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fe- Add Wffi-r wh |v5 ik«s &§§, ®Ite §igma**lt Ctibutit* By M. H. JEWELL. THE DAILY TRIBUNE. Published every afternoon, except Sun day, at Bismarck, Nprth Dakota, Is. deliv ered by carrier to all parts of the city at GO cents per month, or $C per year. The dally sent to any address In the United States and Canada, postage prepaid, $ii per year $3 for six months $1.00 tor three months. THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published every Friday: eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week—local and foreign—particular atten tion being paid to state news. Sent to any address, postage paid, for $1.00 for One year 50 cents for six mouths 25 cents for three months. The Bismarck Tribune Is the oldest, newspaper In the state—established Jane U, 1S73. It has a wide circulation, and Is desirable advertising medium. Being published at the capital of the state it tuakes a feature of state news, of a semi official character, and Is therefore particu larly interesting to all who desire to keep tle run of state affairs—political, social and business. These are commencement times for the various state institutions. The Tribune acknowledges invitations from the state agricultural college faculty and that of -tliO Valley City normal school. Both institutions will grad uate clashes Of young men and women who area crfedit to the state and will be better equipped by their education for the battle of life. .There is a good deal of interest at Washington in the statement of Judge ArthuSf H. Noyes off the Nome district, In response to the charges that were submitted to him by the attorney gen eral. The president is said to insist that Noyes must show that the charges are not well founded, else there will be an investigation to ascertain ex actly the condition of judicial affairs at Nome. It is likely thai quite a number of northwestern people will take advan tage of the Soo's special excursion offer and viBit Newfoundland and Labrador, this summer. The trip will be one off pleasure and instruction, covering a period of forty-seven days from St. Paul and costing but $375, including all hotel and necessary-traiVj eling expenses. The excursion leaves St. Paul on the 25th! Inst. The Soo also announces other excursions to Mackinac and other "cool" regions, on extremely advantageous terms. Gen eral Passenger Agent Callaway, Min neapoMs, will send illustrated booklets giving detailed fnformatioia to those •who apply for them. THE NOYES CAS®. jb, ^Washington correspondence Journal1: Three montluf ago dog team started across the frozen fkr northwesfccarry ing to Judge Arthur H. Noyes,'at Cs®e Nome, a coammmheation fro«n ti&feat toraey general erf the U5 requeuing that Noyes make a written defense fyt himself against the changes brough^jast winter •with so much. energy. The communi cation contained a detailed statement of the charges. If Judge Noyes has1 sent his reply by dog team it may Teach Washington very shortly^ but If he is Waiting for the first boat sev eral weeks will elaipse before he can be heard from. As soon qs his defense has been received it is the intent df President McKinley to act prompter. What the president will do wJH'depend entirely upon wh^t Noyes may havfe to say. There is a growing belief that the president is not inclined to regard the situation with the same leniency which he showed last winter.- While In San Francisco he met a number of reputable men who are Against Noyefe and' who gaye long and circumstantial reports to. him, attempting to show that Noyes is not a proper person to continue on the Alaskan bench- While the president may not have became prejudicial through these reports, it is certain that he now. has a clear under standing of the anti-Noyes situation, something he did not have before. Hr is understood to believe that mai terp at Nome are in a- very bad condi tion and that something must bedofle. Whether-this "something" will take form, pf dismissal for Noyes or off re moval to another district cannot be said at present. It is suggested here that- .Noyes oould do no better thing for Monelf than to hrftrg out his de fense in person and submit it in Wash ington, The president is said to In sist that Noyes must show a clean bill o' health or submit to fata Danger, Disease and death follow neglect of the Bowels, Use DeWitt's Wttle Early Risers to regulate them and you will addyears to your life and life to yo^.-yeara. Easy t» take, neyejr gripe. "^iiBeainteley & Finney, -woamnm^i ATTaamcm ^-Excursion rates. to St. Paul and Min w&apoUs account of Modern Wood men meeting June lO-m Tickets are sold June ioth, im and 12t%, gooS returning nntli 0W* 17th. Ample WfmratiaTif&m made to care for all, attnttsttye progrimB Bave '8^ JJm -egmt PasMcmw ftm any mf§M 3m*%& PJttAIRIE BREEZES THE PARTED THREADS. If b,e came back, I wonder Vould he know The voices* whispering of the long ago?. If he came back, I bonder would he see The beauties, buried now, that used to be? If he came back, back from the dust and dead, I wonder 'would he seek the broken thread, And follow on, o'er sod and o'er the sea, Until it led him back to youth, and me? If he came back, I wonder would he share My dreams? Or would the roses in my hair Be but dull, voiceless flowers of spring. Speechless and silent mute nor whispering The secrets once they told? Or would. they glow "»\.1: With the sweet memories off long ago, Where every petal quivered with the weight Arid grandeur of a rapture passionate? If he came back, I ponder Would hie feel The rapture of the hop^s, that used to steal 1 From but ithe tinted twilight, as we. StOOd Beneath the boughs, in the thiek, leafy woodt Thrilled with the song whose silent melody None heard, in all its ecstasy, but we? Would he now hear that whispered song and low If he came back, who went so long ago? Where ends the song that is yet half unsung? In the still mound, where the green turf upflung? Dies all the music, or but hid in air Trembling, yet mute, In that vast Otherwhere? The threads now parted, who shall mend again, Wejd bro&en links, restore the chain? And then When they come back who hav6 been* gone so long, I wonder will ttiqy know the old sweet song? —J. W. FOLEY. INDIANS TAKE LAND. LARGE NUMBER OF INDIANS AT FORT BESRTKOLD WlfO HAVE TAKEN LAND IN S!EVERALTY. the list recently filed in the local land office by the. department of the interior, showB that a large dumber of Indians halve taken laAd in severalty. There are several hundreds of names on the list, the Indian name and the English equivalent being given In each case. There is a strong element of the'humorous in Indian nomencla ture. "Bear" seams to be an espe cial popular name -with the red men. Among the names on the li?t are bears of all kinds. There is "Bear in the Water," "Betfr on the Flat, ""Bear in the Woods,". and bears of all kinds, colors, shapes, sizes and, conditions. Names of other animals are also popu lar, there being "Weasfel," "Mink* "Wolff" and there Is even a •"Skunk: There are citified Indians also, 'for there is "Flat No. V' "Flat No. 2," and "Flat No. 3." Onejtadian'jis evidently a humorist, fbr his name' Is "Eli Per kins," and there is amother one nameld "Russell Harrison." 3E RAILROAD RATES. Tickets foqr the Dicktnson tourna-. ment and street fair, all* points be tween Bismarck and Glendive will be on sale June 10 and 11 and will be good for return until and Including the 15th. The rate ot one tspa for -the round trip makes the cost 4 i-jf Richardton Taylor Gladstone Glendive. fJK HlhtSatarrh A -"?'Thei»ilse Hood's Sarsaparitla sfee aaxd strength. -v r-H A* .! 1 oi tickets from these variops points follows Biamarck ?8.45 Mandan New Saleim Sims Glen Ullta •.'*•*. 3.30 2.49 2.25 1.55 1.20 •2-w- .it Jk*%.,** -l v,# Wibeux Sentinel Batte Medctra Belfleld ...... South .45 3.20 8.25 1.70 W ri Ml. **,%. Iffi" t'* *'}&$&&&* rt'-ii•* '•p^i* 85 Calf'at Seartfsley & Finney'tf "drug store and get a free sample of Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver tablets. They aa*e an elegant ^hysiCi,, They al«io tmpfive thjs appetite, ntitmigllam the digestion And, regulate the llvet and bowels. iThey are easy to take and pleasant In effect. RIchhoIt's is headquarters'for Amite, dandy and good tW| 'of all kinds. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE :S ATURD AY, JUNE 1,1901 of the vhat causes inflammation mucous membrane. It is therefore impossible *to teori the disease by local applications., It is positively dangerous to neglect it, because it always affects tl\e stom ach and deranges the general health, and is likely to develop into consump tion i' Man have been radically and permanentl cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cleanses the blood and has a peculiar alterative and toolo effect. B. LonKi California Junction, Iowa, •toTites: "I had catarrh three years, lost jny appetite and could not sleep: My head pained me and I felt bad all over. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla and now have a good appetite, sleep well, and have so symptoms of catarrh.'? Promises to cure and keeps the prom ise. It is better not to put off treat* meat—buy Hood's today. Hi ERODE 11 ARM MULE Sergeant Haniey and the Thrill ing Ride He Made on a Mule in 1876. HEN some American mules in South Africa stampeddl With the British field guns and put the English men in rather a bad plight in the face of the enemy people said that it was the American mules' way of showing sympathy with the Boer cause. The thing was spoken of a^d written about everywhere as being the first instance where the mule, though his back al ways has had to bear much obloquy, ever came within ah ace of being re sponsible for the defeat 'of an army. People who wrote and talked about the aifair evidently had never heard of bow a Missouri mule came near being the cause of the wiping out of Reno's battalion on the Little Big Horn con temporaneously with the annihilation of Caster and his band a few miles .be yond. An ugly, vicious, branded Mis souri mule did tils level best, on that awful day to aid the Indians in exter minating the whites, and what's more, If it hadn't been for an Irish sergeant, Richard J. Haniey, recently retired, the Missouri miule would have suc ceeded. It was in the red month of June, 1?76, when Reno's column after separ ating frota Custer struck the river of the Little Big Horn. The gallant major, whose valor in war was much greater, as subsequent events proved, than bis discretion In love, tfas at tacked by a tremendous force of In dians. Perhaps everybody knows the story of the awful fight that followed, and of the charge that a part of the gallant white band made, turning the tide of defeat, though losing "Benny Hodgson" and' a dozen other brave souls. After the charge across the open, the army-of the reds and the at tenuated line of the whites were par allel and face to face.. There was perhaps enough courage in the troopers /of the Seventh and of the other out fit^along the bank of that Montana rivar to make up far the ten to one number of the reds, but the case was looking bad at best, when an army mule started oitt not only to make ii wOtse but hopeless oyer-and Sbove "much ammunition Reno's- outfit. As a sailor would tiay^ "They fiad been fiying light." and with ttift exception ^f what the men had in their belts the bulk of the bullet sup ply w^s on the back of an ornery Mis souri^ mule, chosen for the job of carrying It: because of his prodigious A *, The long-eared ammunition bearer was with the pack train to' the right and rear of the squadron whi«% -rtraa lying1 facing the enemy along the .edge of the wood. A Sioux bullet went .oven* the head 6t the skirmishers and with a tor-reaching- trajectory tore an ounce of flesh ouit of the pack: mule's' fia»S. Instantly snapped its tether, bro&e like a setrcf foiirs f«*m right reiurj and' clearing the obstacles of IttT rightfui lords and masters to the front, made straight on a wild gallop for the heart of the outlying masses of the In dians. When within about 100 yards of thk plaice' for which It wrb headed' the mule struck 4 bit of hunch grass which was to Its liking, and it then and £fa«ai Cataarrlji quioily yields to tree* zrtmt £lx's,CMflm Balai, which ia agree ably Atomatio. It is received throtwh the nosteiMf, oleuuies and heal* the whole sag. itw* m& wb&h velocity of rb.tSection it dlffiuefF itimii. D^raggisti •ell the BGo. fliz® Trierf etie by xnai^ lO cent*. Test it and you are suM to oontiiiae T.,4 To s^wmmodats those who ano -partial to the UM O ble*, into the nasal pajwagen for tee 4 mtomiwA trou atomizers in applying Uquida the proprietor* prepare OemBaJ^iii upraying tube is 76 cents, 3Drnggi»t6 by mail* The* liquid ffirm erohodfei mmm there started to grazed On itB ack in the amimunltion cases lay that which meant the safety of Reso's forces. To reach the animal any man of the com m^L must cross an open plain swept by a thousand rifles. 'A^There a moments: of consultation among the officers, and a desperate plan for^ttie recapture of the mule was being dis cussed* when one of ^the' soldiers saw far oveir to the right, just above the grass, th6 slowly moving head of a white man who was crawling tcuward the stampeded .amimal, The word was pqssed along the line, and volley after volley from the -whites kept the attention of the enemy directed away from the mule and from t^iat solitary soldier who was. worming his way tcftvard It. Discovery for him meant capture and death. On he went, while between shots the eyes of btsf every comrade sought himr He was- within twenty-five yards of the nrule..^„ Theiit he stood straight up, dashed forward* vaulted onto the creature's back and digging deep the spurs he started the animal back on a gallop as %ild as that by which it had fled. There was a yell from the reels. A hundred rlflefe were emptied at the flying beast and Its dauntlesti rider. Sergeant Richard J. Haniey, who was astride that gigantic Missouri mule as it went through that hailstorm, got never a wound, though his chances of escaping unhurt were only One in a thousand. The mule was saved, but, as a trooper put it afterward, "ithe. critter brought back as much lead in its hide as it did in its pack.", v' =. .*. Perhaps Richard J. Haniey, ser geant, retired, is the only man on record who wears a m^dal of honor for riding a mule, though that operation ir peaceful times is not always devoid of danger. FROM SWITZERLAND. DOES A STFERLING RANCHMAN GET A BRIDE.. AND THEY WILL TEND THEIR FLOCKS IN NORTH DAKOTA. Mr. lind Mrs. Jacob Ssw^tsser of Ster ling "were in £he city yesterday and with them was a tinge of romance. Mr. Sweitzer is a Tanchman who lives near Sterling, has a nice band of sheep and a comfortable home. Mrs. Sweitr zer was a recent irrlval froin the hills of far off Switzerland, whence she' came to become Jacob's bride. They knew each other »when they were chil dren, and when Jacob wrote back that he was anxious for her to come and share his home she came. She air-? rived directly from Switzerland a day or so ago and the couple were married at once. Yesterday afternoon they went to Sterling, after: ^pending the day in'the city. MTS. Sweitz-ar is, a bright and attractive looking little'1 woman, and Jacob looks happy as. the typical bridegroom. v'It JUNE WEATHER,'/'* The following data, cov,erlng a period of twenty-six yearSj have heen com piled from the weather bureau records at Bismarck* D.» for the month of June: ,,M TEMPERATURE. JSjfean or normal temperature de -grees the warmest fhohth ^s' that, of 1884,' with an average of 69 degrees the coldest month was ttiat of 18T7»: With an average of 59 degrees the hl^heet temperature wa§ 98 decrees on the 30th, 1883 the lowest temperature There wasn'ti degrees on the Cth/g$8. munition with PRECIPITATION. Avei^ge'for the month, 3.59 incl^es^ average number of days witli .01' of an Inch or mjre, 18 the greatest monthly precipitation was 8. finches in 1890 the least monthly pre&pitatioh was 0.85 inches in 1887 the* greatest amount of precipitation recorded is" any 24 consecutive hours was 5.40 Inc^eson 12th and 13th, 1879. REVIEW TABLE Wf OLO%)S A^ weathbr|pI Averkge nujnber of clear' dky^%? P**, 15 ig^dy .tteys^ the wln4 S^igal The prevailing winds^arfthie^ir'^bc^' th east and southeast the highest- was 56 miles from the east on the lCfcJ*, 1892, Director Weather BureaiiiCI KA. =. ,^2? Mr. Jamei3 Browri'ttf Putsmouth, oyer 9j,years of ag^ suffered for years with a bad sow on his face. Physi cians could not help him, DeWifct's Witeh Hazel Salve pured him ptinma nentty: Beardsley & Finn^y. EXCURSION RATES TO FARGO The 'Northwn Pacific- B£ will sell Excursion tickets io Fargo for the fire festival to "be h^id at F^rgo June 5, 6 and For patficnlars rail on ticket agent :-,Jad^-Xa«der held cour Rocicford and pleased everybody, so Hare you b«en. to Rlchholt's tog the ice w&am yet, fetter go tonight., ir. DaVld T. Day, of the United States Geological Surwey, gives Jn the Review of Reviews for June! \well inforimed and judicial estlmafe*«t|J the new petroleum discoveries ,injl California ^6d '^Isewher&^tl)!!?. 'Diy writes hopefully 'bf the valiie of the Tfexas product, and points out the im: portance of,the oil finds in Califofni^ as a source of fuel-supply for the Pa cific Coasti^i Aj the Engineering Magazine for Jung, Mr. E. Phillips gives a CQimBfre hensive review at the steps Britain must take to check her waning su premacy in iron and steel making. His proposed measures are radical, but they are for the most part economic and physical rather than legislative, dtaft at the present stage of impending reorganization a searching study by so well-informed an authority is- of the utmort •intenfest^,S!5v'i,--'»-i-, TV In .his discussion.^ in the Jtine Forum, of "The Place of the Senate in Our Government," Str., Henry Litch field West examines how. far the his tory- of the senate confirms George Washington's description of it as the saucer into which' the hot tea of the house of representatives was poured to cool. Many interesting facts con cerning the personnel of the senate and its methods of procedure may also be found in this article. In almost every walk of life there have been great women. Bu£ has there ever been a, 1 women •Wiaeof fBtatrfaeew^twof- J|g @te®S^*!*!f!SSP4--K* woman who" has reached "the very highest pinnacle in any fieTdJ. In the June Cosmopolitan Ella Wheeler Wilcox answers this question in the negative and declared that even in the essentially .feminine vocations of cooking, dressmaking and millinery men excel women. "Women," says Mrs. Wilcox, "have not the con centration which gives a' clear per spective. They lack system and pa tience and are distracted by details of turned aside by vanity.'- "The Warners" Is the title of a-story by Gertrude Potter-Daniels,: sister of Margaret Potter, author of "Uncanon Ized" and "A Social Lfan," ^-Mrs. Dan iels is daughter of Mr. Orrin W. potter, steel magnate of Chicago,' and the fact that her father is one of the chief stockholders in the billion dollar steel trust,. #hOse miethods are attacked In: the story, and the radical andv sensa tional manner In which she makes her characters, act, renders the story one sure to= attract widespread attention. As may be inferred from the fore going*, the story is an American OHe of today, telling the life tale^pf Cyrus Warner, a' hoy of the streets,'wKO, after spending his youth inceaseless t^il and struggle against acute poverty, finally gains a' factory" position. The regular pay is not large, but it enables him to -rent a room In -a tenement "where J^ the first time in his'life Ixe experiences any of the comforts of life.' At the factory, he meets a socialist, Kit-by .by name^ man of good educa tion, but bf such bad disposition'that until' and ready to keep the acquaintance «f ».• charming ^rl, Betty Martin, with whom he promptly falls in. loitfe. Klrby helps Gyrus to «ain? an education, but loser no oppor ttftiity of^I&fiij^jlieiJig him.againfifr^^. italiats, anti, it is iflto ^Irby'p mouth thaler. Daniels puts words to expre^j heE^stro^r socialistic ^entimente. r'# By unceafliD®, effort Cyrus jrisejjf hife position, oaves money enough io. purchase on the' iristallment plan^ a flmall piece of property Inyg srnalf itoNvni so and' Betty, inaity and go to live on it and are ideally happy. By good'-matfagement each paytoeat i^ met until they own their home and, liave -something put aside as well.. They-'have'^one child, little Betty, land»: thjeir happiness is supreme. On-their property- is an oil well, and on little Betty's tenth birthday Anthony J. Fel Iowa, a capitalist, arrives in the towii in hi^. privats car to look over the oij industry While there Fellows asks CynuB'tO Bell hjs -well, naming the orig inal price, his son Teddy amuses him selfVith the child Betty, who has ac-*: companied her father on his visit to 1 the' car. -Cyrus indignantly refuses the o^fer, and Fellows puts down the pjlce of oil until such small dealers as Cyrus are driven out of the market.* All this time Teddy has been writing violent love letters to little Betty. The Warners are finally driven back to the city" for a living, and taking up the Sburden of life in a tenement house Cyrus begins search for work- in a great city. Betty, too vain to work and disgusted with poverty, spends her time with Teddy, unknown to her mother. Teddy is fascinated by her beauty, and being unscrupulous, deter mines to encompass her downfall. Cyrus TeneiwB his friendship with Klrby, who has married a woman en tirely in sympathy, and who assists hini in conducting a newspaper preach-: ing anarchy. There is a strike, and Kirby figures conspicuously in urging thei men to violence and bloodshed. He preached nothing but blood and bombs and while Warner's friendship re mains unabated he refuses to Imbibe all of Kirby's teachings. In a ter rible riot. Kirby and his wife and boy head a mob of infuriated strikers, and I a bomb intended for the officers of the law falls short of the mark and kills Mrs. Kirby and her boy. Kirby flees to the Warners for refuge, but is taken, tried, convicted and sentenced to a term of years in the penitentiary. Meanwhile things go from bad to vrtjtse with the Warners, but the devo tion of the father and mother never flags. Betty, however, does no^ seem to be made of the same stuff, and she falls entirely under the influence of Teddy. It would not be fair to the reader to follow the plot in detail, but sufficients say, Mrs. Daniels has writ ten a story which is certain to create a sensation, and one that certainly does, not fail to entertain, even though the reader finds it impossible to syrm pathize with many of radical sent!-, meats expressed. CAUSE OF FALLING HAIR. Palling hair Is caused by dandruff, whlcih ifl a germ disease. The germ in burrowing in to the root of the hair wnere it deetroys.tihe vitality of the hair, causing the hair to flail out, digs up the cuticle in little scales, called dandruff or scurf. You can't strip the falling hair without curing the dand ruff, and you can't cure the dandruff without killing the dandruff gernL "Destroy the cause you remove the effect." NewbroV Herpicide Is the only hair preparation that Mils the dandruff germ. Herpicide Is afck a. delightful hair dressifig, W. J,/ banjks in North Dakota, April 24, has been made public... It shows that Since 'February 5, when there were 31 bapks In the state, total resources fell ,f^pi f8,829,706 to $8,705489 loans discounts increased from 'SeetftUlieH testfion fo thSlft«e I fev«lopm«it of hidden 4Uum wmot whW» ll»ow« that dbtedmd of ft* vwb and kngorrhMi arc bUthtfngllvL la WlNE^CMRMIl i t. Attain^ l» i) tl# I $5,280,- 057" to $5,416,355, and cash reserve de creased from $474,720 to $416,154, of which gold holdings felt from $173,- 327^ to $168,852. Individual deposits! decreased from $5,598,312 to $5,332,85f, I and pie average reserve held fi oin' 2£?.6P to- 22.67 per cent. j'i •y'j ,V- -. -lS