A DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. r iwavNkJM.i!nfcMii etww i" v. .i m .Mii. ti.i.. n . , , , , , t a a ' a,' The Man Nob BILIOUS! Quick! Get Liver and Bowels Right with Cascarets" knew odv I T jry-- x (Copyrlcht by Dodd. Mend A Co., "LET 'EM MAKE ME LOOK LIKE THAT!" Everyone knows about the Legion Etrangere the famous Foreign Legion of the French army. Well, Rich ard Morgan of Syracuse, N. Y., enlisted in the Foreign Legion in the great war under the name of Henry Hilliard. So you can guess that the hero was not in love with him self or with life. The Hun sent him to the hospital with a wounded knee and arm and a face pretty much shot away with shrapnel. The surgeons fixed up his knee and his arm. When they proposed to restore his features, he lied and said he had no photograph of himself. And in his rage against life he caught up a picture postcard bearing the radiant face of Christ and cried: "Let 'em make me look like that! Or anything else, either I don't give a d n!" The French surgeons were interested and did a good job. And presently "The Man Nobody Knew" is back in Syracuse, telling of the death of Dick Morgan and selling mining stock and falling deeper in love with Carol Durant, the "only girl" of his old life who had refused to marry Dick Morgan, the failure. Complications! Well, rather especially when the mining stock apparently turns out to be worthless and the only man in the world who knows Hilliard's secret dies of apoplexy and the hero finds out that the heroine did love Dick Morgan. And Holworthy Hall handles these compli cations and these real, human characters and this Ameri can community in the masterly way that makes him read from one end of the country to the other these days. Good reading! CHAPTER I. In the beginning of things, ho was .merely a' number; but even thnt was creditable, because his number was low enough to signify that ho had re sponded pretty promptly to the rally ing call. After that, and with tho cataclysmic suddenness which marked all changes of military status on the western front, ho became, one frosty morning, a Case, and "got himself roughly classified (and tenderly han dled) as a Stretcher Case, a Grand Blesse, ami, In consequence, a proper temporary Inmate of a field hospltnl on the Belgian plains. There, he was unofficially known as Joyeaur, or Joyous One; not because he displayed o very buoyant disposi tion far from It I but because ko be longed to the Foreign legion; and In the course of another day or two ho wus routine-ticketed as an Evacue, and provided with a lukewarm hot water bottle and a couple of evil smelling clgnrettoAto console him on the road to the base hospltnl at Neu My. ,At Neullly he became, for the first time since his enlistment, nn Individ ual, and at the very outset he was dis tinguished by certain qualities which had passed unnoticed in the frying pan and firo of the trenches. For ono thing, he was obviously Immune to kindness; and for another, he was ap parently Immune to hope. He wns a man of Inveterate silence; not the grim silence of iortltude in suffering (which Is altogether too common a vir tue In base hospitals to earn any es pecial merit), but rather tho dogged reticence of black moods and chronic bitterness. To bo sure, speech was physically difficult to him, but other men witli similar mlsfoitunes spoko blessings with their eyes, and gavo back gratitude In voiceless murmurs. Not so tho Joyous One. From the day of ills arrival he demanded nothing, desired nothing, but to brood sullenly aloof; and so, when ho became nn In dividual, he also became a mystery to the nursing staff. It was rumored that ho was an Implacable woman hater, and there seemed to be something in It. ' Kegardless of the care of the Amer ican nurses (all hoverlngly attentive to one of their own nation who had fought for France), his spirit remained abysmal and clouded in gloom. Only twice, in (ho Initial month of his con finement, did he betray the weakness of an ordinary emotion ; on each occa sion a gold-laced general hnd come to salute, in the name of the republic, ono of tho Individual's neighbors, and to deliver u bit of bronze which dangled from n ribbon striped red and green. It was said (and doubted by those who hadn't Been It) that at these ceremo nies tho Individual had grown fever .lsh. and let tears come to his eyes, but subsequently ho had relapsed Into still greater depths of stoicism than before; his own bed-Jacket was Inno cent of cross or medal, and his depres sion was apparent, and acute. Tho nurses, arguing that perhaps his prldo wus wounded as seriously at his flesh, offered quick condolence and got them selves rebuffed with shrugs of the In dividual's shoulders, and Inarticulate sounds which had all the earmarks of suppressed profanity. He didn't even soften when LMerre Dutout, a hard-hit territorial in the next bed, squandered a dny'a supply of energy to lean ncross and whisper sympathetically to him: "Old man . . Vleux especo dc chour erouto ... I know bow It U . . . " haven't got tiny friends either. Inc.) -I want you to take my Croix de Guerre. . . . When I go nowhere." Even when speech returned to the Individual he was a man of curt re sponses and stinging monosyllables a problem to the surgeons, a problem to the nurses and (if tho expression in lite eyes meant anything), an over whelming problem to himself. It ap peared that, after all, It wasn't simply women that ho hated It was the uni verse. His military book Implied that ho had no parents, no close relations, no friends to notify, no fixed abode. He received no visitors, no letters, no packages freighted with mngical de light. But to those who pitied him In all his loneliness ho was utterly con temptuous; he even went so far ns to fillip sidelong to tho floor a religious post card tendered him by a devout and sentimental passer-by, and ho did it In her presence, unashamed. Later, when a smiling orderly picked up thnt post card and tucked It under his pil low he wns no less contemptuous In permitting It to remain. But the one stupendous fact which, more than all else combined, made him an object of bewildered curiosity was this that of tho scores and scores of men with head-wounds who were, reborn at Neu llly that spring and summer, ho wns tho only one who had never asked for a mirror. This, of Itself, wouldn't have been astonishing as long ns ho delayed In. thorellmtnary stages of recovery, for now and then u man with head-wounds proves to be super-sensitive; but in tho second stuge it was remarkable, and In the third stage It was unique. Tho stuff held It to bo extraordinary from a social as well as from a path ologic viewpoint, that n man so ter ribly disfigured .should have no Inter estnot even a morbid interest In his own appearance. And It wasn't that tho Individual was simply indif ferent to the mirror; on tho contrary, his aversion to it was native and ener getic; ho flinched, and motioned it frantically away as though the mero conception of seeing himself as others saw him was too repellant. and too unthinkable to endure. There came a day In April when a photograph was requested of him. Surely ho know where there was a likeness of himself, didn't he? Ills old passport photograph, which had mysteriously disappeared, or The Individual glanced up from his present task; the wound In his arm wns still annoying and lie was ab sorbed in learning to write wllh his left hand. "What for?" he muttered. "Why," said the nurse, cheerfully, "for a model. To help tho surgeons. They'll tnke your picture for a guide and mnkc you look almost exactly the way you did before." The Individual from America sat up straight, so that the nurse was startled by his animation, which was without a parallel in his local history. "What!" he said. "Certainly!" The nurse spoko la tho tone one uses to an ailfog child. "You've known that, hnven't you 7" The Individual's voice wns queerly unmanageable and strained. "You mean to say they're going to make mo look tho way . . . Could they do that? Could they? Even now?" "Why, of course," alio assured hlra. "You never told me that!" ho said, passionately. "Why didn't you? Why couldn't you have told me! And hero I've been . . ." ' Ho put his hands to his bandaged face and seemed to trbrtalc within himself, Tben all at race By HOLWORTHY HALL ho burst out: "Well, there's nothing to provent . . . Then they could mpko mo not look like It, If they wanted tol Isn't that so?" She regarded him In vast perplexity, and thought of summoning a surgeon, for the man hnd begun to quiver ns though from shell shock which ho hadn't undergone. "Why, I don't understand whnt you menn," she said soothingly. "But If you'll Just bo calm and" The Individual gestured wllh fierce impatience. "It they can do whnt you say,' and make me look like any old thing they choose to, then whnt In the devil nre they asking for a photograph for?" "Why, to go by," sho said helplessly. "You want to look like your old self, don't you?" "No, I don't!" The nurse gasped. His tone had been churlish, but tho echo of It vngncly suggested triumph mid relief. Ills symptoms hnd subsided . . . could It bo that ho actually was relloved? DumfQiiuded, sho. made nnothcr effort to convince him. "But you want to look just as near ly' like" "Don't you suppose I know what I want?" ho Interrupted rudely. "But hnven't you n photograph, any way, time I can " "No, I haven't!" ho snapped. "1 hnven't." It was a lie; the passport photograph was In tho lining of n cer tain wallet, and ho hnd hid It there for reasons of his own. But now that one grent danger was definitely past, nnd n still further bulwark of protec tion offered, if the nurse spoke truth, the Indlvldunl could afford to come out from nmbush. "And I don't want to look the wny I did before, and what's more I never did ! But If your doctors nro half as smart as they think they nro let 'cm make md look like that! Or anything else either I don't give a d n I" Shocked nnd horrified, sho was gaz ing nt' a picture postcard he had snatched from under his pillow und thrust upon her.j It was a reproduc tion of a religious painting by Rem brandt. It was the radiant face of the Christ. CHAPTER II. Nine o'clock on a night In June not i Juno evening, heavy-starred on vel vet, but a furious June night, with Stygian blnckness looping overhead, and Stygian water battering nnd boil ing against tho hull plates. The ship wns dark as the night Itself; blind dark, without n single ray to play the traitor. On deck n solltnry venturer hugged tho rail, and apathetically watched the waves tenr past. Out of tho warmth, nnd cheer and tho vitiated atmosphere of the smok ing oom came Martin Hnrmon, big, florid, exuberant. A heaving lift of tho deck sent him lurching sldowlsc; ho saVed his balance by struggling "Let Them Make Me Look Like That." toward tho rail, when suddenly tho slope was reversed, and he slipped nnd slid to the barrier of safety, clutched It, nnd found himself at arm's length from the lonely watcher, who hadn't stirred, or even turned jMs head. "ncllo!" said Harmon, his surprise tinctured with easy fnmlllarltv. "Some night l" "Yes, It Is." The tone of the re sponse was curt, so curt thnt Harmon instinctively leaned forward to dis cover what expression of countcnanco went with It. The nlitht was so black that he might as- woll have tried to penetrate a curtain of solid fabric, "Seen any U-boats yot?" ho asked humorously. "Ndt yet." The taciturn one moved a trifle nway; a man less thin-skinned nnd less dined and wined than Hnr mon would probnbly hnvo taken the hint nnd removed himself, but Har mon's was nn Inqulsltlvo disposition and hn nover nttempted to curb It he was the sort of traveling compan ies -wh" makes Christians reflect up m it i ml on the definition of justifiable homi cide. "What Is your line?" ho Inquired nftcr n pause. The other man laughed queerly. "The first ... It it makes so much difference to you." "Beg pardon7 I don't quite get you. You said . . ." "I said tho first line. I meant the first-line trenches. I've been In It." Hnrmon Jerked his head upward In comprehension. "Oh, I sco I You mean tho war! And you've been right on the spot where tho fighting Is? Pretty lively up there, Isn't It? Something stirring most nil tho time?" "I Imagine so." Tho other man's nccent wns ntiinzlnply diffident, nnd Hnrmon peered nt him, Incredulous. "Good Lord, don't you know?" "Not n great deal. I happened to get hit tho first day I was In tho trenches." "But you got in it ngnln nfterwnrd, I suppose? I'll bet you did!" "No." "What! You nover got back nt nil? Just ono dny, and you'ro through?" "Yes. After I wns discharged from hospltnl I wns discharged from the army too. Permanently unfit." "Hngllsh tinny?" "No French." "Well, .that's some record!" said Harmon appreciatively. "That cor tnlnly Is some record! Not to sny tough luck the toughest kind. Going back homo, I take It?" . "Looks thnt wny, doesn't It?" Hnrmon Ignored the snrensm, "Back to work, eh? Whnt did you say your lino Is?" "I didn't say. I hnven't any Just now." narmon pondered n second. "Oh! Gentlcmnn of lelsuro? Sol dier of fortune, eh? Well, I wouldn't worry If I were you. You're disap pointed ; Unit's nnturnl . . . hut the world hnsivt come to an end yet. OT course It Is something of a come-down to leave the nnny and get Into hnrness ngnln, but nfter nil there's plenty of excitement right in tho United States. Big work to be done, son I Big money to mnke. And It helps the war nlout;. too. I tell you there never wns n big ger opportunity to make money than there Is right this minute. Tho hnrd job Isn't to find tho scheme; It's to find the men to run It. Don't you worry . . . you'll land something right off tho bntl" "Thnnks for the compliment!" "Oh, It's no compliment 1 Anybody can mnke money these days. It's a plnln stntcment of fact . . . Sny, let's go In nnd have something. Como In nnd bo sociable. Whnt you want's n drink. Am I right or nm I wrong?" "Well" "And thnt's what the doctor or dered! Come on! It's on me." The other man hesitated, nnd nt Inst succumbed, out of sheer uncon cern, to n companionship ho realized tn advance would be distasteful. "All right," he consented briefly; nnd together, nrm In nrm. they stum bled nnd tacked ncross tho treacherous dock, nnd presently crossed tho thresh old into the hazy light of tho smoking room. Hnrmon, smiling broadly, wiped tho brine from his smarting oyes. , "Now, then," he said, "what particu lar brand of poison do you " And broke off short nnd stared, fascinated, nt the extraordinary young mnii In front of him. He was anywhere from twenty-five to forty, this American from the dis tant trenches, nnd his ago wns as hard to guess ns n clever woman's; there wns something about him peculiar to youth, and yet when his face was In repose, ho might easily have claimed two scoro of years nnd gono undis puted. It wns n faco which suggested both the fire of Immaturity and tho drain of experience; there wns breath taking grnvlty about It, a hint of tho dignity of nimble, of ageloss permn nonce. It was a slightly thin fare, senrred by n heavy line or two, and Indelibly stamped with tho evidence of Intense thought and Inward suffer ing; but It Incked the hollows which, at tho first glance, should hnvo sup ported the evidence. It was a thin and oval faco, with a moutli of hug" and sympathetic sweetness, a forehead white nnd high, n prominent, delicate nose, and Irises of clear, luminous gray. It wasn't altogether nn Anglo Saxon typo of countenance, nor was it definitely European; It seemed rather to huve taken nil tho better qualities from severol races. It wns u faco to Inspire immediate trust and confidence and respect, and llnrmoti, despite his luck of prnctlce In nil three of these reactions, wns evidently at tracted by it. "Vichy-CeleBtlns for me," snld tho old-young man Indifferently. "I'll ... I guess I'll have vlchy too," suid Ilnrmoi, relaxing. "If It wnsn't for something I enn't Just de scribe I'd suy . . . woll, never mind, Er . , , what business have you been In,( by tho wny?" Tho younger man's reply was tardy and not particularly gracious. "Why, tho longest time I over put In nt any ono business was selling In surance. The Inst thing I did was to sell bonds. Why?" Harmon itliTcned. "A salesman t Good Lord! Thnt's the hist thing In the world I'd havo . . . but, say! You must hnvo been a whirlwind! Why, a man with n presence like yours would hnrdly hnvo to open his moutli I You've got n sort of . . . I'll bo hanged if I know whnt to call It . . . but u kind of feeling. If you know what I menn. Salesman! Why, all you need Is nn Introduction and a dot ted lino!'1, Tho young man lailghed rather for lornly nnd sipped lite vlchy. "Just nt present I haven't cither." Harmon's gnzo wus unfaltering, and his Interest nnd admiration bounded higher. Mechanically, In accordance with his hnblts, ho 'wns striving to dis cover Iipw this now ncqualntnuco might ho gt to practical use. "Was "Meanlno What7" I right, or was I wrong? Playing In hard luck don't strengthen a man's courngo much, even If ho tries to bluff himself Into thinking It docs. Cut out tho regret stuff; that's my ndvlce, nnd you can tnko It or lenvo It. Forget all that tough luck you had over here, and got busy figuring out how you'ro going to cash In on nil your experi ence. America's full of chances you'll hind something big in no time. Can't help It If you try. Salesman! Son, you'ro carrying your best recom mendation right on top of your own shoulders I" . Tho young man gave him back a wry smile nnd finished his vlchy. "I only hopo It comes true," ho said, Harmon looked at him steadily,' and falling under tho spell of those radlaut feuturcs stared and stared until ho came to himself nnd all nt ouco brought his fist down on the table, so that tho glasses rang again. "Woll, why shouldn't it? As n mut ter of fact, why shouldn't It?" The younger man's expression hadn't chnngec. "Meaning whnt?" "Meaning," snld Hnrmon deliberate ly, "that tho first thing I've got to do when I get home Is to hunt up a cotiplo of good salesmen myself. Aro you hunting for n good Job, or aren't you?" "Aren't you n llttlo hasty?" Tho young man's Intonation wus sardonic, "I've cleaned up most of my money," sold Hnrmon very slowly to the cell ing, "by rtnklng quick decisions. I mnko up my mind pretty fast. If you can Interest mo on short notice you can Interest other people. Mind you, we're Just discussing this sort of thinking out loud. No obligation on cither side. Doesn't do any lulnn to talk about it, docs It?" "Then supposo," said tho young man placidly, "yon define your Idea of a good Job. I'm rather purtlculur." "But you ndmlt you're out of luck, hnd" "But you ndmlt I'm n whirlwind." Tho young man smiled with fnlnt amusement. "I said you ought to bo with train ing." Tho young man's mouth turned up ward at tho corners. "Go ahead and describe the Job." "Weil, my Idea of n pretty sweet Job for a man of your ngo Is to start, of course about twenty a week and commissions." "Yes? What per cent commission?" "Oh, eight to ton per cent" Tho young man glanced at Harmon and lnughcd quietly. n "You're n bicker, of course, but thnt doesn't sound much like conscrvatlvo investment securities to mo. Whnt Is It Industries?" Hanuon grlmuced. "Yes, I'm n broker." ne set down his glass nnd fumbled for a card. "There! But I was thinking more about stocks than bonds. Somo now Montnnn properties copper and zinc. Metals aro tho big notee theso days. I guess you reallzo thnt, don't you? Munition work." "I'll show 'em whether I can make good or not!" (TO DB CONTINUED w a Furred Tongue, Bad Tnsto, Indiges tion, Sallow Skin, and Miserable Head nches como from n torpid liver nnd Blugglsh bowels, which cause tho ntom nch to becomo filled with undigested food, which sours nnd ferments, form ing acids, gases, and poisons. Cns enrcta tonight will give your bilious liver nnd constlpntcd bowels a thorough cleansing nnd straighten you out by morning. Cascarets nover sicken or In convenience you llko nnsty Cnloinel, Snlts, Oil, or griping Pills. They work whllo you sleep. Adv. Father' Amendment "And what do yotj propose to do now, Wllllnm?" asked tho fntlier of tho son who has Just como homo after graduation nt college. "Oh," yawned tho optimistic young man, "I think I'll go over to Now York nnd look for n position at five thou sand per you understand? At fivo thousand per." "Oh, yes," said the old man. "I un derstand. You menn nt five thousand perhnps." Pathfinder. County-M hl0' Clt ot ToIodo Lucns n J'. chon.8y, makes oath that ho la senior partner of tho tlrm of P. J. Chonoy & Co., dolnp business tn tho City ot To low' nCou,llyad Stuto aforesaid, ami Unit nnimnni !' FtiS V' BUm of ONK 1IUN hked DOLLAIlS for any caso of Catarrh mat cannot ho cured by tlio inn of HALL'S CATAmtll MKDfCINK. Sworn to borons mo nnd subscribed tn royjroaonco, this 6th day of December, A, ljt 1550. JvI'Lui aiiJion, Notary Public. HALL'S CATAItlUI MEDICINE Is Ink. on tho Muooub BurfacoH ot tho System. 1 r.J,TCIJf.noy &PX Toledo, Ohio. P. J. Chonoy & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Now What Did She Mean? A busy business woman had en gaged outside liolp to wash and clean up house. As they entered the kitchen, on nrrivnl of the help, who hnd been recommended ns a Jowol, the mlMrcss said : "This kitchen's in an awful state, Mary. I" "Never mind, mlssoy; I'so used to white folks." Ladles' Home Journal. Don't Fernet Cutlcura Talcum When nddlng to your toilet requisites An exquisitely scented fnee, skin, bnby nnd dusting powder and perfume, ren dering other perfumes superfluous. You mny roly on It hecauso ono of the Cutlcurh Trio (Soap, Ointment nnd Talcum). 25c etiqh overywhere. Adv. Too ninny men wult until they hnve been done to n turn before turning over n now leaf. Quack doctors nropnticnt workers. Sure, Relief 6 Bell-ans --) I U ....4- ivi naier dWl Sure Relief RE LL-ANS PFOIt INDIGESTION A. Young Girl well groomed is an attractive sight. Red Cross Ball Blue if used in the laun dry will give tliat cfc;;-j$ appearance that everyone admires. All good grocers sell it; 5 cents a package. 3,040 ACRE MORRIS RANCH Two seta improvements; plenty Rood water, school at ranch; 8 miles out; price $12.00, terms, L. C. BURNS, BAKER, MONT. 140 Oil Companies Operating g.ucre leaao nlw fto J a. Parker. Man agar, U South tli, Albuquerquo. Norr M MAGAZINES""' Special low prlceH for uprlnx bualnen. A. A. IIAI.K. IIIHON, H. D. KODAK 1'INIHlllNd A freo enlnrKomoitt. Bx7, from oach roll nnt iu for flnlqliln-. .Rami for prlcr unit purtlculari. Toyaku. Pfioto Supply Company, Ilox 4 J 7, Tupekn. Kurmaa We Tmrli Comft .Milking In J easy leHKons by mall; aewlnu macli all'a necoasary. LaPrancu Cornet DrafUuir Sratem, Lou Anueloii. Calif, loim Imprcurd Farm, Chickasaw, Adjoining-Cos VUrcl from owners. 1176 to Itli a, &Kla. Wtil Umtly Uroa , Mow Hampton. U. I CSSi2C' t e BoyS I w y77!y.i I L A- i I ) VSLswifl i m -CV