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About The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.) 1905-1915 | View This Issue
The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.), 04 Dec. 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025319/1913-12-04/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
DROWN 'S BUSINESS COLLEGE can give you a start in life that It t .viould-be Impassible for Yi - A• to. get any ether vitiy. We prepare young pcople ia ontsr business good G; lvias. . You can double your earn ng power by mastat•Ing our courses. Tha beat Is worth kri•valhig, hundi-ada ot rollesTor. • Witte us TODAY for beautiful Illustrated catalog. It is ii•IrS, and scridlog ior it places you ander . Adds...est EROWICS-11:0SiliESSI COLLEGE. 'ELO Pine St., ST. LOUIS, MO, W••••••••••••m• - AiNirtiT1ON TALKS bet% let NAVE ?MD • ILL \A in 1,1110a 1 , 4 evvi V w. ,L..,, 1114k 1 eni,bt iJi11,/fi,NVeiyiJi.dy *L. has. iii• right :L.,. LO/AI iii.G4PegOA ; c L.... Oa , ik (Ala. Ni•1111 , .. ; 01191iNCSS 84.)0E COMPANY Tholkiiiiiieapolia0011ar-Hota1 tea MODERN ROOMS Located Is Hoare of Sadao« DIstsiof $1,. $ 1,14.1.11' SATS $t..00 11,1110 PLA N. RATE FOR TWO peas...slit .110 PRIVATE MATH AND TOILET' EXTRA el/CRY ROOM HAS HOT AND COLD RUNNING WATER, STEAM HEAT, GAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHTS. PORCELAIN LAVATORY, PARIDUCT ILOOR, AND CCCCC HONE SERVICE TO OF- FICE AND CITY. ALL OATH ROOMS ARE FINISHED IN WHITE tIbs WITH OPEN OMSK PLATED PLIMSSINO. SEVEN • STONY MRS. pastor ANNE NOW COMPtETED First Class Accommodations Livery in Connection Linoleum is one of the most satisfactory Floor Coverings made. It is a plastic cement of oxidized linseed oil and ground cork and is applied with heavy pressure to a prepared burlap back. We have Linoleum at 75 cts• per square yard, which will last from three to five years on your floors. Buy glass for those broken during the summer and take ad- vantage of present prices, as it is.go,ing to raise in price. Do IT NOW, LS THDRIC ANYTHING! ;yttis would Like to 'WY, sell, trade or rent? , If Ito try a , Want std in The ilkapire aid *OA redults. A Mother's Scare Mrs. Jaeger was not an educated wo- man; but, her kitelpand having talitaY roars before ataried'. in the soap boil- ing business. and built tap a large -man - ufactory. the fatally were wealth*. Two children cams to the Jaeger& a boy and a girl. Their parents gave them an excellent education, and they were both very fond of reading. There was a library in the place where they lived from which they constantly drew books. Tom Jaeger read a great mauy works of action that have long ago Passed out of - date.and are only now read by those who value them chiedy for the pictures they give of a termer time. His sister, Ruth. was more mod- ern in her taste. Mrs. Jaeger was an ambitious •Vvo- latan.tauAesirous that both her chil- dren should marry well. That meant that she .proposed to watch them to make sure that they made tio unfortu- nate .entanglements. One day there was # rim/ at the telephone and Mr. Jaegir answered the call. \Is Tom in\ \Weil what is it?\ \Tell him Bvelina's here.\ Whoever was at the other end of the .wire was.evidently in a hurry, for'.the receiver was dropped, and Mrs. Jaeger was cut off from further inquiry. . \Who was Evelinar Mrs Jaellikr was at once seized with a sudden -ter- ror. She had never heard her- son speak of her, and thia call for him .to come and meet her boded trouble.. .said nothing to him about the call---uot Jibe. If the young woman were hold enough to telephone to the hone* for him she could aot.heiliow4 ,\ blit J un*\ he should reply to the call' himself It would avail nothing. ,Nor would Mrs ; Jaeger say anything about the matter If he were getting entangled with a,' girl she would not let him know that his secret was hers. Nothing would: feed the dame of love so much as. sig . p: position. '••• But what .was her consternatien when a few days later there came an- other ring at the telephone, and -Ruth was called for. \What Is it?\ iutked the mother. \David Copper/tad has just come In,' There was the same click that.'ihid followed the announcement that ; !Mat was waiting for Tem. indicating.; the -saute .hurry. Was it hurry? !•Rlii, not this go-between shut off the plunie,' that .there might be no opportunity ifier the person -receiving the meess i e.:ta.1 ask questions? David CopperlialtIl?\ Never had *he heard her dautihter mention any .such person. and Math talked of all her friends freely. If .thil I fond mother feared for bet son she.Was in terror for her daughter. Butlifrs, Jaeger treated the matter with.Tthe same caution she had practiced in :On owe of her son. She would set a witch,. on Ruth. but would not Put her en. her guard by toiling her that she stumbled upon this secret affair. Mrs. Jaleger did not consider it .prak ticable to shadow her son, but she. ha a maid whom she bribed to watO t ..her daughter. Never did Ruth go Q 4.-iAtt this young woman found sosasietrinfl to take her out also. One she came in from shadowing th4 lady and reported that she hailkiiiita Ruth so up the Mops of the lihrbOY+ at the same time with a young man Whnis she appeared to he much piattass meet \Alas!\ said Item Jaeger. -Irs the library where they meet. Lod :$y have been hounding me for a lion to buy hoots. Than cozy altOtes are just the pieces tot pines ponSlt to meet and dirt\ Mrs. Jaeger was called up Apia Ater son was inquired tor. Thls. was: \Tell Itim I would like to fleet about veUns. There's another ban waiting\— Some one other than the spioiter batted Is, and the sentence waa•llOt finished. But Mrs. Jaeger had heard enough. Heaven grant that:the ether man would get the girl away. :tram Tom and he would be Naval a Waal - dance. . The good ladrs patience waa.n- sting to wane. Mao was 4lftln to- ward a point where she whuld not he able longer to keep her - knowledge a secret from . her SISSI and. daughter. Despite her watchfulness could get no further information of either of those clandestins affairs. One aft- ernoon her son and her daughter were talking together in ber hearing. \lim through with *David Copper- Seldt' \ said Ruth. \And I'm through with ilivellate.; She was due at Me library ,4 weak ago.\ \I'm sled you two him AMA/trough with your beloveds. rye been wor- ried to deatb‘alianit. feu. i 4 440-4hoWn all about these mistilags at the Wea- ry. tint I 110t a teasAPIt4174 UMW* that Illvatina we. 'wfor Tom there, ,and ,the next inessage,'Wastthat this Mr. 'Ooppertield was * r atting for Ruth at the same pleas. Who are these persens -anyway? i've never heard nothing shunt them -.before:\ Tom and Ruth limbed ott each Atter -And would have hunt -Into a *ugh had the -speaker net been their awn 'mother. As It we. Teektatid: \Mother. ls not& written by a yens; girl about a hundred \oars ago ; 'David Copportiekr te the tame of one of Charles Dickens' hooks. ,The libraritsa, , .Sus Yews., *hewer whet* we' want is out holds it for is when • It emus fm saps asoisos•as over VI* WA V III.' 11, I ragrOde Wad Alffilia IS A RESTAURANT? illiere's a Definition of the 'New York High Life •Brand. - A. restaurant is a place whore you pay $4 ter lb cents' worth of food, ae- oonaNnnassa hy about $2 worth of light What, light : china and light -music, which you have heard before, • After killyin$ your hat with a Wall street Bynames you pay all the way' front lU cents to M. oasts for the privilege mtgetting it back and wearing it once mere. The difference between a man and woman indeed today is quite sim- ple. A. woman pays '$50 all at once for het hat 'while a man pays '45 for his and $66 more in tip installments for storage at restaurants while he Is vainly trying to obtain enough nourish- ment to sustain life between times. The object of all restaurants is to tarnish you with everything you want eateept nourishment. This is carefully extracted , from all food before it reaches you. livery restaurant nowadays has at- tached to III a homeless hotel and a drugless drug store, a newspaper stand, where You can buy a paper for not ewer twice what you can get it for across the street, and a box office dis- pensary,, where you can get theater tickets ter almost any night you don't what. tient at the same rates. Every restlintlint also has a wine cellar which - Istalledr with native cobwebs, , tore; peen , labels -and California grape juice. A TALE OF THE SEA. Linsky Rescue of a Boy Who Was Lashed to the Branch of a Tres.. A sailer tells a tale of .peril that is out Of the ordinary. He was one of the ...rew of au English ship hound frow,British Guiana to Rio Janeiro. WNW Ma IL* 11106[11 s1 rfle tlitagaa river there cante on a* calm, followed by a dense fug. At 10 o'clock in the weirs there ai came out of the fog the vof a hu- - man being, calling for help. A noise In a fog is very deceptive, and this on, could not be located, but an anewer lug \hello\ was given. Suddenly something struck the ves- sel on the port quarter. and it was made out to be a tree, and in ita• branches was a native boy, lashed to a limb and almost unconscious. The tree was caught -with a rope and the boy taken on board. It was half a day before he rallied enough to tell his tale. He and his father had been hunting twenty miles up the Parana river when a sudden freshet came down. Both climbed the same tree. but It was rooted up and carried down the river. • The father - tied his son to a limb with his loin cloth, but before he could thus protect himself the tree tilted over,. and Ate was swept away. The boy bad been floating three days and nights when be was picked up.—St. Louis Globe -Demo- crat. Easy Bravery. nakS—From what . you told me of your mother -In-law I should think you'd have heard enough - ft0111 her In person, without haying- cared to in- duce her to talk into your phonograph: Filkins—Oh, you can't imagine the pleasure it gives we to start the ma- chine going and then shut it Off right in the midst of a sentence.—Puck. A Human Habit. \There Is one pa radoxi s calthing which we all do.\ • 'What is that?\ \We long for things when we axe Ithort\—Baltimore American. MR: FARMER: If You WiFi To Make a Mortgage 'Loan Your Farm Write US Needs Or Call And SUS, We Can Serve Your. Interes °Wawa, Payment PAVIARges bow -team Treatment Sir ER PETERSON Au Surety Borah of Every Character ( Moore, oblentana: ( 4 . . AT THE TOM KELLEY RANCH 7 miles south of Glengarry, 2 miks south of Beaver 'Creek church and 14 miles southeast, of Moore i-at-10fOOLo'clock a. m. sharp Hitving sold my ranch, will put up and sell on the premises the f property: 1 Black Gelding, 6 yrs. old, weight, 1300 1 Black Mare, 8 yrs. old, weight, 1200 1 Bay Mare, 12 yrs. did, weight, 1200 1 Bay Mars, 12 yrs. old, weight, 1100 1 Brown Mare, 9 yri..i)id weight, 1300 1 1 Filly, 3 yrs. old • 2 Fillys, 2,yra. old, good ones 6 Yearling Colts 3 Good 1%14 Cows, balance Young Heifers, two and three years old, good ones FARM MACHINERY, ETC. 1 3 1-4 inch Weber wagon, with grain tank 1 3 inch Weber wagon 1 7 ft. Deering Binder, good shape 1 good Mowing Machine , 1 Hay Rake 1 John Deere Double Disc Plow 1 Double Disc Plow 1 Single Disc Plow 1 20 -ft. Harrow 1 8 -ft. Drill 1 new Manure SPitader 1 Truck Wagon 1 Side Hill Plow 2 sets Heavy Work Harness 1 Hay Stacker 2 Bull Rakes many other articles too rtumerousVatentioit TERMS OF SALE ---All sums under $15, cash. On sun**!r: 5 i:dedk, of 10 months time will be given on good bankable notes drawing 10 per cent interest, 5 per cent cat; count for cash. All property must be settled for before removed from premises.