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About The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.) 1905-1915 | View This Issue
The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.), 23 Oct. 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025319/1913-10-23/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
1 • • ' \fl , \•\ 1 \\*. AL E, , October 23rd, 1913. vhkcUp Yozte Mind , . fiat Next Sack of doar Yua Ly 'Will Lhow This Tradn-Mark: You WM Thank Us For the suggestion when you se* --the hig, nowy : loaves, smell the sweet (.:clor of the new bread and see how many more loaves 'the rack pro- duces, \les the VI t' That trade -mark points the • way to the cleani . t -t, most nourishing flour on tie niai ice Made right here in Montana ff0111 MOtita n e h S wheat. milled in a plan that haa installed the process sepuring , wLeat thoto;;011y before - niilling to insure you of a perfectly clean product. Ask your Grocln. fDr This Perfect Pi:od.v.c._ Markerl! \IT'S .THE WHEAT\ MONTANA 'FLOUR . MILLS O. LE.ViISTOWN - HARLOwTON 411• 4 6.0 • 11133:01111101111111110V111131KAel 11••••rale•••1....\•••• ••••• 4••• Linoieum Linoleum i one of the : ii!osi estisfactoty Floor Colantr.Th 'made. It is a plaatle cenicnt Oxidized linseed oirandr•; . •.t.!. ,gerk and is applied witn pressure to a p,.t•pared. b!tr1.11) We have Linoleum at 7 - i'v s• . per square yard, which will from three to ffve year;) ,k .r floors. Window Bay: glass co l t. those broken during . the sumnter mid tat‘e ad- vantage of present pricer:,Us it is going to raise in prier , . Window Shades, Walt raper, Etc. 11 Le BANNAN 1.14011c.. -;•••60r. CAP: Ableffill1111.1“1:14lara 114,1L. -•!•••• . R P Contractor ‘8z Builder ' A LL\ ki D8 OF CEMENT WORK Cenlent Block, Brick and Concrete .tiouses a Specialty A f INE LINE OF CEMENT ' MACHINERY ARCHITEGT of the lateet up -to riatk. ii oderti buUdln,g.Illtine - end ' cations furnished on all, kinds ol \rublic buildings and dwelling holism- eine rvislou if ALL WORK GUARANTelED oore, • - Montan, 1.1110.11 , For BIG ItESITLTS, try an km :1- 114 ‘vi% N • FABRICS THE THING. Gorgeous Coloring Irt Ma- terials Never so Pronounced. OOSTUMX OF ow nom pastrollirEcats. The chic of the new frocks lies in the .fahrles this season. It is the beauty of the coloring and the novelty of the weave in the material that distin- guish the best looking costumes, not the line nor the design. The result is a vast amount of materials richer in tone and more original in design than anything that has bewildered the eyes of women in the past. Of all the silk materials duvetyn (a combination of silk and wool) is at the present moment the most popular. It Is claimed that duvetyn is not prac- tical because the silk face causes it to wrinkle easily. For this reason some of the exclusive Importers are advis- ing peat] de peche, a tine Interpreta- tion of velours de laine and In all wool material. It has a high luster, which makes ,it quite as dressy as duvetyn, and, being wool, it is said not to wrin- kle and show the signs of wear quickly. The very delectable costume seen In the illustration Is of peau de peche in a lovely shade.of old rose, having the new full tunic skirt effect over a tight skirt of velvet. An orientalLembroider- ed brocade vest crosses In the front of the coat and ends in a broad folded girdle across the back. School Shoes and Boots. If the girl who is to . spend three or four months at -a school so far from home that she cannot economically visit it at stated short intervals is not provided with several extra pairs of shoes and boots she cannot be thor- oughly comfortable in so far as her feet are concerned. And the comfort of the feet always reacts upon the mental condition. For wear in the house and in the classrooms there should be. tin.ee pair of lightweight ox- fords, loonier that the same ones need not be worn two days in succession, even while one pair. is being repaired. While exercising in the open air dur- ing cold weather the boarding school girl should weer quite high topped waterproof boots with heavy soles rather then lightweight shoes under rubbers, are the latter are apt to heat the feet and make them tender if worn for several hours at n time. But as heavy soles take a' icing time to dry there must necessarily be two or more pairs of such boots always on hand. The girl who attends the average moderately priced boarding school can get along catnfortably with two pair of evening slippers or low cut shoes - one pair in bronze or black' kid and the other in white gInce or suede. Satin in any shade is much too dressy looking to go with the sort of evening frock that sensible girls pack Into their hoarding school trunks. Concerning Women. W. C. Brownell has given two new prizes to Vassar college in memory of his wife, who was a graduate of the clitss of 1873. One hundred dollars is to be given each year to the senior holding the highest rank In biology and $100 to the senior holding th highest rank In history and economics. Delegates from the principal in- dustrial countries of Europe will meet Sept. 15 at Bever, by invitation of the Swiss government, to consider the drafting of an international agreement to prohibit the employment of boys and girls below specified ages and to fix a maximum ten hour day for work- ers within -certain ages. Refinishing Easy. A. chest of drawers or an old cup- board that Is in need of refinishing can be restored by the application of a coat or two of mahogany stain after , the old paint or varnish has been re- moved. In place of the wood or brass handles to the drawers substitute the little glass knobs that adorn real pieces of colonial furniture. The glass knobs • met merely a trifle and en uses 'crewed into place. 'MAGIC OF COLORS By It We Knov4 of What the *tin and Stars Are Composed. SECRETS OF THE UNIVERSE. How They Were Revealed by the D:s- oovery of the Spectrum Lad the ' *ening to Which It Led -Our Ey e - lashes Are Primitive Spestrossus. The miracle of the spectrosctetv is r- peated before our eyes every day amid every night without our yeeognizing it If people were 'more. observant and more accustomed to think adatut the meaning of what they see great dis- coveries would be as plentiful as . di.t• monds in a Kimberley pipe. A man said to me the other day. \What is all this color that I see when I squint my eyes and look at nn elec- tric. light?\_ • I replied: \It is the greatest rev - - elation that man has ever bad in the physical world -it is spectrum analy- sis. Your crowad eyelashes become an astronomital . instrument and ana- lyze the light for you into its . primary colors. The multitude of narrow slits through which the light passes as you squint your eyes act like a diffracttei grating and change the direction of the various waves of light in accordance Arith their length. \The red waves are long, one tntr- nine-thousandth of an inch in length, and they keep on without much change of direction, but the violet waves are short, one fifty -seven -thousandth of an inch in length, and they are crinsid- erably turned out of a straight line. All the intermediate wayes, from or- ange, through yellow, green, blue and iudtgo. decreese in lett4th and are more and more - turned aside .as they ANTSI • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 0 • The following list of want o ads should be read over came- o fully as they may suggest some- • thing you want or can supply. o o 0 0 0 0 00 o o 0. 6 o For Sale o 0 0 For Sale -B -flat Clirinet. Just the thing for a new beginner. Cheap if, taken at once. Inquire 'at' fri - upire office. tf For Sale --Good ei_ght rooni very cheap if taken new. Lin% Co., Moore, Mont. For Rent house See Basin For Ittnt---The Trentz farm, 1 I-2 miles cast .. of Moore; 90 acres, - 45 acres isumnicr fallow. Call on. or address Pettrsl. . When in Butte stop at the AC 0 I A a quiet rest place in the city's centi 1, Broadway & Wyoming. Booms $1.00 a day and : up, 9-251f. Want 350 acres or more,ofikkibble plowed and put into crop; 2 1-2 milcs east of Moccasin. Call on or address )4. E. Peterson. Moore. Competent girl, good cook, wanted; • no .children. - prquirWrawisirt- of- . get shorter. The consequenee is that tw e • you see through your iteatis closed eyelashes a band of colors. which Is HOMESTEADS LOCATED in Fee: nothing but the famous spectrum of g us County. Call on or address the astronomers.\ '\\' John Goetz, Platwillow. Mont. 8-1 , 1t By the discovery of that spectrum and the reasoning that It led to we have found out what the sun and the stars, are made of. Every known ele- .ment of matter, when it is made to shine, gives out wave lengths peculiar to itself. Spectroscopic instruments more perfect than the eyelashes reveal these special waves in the light of the sun and* the stars and by that revela- tion enable us to detect the incandes- cent clouds, composed of the hot \va- pors of iron, copper, nickel. platinuin, carbon, calcium, sodium and many other substances which glow in the atmosphere of the heavenly bodies. We find these things In stars so far away that their light may require 1,000 years to come to us, although it flies -with a speed of . 186,300 miles per' Look around you when you enter a brilliantly lighted parlor with crystal chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. The mysterious spectrum flashes at you from a hundred directions at once. The glass crystals of the chandeliers are also spectroscopes, and they, too, separate the various colored waves. though on a somewhat different prin- ciple. They act not as diffrattion grat- ings, but as prisms, but the effect is nearly the same. When light goes through a prism the red waves are less bent out of their course than the or- ange, the orange less than the yellow, the yellow less than the green, the green lees than the blue, the -blue less than the indigoand the indigo less than the violet. The result is that what was white light, with all its waves intermingled, when it entered the prism, comes out in beautiful sheaves of color. A similar effect is produced by the beveled edge of a mirror or the facets of a piece of cut glass glittering on a dinner table. The beauty of jewels elg r pends upon their spectroscopic' powers. Every transparent substance has its own \in- dex of refraction,\ which means its peculiar power of turning light waves aside. TheAlamond. as the king of gems, possesses this power In the high- est degree. Calling the refractive in dex of air 1.00, that of glass Is from 1.51 to 1.71, according to its density. while that, of the diamond is 2.47. This pvbperty alone furnishes a means of detecting the genuineness of a diamond. Taking advantage of Its high refractive power and shaping its facets accordingly. the Jeweler can vastly increase the brilliancy of a eel- mond by -proper cutting. He can bring about Internal reflections that make the blaze as if Its atoms were all a fire. The shimmer of colors In an opal is due to the existence of invisibly mi- nute fissures, which split up the light waves and scatter their hues in den- tate, intermingled rainbows. Nature has been doing these things for thousands of' years in plain sight before men found out that he could use the principle on which she acted to uncover the secrets of the universe. Very likely ,she is giving us many oth- er equally valuable hints which we are still too stupid to understand. -Garrett P. Serviss In Spokane Spokesman -LL., - view. second. Untrustworthy. \I'm glad I refused that man. He's untrustworthy.\ \Why do you say that?\ • ..\He vowed he would pine away and die if 1 turned him down, and now look how fat he hem grown.\ -Louis- ville Courier -Journal. Life Is a garden, every thought is a need, and what we sow we reap. Watch your garden. We have Bran for sale at $18.00 per too in bulk. At our mill, Hobson Farmers Min & Elev. Co., Hobson, - Montana. 10-2 tf E. G. Worden, Lawyer, First Na tionui hank block. he who own, Mont hot h phones 127. tf For BIG RESULTS, try an Eni• litre WANT AD. Notice. Lewistown, Mont., Oct. 6, 1913. State and County taxes for the year 1913, are now due. Taxes will be de- linquent on Saturday, November 29, 1913, at 6 o'clock p. m., and u/nless paid prior thereto 10 per cents' will be added to the amount thereof, to- gether with $1.00 for publiCation. Taxes are payable at County Treas- urer's office, Lewistown, Montana, between the hours of 9 a. m. and 5 p.. mu. R. G. FOLAND, 10-9-13 Treasurer of Fergus ('ount) Notice of Dissolution Notice is hereby given that the firm of Abel & Quackenbush, doing busi- ness under the name of the Moore Meat Market and . composed of Wm. J. Abel and harry Quackenbush, Is from this date dissolved by mutual consent, WM. J. Abel will succeed to the interests of said firm, collect- ing all accounts in their favor and paying all bills against said firm. Dated at Moore, Mont., 'Oct.9, 1913 Wm. J. Abel ' Harry Quackenbush We have a number of the small new maps of Fergus county, size 13x18, which were drawn and compiled by II. C. Tilzey, former county snrvey- or. They give all the new towns and postotfices, all railroads --including new lines under construction, all streams, elevations of the principal towns, and everything . of importance Is locator' accurately. These small Malm sell at '25 cents each. / Drop ie and get one. We also have the large, mounted map at $6.00 each - ahd timi large, unmounted map at $8. 0 0, Thu Inland Empire, Moore. Lt'le Girl Knew Something About the Male Gender. A little girl wrote the following composition on men: \Men are what women marry They drink, smoke and swear, but don't go to church. Perhaps if the.% wore foxy hats they would. The.1 are more logical than women and al so more zoo-ological. Both men am' women sprang from the monkey, hut - the women sprang farther than the men. DO IT NOW. IS THERE ANYTHING you wool , Uke to buy, 661 4 , trade or roottl so try a want ad In The Etnplr , NA mita results. Moore Hams 1111111111111111111111elle RIGHT NOW! We're ready to take your measure for your Autumn and Winter overcoat or suit. In every over- coat we make we in- ject a touch of indi- viduality, which is a touch of genius ---the smart and breezy kind of clothes that are bound to give the wearer a feeling of content as he walks along the street un- der the critical eye of the passers-by. Your choice of over 600 patterns. We're making a spec- ialty of loose fitting raglans. Call in to- day and look over the models. HE GENT'S TOGGERY k — MOORE MEAT MARKET Wm. J. Abel, Prop. Wholesale & Retail Dealers in • -Fresh & Salt Meats Fish Every / Friday OUR BRANDS Moore Bacons FARM LOANS Optional Payments, Money Same Day Applied For Interest and Principal Payable Lewistowr IONTANA LOAN 6 INVESTMENT CO. Phone 496 Next to Bank of Fergus County on 3r44..v_enue Lewistown, Montana Bran, Shorts and Mixed Feed will fit your stock for heavy work Montana Elevator Company D. 0. McGUINN, Agent MOORE, MONTANA Stickney 6asolineEngines ARE THE BEST 9 . 22:112 . _' If No. $ You can't get something for noth- ) Int, neither can you get a gasoline engine for 'less than its worth: You get exactly what you pay for when you trade with us. And when we sell you a Stickney Engine, every dollar you give us works overtime. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS Emil Felenzer C. - I Moore, Mont. THE EXCHANGE BAR C. P. 'T1,1-ZEif PROPRIETOR MOORE, MONTANA BALTIMORE, RED` TOP AND METROPOLITAN RYE - OLD CROW AND WARWICK BOURBON - PABST'S BLUE RIBBON BEER. West And Domestic Cigars ^•••• — —