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,? fc4 P:i *r fk? &V- ••A 1 y to.-, •. ~&f. JC -s? K£? v v if -, ^Yr **, &A S mp. h'v »i ^,v4vt" 3#.V kfe s~: •.li m- 7 Y V A 5 V t» **C ,s n C*# •i{S A npup wmcLY IF.V 1 W. aivnw A log*1 weekly newspaper pub lished every Thnreday afternoon III ita office OB North. Center street, Philip, South Dakota. J. P. Baiaoj Iditor and FtiUfcM* Ql i Xf Entered at second elan matter v Jkuguat 2, 1907, at the poatoffiee MX. Philip, South Dakota, under -the Aet of OongreM of March 3, 1879. 1UBSOEIPTIOM EATIS One year $1.50, six months $.75, three months unless pah! for in advance, when a rate of $1.00 a year will be (ranted. The outs'' at the Chicago con vent ion called it a steam roller the "ins" instated it was a steam falliope. •Statue Teddy'H convention %ill Hot be held till Home time in Aug jjpjBt, there is plenty of time for the leaders of the other parties Jto have their "principles" copy ightod, and avoid the chance of Old Bat 'Em Alive to appropri lite any of them. f/ In the South Dakota §on .test before the democratic na tional conventftn at Baltimore |he Wilson delegation was seated 'in preference to the Clark dele 's. gation. Bx-Oovernor Lee headed the latter, and George Philip, of Fort Pierre, is a member of the -former. ffo word in the RnglMt ¥tn guage was ever subjected to ^tougher usage than is "progrcH trive" at the present time. Like Home of those who insist on wear ing the adjective, when describ ing their political standing, it is made of rubber and can he ttretehed to fit in anywhdie. P. A. Mix, editor of the Fair jlay, Port Pierre, was in the eitv Tuesday evening. The returns from the primaries show that Bro Mix landed nearly all candidates Supported by him.—Pierre Free }*ress. The files of the Mix sheet ihow that he would be immensely pleased if those who were array ed against him would be willing to eall it a draw. The fact is tha nearly all the members of the tiek ft supported by Mix are in the ^'atoo ran" elass. Let keep the reoord straight. ruM At it waa the |)an of Col ivelt to bolt when it his comprehension that tho CWNbH" convention would lipMnate him to a third preai The plan was ehknged and that k waa ahanfftd may be attrihut i4*ll the jndfei»eal of Roosevelt iM* ieffctti to follow oft.* madraoo im pf •., fsvsvisnv wiMfi ne W WK on- 4 1 v ffi- i 'k could have impressed upon the public most aeffectively an ap preciation of his regard for the progressive eause. Finding him self defeated, he could have turn ed the delegates under his com mand to LaFollette and engaged in an earnest effort to bestow the presidential nomination upon the Wisconsin senator. Mr. La Follette's progressive qualities are not to be questioned They are far more reliable and enduring than the progressive qualities of Mr. Roosevelt, whose candidacy has been backed by the financial representatives of money and industrial trusts. Mr. Roosevelt had it within liia power to atone for his betrayal of the La Follette cause in the earlier stage of the canvanu and at the same time serve the prin ciples he professes to love. He prefers to overthrow the political organization that has conferred upon him its highest honors because it will not con tinue (perhaps indefinitely) the power of Roosevelt, the man. In this one act he has proved to tlie country that its suspicion of his ginc'riity was well founded —that selfish interests was his one motive in the alliance he re presented between mammon and a false pretence of solicitude for the common good. While the methods employed bj the seasoned politicians of the Chicago convention to smother the Roosevelt ambition may not have merited the commendation of political moralists there will come into the public mind, as time goes on, an appreciation of the useful adage that sometimes the end justifies the means.—The DjMnUrv is always serious and often dangerous ilit»a*e, but it can be cured Chamberlain'* (3olie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy lias cured it even when malignant and epidemic. For sale br all dealers. Ash Orook Amtheat Prospects were never better for a good crop in this part of th counties Miss Steile, of Bristol, is visit ing with Miss Theresa Poste at the present time. Marion Bennett, of Pedro, pass ed through here one day last week enrqute to Philip aft^r sup plies. Mrs «eo. 8. Pwtt* left %st week for a visit with Mr. Poste, who is holding his eattle and horses on White river. She was accompanied by her son, Allison. William Burns had business in i'hilip Saturday. Mr. x, who haa been holding some sheep on state land in Pen nington eountv near the Stanley eouuty lia for the past two months, left with his sheep last week for Belle Fourche, the wat "r supply having beeja exhaipted here. A Thomas MeDoiiatd made busi ness trip to Cottonwood a tew days ago. Nelson Steile was transacting business in Philip Saturday. The Peterson, Russell and Seth er families all went on a fishing expedition to the Cheyenne river last week, and all say they had a fine time. Andrew Thompson and wife passed through here recently on their way to the home of their daughter, Clara, aaar Howling, tor a rUt. Nothing ia promised in this sec tion in the way of a 4th of July tfcat we have km4 of WM called FAVS%*&. D^ MIO that ago «v» a witftMi on m. MM in fodoral tmm Situdiy. .immtJVZ to bin] T!l£ Chalice of Courage I WCwali hnmVte A Romance of Colorado BY CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADT 'MaT MM.""Htaik nd 'A« in Spark* My I •at pwud. Upwa Meali Us«i« by EHswsrtfc Yaaag IBsvirrickt, i»u, b# W. tt. "hs|iiaa "i ntfre aloT no ffduBt about Tt.^ pro tested old Klrkby earnestly. "I've read them letters a hundred times over, havln' no scruples whatsoever, an' In every one of 'em he was beg gtn' an' pleadin' with her to go awajr with him an' flghtln' her refusal to do It. I gue* I've got to admit that she didn't love you none, Newbold, an* she did love this here wutbless Armstrong, but for the sake of her reputation, I'll prove to you all from them letters of hlan, from his own words, that there didn't live a cleaner hearted, more vir tuous upright feemale than that there wife of yourn, even if she didn't love you. It's Ood's truth an' you kin take It from me." "Mr. Armstrong," cried Enid Maib land, Interposing at this juncture. "Not very long ago I told you I liked you better than any man I had ever seeu. I thought perhaps I might have loved you, and that was true. You have played the coward's part and the liar's part In this room—" "Did I light him like a coward?" asked Armstrong. "No," answered Newbold for her, re membering the struggle "you fought like a man." Singular perversion of language and thought there! If two struggled like wild beasts that was fighting like men! "But let that pass," continued the woman. "I don't deny your physical courage, but 1 am going to appeal to saother kind of a courage which I be lieve you possess. You have showed your evil side here In this room, but I don't believe that's the only side you have, else I couldn't have liked you in th© past You have made a charge against two women one dead and one living. It makes little difference what you say about me. I need no defense sad no Justification In the eyes of those here who love me, and for the rest of the world I don't care. But you have slain this man's confidence In a woman he once loved, and who he thought loved him. As you are a man, tell him that It was a lie and that she was Innocent of anything else although she did lore you." What a singular situation, an obser ver who knew all might have reflect ed! Here was Enid Maitland pleading for the good name the woman who had married the man she now loved, and whom by rights she should have Jealously hated. "You ask me more than I can faltered Armstrong yet greatly moved by this touching appeal to his better self. "Let him speak no word," protested Newbold quickly. "I wouldn't believe him on his oath." "Steady now, steady," Interposed Klrkby with his frostier Instinct for fair play, "the man's down, Newbold, don't hit him now. "Give him a chance," added Malt land earnestly. "You would not believe me, eh?" laughed Armstrong horribly, "well then this Is what I say, whether It lp true or a lie you can be the judge." What was he about to say? They all recognised Instinctively that his forthcoming deliverance would be a final one. Would good or evil domin ate him now? Enid Maitland had aude her plea and It bad been a pow erful one the man did truly love the woman who urged him there was aothlng left for him but a chance that she should think better of him than he merited he had come to ihe end of his resources. And Enid Maitland spoke again as he hesitated. "O, think, think before you apeak," she cried. "If I thought," saswered Arm strong quickly, "I should go nuul. New bold. your wife vs-aa us pur« as the saow that she loved me I cannot and will not deny, she married you in a lit of jealousy and anger after a quar rel between us la which I was td blame, and when I came back io the camp In your absence. I strove to make It up and used every argument that I possessed to get her to laave you sad te live with me. Although she had ao love for you she wss Ma twasl saddsaly and aoae pre veatfc*. tadesi !t vss not possthi*, be ma to tha mm fears aa ha did so his haad saatahed snmsthlat that hr oo thaahofcat jtawts. Thsse wss a 4s* sMtftt aa it mm la ft* ana ^msa,' .W W' Ww TITey fountf Armstrong lying on his back In the snowy path, his face as white as the drift that pillowed his head, Newbold's heavy revolver still clutched in his right hand and a bloody welling smudge on his left breast over his heart. It was tha wo man who broke the silence. "Oh,"* she sobbed, "It can't be—" "Dead," said Maitland solemnly. "And it might have been by my hand," muttered Newbold to himself la horror. "He'll never cause no more trouble to nobody in this world. Miss Enid an' gents," said old Klrkby gravely. "Well, he was & damned fool an' a damned villain In some ways," continued the I old frontiersman reflectively In the si letice broken otherwise only by the woman's sobbing breaths, "but he had some of the qualities that go to make a man, an' I ain't doubtln' but what them last wordB of hlsn was mighty near true. Ef he had met a girl like you earlier in his life, he mought have been a different man." CHAPTER XXIV. The Draught of Joy. The great library waa the prettiest room in Kobert Maitland's magnificent mansion in Denver's most favored res idence section. It was a long, low studded room with a heavy beamed ceiling. The low book cases, about five feet high, ran between all the windows and doors on all sides of the room. At one end there was a huge open fire place built of rough stone, and as it way winter a cheerful tire of logs blazed on the hearth. It was a man's room pre-eminently. The drawing-room across the hall was Mrs. Maitland's domain, but the library re flected her husband's picturesque if somewhat erratic taste. On the walls there were pictures of the west by Remington, March and, Dun ton, Dixon and others, and to set them off, finely mount ed heads of bear and deer and buffalo. Swords and other arms stood here aud there. The writing table was massive and the chairs easy, comfortable and Inviting. The floor was strewn with robes and rugs. From the windows facing westward, since the house wa3 set on a high hill, one QQuid set tLe great rampart of tbejrang* Subscribe for the Review. Buy it now. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemedv in I most certain to be needed before tie siuuint-r is over. Buy it liow and be prepared lor such an emer gency, For snle by all dealers. Notice For Publication o Department of the Interior, 17. S. Land Office at Pierre, John IA. Lockhart, Register. Statement of the Condition of First State Bank ol PbUip, 1 Philip, S. D. At ttiP cfosp of tHisine*" on June, 14, I9!2. Hate of call l»y Kxaniiner. .tune lit 1912. Date of lit port !y Bank June 22. I via. assocasas Loans and dbooanu Overdraft* SuM^ks and HmitU t'a.v I'vrlith'air* Oth»r Iteal KMHU* Oilier imierty Expense BaoU HU' 1IOU.M 4 M.OTW (K* 140 5# llrttle 1.442 Mi none none 1 m* 4.UW v atidfaiiif* Ki'*rve a lue from banks li t'he»*k* ami draft* tar fie arit i* Cash uu band i- SWTS Hold !*Ki e Sli vat MkH' Miuo^eeK U& Cash ItvtH-. ,,-ji Total Casii A-*. Bills nai'atiU' "iTlliclllH foif borrowed money XotM rHUHOOBtei Oilier UalihU«M too. •sod and too trao a wnmss for thai. Maw yoa°ve got the truth, daaui yon., hitters It or aot ss you like. Wss Maltlaad." he added swiftly. "If had awt fsa scenes, I might have hesa a better assa. Oaad hps." HARTI** TLEPOTRIM Cortitod CtMrka OMrider'sChocka IHaa tootlior beoln 12,084 01 ^Tk|V4b 70 -v- uiaumi h! -r f' *t».OUO 00 Surplus t'uiui I..KJOOO Undlvld«Hl 07 5 none I none 4* SA Osnand c«vUAeates eertMeatos i 14.8 -7 ,''. Tovatr _v JL __ The new forms of la^al blanks prescribed by the last state legi in its mlform blank law, 3an ha obtained at the Review sffice. T!ie forma are Warranty Deed, Satisfaction of Mortgage, Mortgage, Assignment of Mort ?age and Quit Claim Deed. For farm loam caff on the Bielski Farm Loan Co. Ml* E. Church ServiCft Sundays Claw Meeting lOtOO Preni'liitig l')::0 Sunday School 11 Junior League :t:oo Kpworth IveMirtie a. m. i a. ni. Prayer meeting Thursday p. in. Kveryl)o«ly welcome invited to altend. PHILIP S. 1).. June 14, 1912. Notiee is hereby given that •lames Young, of Smith. S. D., who on November 6. 1906, made 11. K. No. 8257, serial 06674, for vu.tli-east Quarter Section 15, Township .'i North, Rungc 19 Kast B. H. Meridian, has filed notiee of intention to make five ear Proof, to establish claim to Mie land above described, before •Iam«-8 A. Quigg, U. S Commis sioner, at Philip, S. Dn on the "tli day of July, 1912. c'laiuunt names as witnessea: ('harles A. Smith, George A. Woodard, Martin Jennen, Jerrod '). Riddell, all of Smith, S. D. T:Ho Hlrtl J. VV. Lueas, PtKtoi Berenice I. Gust Graduate of Yankton Conserva tory of Music I am prepared to take pupiU in 1'iuno and Voice Culture Terms Reasonable O. K. WiiiTNvr R. A. tt(i«.HKi Whitney & Bielski Attorneys at Law Office in Bank of Philip Build im* SO. DAK. S. M. KYDE Physician and Surgeon Calls answered day or night Office and residence Nartli Cen Street. Phone 88 You Want Your Goods Handle Promptly and in a Satisfactory Manner call Phone 7-6-B TrfE CITY ORAY Fred ELik George Philip JUvin Waggoner Philip St Waggoner Attoruryc at Law Philip and Ft. Pierre, 80. Dak. H. J. INCE Physician and Surgeon Graduate of Bellevue Hoa pital Medical College, New York OU7. Office on N. Center St. Aoneo: Ofiiec 56A, Bea. 58B PHILIP gQ, Tifl.it ,1. II. JOHNSON -V i&f aw v OeiHktitH W i Dividend* ungeH IVIMMUM xubiect to cbeek *.V none ^-vv 11'^ i if -•, \r '-P nam ftt'fc&k.i (M «l MMO fy S^««m85»¥* ML* *•#*#«. A. '0 thaetai MRkdoMiepniijr ,U a Vv s 1 5k LNSOWLE4TFO tM*Si A? Portrait and view work that HUgge.st st^le and quality at the High studiio. All work fuUn guaranteed. Aldrich & Sen Unctercakerii ltu*lfH «K ltione Kes Phoiv i a. in p. in. sei Preaching followi^r league vice. Midweek Service nilMf. sorTH n.vK. During lV« 3'ir.iT^r raothdri oi yoiiriKch.iiii *n shouU wns j« for unnat nral liMw*'nf» of t!»e '«•, !i,.n prompt utu-ntioa at ilnt tiiiy- senoim tronii^ may bt avoided. Clnuti!H*rlui.i'. Colic,C'h. I era anl Diurrlioea Remedy can a!w*y» h* depended i!|ton. For sale hy all dealers. Di. ft. B. DRIVES E N I S Philip, South Dakota N«*th Center Stvivl Office Phone J9 Ban. Phone 4A DR. A. 4 HEINE)U.\t( Oflee North Center Stre^l Phone .16A Mwldetioe south of repot Phone 35B Surgeon for thaN. W. R. R. •hlila. South Dake^ 7 M" Tah« One Pain Pill then— Tafcott To get the best of Backacha Get m. Box of Dr. Miles Office over Hargesheimer's dri:g store. Philip.S.I). I THE OLD RELIABLE S u-' --y't ft€ ,-ii iP§3. 9 Anti-Pain Pills Otherwise Bacfcaohe May get the beet of yoe ?Jothinf: disturbs the 1 and Funer«l Dtfectors Cat's Answered Oay or i hurrtn svytem more than pain whether it Ue in the form of headache, backache, neuralgia, stomachache or the pains peculiar to wonieH. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are a standard remedy for pain, and are praised by a great army of men and women who have used them for jcir*. V ftf was dowa with LaGrippe aim neatly .razed with awful backacne. 11her Anti-Pala PiU and left aiiuther lor o take. They helped hrr right away, *id she says she wi.l never be without l.i«m again." Mas. (j. li. NVk.t.«, Austinborg, O. At all druggist*—2S doaea 2S cents. "ICE» MKOICAL CO., CIKhart, Ind. O. Jt RexRvrr Johnson, Bennett & Brown LAWYERS H. I* Hnrms (J? 4 V ,!» "i 'St .. 'A K i 8