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About The Basin Progress and Mining Review (Basin, Mont.) 1904-1909 | View This Issue
The Basin Progress and Mining Review (Basin, Mont.), 13 Aug. 1904, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036042/1904-08-13/ed-1/seq-8/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
ms er = oe eee week from a month’s™ GoTo Camps. That’s all. A smoking cigar, the Modern Flora. E. Ring came over from Butte ee? Dennis Driscoll was in « Boulder eur on business. Hon. M. L. Hewett made a trip to Helena yesterday. Fresh supply of candies, cigars and tobacco at the » drug ste store. Mrs. N. Godell spent spent a day at the ' Boulder Springs this week. Malcomb Gillis, of Butte, was a visitor to this city Sunday.: * You can buy first class: shoes at . Wallin’s shoe shop, Basin. Modern Flora. - For lunch ch GoTo Camp's | ee Old 60, 18 year-old, at Camp's. 8. A chanée to'win $10,000 for nothing -For your Sunday dinner delicacies ‘see Rule & Weitz. Mrs. Lizzie Hermann, of Butte, vis ited friends in this city Sunday. Seeour flies, fishing poles, reels;>~~ ; ete., at ‘the drug store. ~All, kinds of legal blanks at the Progress office, 50c widozen.. Mrs. L. D. Kent is visitingin Hel- ena with her sister, Mrs. James Glass. Miners supplies of all kinds at the Basin Hardware and Mercantile com- pany. ‘ Mrs. M. Sutherland returned this ‘week from a visit with friends in}, Butte. Jas. Hennessy brandy, 1880. Fif- teen cents a pony, twenty-five cents a drink. Camps. Mrs. L. Q. Skelton, of Boulder, vis- ited for a day this week with the family of D. C. Skelton. * Miss Alice Pope of Helena, 1s vie iting this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Hewitt. ~ Miss Nora Carley returned this visit with her grandparents in Kansas. ~__._Miss__Edna—Taylor,—of Boulder, spent a few days this week in Basin with her sister, Mrs. Jerry Elhs. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Burdick and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Riedel drove up| from Boulder Tuesday evening. Mr. Hume, foreman ot the Specu- lator mine at Butte, wasin this city last week on some mining basiness. Dr. H. C. Brock, dentist, will visit Basin every Tuesday and Wednes- day and be located over Driscoll’s store, Quite a number of people visited the Bullion smelter Sunday, and it was impossible to get a rig of any description at noon... —- J. P. Cutting, of Butte, spent Sun- day with his wife and daughter, who have been visiting at thefiomo of Mr. - and, Mrs. C, C. Darrow. Mrs. Wombacher, sister of our gen- ial postmaster, Elmer Pond, and Miss Maud Stewart, of Melrose, were in the city for a few days this week. Pick out your wall paper and take it with you, as we have it in stock and do not have to wait on delayed freight and express. Riedel & Bur- dick, Mr. and Mrs. C, ©. Darrow, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Cutting..Misses Olive Hall and Helen Cutting were a party that spent gay! up the , Little Boulde der. Henry Lyneh, candic candidate for secre- tary of state on the Socalist ticket, was in ene this week in the interest hae coloarse the lhsae - Mies Dora Arms went into Butte Mrs. H.Andetson returned yester- day from a visit to Butte. 4 Mr. George B. Drakenfeld is con- fined to his home with rheumatism. K. B. pure rye whiskey,1881. Fif- teen cents a pony, twenty-five cents a drink. Camp's Mrs. D. B.° Baker and her sister Miss Myrtle Goff left here Thursday morning for a visit to Seattle. Mr. Kabler, representing the hard- ware department of the Anaconda Copper company, is in the city today. The young son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Perkins is quite ill and has been brought to the city for treat- ment. Mrs. R. M. Cralle and Miss Eliza- ~~ | beth drove up from Boulder today to vistt with the honorable head of the family. George Lapp, former chief of the Butte fire department but now with the Anaconda Copper company, of _ | Butte, in the same capacity, was in Basin over Sunday. Mason fruit jars in ‘pints, quarts and jelly glasses in one-third and oue-half pints at the Basin Hard- ware and Mercantile company. J. E. Pauley, of Butte, formerly with the Montana Mineral Land De- ‘velop’ mine, is “assisting Chief Engineer Cralle, of the Montana Northern rail- way. The Montana conference of the Methodist Episcopal church will con- vene in Grace M. E. church in South Butte, August 24 to 29, 1904, Bishop Joseph P. Berry, D. D., L. L. D., presiding. ‘The forest fires that have been burning north of town in the un- tains have been put out. Tuesday and Wednesday a number of men were sent out and they succeeded ‘in stopping the fires by back firing. We have been informed by the grand secretary of the Sons of Her- man, Mr F; W. Kuphal, that 1t will be impossible to hold their picnic in Basin as was intended, the expense being to great for them to undertake it without any assistance. Methodist services at the Pres- byterian church Sunday at 8 o'clock. Rev. W. C. Shippen will preach his closing sermon for the conference year on the “Gospel Christian Life.” vices. Sunday school meets at 2:30, atten Tests in the subway in New York show that at one point—Astor place— there is only a four-inch space between the car ventilators and the roofs as the heights in the clear at this place is exactly 13 feet, the pess- imiste are making all manner of pre- dictions regarding the ultimate oper- ations of the trains. Dr. A. W. Johnson, the Butte den- tist who was arrested as a. principal in a criminal case in Salt Lake and has been held to answer to the district court, has secured bonds and was imm@diately married to Miss Frank V. Sturgis, formerly ot Helena, but now living with her parents ia Salt Lake. The couple are on their way to Montana. ‘ALMOST A FATALITY. Great Northern Pi Passenger Train ARNE 0 High Teete, ’ the Great Northern, No 153, due~ in and two quarts, jar rubbers and caps | t company at the Eva May]. ‘All are cordially invited to these ser- Ca The west tend pe passenger train on|: Labor Day a Banter Dey in Resi Helena Unions to be with Us— ~ Visitors from Marysville — Labor Day, Monday, September 5, will be a day that will be remembered in Basin as one of the greatest in it’s history. The local unions have got together and will all help to make this a great celebration of their holi- day. A committee was appointed to meet with the Helena unions and ex- tend an invitation to them to celebrate with us. The unions in that city have accepted the invitation and will be over in a body. The Capitol band, of Helena has been engaged for the occasion and a program of sports ar- ranged. There will be two speakers, one en- gaged by the local unions and the other to be brought over by the Hel- ena boys. Basin has engaged the of Denver, Col., who has been mak- ing speeches all over Montana during the past month. A rate of one fare for the round trip has been obtained from_the—railroads from Helena. Following is the program of sports as arranged by the committee: Ball game. 100 yard dash, free for all. 50 yard dash for boys not over 15 years of age. Prize for best lady and gentleman waltzer. -Wood sawing contest for ladies:~- Fat man’s race, 50 yards. ~_ Voting contest, for most pépular young lady on grounds. Rock drilling contest- double. High and broad tetaninel Democratic State Convention. tng ot Aug. 1, 1904. single and Ata meeting\ of the democratic. state central committee, held ir the city of Great Falls on the 17th day of May, 1904, it was ordered that a dem- ocratic state convention be called to meet in the city of Helena, at 2 p. m. on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 1904, for the purpose of nominating three presi- dential electors, a candidate for ‘con- gress, governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, attorney general, superia- tendent of public instruction, chief justice of the supreme court, and clerk of the supreme court, and for the transaction or such other business as may properly come before a democra- tic state convention. Thé representation in the conven- tion will be apportioned among the several counties as follows, the basis being one delegate for each 50 votes or major fraction thereof cast for the democratic candidate for con- gress in the electiou of 1902 and five delegates at largé from éach county. Beayerhead 19 Broadwater 12 rhon is 15 Cascade 36 Choutean . 15 Custer il Dawson .. Selena ih 8 Deer Lodge ; ‘ 22 F 8 23 Flathead 24 Gallatin . 25 Granite . 13 Jefferson . 15 Lewis and Clarke 30 eagher ovtue tt . Missoula . ; 22 Park eileen : ‘ 15 Powell ms “ . ‘ 14 Ravalli ‘ Lina 18 Rosebad .. ... week ta 10 Silver Bow .. 91 Sweet Grass . 2 Valley ...... il Yellowstone ia 16 oe atin. cleo: pio The state central | committee has adopted the following standing rales for the government of the convention: First—Delegate dnd alternate, del- of the county they represent. é Seccnd—In absence of a delegate his alternative shall cast his vote. - Third—Io the absence of a dele- gate and his alternative, a. majority ofthe delegates of that ecunty be entitled to cast the vote ‘of the absentee. Fourth—In cose any gousty shall be without any. either ~ ner or services of Mrs. Ida Crouch-Hazlett, |. MEMBERSHIP OF CONVENTION, = egates shall be democratic residents The following table shows what daily saving amounts to: 5c per day for 5 years...:..»...... is per day for 5 years. ‘Sc per day for 5 years. oe per day for 5 years. 100c- per cay for 5 years..... D. E. RAINVILLE, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Company Physician. BASIN, MONTANA. Basin Camp No. 10972 MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA meets the first and third Thursday night of each month at A.O.U. W “Thatl. “Sojourning members are cordial- ly inv ited to attend. J. HU. Basxrer, V. C. JounWatun, Clerk. Fraternal Brotherhood. _ Basin Lodge No. 275 meets every first and third Monday of each month in A. O. U. W. Hall at 8 o’clock. So-1@ journing miesbors are invited to at- tend. Foster H. Torrence, Pres. Miss Dora Arms, Sec. Avsert S. Kitsvurn, Treas. FITZPATRICK & LEWIS Gissayers and Chemists Careful attention given to Sauee 2 Ship ments and fettlements. we ing Street.. Opposite Thoretes BUTTE, MONTANA P. 0. Box No. 114 CAMPS: A Barrel of OLD 60 18-Year-Old CAMPS as Tre Basin Saoon, John Sackerson,,Prop. PBALER w. FINE WINES, LIQUORS & UNION MADE CIGARS, Main Street, Basin, Mont. NEW HUOT : Mary Wormsley, Prop rietress $2.00 a Day Rates, A Strfttly First Class Hotel. Basin, Montana IGE CREAM and Glasses Fitted! é piipinies Prescriptions Filled { RIEDEL &BURDIGK’ st | | nat § Store — dein me 2 &: uors and Cigars _ J. C. Whiteley, Is Open Day and Night. enon soxesexensorosenones I cl P. R. LYDON, Bade - Everything -Strictly. First Glass s- RATES: ‘81. 00 to $2.00. A. DAY BASIN, MONTANA. FINEST WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS Only Pool Table in the City oe Zone HonenononononeHone aon the BUTTE SALOON , * BLAGKSHITH™: A COMPLETE LINE OF . TOBACCOS A Complete Line of Fine. Wines, Lig- c Proprietor BASIN, Hrs a |THE PROGRESS CFDS EVE Frank Toohill, tended to, ining Work a’ Spec- latty. - Everything Done First Class, FOR FINE JOB . PRINTING Basin Hardware and Mercantile Co. ' Heavy and Shelf Hardware - Norway and Common Bar fron Double and Triple Coated Graniteware Crockery, Glassware, Nickel and Silver Plated Ware, ote:, ett, CUTLERY, GUNS, and AMMUNITION ‘and | 1- CONFECTIONERY } | suneOF ALL peal loe Cream for Family Use by — the Pint, Quart oF ¢ MRS, G. T. C nee f Miners Supplies _ Hercules and. Gelatine Powder, Ts and 60 per cent. - ' Fuse and Caps, Shovels and Picks, Drill and Pigk ‘ieee