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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 04 Feb. 1916, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1916-02-04/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
GEYSER JUDITH BASIN TIMES (5- 6rGEOPGr IANDOLITI and LILLIAN GIE)TER if I CoPyRIGN1 I914 , Trifolvi3OON ll_LUSTRATED C.D.RHODES CORPORATION I CHAPTER XXVI I—Continued. alah? Yee. Oh, yes. Yes The —18--- chicken.\ Towards morning there was an army O . , newsaaper men so worried and dis- tressed, and generally consumed with the mad passion of restraint, that there was scarcely a fingernail left in the profession • and frightened-eyed copy hoy s hid behind doors. Sod- Certly a dozen telegraph operators In us many ollires, jumped from their desks. as if they had been touched at the SHOO. iltant by a powerful cur- rent from t heir inst ruments, and shout- ed vii - ying phrases, a composite of which %mild be nearest expressed by: \Let 'i.e en!\ It had been eight o'clock in the eve- riog in Nee. Yorl; when Gerald Fos - land hail first given Out his infeema. lion, and at that moment it was 1 a in In Berlin. At 3 a. in., Berlin time, %bleb it as 10 p. in, in New York, the item] yen Slaehten who ht been de. Wiled by an unuseal stress of dine). matte bast/less strolled to his favorite cafe At 3.aO the Baron von Slach• ten became the most thought about roan in Ms city, hut the metropolitan lira Si of Bereft is slightly fettered arid more or lees curbed, and there are certain formalities to be ebserved. It Is probable, ile•refore, that the baron n ight have gone about his peaceful way for oto or three days. had not a 1.m1 American, in the advertising bran, h of one of the New York pa- pers, in an entire ignorance of decent formalities, walked straight out ',Otter len Linden, to Byron von Siachten's favorite calf.. and, picking out the baron at a table with four bushy - faced friends. made this cheerful re- mark. In the in and custom of journalists, in his native land: \Well baron, the international Ten risporta tion coin pany has con - leased. Could you give roe a few words MI the silbject?\ The baron, who had been about to IrInk a stein of beer, set down his half liter and stared at the young man blankly ills face turned slowly yel- low, and he rose. \Lass bleiben.\ the baron ordered tie handy persons who were about to remove the cheerful advertising repre- sentative and Incarcerate him for life, and then the baron walked stol- idly out of the cafe. and rode home and wrote for an hour or so, and ate a heavy early breakfast, and returned to his study. and obligingly shot him- self. This was at seven a. ne. Berlin time, which writ two a. in. in New York; and owing to the nervou-mets of an 1 4Id woman servant, the news reached Yew York at three a, m., and the big wheels began to go around. Wbere was Edward E. Allison? There was nothing the free and entire- ly uncurbed wanted to know so much as that; but the f. and e. u was -'' doomed to disappointment In that one desire of Its heart. Even as he had 'tumbled down the steps of the Sar- gent house. Allison was aware of the btdecus thing he had done; aware, too, that Jim Sargent was as violent - aa good-natured men are apt to be This thought, It Meet be iald in justlee - ft'S Allison. came last and went away area It was from himself that he tatted to run away, when he shot his rinabout up through the park and Sato the north country, and, by devious rceds, to a place which had come to him as if by inspiration; the Willow olub, which was only open in the sum- etertime, and empicyed a feeble old raretaker in the winter. To this haven aleak and cold as his oval numbed pout, Allison drove In mechanical ermness. and walked around to the 'lichen, where he found old Peabody s moking a corncob pipe, and !abort - entity mending a pair of breeches Allison went into the office and elosed the door after him. It was Camp and chill in there, but he did not isotice it. lie sat down in the ewivel i hair behind the flat top desk and oested his chin in his hands and s:ared out of the window at the bleak red dreary landscape. Just within his range of vision was a lonely little t reek, shadowed by a mournful droop- ing willow which had given the club Its name, and in the wintry breeze ii tiliN ed its long tendrils against the :laden gray sky Allison fixed his eyes pa that oddly beckoning tree and g'.-ove to think Old Peabody came pottering in, and with many a clang sad clatter builded a fire in the caps \toes Dutch stove; with a longing stencil at Allison, for he was starved 'with the hunger of talk, be went out train At dusk he once more opened the loor Allison had not moved He The lire had gone out. Peabody re- built it. Be came in an hour later. and studied the silent man nit the desk for a long minute, and then he decided Sri Important question for himself. Fie brought in Allison's dinner on a tray and sot it on a corner of the desk At eleven l'eabody came in again, to see if Allison were not ready to go to bed; but Allison sent hint away as soon as lie had fixed the fire. The tray was untouched, and out there in the dim meealight. which peered now and then through the shiftlag clouds, the long -armed willow beckoned and becatened. Morning came, cold and gray and damp as the night had been Allison had fallen asleep towards the dawn. sitting at his desk with his heavy bead on his arms, anti not even the clatter of the building of the fire roused him. At seven when Peabody came. Allison rose up with a start at the opening of the door, but before he glanced at Peabody. lie looked out of tliti window at the willow \Good -morning,\ said Peabody, with a cheerfuliette winch sounded oddly in that dim, bare room. - I brought you the pithier, arid some fresh eggs. There was a little touch of frost this morning, but it went away about time for sun -up. How will you have your eggs? suppose, after the steak. Seems like you don't have much appetite,\ and he scrutinized the untouched tray with mingled regret and resentment. Since Allison paid no attention to hint, lie decided on eggs fried after the steak, and started for the door. Allison had picked up the paper me- chanically. It had lain with the top part downwards, but his own lecture was in the center. lie turned the pa- per over, so that he could see the headlines. \Peabody!\ No longer the dead tones of a man in a mental stupor, a man who cannot think, but in the sharp tones of a man who can feel. \Yes. sir.\ Sharp and crisp, like the snap of a whip. Allison had scared it out of hint. \Don't come in again until 1 call you.\ \Yes sir.\ Grieved this time. Darn It, wasn't he doing his best for the man! So it had come; the time when his will was not God! A god shculd be omnipotent. impregnable. unassfilable, absolute, lie was surprised at the calmness with which he took this blow. It was the very bigness of the hurt which left it so little painful. A man with his leg shot off suffers not one -tenth so much as a man who tears his fingernail to the quirk. Moreover, there was that other big horror which had left him stupefied and numb tie had not known that in his ruthless. ness there was any place for remorse, or for terror of himself at anything he might choose to do. But there was He entered into no ravings now. no \Clark and (7hisholm?\ and Jim Sar- gent's brows knotted. \They're not 1 he World He Had Meant to Make my fellow -vestrymen. Either they go His Own Never Saw Him Again. ' or I do!'' chair writhings. no outcries. lie realized - Do you know,\ he observed. \1 I would like you to remain.\ qui .. etly stated Rev. Smith Boyd. \I hope calmly and clearly all he had done, should like very much to become a to achieve several important alters - and all which had happened to him in member of your vestry.\ tions in the ethics of Market Square .. retribution. Ile saw the downfall of , o lan glad you are interested,\ re - his stupendous at borne of worldwide church.\ lie was g rave thi s mornin g • turned the rector, and producing a He had unknowingly been ripening conquest. Fie saw his fortune, to the pencil he drew a white advertising for some time on ninny questions; and last penny, swept away, for lie haul in apace towards him \This is the plan these tie saw cream/ deny, mime may be .cri, ... won. si.0 down around him, a wreck so COM - smiled across at hem within her eyrie plete that no shred or splinter of it was %mitt the picking up; saw him- self disgraced and discredited, hated and ridiculed throughout the length and breadth and circumference of the very earth he had meant to rule; saw himself discarded by the strong men whom he had inveigled into this futile scheme and saw himself forced into commercial death as wolves rend aod devour a crippled member of their pack; last, he saw himself loathed In the one pure breast he had sought to make his own; and that was the deep- est hurt of all; for now, in the bright blaze of his own conflagration, he saw that, beneath War grossness, he nad loved her, after all, loved her with a love which, if he haJ shorn it of Its dross, rulgat perhaps have won her Through all that day he sat at the desk, and whoe the night time came again, ire walked out of the house, and across tile field, and over tile tiny footbralge, under the willow tree with the atill beckoning arrns; and the wend, his world, the world he had meant to make his own, never saw him again. CHAPTER XXVIII. A Matter of Conscience. Gail stood at the rail of the White- cap, gazing out over the dancing blue waves with troubled eyes. \Penny for your thoughts.\ The im- possibly handsome Dick Hadley had strolled up. in his blue. jacket and white trousers and other bautical em- bellishments. \The news in the paper,\ she told hint. \It's so big.\ Dick looked down at her critically. She was so new a Gail to him that he was puzzled, and worried, too, for he felt, rather than saw, that some trouble possessed this dearest of his friends. \Yes it is big news.\ he admitted; \big enough and startling enough to impress anyone very gravely.\ Then he shook his head at her. \But you mustn't worry about it, Gail. You're not respcmsible.\ Gail turned her eyes from him and looked out over the white -edged waves again. \It Is a tremendous responsibility,\ she mused, a - hereupon Dick, as be- came him, violently broke the thread of thought by taking her arm and drawing her away from the rail, and walking gayly with her up to the for- ward shelter deck, where, shielded from the crispness of the wind, there sat, around the big table and amid a tangle of Sunday papers. Jim Sar- gent and Rev. Smith 13oyd, Arty and Gerald Fosland, all four deep in the discussion of the one possible topic of conversation. \Allison's explosion again,\ objected Dick. as Gail and he joined the group, and caught the general tenor of the thought. \I suppose the only way to escape that is to junto off the White- cap. Gail's worse than any of you I find she's responsible for the whole thing.\ Arly and Gerald looked up quickly. \I neither said nor intimated any- thing of the sort.\ Gail reprimanded Dick, for the benefit of the Foslands, and she sat down' by Arly, whereupon Dick. observing that he was much of- fended, patted Gail on the shoulder. and disappeared in search of Ted. \I'd like to hand a vote of thanks to the responsible party,\ laughed Jim Sargent. to whom the newe meant more than Gail appreciated. \With Allison broke. Urbank of the Mideon- tinent succeeds to control of the A. -P., and Urbank is anxious to incorporate the Towando Valley In the system. He told -me so yesterday,\ The haat which leaped into Gail's eyes. and\ the - liace of coral' sailich flashed into her cheeks, were most comforting to Arly; and they ex- changed a smile of great satiefactIon. They clutched hands ecstatically un- der the corner of the table, and want- ed to laugh outright_ However. It would keep. \The destructloy of Mr. Allison was a feat of wnich any gentleman's con- science might approve.\ commented Gerald Fosland, who had spent some time in definitely settling with himself the ethics of that cetestion. \The company he proposed to form was a menace to the Utterly of the world and the progress of civilization.\ \The destruetion didn't go far enough,\ snapped Jim Sargent. \Clark. Vance. liaverman, Grandin. Babbitt. Taylor. Chisholm; these fellow's won't Iv eager about it; but if he Is relin- be touched, and they built up their quIshing the dream, It is because he monopolies by thn same method Alit- „, hints something else very much more son proposed; trickery, force and eorth while. I entirely approve of his plain theft!\ plan for the new lenementa,\ and she \Harsh language, Uncle Jim . ar I did not understand why they all gent, to use toward your respectable I laughed at her. She did feel, however, fellow -vestrymen.\ chided Arly, her black eyes dancing. that there was affection In the Istigh- ter; and she was quite content. I.aughing with them, she walked on with Grace Sargent. Gerald Posland drew forward his vested all that he could raise on his the revelations in this morning's pa- seem : Ries and his business and his pers had brought him to the point of ; the next half hour the five of them willow Old Peabody thought that he of the International Trat changers out of the temple,\ he added. e:Imo:it ion oust be asleep, until he tiptoed up at company, bearing this 'torten] of the I and glanced at flail WWI a smile in the side. Allition's gray eyes, unblink- fieancial burden himself, as part of I which there was acknowledgment. Nag, were staring straight ahead with the plan by which he meant to obtain \A remarkably lucrative enterprise, so erpression in them It was as if ultimate control and command of the I eh Gail?\ laughed her Uncle Jim, re they had turned to glass tremendous consolidation, and become teernherIng her criticism on the occa- \Excuse me, Mr. Allison Chicken the king among kings, with ihe whom sion of her first and only vestry r1144 -t- 401 'teak? I gOl 'em both, one for sup - eerld 'a ..is infaineriOUS grasp, a ewer , Mg. ahen she had called their stem per and ohe fcr breakfast.\ larger than that of any potentate alto Oen in the satire of the 'deified -glass Allison turned slowly, part way to' lards Iteahodi; not entirely. \Checker or steak?\ repeated Pea - 'sae - !of tenement I have in mind. - and for still sat with his chin in his hands, Staking out at that weirdly waving prospects. in the preliminary expenses decision \I wish to drive the money diseusned tenement plans with great ! enthur which gives the mleeldevous twinkle which had been abeent for many days \I hope to be able to remove the public place.\ replied the rector with a graytty which told of something vi- tal beneath the apparent repartee. Mrs. Ibid. strolling past with Aunt Grace Sargent. peused to look at him fondly. \I shut, set myself, with such strength as I may have, against the building of the proposed cathedral.\ \Don't be foolish. Floyd.\ protested Sargent, who had always felt a father- ly responsibility for tile young rector \It's a big ambition and a worthy am- bition, to build that cathedral, and be- cause you're offended with certain things the papers have said, about Clark and Chisholm itt connection with the church, is no reason you should cut off your nose to spite your face.\ \It is not the publication of these things %% Melt has determined me,\ re- turned the over thoughtfully. \It has merely hastened my decision. To be- gin with. 1 acknowledge now that it was only a vague, artistic dream of mine that such a cathedral, by its very magnificence, would promote wor- ship. That might have been the case when cathedrals were the only mag- nificent buildings erected, and when every rich and glittering thing was de- voted to religion. A golden candle- stick then became connected entirelY with the service of the Almighty. Now. however. magnificence has no such signification. The splendor of a cathedral must enter into competition with the splendor of a statehouse, a museum or a hotel.\ \You shouldn't switch that way, Boyd,\ remonstrated Sargent, show log his loam disappointment. \When you befein to agitate for tile cathedral you broimht a lot of our members in who hadn't attended services in years You stirred them up. You got them interested. They'll drop right off.\ \I hope not.\ returned the rector, earnestly \I hope to reach them with a higher ambition, a higher pride, a higher vanity. if you like to put it that way I wish them to take joy in es- tablishing the most magnificent condi- tions for the poor which have ever been built! We have no right to the money which Is to he paid us for the Vedder court property. We have no right to spend it in pomp. It belongs to the poor from whom we have taken it, and to the city which has made us rich by enhancing the value of our ground. I propose to build permanent and sanitary tenements, to house as many poor people as possible, and con- duct them without a penny of profit above the cast of repairs and main- tenance.\ Gail bent upon him beaming eyes. and the delicate flush, which had be- gun to return to her cheeks, deepened. Was this the sort of tenements he had proposed to re -erect in Vedder court? Perhaps she had been hasty! Rev. Smith Boyd in turning slowly from one to the other of the little group. by *ay of establishing mental communi- cation with them, rested for a mo rnent in the beaming eyes of Gall. and smiled at her in affectionate recogna nen, then swept his glance on to his mother, where it lingered. \You are perfectly correct.\ stated Jerald Fosland, who, though sitting stiffly upright, had managed neverthe- less to dispose one elbow where it touched gently the surface of Any. \Market Square church Is a much more dignified old place of worship than the ostentatious cathedral would ever be. and your project for spending the money has such strict justice at the bottom of it that it must prevail. But, I say. Doctor Boyd.\ and he gave his mustache a contemplative tug: \don't you think you stfamld include a small margin ,ot profit for the future extension of your Ideal s ' \That's glorious, Gerald!\ approved Gail; and Any, laughing, patted his hand. \You're probably right.\ considered the rector, studying rosland with a new Interest. \I think we'll have to put you on the vestry\ \I'd be delighted, I'm sure,\ respond- ed Gerald. in the courteous tone of one accepting an invitation to dinner. \Do you hear what your son's plan- ning to do?\ called Jim Sargent to airs. Boyd Ile was not quite recon- ciled \Fie proposes to take that won- derful new rectory away from you\ The beautiful Mrs. Boyd merely dim- pled. \I am a trifle astonished,\ she con- fessed. \My son has been so extreme - At the expiration of that time. Ted land Lucile and Dick and Marion came l seething up, with the dieiberate In-; , tendon of creating a flisturbance: told I Call and Rev Smith Boyd. being thrown accidentally to (he edge of that , ehirlpool, walked away for a rest ! \They tell me you're going abroad.\ week.\ and she glanced up at the tee tor from under her curving lashes. There was a short tiPRee of silence It a - as almost as it these two were weary \We shall miss you very much \ tutu told her, in all sincerity. They were both looking out over the blue waves; he, tall, broad-shouldt•red, agile of limb; she, straight. lithe. gracefui. Mrs. Boyd and Mrs. Sargent passed them admiringly. but went on by with a trace of sadness. \I'm sorry to leave.\ Cali replied. \I shall be very anxtoue to know how you are coming on with your new plan I'm proud of you for it.\ \Thank you. - he returned They were talking mechanically La them was an inexpressible sadness. They had come so near. anti yet they were so far apart Moreover, they knew that there was no chance of change. It was a matter of conscience which came between them. and it nag a divergence which would widen with the years And yet they loved. They muteally knew it. and it was because of that love that they must stay apart. CHAPTER XXIX. A Vestry Meeting. There was a strained atmosphere In the vestry meeting from the first. Every member present felt the tension from the moment old Joseph G. Clark walked in with Chisholm. They did not even nod to Rev. Smith Boyd, but took their seats solidly in their cus- tomary places at the table, Clark, shielding his eyes, as was his wont. against the light ,which streamed on him from the red robe of the Gotta Shepherd. repression wria ap; parent, too. in Rev. Smith Boyd. atie rose to address his vestrymen as soon as the late -comers arrived. - Gentlemen.\ said he. \I wish le speak to you as the treasury commit- tee, rather than as vestrymen, for II is in the former capacity which you always attend I am ndvised that we have been paid for Vedder court\ Chisholm, to whom he dirocted a gaze of inquiry, nodded his head. \It's in the Majestic,\ he stated. \I have plans for its . investment, which I wish to lay before the committee\ \I shall lay my own before them at the same time.\ went on the rector. \I wish, however, to preface these plans by the statement that l have, so far as I am concerned. relinquished all thought of building the new cathedral.\ Nicholas Van Ploon. who had been much troubled of late. brightened and nodded his round head emphatically. \That's what I say.\ he declared en) ItE coNTINtrED.) GRADES IN MEXICAN ARMY American Woman Learned Something From Visit Paid Her by a Detach- ment of Villistas. Some years ago a humorous story went the rounds of the newspapers. about a young lady who, at a gather- ing of the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution, held her head exceedingly high, explaining her haughty demeanor on the ground that she was descended from a bona rid. private soldier—the only private, she was convinced, in the Revolutionary hosts. The following incident would seem to indicate that the alexicanu who are fighting today are almost as \well officered\ as the patriot army of the young lady's lively fancy. An American woman—now safe in the states—writes that five soidados of the Villista, following one day rode o in: to her remote mountain camp. They - were very decent fellows., and made no threats; still, in the absence of her husband, it seemed only wise to give them plenty of food and drink, also to yield gracefully to the request of one of the number, who said he was the captain. for the \loan\ of a blanket Pretty soon a second warrior inti- mated that he, too, could use a blanket to advantage in his campaigning. add- ing that he, too, was captain. When a third made the same request, also an flouncing his rank as that of captain their hostess paused In her distribu tion of blankets. \Tell me.\ she inquired politely, \is this entire detachment composed of captaias?\ \Oh. no, senora!\ replied the on -9 who had first spoken. \1 am Captain Primer°, this is Captain Segundo, and that is Captain Tercero. Those\—in dicating the two remaining --\are the private soldiers.\ And at this the admiring senora. ar cording to her own account, at once gave a blanket to each of the two \high privates in the rear rank\— moved by \sympathy with them for Or ing captained firstly. secondly. and even thirdly, and also by admiration of them as being such rare birds!\ --- Youth's Companion. Hair Demand Exceeds Supply. During the Ills. iew years the expor- tation 01 human hair from Japan ans increased to tne point that the de wand lor it now far exceeds the aval!• able supply. Especially wt.•2.. cont- inued with that of the average Euro. perm. the hair ol the Japanese womas is extremely tong, elastic, and strong it superiority tor continuer curl purposes. The United States and France otlei the principal markets for the °remota dealers. in 1•;u:ilie it IS 11111ell US..1 tor weaving purposed. the hair tieing hleactied oy chemical treatment, in ditti•rent colors, and stiesequeutiv woven with sill, into ribbon 111/.14.111 It had ever sat upon a throve airger window, eteorved the recter. Moking down at and nem warms suitable ior ars than the sway of all the m onar , , J . of \You will have still the scribes art her sadly as they paused at her fie penes and upholstertug Rome te earth put together, as large tu'rre,uirl I pharisees. doctor: 'thoee who stand vorite rail prince wtoch command prices oi several nes ally as the sway of God himself! All praying tru .he leinlie pla ces so th e y \Yes.\ ship on.wprl.d. suit•IR 'Path- drPd pounds a yard WIDE ROADS ARE IMPORTANT Time That Highway Builders Awak- ened to New Conditions—Involves Safety and Convenience. The road builders of today are neg- lecting a very important point. The motor car Is a new thing in the world and creates entirely new con- ditions. Tho travel of the future will be very great. The fashion should be set at once for a 100 -foot right of way on all main roads. One half should be developed first; the other could be used by the former owners under a free lease from the counties until it is needed. It will surely be needed some day. Allowing ten feet for a sidewalk the first hard -surfaced road should center Making a Road In South. on the remaining 40 feet. The model to be worked to is two 40 -foot road ways, two ten -foot sidewalks and three rows of shade trees—a most proper plan for a hot climate. All travel of c,purse takes the right hand road. The grade should allow crossing from one road to the other. On a single road with a 50 -foot right of way, two ten -foot sidewalks and 30 feet for vehicles, when autos are standing at each curb there is not room for safe passing of vehicles go- ing In opposite directions and this difficulty and danger increases with the traffic. A single-track road should be 60 feet wide. The middle line of new roads is gen- erally on a section line or other line between two owners. If the fashion is set for a 100 -foot right of way owners will give the 60 feet. If county commissioners will insist on the 100 feet and make It a state- wide rule supported by public opinion. owners will fall into line and give the land. The double -road plan allows speed with safety and the speed of motor cars will In the future be increased on long runs. The point Is that It is the duty of the pioneer road builders of today to provide for the travel of the future. Fifteen years ago In Chicago a street a mile long between Grant and Lincoln parks was widened from 60 to 200 feet. It cost $10,000,000. If thy people who laid out that street cotild have looked ahead the expense would have been only the amount of the surveyor's hill. In less degree such things will happen some day in Florida wherever narrow roads are built. California has awakenel to the idea and has some main roads 100 feet wide. As soon as Florida gets hare' roads the travel by tourists and citizens by motor car and motor truck will rapid- ly increase and will grow in time to enormous proportions. The climate and the motor car will accamplish It and It is time that tho road builders awakened to these en- tirely new conditions. Besides the question of safety and convenience there is the question of beauty. of civic pride and the satiafactIon of building right for all time. Road builders must realize that the motor car has brought entirely new conditions. Thev must lay out the roads wide enough for all time, while the land can be got for nothing. It is a duty. Kindness to Cow Pays. Be kind to the dairy cow. You can't pound milk out of her with the milk stool or run milk out of her with the dcg whe:! bringing her from th°. pas. ture to the barn. Get en good terms with the da . iry cow, and her friend- ship will be eeen by iacreased profits In the milk Surfacing Footpaths. For surf:if-rig feotpallis. mtr• times of KIWI arid Clay, and cinder, will, in general, give good satiate* lion. lj