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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 11 April 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1913-04-11/ed-1/seq-5/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
DILLON . FURNITtlRE CO., The Big Furniture House. Prices based on compe tition wltti the world. Stock complete Gener ous treatment. ‘ G T. PAUL, Prop DR. F. H. BIMROSE -DENTIST- 1, 2 and 6 Telephone Block DILLON MONTANA * Ladies’ a n d Gents* j Clothes Cleaned And Pressed REPAIRING DONE Ladies’ Suits Made and Fitted M R S S T A B L E R In Every Department of BANKING The FIRST NATIONAL BANK Is. prepared to serve you in a satisfactory manner. Cal! on or address us by letter B. F. WHITE, Pres’t. Pioneer Merchants Of THE BI6 HOLE BASIN 6 8 Our Spring Stock is arriving daily and it will pay you to inspect it per sonally and get the prices. Silks, Whipcords, Serges, Linens, Lawns and all kinds of Summer Dress Goods A fine line of Men's and Boys' Fan cy Negligee Shirts A new shipment of the cele brated Mayer's Shoes in the latest styles for Men, Women, Boys, Misses and Children 1 . Our Grocery Stock is Complete and it | | will pay you to come and get our prices | | — S T O R E S A T — || Wisdom - Dewey - Jackson !® : © S t 0 I S : 2 : S i S i C : 2 : S : 0 : S : S t C : U J 3 t t I i i : 1 m CATTLE ACCOUNTS from the BIG HOLE BASIN RECEIVED ON FAVORABLE TERMS THE DALY HANK & TRUST CO. OF ANACONDA. MONTANA, jffers every Tacillty of modem tanking for the care of its customers' business. It knows the special condition erist- ,ngin Big Hole Basin and the needs of tt people. It is prepared to serve them and so licits their business A. L. STONE, Cashier THEMINT J. C. HILLTProprietor J WINES LIQUORS CIGARS? GOLDEN LINK LODGE No. 27* I. 0. 0. F. Wisdom, Montana. Tvery-Ttnrrsd*r~nhfh*-~ B. A R isley N G O. J. W oodworth , See'v A. T. B arry , Treasure. ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ * * * * * * * * ♦ ♦ * * * * ♦ Under New* % [ M A N A G E M E N T 3 _ T he . Northern # j & C a f e ^ * D avis & N osjus , Peers. < i Short Orders The METLEN Hotel Dillon^aiiR^SS^Motitaiia Rooms from 50c. to $1.50 Best Meal in the state for 50c. Special Rates To Jurors T. J. MURRAY A? 5 PROP’R. THE Divfile & Wisdom -STAGE CO.- (Consolidated Line*) Ws earry tbe United States Mail and offer superior aecommodatioBs for passengers. Express handled to all points between Divide and Wisdom. Leave Wisdom 6;30 a, m. Arrives Divide 3:80 p. m. Leaves Divide 7:00 a. in. Arrive Wisdom 6:0o p. ra. H. F. BROWN M ll^dutieal TONG BliOCK WISDOM ... : MONTANA WISDOM STEAM LAUNDR! A. T. BARRY, Psor a Clothes Cleaned .. And Pressed If it isn't an EASTMAN it isn’t a kodak. Our stock of Eastman’s kodaks and kodak supplies IS COMPLETE With the coming of spring you will get the kodak fe ver. Lei us prescribe for vou. r Boots When you need Huhber Boots there is just one place to buy them and that is the * * 4 * 4 * 4 * 4* 4 * $ 4* * 4* 4* 4 * * 4* 4 4 * * 4 44* 4* 4* 4 * 4* Chris Christensen CARPENTER and Contractor Estimates Made •::* Job Work To Order Wisdom Montana 3 -SS The COTTAGE Hotel OLD LOSSL HOTEL Roy Cowan, Proprietor. Transcient Rates $2.50 per day Comfortable Beds and Cozy Rooms. WISDOM Home Gxjking Your Patronage Solicited MONTANA Ranclies For Sale Or Rent THE STORE OF QUALITY Wisdom Mercantile Co. > 444444444444 $$&$#,$ 4444$$4 B U I L D E R A 1 cm TNat CnmUw Mw JNaXhg- wttM a u hmaml . Some of the curioua treed that grow oa tbe pumpa* of .Argentina ;i,rt interestingly described by M* Ge’v.rges Clcnu-uce,iu iU fit “Soutil America Todny.\' One at leuat— tbe ombu—is to queer u to U al most uncanny. “Tbe on:bu m tbe marvel of tbe pampas, the only tree which tbe lo cust refuses to touch. For ibis rea son it has been, allowed to grow j freely, although not even man ba* found a way to utilize what tbe j voracious insect* decline. For tbe | ombu pride* itself on Icing good for ! nothing. It due* nut even lend it self to making good firewood, it is only to look at. But that is sulli- ctent. Imagine an object resembling the backs of antediluvian monsters, mastodons or elephants, lying in the shade of a great mass of sheltering foliage. Heavy folds in tbe gray rind denote a growing limb, a round ed shoulder, a gigantic head half concealed These are the tremen dous roots of the ombu. whose de light is to issue forth from the soil in the form of astonishing objects. “Then you turn your atlentioa to the trunk and tind it hollow, with a crumbling hark. The lingers smk into the tree, meeting only the re sistance that would be offered by a ! thiu sheet of paper. And now line i powdery seale* of a substance thut ! should be wood, but, tu fact, is in- 1 descnbuble, fall into your hands. They crumble away into an impalp able dust, which is carried away by the breeze before you have time to eiuminc it Now you have the se cret of the otnbu. 'The wood evapo rates m the open air At the same time there spring from its strung* roots young shoots of the parent tree. Since it is impossible to bum the nonexistent you cannot obvious ly have recourse to the ombu to cook your luncheon. Here is an ex- ample in t tic vegetable world of a paradox, a tree winch is utterly uaelesa. “The pnlo borrucho, on the other hand, is extremely useful, although not without u touch of capricious ness. Its strange trunk, strangled in a collar of roots and bulging in tbe middle part, bristles with in numerable points, short and sharp, which prevent uil undue familiarity. “The trunk, if tupped with a cane, returns a hollow sound. The tres is, in fact, empty, needing only to be cut into lengths to give man alt he needs for a trough. The Jndiua squaw uses it to wush her linen, and the wood, exposed to the doubla action of air and water, become* as hard a* cement The unripe fruit, the size of a good apple, furniahea a white cream, which suppliea the natives with a savory breakfast Later, when the fruit conies to ma turity, it bursts under the sun’e rays into h large tuft of silkv cot ton. The exceedingly line thread produced by thia tree is too short to bo spun, but the Indians and many of the Europeans turn it t» account in many ways.” w*«l.y Didn't Llk* Fwneh. John Wesley had a very poor opinion of the French language, lie once wrote: “1 was more than ever convinced that the French ia the poorest, meanest language in Europe, that jy it no more compar able to the German or Spanish than a bagpipe is to an organ and that, with regard to poetry in particular, considering the incorrigible bd - couthness of their measures and their always writing in rime (to say nothing of their vile double rimes— nay, arid frequent false rimes) it is as impossible to write a fine poem in French as to make fine music upon a jewsharp.” Maud* Wa» Willing. A strict housewife said to a new maid, “l forgot to tell you, Maude, tEat if vbti LrcuT afijTtilig ITt fnrve- to take it out of your wages.” Bat Maude, whom two days had heartilv sickened of her berth, replied, with a merry laugh: “Do it. ma’am; do it. I’ve just broke the hundred dollar vase ia tbe parlor, and if you can take that out of $4— for I’m leavin’ at the end of the week—why, yoa’11 be mighty clev er \—Argonaut. M* C*H«d th* Turn. *1 came.” announced tbe inii- ttate f-Tcend of the family, “ta make my dinner call.” “Bat,” they protested, haven’t been here to dinner i “I knew that,\ he replied,1 thought if I called tb i t zsightbe remedied.” i m