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The new man in charge of the Highmore Bulletin made up his first and last pages last week so that the columns read from right to left. Whether he wanted to prove himself a little out of the ordinary as a "make-up" man is not said. The First State Bank at Onida is still in the hands of the bank examiner. The deal with the C. L. Millett interests, by which the bank was to be re-organized and Chas. Coyne. of Midland, made cashier of the institution, was not completed. Jim Garner and Earnest Reed depart Monday on a sight seeing trip to Oregon. They are looking np a location to run a horse ranch. We will hate like thunder to see these two popular neighbors leave our midst, but if its horse ranching they are after, they will be compelled to pull up stakes here, as this is fast developing into a farming country.-Cottonwood Republican. The epidemic of rabies still continues at Pierre. A small girl and a boy from that city have in the past three weeks been taken to eastern institutes for treatment from bites of supposedly rabid dogs, and one day last week Miss Rintz, of Fort Pierre, was bitten and left for Chicago for treatment. Orders for the muzzling of all dogs was issued some time ago and a number of dogs have since been killed. News from Seattle, Washington, tell of a fight that may go all the