{ title: 'The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.) 1905-1915, July 16, 1914, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025319/1914-07-16/ed-1/seq-4.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025319/1914-07-16/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025319/1914-07-16/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025319/1914-07-16/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.) 1905-1915 | View This Issue
The Inland Empire (Moore, Mont.), 16 July 1914, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025319/1914-07-16/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THE INLAND EMPIRE. CONM1111111.1641”A11.1141:WAVALVarglis:b i Business Cards J DR. S. S. OWEN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office, Owen building, Main Street. MOORE, MONT. _ DR. 0. F. DAVID ' PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Calls attended prompltily day or night. Office David Drug Co. MOORE, MONT. . DR. E S PORTER PHYSICIAN 95N1) *SURGEON . Office over State Bank. MOORE, DR. 0. V. CALKINS DENTIST Office closed Saturdays, open . Suin- day by appointment Office over State Bank. Phone 39. MOORE, MONT., DR. V. W. FOSTER DENTIST •Rounis 213-214—Bank-Electric Bldg.' Phone 159W 'LEWISTqWN, MONT. S. E. PETERSON LAWYER Office in Clary Block. MOORE, - MONT. Photo copyright, 1914. by American Press Association. Fighting Fred Funston at Vera Cruz This photograph of Brigadier General Funston was taken on the gang- plank of a transport as he was about to go ashore at Vera Cruz. Funston Is in charge of the American forces at -Vera Cruz. NEWSPAPERS MOORE DRAY & TRANSFER LINE George F. Curry, Prop. Phone 45 MOORE, MONT. THE CITY DRAY LINE And Baggage 'Transfer W. E. Stapleton, Prop. Prompt Service to Ma. Phone 76. MOORE, MONT. I. A. COMBS AUCTIONEER The Man Who Gets Results MOORE, - MONT. MOORE LIVERY & FEED STABLE .1. E. Hensley, Proprietor Good rigs, Careful drivers Peed Ground. MOORE, MONT. THE SANITARY BARBER SHOP Fred Hoehn, Prop. Try us fqr an up-to-date Haircut or a smooth Shave. Laundry agency in contection.. MOORE, • MONT. W. 'F. SHARE Contractor & Builder ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK Cement Block, Brick and Concrete Houses a Spot:laity A FINE LINE OF CEMENT -MACHINERY • ARCHITECT of the latest up -to dat, n_odern building. Plana and sAnctri (ationa furnished on all kinds of public buildings and dwelling houses with supervision if desired. ALL WORK GUARANTEED Moore, • Montana • SETH 0. CARROLL LICENSED EMBALMER AND FUNERAL , DIRECTOR Guaranteed work satisfactory for shipping. Galls answered promptly. Also dealer in Foreign and American Marble and Granite MONUMENTS See or write me for pekes. Phones 46, 73. Good Printing Is the art of putting into another mind what is in your own. IT IS A SUBTLE METHOD OF SUGGESTION It Is • means of making a favorable Impression. To have the beat results, It must be the best printing. That we are prepared to give you WALK RIGHT IN AND THE PUPI Editors Discuss Prob em at Journalism Week, IEMAND CO-OPERATION. William Allen White, Arthur Capper, Henry J. Allen and Nine Other Well Known Kansas Scribes Turn \Preach- er\ For the Occasion. One of the big features of journal- ism week at the University of Kansas was a series of twelve sermons deliv- ered by twelve famous newspaper men on \The Press and the Pulpit\ in twelve different churches on the same night. PRESS IS DOING ITS WORK. Arthur Capper of the Capper Publica• k. teens Calls For Newspaper Apprecia- tion. I DO not want to appear be- fore you as an apologist for the newspaper. Because the de C ent newspapei needs .no apolo- gist, and the in decent newspaper deserves none. The pulpit is, I fear, too often misunderstood by the press. The• ARTHUR CAPPER. newspaper is al- most always -misunderstood by the pul- pit, and this misunderstanding arises front what I think is miscongeptiou of the provinces and functions of the newspaper. And yet if you take the newspaper at its face value and accept It for what 4 claims to be the misconception IS hardly possible. All newspaper criticism is based, to it large extent upon the personal , attl Jude of the critic. It seems difficult sometimes for a man outside the news- paper profession to remember that a newspaper is made for all people. not for any one set nor class nor clique. The newspaper is not a preacher; it Is not a Jeremiah nor a John the Bap HA. The world has need of both of these, but the world provides for them: that place is not in the editorial chair The newspaper is a chronicle of the times, a reflection of the life of the day. It.inakes no pretension to be a complete gpide, philosopher and friend It is only one factor in modern life The editor does not seek to take the place of the public schools or the higi , or institutions of learning. -He do*-' not seek to supplant the clergy He leaves • them their work and expects them to do It He is willing to aid, but he cannot take their Work and their re sponsibility off their shoulders. Newspapers. I fear, _like clergymen are likely sometimes to be judged- not by their best specimens or by their best efforts, but by their worst sped - wens and by their delinquencies The average publIsher, or editor is not wan- tonly giving the people a poorer qual- ity of newspaper than they ought to have. Experience has taught him that the public does not demand anything better; that, in fact, it will not have anything better and might be Wormed with something worse. The news stand ard is improving constantly, and every inch of encroachment on the part of the morbid, the morally wholesome and poisonous has been fotight'by the men who make the papers, not the peop. will1.1111#9.1ft-tht.neWiLallVr- V1 7 hile possibly not living up to their opportunities. newspapers are never- theless in my judgment doing at least as muc ias t other InThienee to pro mote such interests as political how osty, the protnotion of interpational peace, the abolition of poverty, the ad- vaucement of the brotherhood of map lelar tiEN CuPBoARD CHERRY PUDDINGS. DINNER MENU Clear Soup. Roast Lamb, Mint Sauce. - Creamed Peas. Mashed Potatoes Lettuce Salad. Cheese Wafers Baked Apples. Cherry Pie. Coffee. Tea. Milk. C HERRIES make tine puddings, and these may be varied as to the crust; the method of cooking theta and the sauce with which they are served. Baked and Steamed Pudding. Baked Cherry Pudding. — Put the ' stoned cherries In the bottom of a granite dish and cover them with paste made in the proportion of one cupful of flour, one-half cupful of milk, one teaspoonful of baking powder and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Put the dish in the oven and bake. No sauce will be needed. as the cherries will serve that purpose. Steamed Cherry Puddiug.—Beat one • egg very light, add one and a half cupfuls of milk and u pinch of salt. Sift together three cupfuls of flour and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and add the egg and milk, making a smooth batter. Add last half pint of pitted cherries. Steam for an hour in it well buttered pudding dish Serve hot with sUgar and cream. With a Delicious Dressing. Sweet Cherry Pudding. — Take one cupful of sugar, one cupful lf Swet milk, butter the size of an egg, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, flour euough to make a stiff batter. Serve with the following dressing: Two cup- fuls of cherries, one cupful of sugar, a small piece Of butter,- two cupfuls of boiling water. Pour over the batter .ind bake forty-five minutes in a mod - , rate oven. A Simple Pastry. Plain Cherry . Pudding.—Heat three eggs lightly, then stir in a pint of tnff and a little less than a quart of flour, enough to make a smooth batter. Add a little salt and th - o teaspoonfuls of baking powder, which should be added I,, the dry flour and sifted together to mix. Add a teblespoonful of softened butter Beat thoroughly. and last of ill mix in a pint iff cherries, stoned and drained free from Juice and dredg- ed With n little flour to keep them - from sinking In the batter Turn into a but- tered ',lidding mold or pail and put into kettle of boiling water and keep boil- ing continuously for three hours. Serve with sugar and cream 'or hard sauce. A Hard Job. \Didn't you any six months . ago that If Miss Tipkins wouldn't • marry you you Would throw yourself into the deepest part of the sea? Now. Miss lipkink married some one else three months tigO and yet you haven't\ \Olt It's easy to talk, but let me tell you It is not such nn easy matter to timid the deepest part of the sea.\ Where They Differed. \I .always try to look at everything from hot h sides.\ • - \Your wife tells a different ntory.\ \Ilow'm that?\ -sli t , says you haven't seen the in - slide tif 'a chureh for years.\—Chicag • Record-Henild. ROUND 'THE ' o nl There are 4.500 varieties of es—all ;irk may establisb a teimicipal slippery. Newy bureau for tree culture. The Japanese do Eot far rice raised in other cOuntries. Vermont's first marble quarry, opeu ed about 1795, still is being profitably operated. It is said that about 1,490 earth tre- mors were recorded in various parts of Japan last year. Orange pulp is much used in Spain . as feed for hogs and cattle. The peel Is dried and exported, . India is developingao important tur- pentine Industry, though it does not yet supply the home , market. The population of Cuba is 2,387,000, according to the new census. The population in 1907 was 2.048.9S0. The Spanish city of Seville, once the most famous In the world for its silk, Is planning to revive the industry. Germany alone supplies nine -tenths of the razors, penknives and other cut- lery imported into the United States. Tile German Pound is exactly one- half kilogram, or about one -tenth more than the American anti English pound, sanitarlans in tropical countries are beginning to understand that ants are among the insects 'which transmit dis- • eases. Iii Prance farmers are experimenting with a prolific potato from Uruguay, vliicli perpetuates itself with roots left in the soil. Great Britain has the longest coast line of any country in Europe. Italy, Russia and France come next in the Order given. Rubber -heels tetre-beceme so popular in Switzeriagd that all leather and rubber goods Zettlers, and even the ped- dlers have taken up the trade. According to some language students, Irish brogue lathe ancient way of pro- nouncing English, preserved in its per ity by residents of the Emerald Isle. The Servian government is support- ing a plan to link all towns in the fountry not connected by railroads with iues. automobile passenger and freight A French motorboat with an engine of only forty horsepower is making a voyage around the world tO record me- teorological and astronomical Observe - ions. Johnson is the commonest name in 1!hicago and Smith the commonek itame in New York dity, Philadelphia; i i , I t o ir s g to h. n, Cleveland. Buffalo and Pitts- . A RUBILiati woman is heading an ex- pedition which has started to cross Arabia at its widest part and which will try to penetrate land never before explored. China has sent government agents abroad to study the manufacture of telegraph 'and telephone equipment with a view to making all such appa- Fetus at home. The Belgian chamber of deputies has passed a bill granting a pension of 800 francs a year for miners fifty - five years Of age who have worked forty years or more in -a mine. To promote agriculture in France the government stations a professor of ag- riculture in each _'department and awards prizes frequently to the most progressive farmers. • Mrs. Charles Coulter of Vancouver wore a pedometer for one month, at the end of which time she found that she had walked over 400 miles In tie- ing her household duties. Au institute for bibliographic re - Search, the first of its kind in America, Will soon be established in Chicago if he plans of the Bibliographical Socie- ty of America are carried out. Lemon growers of Sicily. who often suffer from an uncertain market, are rejoicing in the fact that, the lower 'Trades of lemons are coming more and More into demand for manufacturing purposes. Less than twenty years ago Uganda was one of the wildest districts in S outh Africa, and much of it even was unexplored. Today it has the begin- nlpg of several very important tropical industries. Official documents weighing twelve pounds six ounces were employed in the correspondence connected with the writing off of a debt of 5 cents from the accounts of the assize court at . Nlontbellard, France: In the province of Quebec the care of the insane is under somewhat peculiar conditions, being intrusted to cornOrate bodies, religious or otherWise, by the governmetit, which niakes a per capita grant for the public patients. TIP largest poultice known to medi- cal science was recently applied to a twenty ton baby .elephant belonging to a circus. It contained forty-five pounds of mixture and, although slow in ac - 'don, was perfectly successful. The mortality from operations for ap- pendicitis is only 1.2 per cent if the pa- tient is operated on during the first twenty-four hours. During the second period of that length it is 8.0 per cent. During the third it is 8.7 per cent. The Canadian Pacific Railroad com- pany is the largest landowner in the world. Despite the sale of millions of acres from the original grant of ap- proximately 20,700,000 acres, the rail- road still possesses more than 11,000.- 000 acres, worth at least $175.000,000. It lig stated that more then thirty egg \cfrelea\ have been established in the Cape province with the object of pro- moting an egg industry equal to sup- plying the South African , market and even to create an export trade. At present South Africa Imports eggs to the value of $35,000. TO ME VAST OR WEST Alive ' on the \IVIILWAUKEE\ The shortest line through a new couittry of fertile farm kinds and magnificent scenery. TWO FAST THROUGH TRAINSDAILY \The OLYMPIAN\ ----- \The COLUMBIAN\ The Finest Trains'Across the Continent Both trains carry specially constructed \ALL -S PEEL\ standard sleep- ing cars, commodious and comfortable tourist sleeping cars, dining , cars and coaches. A special fe , ature of all \Milwaukee\ sleeping cars is their \longer wider and higher\ berths. In addition \Ph Olympian\ carries a lounge -observation car With library, buffa, barber and bath. Both trains are electric lighted thaoughout. For further information rega‘rding fares, train _service, etc., please call on or address H. G. MERKEL, Ticket Agent Moore, Mont, CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY GEO. W. HIBBARD, General Persenstr Artist 163 C. M. Kelly ABSTRACTS OF TITLE Lewistown, Motif. Clreful work Reasonable charges. OPTIONAL PAYMENT FARM LOANS Our terms the best, our rates the lowest. You get your money the day you apply for It. It will pay you to see us before borrowing. Our office is opposite the Fergus Hotel on Third Avenue. Write or call upon us. Montana Loan and Investment Co PHONE 496. LEWISTOWN, MONTANA. .....,•ww...inheinnwannin1WWWWWWINWIL. he Harness Harness W e ill Reputation C. C. JEFFREY, 109 MAIN STREET L EW ISTOWN, MONT. 11:1 , 119 [ 11 Walking Tours GLACIER NATIONAL PARK $1 to $5 Per Day See Montana First. Montana boasts of one of America's re,atest scenic play- grounds. See it this summer. Season June 15 to Oct. 1. ,Low Round Trip Summer romist Fares East —Ask the Agent Get free booklets relative to Glacier National Park; and rates, etc., relative to low round trip summer tourist fares. 3. T. McGAUGHEY. A. G. F. & P. A. Helena. Montana \Other sights won't seem a marker one. you've been a Glacier Parker.\