical district — are so much alike that ne bit ‘ dr an 80 act collectively like a gigantic individual. A.nation at war acts about the same as the average indi- ‘vidual conducts himself in a rage. | * } Analyze, for instance, the.American people, and you can | picture them congealed together into.a great giant. Through *Phis giant (nation) runs waves of emotion — religious re- fs dancin epidemics, etc. At times the giant is lan- old uid. Again he has a spurt of energy. Today he may mani- est sudden interest in science or other things intellectual; tomorrow, off on an emotional debauch, brain drowsy. You | Sean remember periods when the whole nation was gloomy, ,flso periods of light-hearted joy. $i Europe, by the way, has been acting like a man recov- | ,ering from delirium tremens. Weak, shaky, irritable. Psychologists recognize two distinct kinds of mind—the mind of the individual and the social mind’that seems to ‘be possessed in commor by all the people. “The social mind | it. is at work whenever we operate in groups-—lynching mobs. | >¥ iwars, radio craze, sudden interest in spiyitualism, dancing :epidemics, and so on. vw te be ; an, All this, of course, you have obserwed. While each of us| su a separate being, we seem to be sprouts or branches from | ©° mon tree. i I |wore. And she’ made some with iB comin i i e. That is, we draw. our current out of the | y’¢4 tunics like the gnomes wore. tkame high tension wires as other. people. _ And she made some with short Somewhere we are connected together—in the mysterious | jerkins like the elves wore. rae of the subconscious or psychic, and possibly out in| ithe fourth dimension, Having so rauch in common, it’s aj *wonder that there isn’t more brottierhood of man, a more/ Goer spirit of working for the common good of huinanity | ‘the giant) instead of for self. i —__—_—_. / li Many of our infectious Giseases are of relatively recent srigin and due to the artiftcial, unnatural life of civilization, Heclares W. B. Scott, Prin¢eton professor. . i 5 * As man’s history goes, tpyhoid is a youngster among seases, Scott says. Typhoid never bothered Caesar’s armies. It was 1823 before typhoid was differentiated from phus. Panama, hothed of yellow fever until a matter of «months ago, had no germs of this disease as late as 1674. We'll find a flu cure’and preventive one of these days. Then nature will send along a new disease. She does, as fast ‘we conquer the tence. ‘That sit ' SICKNESS \ i- R swindled another woman of $25,000. many a man get the b Fine thigg about“having a garden FOR RENT—Room in modern home, | One day jn Raigsy Land Nancy had “Who for?” asked Mister Tatters, | the little Ragsy, man. give another party.” | reluctantly. Fairy Queen sent us some cloth one ime, but we never had any use for body looked happy. names now because we aren’t Rag- rowfully. folks because we're tod dressed up,” | said Bob Tail soberly. | about it, you'd better take your old | they are, every one of them.” was shocking. (Copyright, 1923, old ones—competition, to keep us battling| Dyeing. Repairing. Call Since women are entering all lines | business, a Baltimore woman - | Of course spring is time for the | + i Some people save for a rainy day ) if they lived in a desert. — | An ounce of holding is worth a ock of straw lid chasing. a front cking. Putting up’ a good helps “ you can pick what you want. { j cee ae ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberta & t This is .a story about how Nancy essed up the Ragsies. \ idea, “I’m going to make you me new clothes,” she said. Het “Why all of the Ragsies,” she an- | | swered. “You just shan’t go around | und taken \this loss and handed to any longer looking like ragamuffins.” | tie Milling\ Interests without pro- Mister Tatters looked down at his | tegt—why? 1 overalls all worn to rags and | | slowly shook his head. “I don’t think | only.a grain bayer and. it has been we work better‘in otd duds.” “Oh, you'll soon get used to them,” need them,” he said. “We can | ¢ ji id Nancy, “You might want to said Mister Tatters “Perhaps it would be | tter if we dressed up a little. The | You'll find i reau drawer.” Nancy got her scissors and snipped d/cut and fitted and sewed and in’my best bedroom | i others. f | pretty soon she had every single | right of our business as one of the | Ragsy man fixed up in a brand-new it. She made some with long-tail ats and tights like’ the Brownies But when they were finished no- “We shall have to change our es. any ~more,” said Rag Tag sor: “We all look like dude: “And we'll have ,to stop helping “Well, if that’s the way you feel | lothes back,” decided Nancy. “Here | een the | Tt really And you should hav agsies grab, my dea (To Be \Gontinued.) , NEA Service, Inc.) Dry Cleaning. Precging 58 brother-in. general, « Washington to demand readjustment ‘ Big terests get every point of doubt in You know why Mr. E, P. Wells of North Dakota were being discrimin- ated ‘against as Wheatiis, delegates would have beer grain. + Wake up Mr, Grain man you Are handling the North handle the wealth of this state be-| fore the Banker and Merchant, the Doctor or any one efse can touch it to convert it into cash, | our profession who should be dig- biggest businesses of the state. at heart the interest of his custom- PT Ee AY endure.—Shelley. Major H. C. Grant, a , was army paymaster Prancancmemmret 0) An Open Letter; Delegation of one or two fropt ch county in the state be sent to of ‘ederal Grades, That this Delegation be of men actually in the G and some attorney or Doctor, Politician of Book Learned Theorist of the Agricultural College like we od in Washington a year ago who me back and told us all was ad- usted .atis What was adjusted? You as a grain man know that the Milling Interests, You know that the In- Milling he grading and docking of grain. he RussellMiller Milling Co., rush- d to. Washington to protest against wucijustment a year ago. the Banks or the merchants of the .Producer of ent to\Washington by the nundreds jong agod Yet we as grain men have set by Because you have been dubbed as | igured that any “fool could buy This has been proven false n the last few years. largest business in Dakota; you are called to Iwill admit we ‘have hundreds in ing’ sewers, so have the banker and Let us stand up for the ‘The Grain man who does not have er as well as himself or company not worth his salt and is a failure.” Resp. yours i 0. M. Heath., (Other papers please ‘copy: ) ‘ 3 A THOUGHT , The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart, and saveth such as he of a contrite spirit— Ps, 34-18. No change, no pause, no hope! Yet was department com- | LEI FROM JOHN PRESCOTT TO HIS FRI SYDNEY CARTON six years | DEAR SYD: 1 pounding out this letter you on. the old vused in college of esting in a month or two am cats the busin more less secluded the wi wild world “Them was the happy imes think, ponsibility and ure that me or 1 campus days. son ydy th fter leaving the | | ies to Again don't think I blame Leslie. brick ang 1 know for | wa: month {have got to rent; the gas She has been a she has worked harder ‘than she! | ever did i must’ come. very She i know, and I don’t believe she ever or next year because you » on buying grocer- ; you have got to keep on paying man, the telephone, the tind the electric light people ter Il shat off your supplies if you ion't ‘pay them. It's ai fight,’ Syd. inher life. Besid hard for her. doing her own work, you shed a dish in her life until she pares them moved: into the apartment. You humdrum li just ought to ‘see how spick and a real business man Span shbokeeps it. And then if a man agids ton grow-] When the bills eome in, however, ing business currigulfin a wife the |and 1 dowt know how I am going dickens is to to pay them, I'am just as irritable Don't ‘stand — me, d,}and ‘cross as [can be, Everything lie is the weetest, dearest, lo liest girl in all the work! and T am]see the: money it, costs. still, yet and always in love wit Day. before yesterday afternoon I her. But when you and [ had spent] got imto a innocent little poker our last cent in the old days we » and when it was time for me managed to go without for 24 hour to dinner I was six hun- by getting invited © somewh« holding: up a friend until v from home. If it was not forthe ing then, we hied our uncle whose famil gold balls, borrowed of —h leaving as a token of grood will « best dinner, suit if a When at and the three dre have thought nothing of that in the | or d var wal im, | tol pun win ooks ‘hateful to’ me for 1 can only nd dollars in. the hole. 1 would but I’m married now. telephoned Leslie that business s keeping me down town and I d the truth, Syd, for I did wan: to 1 some of my money back, In- when .it came 10 ofclock and nis marrii sort 1d to leave because I knew Leslie of thing can‘t be don A man mar-| was worrying, I found that I owed ries both respectability and conven-| eight hundred and fifty dollars. tionality when he amar i Of course you know, before you I begin about the fift month to shudder when 1 think the first of the neyt month with bills. Syd, I.didn’t know it cost much fo you can’t shunt them off by tell them you will pay them somewh in the middle of next week or next) perate \ two people to live. And} of ity so ing ay cer old any money. Syd? you lend had ‘gotten this far, what, I am writ- | Have‘you got} ¢ this letter for. If you have will to me? I've got to make erit on Some stock in the con- Come across I am in des- JACK, rn if I would: hold it. 1 chap, if you ean, traits. ee “WAT A Minut SOMETHING ELSE. THE ARCHITECT'S To WORK A BREAKFA PLAN, TOO, E 7M Ow WHILS . foUIRE IN L WANT You "TO: TSLL NOOK INTO THS sv c AT. i A BREAKFAST NOOK } THS SENSE OF A BREAKFAST NOOK: .W e THERE'S GOING To BE A BIC DINING fRoom & BREAKFAST NOOK ! LITTLE CUBEY HOLES! Ger tinto.it !! WHY, WOMAN 3 NGve GEt INTO SAT : iXou CAN GO WITHOUT: {BREAKFASTS Wee MOUIRE THINNER I AND IF You CAN'T WHEN Ows OF =HOSES WHY, > ,<COULPN'T R BAW ANY PLACES You .COULONIT IF THERE WAS 'SOMSTHING TO GET INTO THIS ONS BEGIN HERE TODAY Calvin Gray, staying in Dallas at the! most expensive . hotel, is the avowed enemy of ,Colonel Henry { Nelson, son of Bell’ Nelson, banker. ‘Gray is in love with Barbara Parker, daughter of Tom Parker, Gus Briskow, friend of Gray, takes | Ma Brigkow and daughter, Alle- gheny, to the mountains. Allie has Ja tutor, Mrs. Ring, also a professor to teach her dancing. The dancing master kisses Allie, who becomes enraged and throws him from a window. The hotel manager orders* \the Briskows from the hotel, but | Calvin Gray arrives in time to ar- |vange for the family to remain. NOW GO ON WITH STORY CHAPTER XVI Plots and Counter Plots Fiom the day of their first meet- | ing, Henry Nelson and Calvin Gray had clashed. No two people could be more different in disposition and temper, hence it was only natural that every characteristic, every ac- tion of the one should have aroused the other's antagonism, Following the departure of his two callers on that day of the meet- ing in the bank, Nelson closed his desk und went home. He could work no more, For several days there-| after he was an unpleasant persow to .do business with. After cautious deliberation Henry sent word to one of his men in the | Ranger field that he wished to see} him. The man came promptly, and when he left Henry Nelson's house after | x conference he carried ivith him a | perfectly clear idea why he had been ent for. This dispite the fact, that ‘he had not been told in so many words. So much accomplished, Nelson jWent to Dallas and there ‘undertook fgg {to learn something about the size of | Calvin Gray's profits, who was be- ‘hind him and the extent of their king, and what his prospects were. When he returned home Gray was | gone, whither he could not learn. | As the days passed without further developments, ‘Newson began to be- lieve that he had had a bad dream and that Gray had merely: been talk- ing to hear his own voice. He de- ‘voutly hoped that such would prove to be the case. A time came, however, when ‘his apprehens: were roused afresh, {and it was Barbara Parker who re- kindled them. She had come to the bank with an. excellent proposition and was doing her best to sell it; in the course of her conversation she referred to Gray in a manngr that gave Nelson cause for thougHt. "I’ve looked this lease over,” “Bob” was saying, “and I've seen the books. It has ‘been producing a hundred and fifty barrels a day steadily} Production like that is cheap at ,a thousand dollars a bar- rel, It is worth a hundred and fifty thousand dollars, Henry.” | “Why it is offered for seventy- iv “Bob” shrugged. weevil’ like this Ja {even a hundred and fifty barrel: well in the first place? Where did he get the money to dill? He is sick of the game, I suppose, and would be satisfied to get his money back ‘with a reasonable profit. It is a find, really.” " “Looks so, for a fact. How did you get on to it, “Bob’?” % “Purely by chance. Through ,@ man ‘named Mallow, a‘‘scientist’ of some sort with a magic tester,” The girl laughed. L “Don’t know him.” “Mallow is as queer as the rest of his kind, and I put no faith in his story until I investigated. But the well is there and doing a hundred |and fifty Barrels as regular as clock- work.” : . “You'll have no trouble in selling it." “Then you're not interested?” nterested? Yes, indeed,” Nel- son’thodded. “I’m quite excited, as a-matter of fact, but—I can’t handle jit at this particular time,” “Frankly, glad you can’t, Barbara told him, “for -now I can sell it to Mr. Gray.” “He’s buying and gelling is he? He said something about entering this field in a big way—” “He's in.” “Bob's” eyes ‘-were sparkling. “Oh things’ are, looking up’for dad and me. Mr. Gray is a real mircle man, isn’t he?” When this question evoked “no response, the girl inquired, curiously, “Tell me, are you and.he (ch good, friends as he says you are?” “Does. he say we are good friends?” . x “Um-m—well hé speaks admiring- ly of you, and if people admire me I love them. He thinks you, are a re markably capable. person, A deter- | mined fighter,.1 think he called you That should by high praise, coming from a fellow officer. He probably outlined his plans to you.” és “He did.” Nelson spoke dryly. ” “I assumed that he was relying on your judgment and taking your tips.” E “Why? How: so?” “Because he has bought so much land! alongside;of yours.” “Where?” ‘Barbara was surprised. “I—why, I supposed you knew!” After a mo- ‘How did a ‘boll son ever make vane syanaaetenet WEDNESDAY; MAY 30, 1923 ORTOP BENE, Mw oon, Miss Parker laughed frankly. “Why Henry- My haughty little nose it turning up—I can feel it. But alas! it proves your sincerity. If you had faith in| my judgment you'd pick up this snap.” With some _hesit: said: “We're in deep, ion the gman Bob.” Awfally deep! That's the worst of this o:l game, it takes so much rooney to protect your holdings. It deesn't pay to prospect land for the benefit of your neighbor; the risks too great, Gray has heen pretty tive to you, hasn't he?’ “That’s a part of the man; h attentive to éverybody. 1 have re ceived more candy und flowers and delightful su ses thar in all my short neglected life.” “[ didn’t know you liked candy” “I don't, But I adore getting: it. The thought counts. [ don't care much for canaries, either—[ such bad luck with them-—-but he sent me the dearest thing frow New York. A tiny mechanical bird with actual feathers, And it sings! It is a really truly yellow canary in a beautiful gold cage and when you press a spring it perks its head, opens its beak, flirts its tail, and ut- ter: the most angelic song. It must have cost a fortune. Couldn't you love a man who would think of a present like that?” When she had ‘gone Nelson sat in a frowning study for some time. So, it was not all a bad dream. What could be Gray's object in buying aerenge adjoining his? Was it faith in his, Nelson’s, judgment, a desire to ride to success on the tail of his enemy’s kite, or did it mean a war of offsets, drilling operations the in- stant a well came in? In and around the office, of Me- Wadé"'& ‘Stoher’ these were ‘abusy reat! with <p) fPenple; of hew wildcat promotions and a wef] gging down on semiproven ground—that lease which cornered into the Nelson holdings, and to which Stoner had called attention. It had been easy to sell stock in the latter enterprise, and now the deeper went the the higher rose the hopes of th moters. Storer himself was direct- ing operations; and he had named have the well “Avenger Number One.” CHAPTER XVII Buddy Breaks the Traces To learn that her mountain re- treat had been invaded and that she had been spied upon filled Ma Briskow with dismay, but when Allie found fault with her. behavior the elder woman burned with resent- ment. “We're queer enough,” the girl said, “without you cutting up crazy and making folks talk. If you want to dance, for goodness’ sake hire somebody to lear—to teach you same as I did. What was you up to the other day? That Delamater man said you was acting plumb nutty.” “Mind your own business!” the old woman snapped, She flounced out of the room, leaving Allie amazed and indignant, at this burst of temper. That day Ma Briskow abandoned her manutain fastness, She took her faithful retainers with her and led them farther up the ravine to a re treat that was truly inaccessible, The next day when she stealthily slipped out of her French. window, she found Calvin Gray idly ropking on the veranda. He welcome@ her appearance and pretended not tu see her embarrassment at the meeting, he was glad of this chance for a visit. with her alone. Perhaps she was going for a walk and would take him along? ‘ But Ma flushed faintly, arg for Sometime’ longer “she rrase her onfiderice:* idn’t_matter; it\ was all an’ ‘old wotian’s foolishness; no- body would Understand. Gray was not insistent; “nevertheless, before long they were on their way toward the glen. In a reckless burst of con- fidence, Ma told him all about her hidden band of mountaineers. He insisted upon making the per- sonal acquaintance of those bold fol- lowers of hers and upon hearing the whole sad story of the Princess Pén- sacola, The history of her struggle against the wicked Duke of Dallks moved him; he wove new details of his own into it, and before Ma knew it he was actually playing the part of the duke, The duke, it appeared, was a hard and haughty man but at heart he was not all bad; when he had lis- tened to the story of his victim’s wrongs ard more fully appreciated the . courage , the devotion of her doughty followers, he was touched. Hé was a handsome man and no wiekeder than the general fun of dukes; he would make a becoming husband to the beauteous princess, and if she set her mind to it she could probably make a better person of him. Thus would the workin factions be united, thus would the blessings of peace: descend— (Continued in Our Next Issue) Piles Can Be Cured ;; Without Surgery ‘An instructive book has been :pub- lished by Dr. A..S. McCleary, the noted rectal specialist of Kansas City, This book tells how sufferers ment of hesitation she said; “I think Td better keep |Just'the same, He couldn’t have done better “than. to. follow | your paid" you, Henry.” ladiesman, I wond to make me jealo: “You? “Jealous? er, if he is going from the cold country “Ive paid you engugh. And J do| has bee: believe. in you, ‘Bob,’ but I’m not} yearg the flattering’ kind. He’s a great|and ¢epses. The book: is sent post- from. Piles can be :quickly and, gas- my. mouth closed.| ily: cured,-without the use of knife, cissors, “hot”: iron, electricity . or lead. | any other cutting or burning method That. ie the: fixat. compliment I ever | without. confinement to bed and no hospital bills to pay. The method & success for twenty-four id .in.more than-eight thous- paid eee to persons afflicted with piles or other recta} troubles who Coming from |clip this.item and mail.it with name Wichita’s most emotionless banker,| and address to Dr. McCleary,,.D542: Croesus, that| Parkview Sanitarium, Kansas speech is almost a—a declaration <s Hoa os ee. City,

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