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THE WYOMING WEEELY REVIEW (AND NATRONA COUNTY TRIBUNE) . SATURDAY, FEB. 18, 1922 WHALES INTELLIGENT, AND SOME (TEMPERAMENT: AL Many Tales |RENO JUSTICE OF PEACE Microscope PAT, EACH OTHER IN PLAY; SIGNAL WHEN IN DANGER| Of Violence | “DOUBLE” FOR LINCOLN) |, Becomin g Pigneet Maker of Gt sg scr cm igre a wre gmt Palty Days of Industry In Old West Real Aid In Police Work Of Old-time Whalj school) wil! sigralise fo the other. Hom |ships" toga, many of, them written ax vores Ae Three =| a it we don't know, but ¢! tters or stories Mlustrated w'th pee NR Rd Re Just Yarns OW first of all fust you promise|of what happened to the berk Kath-|no sight ability. chte)' Tirenghect MMT Wiehe Teves, and |Proves of Incalculable Value in | Running Down Law Violators | in England—Makes Possible leen, which was destroyed 20 yoars| ‘There were ship's abstracts, veri- . ad Zev uot Gene en’ es aaine £0, just to the cast of the Leewari| table treasures to the whaleman of an| nn” — rea pe og = pleasing Bad Men, Gun Plays and Barroom | Roar of the dangers of whaling and of} Battles More Creations of Story Sherlock Holmes Brand of De- | tective a Person in Real Life Islands in the West Indies. earlier generation, evidence of wonder tho cruelties, too, ain’t a bit overdrawn. “My explanation is that one pod of|to people of this generation, few o whales‘on the occasion signalised to| "hom have any conception of the su>-|"The swangui (molasses and bread) was Writers and Makers of Moving another pod,and one of the big fellows lees ans ie variety c ctien {ECMCTALY awful bad, as was much of ictures Than Cha Started to go to the rescue. Going} Wired to fit out a whaler for a crui food. In cll ways it took a brave fi ractenstic through the water he couldn't see, ex-| Besides the necessary equipment| hardy and adventurous nukes te| Events Early-Day Editor Says cept obliquely you know, and he just Which had to go directly with whal-| make a real whaleman. Men had to game up under the Kathleen acci-[!"s, there were the supplies for men | have steady nerves. strong muscles, OUGLAS, Ariz—The southwest dentally. He didn’t attack the barque. stout hearts and a great lot of courage | im the early days of the gold Likely as not, that whale was as sur- and self-reliance when it came to han. rush was never as wild as it is priced as were the people on board. dling that Nt of steel on which their portrayed by the modern movie You'll hear foli-s say that she was @. lives depe=.ded.”" hero, according to Major George H. tacked by a whale but she wasnt There were days and weeks at a| Kelly. publisher of the Douglas Daily That I know from Captain Jenkins| ford at one time, and you will realtze time at sea when there was little for| International, who has been a news- bimsett.” what the whaling industry meant tOlthe crew to do but make Jagging | Peper editor continuously for 52 years, LONDON—From the land of Sher- lock Holmes, whose history as a clever detective is known to all of the many readers of A. Conan Doyle's series of books portraying un- usual methods of crime detection, comes interesting information as to the value of a microscope as an ad- junct to crime detection. ‘The microscope in not negtected by British crime specialists. The real eye of Scotland Yard is a compound optical lens which, with the ald of the camera, is able to produce eve dence such as the sharpest: eyes of the law sleuths could never visualize. which occupy tland Yard de- pon trivialities, facas often un- observable to the naked eye, that ev- evry detective, like every medical stn- dent, should have a working knowl- edge if a modeern microscope. In Ger- many and in Ame. put into far more f ship's stores, trade goods and a huke lot of incidentals, totaling often as many as 50 different articles. Consider that nearly one hundred hips were often outfitting at New Bedg- Fighting Whale Rare. New England ports. Carefully pre | wheels, carve whales’ tecth, make |24 of which have been spent in Ari “There have been two cases, only|Served in the safe is a long itemized two actually proved as far as I know,|list of goods furnished the New Bed- where vessels were attacked and de- ford fleet of 65 vessels {ur the season ; stroyed by fighting whales. They}1858, which amounted to an outlay “Madam, you shonla not speak that| were the ship Essex--and if you want|°f almost two million dollars. way. Three very important’ things|to read something blood-curdiing just} Voyages Three to Five Years. you are dependant upon to the whale} you read of her tragedy—and the seri-|| A® Mr. Brown was locking his safe =-your corsets, which give you your] ous, though not so frightful, catastro-|he talked of the length of voyages in sigle; your cosmetics and your per-|phe of the Ann Aley~nder. Thero was| those days. “Yes, 60 months was a fumery, which give you your beauty|no accident about ether of them.” jlong one. The average voyage was TE sein attcactivwone.” ite, Wieaucaiienban bt: iste' roomate Sores tiene or maybe four years, or 30 Then he explainel there was no|a warehouve on South Water street, as|™onths if the cruise was to the Indian substitute for the whalebone for cor-}a shop. But privileged visitors would/0cean. A two year trip was spoken of sets, while few women realized what as a ‘plum pudding voyage,’ and that's tap owed. ta tiie deaberecia 00 per: another true story about a captain fume, nnd to spermacetl. so valued in who was reminded, ‘as he was once the making of cosmetics and oint- leaving New Bedford, that be hadn" scrimshaw work and perhaps mend | 20na. thelr clothes. Major Kelly began his newspaper No one seems to know why the/“reer at Poular Blaff. Mo., in July whalesmen were so fond of making | 1569. when as a boy of fifteen years the first named articles, but may have|he started in as “devil” and within been due to the ever present thought|three years, through tho help of of the delicious New England pies, for| friends, bernme editor and owner of jagging wheels were used for cutting | the Bl.<x River News, upon which he | out and embellishing with fanciful) 59d <erved his apprenticeship. designs the pastry of “the women on| With the exception of the years of zhore.”| Many of these wheels were|1588 and 1389, when he worked on highly ornamented with mother-of-|N¢wspapers at Tucson, Ariz, Major pearl, whalebone or brass wire, or|Kelly has been a newspaper propric enamei frora the walrus’s teeth inlaid | tor and editor. in the ivory. His first exciting newspaper experi Bobby Bi Goblet ence in the wilds of Arizona was in S connection with the hold up and rob- be more apt to bestow the title of mu- seum upon it, In a conspicuous place upon the wall is the framed picture of what, at first glance appears to be neral uso than in One of Mr. Brown's chief treasures & residential cabinet of about Buchan-|®#id goodbye to his wife. “What's the jbery of Major Wham, an army pay- this country, an‘s day, but which is a group of cag-;U8¢? I'm only goin’ for two years’|!* a Bobby Burns goblet and plate of| master, who, with his escort, was as “There is no phase of crime where tains of the famous Stone Fleet. he answered ’in.an off-hand manner. aie AP pena hacturay: Does Aba Gn sailed by a band of outlaws on the | the microscope is not used. In com- dual. of Azahy Just 60 . unt 2 di “As to dangers, I know of plenty of +. esti-| road from Fort Grant to Fort Thomas, bination with chemical reagents its one Ck a oe ares. eA Mites oie Baie Hl ‘Rect was|otd whilemen who sailed forth, tinme| S00 convinced him that ft really aid|fotn in Graham county, Arizona, in use has practically wiped out the bank carte ot because of its frag.|sunk off Charleston and Savannah to|after time from this port in the same] 2™C¢ belong tothe Scottish poet—con-| the «pring of 1889. 0, Nev. Feb. 17.—Judge] weighs 190 pounds—Lincoin's weight| note forger on a large scale. Inks are of ic Tha Nig it possenee gn vinciag proof belng the fact that the] ‘Tie outlaws escapnd with $28,000 in R Charles E. Bull of the justice jand height. tested with reagents and the paper er oon tainin; Pome A Si i Co. lower part of the goblet cup is bent,j gold, and Major Kelly, then a young court here is a “Lincoln double} War horn in a log cabin fiber with the high-power lens, When DER Sep. Oe ee ses doce 1 ent_ nversation the result of Bobby's forcible pound-/editor, joined a posse of soldiers and| jis resemblance to thé best pho-| Spl't raile as a boy. inks were copied successfully by the gees the whaler, in days gone ies og EN cara: tlawal teeeneueneatne | goblet! civil officers in a search for theltograph 6f Lincoln is sttiking Though Bull's relatives were ar-| forger tho bankers took to perforating Sa hieves. t at c “a % iT semblance « cy. 1c checks. t a by.” Mr: Brown continued, handing ‘Mr. Brown's flendships are aot con- pee is eed > Herts t ides his facial resemblance to|dent supporters of the Confederncy,| their check It is recorded that a Be me a photograph of a large lump of Lincoln, Bull— Bull always has taken Lin¢oin as his|forger got past this perforation fined to New Bedford whalemen, He ambergris, “who got a few bits of tells of a young Japanese who was|turut ana held for the robbery, They] 12 84% feet four inches tall and | ideat conty Bitay the kale ent ee taee THEE eINGs Ie worth tar more teen ss sent over here years ago by his g0V-| were tried in Tucson, Ariz, the trial es peiocaGng, Bat he ee weight in gol@. It would bring him ernment to make a thorough study of |iasting several weeks. x “{round him, He has beon married 47|for president until the territory was| Perforating. But the microscope more money than all the oll obtained whaling. Mr. Brown took him into his Law and Ordor Ruled. seers. His wife,-a native of Carroi|admnted as a ctate in 19:1. ge te dy 3 ye on cven the longest of cruises. shop (adjoining this office room-ia the] Law and order marked the trial and Mississippi, was Alles V. Beat a PAT Ln LB rece dhe Rainer rat And he quoted the two most’ fa shop proper, where whaling guns and|tno major in recounting the early days |‘. y have a comfortable home| M. Krestinsky, the commissar of|‘h® Past of tho superiority of micro- mous catches of ambergris: ra finance has informed the congress of | Photographic search. Some years ago : . : ay tip! lanches are still made, though there is|in the southwest, declares that al 1859, schooner Watchman, 800 ‘ 7 j | but little demand for them compared|though he has had many desperate| Major Keily has always boen a dem | Soviets that the Russian government | ‘here Was a photo taken of a will sts- to the days afound "45, whelt the bus-I characters, known as “bad. men’ |¢crat, casting lus first voto for Som |contemplates the issuance in 1922 of | 2ture, sand when the enlargement ines was booming), and kept him un-| pointed out to him he never saw them| uel J. Tilden, ‘The next vote he cst | 28.000,000,000,000 paper rubles which, | Was ma eas Detachable, the faint , ‘ a ee til the lad went to college in Newlin action, or in any of his experiences |for presidrn: was for Woodrow Wil-|he estimates, should have « buying |Shadow of « pencil signature evidently did then, for $550 a pound, it is not j 4 : ae York. From there he went to South] he has never seen one of them able to|*en. a8 in Arizona there was no voting | power of 230,000,000 gold rubies. made before the inked ‘forgery ‘was difficult to imagine the feelings of a ¥ y ig America, then to the English fisheries, | noid off a whole barroom full of cut: uttered. coptain bound for port, Ustening to and still later he came back to 2 [aed as the modern movie hero MAN WHO ROSE FROM PRIV. ATE TO pete eal and inka abe aaeaaee pag his crew's chanty: United States as a delegate at the * And soon we shall be home again; our J is the value of which the micro- fi & Lime of the treaty of Portsmouth. Th: It is the consensus of opinion among be Hai: friends we then shall see. . : pt 5 3 . Japanese gentleman keeps up a corre-| the old timers of his acquaintance, he FIEI D M ARSH AL TRI LS OWN STORY see Lepaveding hey ear ike Heave away, my hearties; heave a 2 2 spondence with Mr. Brown, ail now| says that when the young tenderfoot VEil) Wh! A f 4B K ) nen send thls a Bi ais ce a away, my boys! 65 a that he has become a man of promi-| from the east came west and connect ———— withcbeet tise: daaoces ss And when we see N~,7 Bedford, we'll ne'er more go to sea, Heave away, my hearties! heave away, my boys! “They used to tell a story—true nence and attainment in Tokio, takes|eq with one of the outlaws who in| LONDON—The first private soldier] wore consigned to the guard room, jabs a bipadt ctr seede ye the time to write of the interesting de-}<j,ose days frequented the salloons, he| to succeed in forcing his way up, step| there to await trial by court martial ar} ceria rigrmgh ed pega: im tails of his life to this teacher of his/ had his hands full by step, to fleld marshal's rank—the|and in all probability to be sentenced salar} ease ed ak $ h a “coches: 2 In 1890 Major Kelly bought the Ari-| highest possible—has written a book|to not less than six months’ imprison- iliaans wate ten ae story, too. all my stories are true ones > zona Bulletin, a Weekly newspaper|about his achtevement. It is an in- pana en Sit of three. weeks the | Mently lying in_wait for him. ‘<. whil! 4 published at Solomonville, Ariz., and] spiring story. 1 commans 0 cavalry - pe po eae gPn h ope Rcd ‘ New Com 8S Designed to) published it for 13 years ‘being suffl-| William, Robertson took ' the| brigade exercised, an I thought, and Tin ( ‘ans A re Set was having its case baled. out,” aod| ff . Prevent }ying Accidents} cientiy prosperous to give a collere|“Queen’s Shilling” from a recruiting |still think, a sensible discretion by the fo an stopped long enough to : ; : ‘ : at st education to his two children, W. B.| sergeant in the elty of Worpester in|releasing us. A ° t t Test explain that the case was that part ? 4 : x : DAYTON, O.—Designed to nt | Kelly, now editor of the Clifton (Ariz)/1877, when he was 17 years old. He| “Had he brought us to trial the drif fe] of the head which contains the sper- ¢ ehh inertial “ncoidents. a ‘few com has | Copper Era, and Mrs. C, L. Rawlinr,/ was sent to the 16th Lancers at Alder-/chances are that I would have fol- P. ifi maceti, “the captain got so eager for ” Be eant in pedtarttyseneleiers ae the hh, | & resident of Globe, Ariz., and the wite| shot and posted to “G" troop, of which | lowed in the steps ef mamy another aciic Currents the subaltern officer was Lioutenant} soldier of those days, and have be- every drop that he kept his men bail- : id rons 3 : a ent section of McCook field. of a prominent lawyer. ing away till they had scraped a hole * In 1903 ho sold his newspaper in! Blair. come a hardened offender against mill-| 1p. in thegwhale's case. BESO athe raphael ine br shad not{Graham county and established the| “I am sure that nono of us then|tary law, a disgrace to myself and a Eapecrpents eee Comatenad es ke cht hour Reperal rame'a'a etic | Pally International at Douglas, where| thought," writes Field Marshal Sir| burden to the country.” a ill rnish Scien- ast bene anti Daliaag ap ths: Atiaatle TEMS iit iaktheconanen « revolving he bas since resided and 1s yet active| William Robertson, Bart, in his book| ‘The fleld marshal writes of his days tific Data in editing and publishing this paper.| “Irom Private to Field Marshal,"|in the ranks as “in some ways the According to the major, the news-| «that forty-one years later I would be|most interesting and fascinating of] LONDON.—Somewhere in the Paci- paper business is very different now|commander-in-chicf of the Eastern | all.” fic Ocean today seven tin cans are from what it was 30 years ago. Then} command, and he would be my mili-| | “I derived greater satisfaction from| drifting ubout. They contain mes- advertising was not regarded as a bug-| tary secretary. But so it turned out.”| being promoted lance corporal in 1879|sages for the Pacific Steam Naviga- iness proposition and those who payed Life in the ranks was a stern or-|—tho first rung of the ladder—than|tion company, says a writer in the for advertising spaco usually carricd | goai in Private Robertson's days. The|I did from belng created = baronet|London Chronicle. The Orita, which the same copy for months, and in| ion were a rough, heavy-drinking,|forty years Inter. And as lentenant,|sailed from Liverpool, ig to add to seme cases no change would be made} fons outhed lot. I felt prouder to be In command at|that number. Her tin cans will be in their advertisements for a whole! m4 ycungster's first night in the|the railhead of a frontier expedition-| flung overboard somewhere on the thelplaneds)put through: year. Running a newspaper in 1bis}.4y could not have been more dis-|ary force in India of lees than 10,000| route to Rio Janeiro via the straite A age, he says, is strictly a business} ouraging. His new comrades had|men, than, as general, to be chief of|of Magellan and Valparaiso. propesition, and because it has been.” racolved their pay and most of|the imperial general staff in tho great-| “These drift-cans messages are to put/on that basis pubiishers aro At! tiem were bolsterously drunk. There|est conflict the world has ever known,| test ocean currents, and are expert. last making @ fair profit fram the cap-| 77 fonts which raged around and|when the number of our troops ran|ments like those undertaken roceatiy ital invested. aI over the new recruit’s head. into‘several millions.” by British and Danish scientists in Ptenty of Live News His chance—remote enough to seem} Having surmounted and dispelled|the North sca. In each can will be Ta the early days in Arizona there|impossible—of winning a field mar-|the obstacles and doubts of the early|a request that the Onder will tnfonm were many exciting accounts of train|shaj's baton was in peril that night. |days, Robertson's career became one|the company of the position and time robberies, holding up of messengers| «1 pecan to wonder whether I had|of hard work, self denial and study. |of recovery. bearing mine payrolls and other large| nade a wise decision after all. I con-| Hntirely without private income, re-| ‘Tin cans with messeges complete sums of money, “but™ declares the/tiiued to wonder for several nights|lying solely upon his army pay, the|were put into the Pacific Occan on ocean.’ . % é coiled wire. ‘Then Mr. Brown grew serious and ‘ In the past, when an aviator would talked entertainingly of the many va- : - : i: : perform stunts or rieties of whales; the belunga or white ‘ es eee Be compass would be thrown off. whale, the narwhal or unicorn whale, a 2: caused the pilot to lose all sense of and y the right whales and direction. Aan eee ey ch tarnish cit and| _/_ Not a word was spoken when General Hugh T Scott met Chief rp ee cakpiae ta sek racrexten It 1s sald that every man and wom an in Iceland is able to read and write. ; wi 5 = whalebone, and the sperm whales, in| Charles MacDonald in Washington the other day. | They used the sign |. tnis manner, aber pit amend which ambergris'and spermaretl are] ijanoma Indiana are in Washington an trial hitsinas direction, no matter what evolutions to be found. Whales A Playfel Lop. ‘ i ed esason ‘so as not to interfere with Mr. Brown can tell of the habite ot/ Natives Along Nile GN 2g Lace 2c eta ap hirer whales, of all varieties of them, and ; 15 | pocket. bole, tpt orem zante Rc ariobonesy Preparing for Visitor: amental and very intelligent. ears : Fee eee tare cs | cus ste tna ea ote as boaly er} WW Tied f Tolstoi Will Be Published who have watched them at play, that|the Nile the head sheik 1s busily en- ritings o they have their preferences, same a3/ gaged in directing the assistant sheik . . among folks. A bull whale will pat|to nurry up and dust off those Pyra- Without Copyright, As Author Requested hia mate, not very lightly maybe, but} midge. 4 2 in @ manner that cannot be mistaken| Native factories are working day| MOSCOW, Feb. 17—Three unpub-]| A second of the unpublished works oor ays tha coat popular’ tf be taalees | eee Tent taming out scarabs, Idols. |iished works of Count Leo Tolstol are|is en unfinished romance called “The | major, “I have never witnessed any:|srtorwara and would le awake for|young officer's early days of commis-|December 11 end 13, 1020; October 4 whale is the most popular; if he makes | terracotta tear bottles—all kinds of an-|to be included in the memorial edition |'Story of Peter the Great,” and deals|tning like Bill Hart and other movie h meditating whether to see the|sioned rank were far from easy, 1921. None of these have yet been the ones sina around they ov Uke | cient curios—to be hidden in the are of his works which his daughters arejwith revoluntionary plots of thatigtars ¢erict on the sercen as stories mneiee through, or get out of bed, put|.. ‘Water was the only drink I could|10 and 18, and Nove 2 Seilige Bins AS chepeent: Deane the tombs and dug up accidently |pianning to issue. time. of the early southwest. During my 34 t 11 had) | afford, while f Sage. X, Rasd:tcite i a: Ana (now ae to their signaltztne.|When the tourists arrive "The most important of these is his| ‘The third work ta a comedy in five | years. In Arizona T hase nover wit: [°° ranean presen te Task | entececciitges eealasomnt ceva be sine Basil Lubbock, writing to ‘Sea last war over the submarine bell Sm Rig ney a aie Fe aa Saget pepe tach, The act ree rasust pin at aheseatesal worm: Comedies Se CanG ope here vee SP ree ake cel the Gropealsvenc¥ed | cois@nidicietpote at i jabtlinia:es are | Sieedneas tote cea tire "Captain. Taylor, lage Wer owe “a for the thelr if 500 each. yas be-| poking fun at short: women, |er seen a man killed in a gun battie, uv cine ery ¥ * Se ere at ood can Laock two stones |General Pershing—to catch the ears|without a break, then abandoned un-|‘sian types. It was refused by the Art |put the scutlwest never was the bat:|for, having Tins Mh ok Chee Ne ohh |e 8 Soe ere drinking cham:|five years: ‘The urebeed of an old knows that you can knock two stones | (6: notriotic visitors. ‘il 1889, when the great writer re-| "Theater, of these days, 2 fact which|tle ground for the hundreds of thrill.| Right appropriated mine. Wwe i paca gy aetna ED ate Laem foe aa of 2 old wil car Ptainty fests whi tt hnoekes A eee en te oa Dera ESTO DESL nape Kap st juni fype, Gays ber | nde tine uthee pewnnearie bee sen i ar eg bets 26 cons Ferhat Pace coini: the conse witch | ine. the masenisleckecke piven. wnreinet |ralase tobe event tat pearasiaisenee Neate g te years, { t- t 1910. Other than these three wor! the copy or e film prod * to her above the surface it wont | #fter a lapso of eight years, is expect-|fore hie death in 0. ing the tide of winter trayel to turn| ‘The first 20 year period of the diary|are a large number of unpublished or|make us believe.” hag since raved ao, Brilliant wna ‘i |allowed, but it had to be done. tonea |r” Ost of Western Australia.” back toward the Nile and is preparins'|describes his life as soldier in the|incompleto shart stories. to be issued.| | MaJor Kelly though a successful Sp igee ay cape ternal J-37 gos] peeeirpant yt sab ci peweeannreio| PORN RaERE tar jas es See - , during the siege of Sebas-| As Tolstoi made his daughters |editor and publisher, e is | te Robertson had “be ener | sbeed i, pave pioeniiven i to greet Appeiean fous -sran oath penton Papel meng P tbes (pec promise not to copyright any of his|cuired riches, He is comortably sit |duty, and tho escort had lost @ priso five languages. In 189 he was one ot] nd ae rielty in Vienna haye Just a as Mettators; in fact, Rave|period of the diary is less personal|works, after his life rule, these new|uated and coclares himself satisfied |er. the oldest Moutenants on the lst, but|been adv per cent, making “Whales. have been known to sig- nalize to each other four or five miles on this same basis of sound carrying 2 A Ss at one laced ‘in|in 1903 he “became in leas than nine|them 14 times more than they were unger water. For instance, if there z lished simultan-|with a paying newspaper, a comfor:| The corporal was at once pI ft - ‘whaling, Sar, on the _ wentherhow sarees pocoeene Haren ead Rina ee earn ae ticipated the world. fable home ant the frends which sur-'arrest,’ while I and my companton|years one of the youngest colonels.” [one year ago three miles from the vessel and whal-] British carryings-on, ‘To Mark ‘Lusitania’s Grave. : _ Sailors Rescued From _ Stranded _ Ship, by Breeches Buoy Cold? Ah, But This Is Florida Boy Scouts, camping in the Florida Everglades near Musa Isle, go ‘of the TEistlemore was rescued after the British freighter went aground off Cape Cod | swimming every day, while thelr northern comrades sled and skate and a line across the bow of the boat and the breeches buoy_was rigged up The crew frolic la the snow. above.