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About Fergus County Argus (Lewistown, Mont.) 1886-1946 | View This Issue
Fergus County Argus (Lewistown, Mont.), 20 Sept. 1907, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036228/1907-09-20/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
2 FERGUS COUNTY ARGUS, SEPTEMBER 20, 1907. CEMENT WALKS Ha'be them laid of best materials prop- erty mixed Laid to last Don't ihrow away money on cheap work; it's the cost- liest kind in the end OUR WORK GUARANTEED.. GREEN 0 SMITH LEWISTOWN I. A. CONN S. E. MOORE COOMBS & MOORE GENERAL AND LIVESTOCK AUCTIONEERS MOORE, - MONTANA Terms the most reasouable and satis- faction guaranteed. Write or wire us before making awl dates. • Typewriters are divided Into two classes— The ONE made seemingly modern by patched-on im- provements—the OTHER L.C.Smith St Bros. Typewriter (Writing Entirely in Sight) with modernness inbuilt. cEvery device for convenience, time -sav- ing and labor saving is inbuilt in the L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPE - warms. q Every known element of durability and dependability is there—BUILT IN. q This insures the most and best work both from machine and operator. 'That's office economy. SEND FOR ILLU TTTTTT D CATALOGUE L. C. Smith en Bros. Typewriter Co. 1647 Ch•mpa St DENVER - COLO. 7 )SU1TS( AND OVERCOATS MADE TO MEASURE French -Back Overcoats A %en\ sad Attractive I...vanes is Overcoat. This Garment requires the most expert tailoring, such RA you al. ways riel in THE Disbecker-Block 1116 -1. -Order This shape 1188 COME to slay, and we Can show you the Jodie they should he merle from. Mentor Knight, The Reliable Tailor i Lewistown, Montana. Opposite Postoffice, 4t• / - wir Protect Your Ideal PATENTS 6UARANTEU Handsome Guido look rowel I as time aad mosey. Patent eat. perL R. Z. VROORAPC Sew It Was10•0104 D. 0. ROBBERS MAKE A GREAT HAUt wibtied Court With o xile r rn SAID TO HAV IN 0 E SECURED $40,000 NE PACK- AGE. Great Falls, thugs who held Red at Rexford Sept. 19.—Did the up the Oriental LIM- last week get a large sum of money, generally supposed to have been $40,000, consigned to Spo- kane from a banking institution in Chicago? It has been persistently reported that such was the case and that the securing of the package was the mo- tive for the robbery. The officials of the Spokane bughness house in question, however. claim that they are not in a position to either deny or confirm such rumor. It is stated now that the grain crop has commenced to move, shipments of gold and currency are being re- ceived almost daily front Chicago and other eastern points by business in- stitutions of Spokane. All money shipments are consigned under insur- ance, they state, and in case of rob- bery the loss Would be borne by the insurance company. Had a Tip. That the robbers were after some! particular package of money, the for- warding of which had evidently been tiped off to them • from a confederate In Chicago, was proved by their ac- tions. Fireman Pearson. who was utilized by them as an involuntary assistant in the pilfering of the mail and express car, was told, it is re- ported, that there was no intention to rob the passengers and that as long as the latter attended to their own busi- ness they would not be molested, says the Spokane Chronicle. They are also reported to have let drop to the fireman several remarks indicating that they were after a par- ticular package known to contain a large sum of money, and that in case it was secured they would leave quick- ly. The fact that they blew open the press safe, as well as cutting open the , registered mall indicated that their knowledge of the particular way in which the money was being forwarded was not accurate. The general belief is that they se- cured a package containing a large sum of money, but whether it was con- signed to Spokane or to some financial institution west of the point where , the robbery took place is not known. Postoffica inspectors will not be able until after a lapse of a long time to determine the amount of money and mail. It will be necessary 10 cheek articles Stolen from the registered ' up on every article in the registered mail sacks. To do this an inven- tory will have to be made of all reg- istered mail in the pouches for points wet of Rexford, a difficult and tedious task. No reports have been received as , et as to the progress being made in pursuit of the perptrators of the :crime. Several posses are known to be searching for them and Draper's bloodhounds are on the scene. The recent rains would have a tendency to obliterate the trail to a great ex- tent and make the task of the dogs difficult if not impossible. A Standing Reward. The United' States government has a standing reward of $1,000 for the arrest and conviction of any person 4 -ebbing the mails. The following quo- fiffolf — Trom the etatuteershows what - Uncle Sam will do with the thugs in Case of their capture: \Any person who shall rob any car- rier, agent or other person entrusted with the mail, or such mall, -or any part thereof. Rh 1 I be punishable by imprisonment at hard labor for not less than five years, and not more Man 10 years. and if convicted a sec- ond time for a like offense, or if, in - effecting such robbery the first time. the robber shall wound the person having custody of the mail, or put his life in jeopardy by the use of dan- gerous weapons, such offender shall be punishable for the term of his nat- ural life.\ The robbers who pulled off the stunt at Rexford come under the latter part of this statute. They tired several shots and held up Railway Clerk Phil Long at the point of revolvers and would, therefore, in all probabil- ity, be adjudged to have placed his life in jeopardy. Health In the Canal Zone. The high win,— _aid make it • mighty - temptation to our young arti- sans to join the force of skilled work- men needed to construct the Panama Canal. Many are restrained however by the fear of fevers and malaria. It 16 the knowing ones—those who have t ithed Electric Bitters, who go there tvithout this fear, well knowing they are safe from malarious influence with Elei.tric Bitters on hand. Cures Blood \poison too, biliousness, weakness and all stomach, liver and kidney troubles. 1 Guaranteed by C. H. Williams, Drug- gist. 50c. But. ABOUT SOUTH AMERICA he sought legal advice and ascertained , that such a deed would be binding and would prove a safeguard against efts - dent ruct e -Colonel Jae ktion went to the courthouse and had the , deed recorded in the clerk's office. 'It reads: el, W. H. Jackson, of the county of Clarke, of the first part, and the Oak Tree (giving location) of the second part, witnesseth: \That the said W. H. Jackson, for and in consideration of the great af- fection which lie bears said tree, and his great desire that said tree be pro- tected for all time, has conveyed, and by these presents does hereby convey unto the said Oak Tree entire posses- sion of itself, and all land within eigflt feet of it on all sides.\ Athens was then a straggling vil- lage, and the oak tree was nearly two miles from the buildings of the state university, the only buildings of much consequence. Streets had not been laid out to any extent, and when the work of street making for the new educational center began the surveyor ran his lines so as to plat* the tree In the center of Dearin'g street. The land around this tree, outside of the right feet to which it holds title, was sold off to different parties, but tne wishes of Colonel Jackson, as expres- sed in his deed, were scrupulously re- spected. Unmolested in the possession of its landed interests, the old tree has stod for more than a century, and with the best possible care taken of it by the city guardians and citizens, It give promise of rounding out many yeare yee—Athens. Ga., cor. New York Tri- bune. The Southern Republics Make Them- selves Felt at The Hague Conference. The Hague conference has given the world a realizing sense of the im- portance of the Latin-American re - puttees. These twenty nations, as numerous as all the independent coun- tries of Europe, have entered dra- matically upon tbe stage of wore. politics, Lumped together in common opinion as negligible factors in affairs they hove shown that among them are powers to be reckoned with. This tact became strikingly manifest when the United States proposed a plan for the organization of an international high court Jr justice, under which t he tribunal would have been controlled by the eight so-called \Great Powers\ of the world. The scheme to which Germany and Great Britain agreed in advance, provided for a court of sev- enteen members, upon which the powers were to be represented in proportion to their assumed impor- tance. This importance was tneas- ured partly by population and partly by tonnage of merchant shipping. This proposition, which met with general approval in Europe, stirred up instant resentment in South Amer- ica, especially in Brazil, which was to be rated as a third-class power. The government of that republic is- sued an official protest, announcing that Brazil objected to the classifi- cation of the sovereign states repre- sented In the conference into states of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth classes. She demanded the con- tinued recognition of the principle of the equality of sovereign states in their internatioual relations, as se. riveted by the earferenes of 111111. Rome of the Europeen delete:AN His Revenge. In the small compartment for smok- ers at the rear end of a train ont of Norfolk a few weeks ago sat three commercial travelers, and an old farmer whose dilapidated exterior made very plausible the story he told the conductor. \I'm only a poor man,\ he said, with tears in his eyes. \I haven't a 'coot in the world. But my daughter is dying—here he almost broke down —\and I want to see her. Please j don't put me off. It's only 60 miles.\ \Nothing doing,\ said the conduct - I or, though with a touch of pity. \Or- ders are orders. You'll have to get off at the first station.\ \It's all right, conductor.\ said one , of the drummers. \I'll pay for him. 1 How mach?\ And he drew a roll of bil ls. \Not on your life!\ cried the farm- er; \thank you just the same though.\ And drawing out his own rather sub- stantial roll, he paid his fare. The conductor grinned, and passed on. \Gentlemen I owe you an explana- tion,' said the farmer to his aston- ished companions. 'Five years ago this darn railroad ran over one of my cows—ran over her In broad aylight, before witnesses. I sued the company for $40, but their cussed lawyers beat me out of it. Since then I've been tryin' to get my $40 every Way I could, and by hook or crook fve beat 'ern out of $37 of it It was the other three I was tryin' for just now.\— Harper's Weekly. Healthy kidneyi filter the impuri- Hee from the blood, and unless they do this good health is Impossible. Foley's Kidney Cure makes mound kndneys and will positively cure all forms of kidney and bladder disease. It streugtheuri the whole system. C. H. 1/0. had criticized Braall's \unreasonable attitude,\ because Norway, with over a million tons of shipping, was satls- ntatire of the with only two hnellitig thousand, wanted more. But the Brazilians retorted that their country had twenty-five million In- habitants, and Norway only two Mil- lions and a quarter. This statement was a surprise even to those who had kept up on paper with South Ameri- can progress, because the census of 1900 gave Brazil only 17,371,069 inhab- itants, and it was not realized that the population had increased by nearly 50 per cent in seven years. But the Brazilians insist that it has, and that their country is more populous than Spain or Turkey, not to speak of the NVh.erlands, all of which are rated by the Anglo-German-American plan as second-class powers. As to Nor- way, which European complacency would put on a level with Brazil, there are eight Latin-American republics that surpass her in population and four in commerce, Brazil, Mexico, Ar- gentina and Chile deserve to rank in every way with European powers of corresponding population—Collier's Weekly. Of interest to many. Foley's Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney or bladder trouble that is not beyond the reach of medi- cine. No medicine can do more. C. H. Williams. Fo. THIS TREE OWNS ITSELF. Georgia Oak Cannot Be Felled Against Its Will. The only tree in the world posses- sing a deed to itself is one of the in- teresting and historic relics of this city. This magnificent oak stands in Cobham, the fashionable residence district of Athens. Ga., and it is rank- ed above the common trees of the world. It stands straighter and holes its head more proudly than the trees around it, seeming to realize it is a property holder and cannot be touched against its will, that is, if the condi- tions of the deed are carried out, The tree is tall and symmetrical, its great limbs are shaped as if by the hands of an artist, aid under its shade several generations' have sheltered themselves from the heat or disported playfully in frolic and amusemeng, while lovers have found It an inviting spot to enjoy their moonlight strolls. Recently George Foster Peabody, a New York philanthropist, erected a eubatantial iron tepee around the sturdy old oak. He was familiar with its history, and said he hoped the pro- visions of the deed would never be vio- lated. The records at the county court- house show that in the early part of the eighteenth century Col. W. H. Jackson, a son of Gov. James Jackson, and father of Chief Justice James Jackson of the Georgia supreme court, owned the land upon which this tree stood. From his early childhood, Colonel Jackson had watched the tree grow, and he grew to love it as much as he would a human being. Its lux- guriant foliage had often protected THE fift,T MADE. tatcydR6 We carry a full line of the famous °OLD SEAL RUBBERS and OVERSHOES Fad Shoe & Clothing Co. Telephone in. Lewistown, Mont COMMISSIONERS' PROCEEDINGS Minutes of the reeuiar September session of the board of commission- ers of Fergus county. Montana, held as per statute provided, on the first day of September, 1903. Board called to order at 9 o'clock a. m., September 2nd, 1907. Present: Julius Petersen, Chair- man; J. M. ParrenrP•ttommissioner; C. L. Meyersick, clerk. Board adjourned until 9 o'clock a. m., September 3, 1907. Board met as per adjournment. Present: Julius Petersen, Chair- man; W. T. Neill, J M. Parrent, com- missioners; C. L. Meyersick, clerk. Ordered by the board that the county attorney notify Harry Hall to open the gates On the old road run- ning down Marcotte creek:. also order the road supervisor of road district No. 35 to keep said road open. Bulls were allowed as follows: R. M. Dryden, road work, $303.50. George A. Bowman, blacksmith work, $31.00. Robert Dutcher, road work, $49.00. G. McHugh, damages on road $1.50. W. F. Hannah, road work, $180. J. Frank Sage, same, $37.50. Dave Foreman, same $399.68. R. M. Dryden, same, $53.00. August F. Mier, same, $22.00. J. M. Williams. Constable fees, $6.10. Joseph Ceearetti, interpreter, $1.50. Roy E. Ayers, cash advanced, $416.- 25. Handel Brothers, rebate of taxes, $5.74. Charles Roberts, rebate of taxes, $1.65 * hint from the sun and rain, and from James Shadwell was allowed an its branches he had taken eggs from abatement of $$.07 on taxes for the the nests of the feathered songsters. year of 1903, incheling penalty and In manhood Colonel Jackson saw his publication. Bills were allowcd as follows: Sam McCollum* bridge timbers, favorite tree standing In its magnifi- cent proportions, and he was pained to think that after kis death It might fail into the hands of those who reight s de- $5 * °° ' L. W. Eldridge bridge planks, stroy it. Believing that the only way to save the tree from the axe of the \`\\°.' A. C. Jones, sane, $42.00. woodsman was to deed it to himself, M. J. Gosch, seine, $33.50. M. J. Gosch. sane, $98.60. M J. Gooch, same, $39.05. M. J. Gosch, same, $43.23. ALT:Dosch, same; $32.40. G. W. Noble, same, $2.00.1 F. B. Scovel, freight and on road culverts, $49.08. Edward Brassey, office rent, $5.00. Western Union Telegraph Co., tel- egrams, $29.81. Lewistown Telephone Co., toll and rent on phones. $30.35. W. H. Stults, work on Stanford jail, $46.40. McWhite, care of smallpox patients, $84.00. Belcher Bros., supplies in smallpdx cases. $162.55. John Bayer, hauling lumber for Stanford jail, $8,00. Amos Ehreneick, work on Stanford jail. $3.00. Sharp Bros., coal, $39.80. Stough & Mitchell, supplies for jail at Stanford, $3.00. Montana Lumber company, lumber for Stanford jail, $174.10. Lewistown Telephone Co., service, $55,611. Cheries J. Marshall, legal service, $50.00, Lewistown Telephone Co., toll, $7.50. Lewistown Telephone Co., tele- phone rental, $87.50. Stapleton & Ph1llips, plumbing in court house, $3.00... E. P. Chandler; cash advanced, $182.50. J. C. Huntoon, ergement in Hodges Case, $38.68. L. P. Slater, cir hire, $4.00. drayage C. E. Williams, services as eontable, $1.20. chandise, $19.7e. Oreat lialls-Lewistown Stage Line, fore for sick men. $10.00. I. E. Wilbur, advanced freight on two road machines, $115.00. Wilson & Lewellin, drugs, $6.35. Burroughs Adding machine, ma- chine paper, $1.50. T. J. Waddell, jail bars and staples, $5.00. Midland Cheinlcal Coe Anit(eer- mine, $12.50. John H. Charters, appraiser court house property, $16.00. E. P. Chandler, cash advanced, $14.00. Packard & Tisdale, livery, $15.00. R. E. Potter„ special deputy, $5.00. W. A. Lopg, insanity examination, $5.00. Kendall Light & Power Co., light- ing jail, $4.50. E. V. Bean, work on poor farm ditch. $16.50. T. H. Pheasants, insanity examina- tion, $6.00. E. W. Norton, digging grave, $10. John J. Stapleton, hauling coyote scalps and burning same, $1.00. Blackford & Blackford, attorneys, legal service in George S. Wells vs. Beard of Commissioners, $250.00. Dr. D. F. Clancy, insanity exami- nation, $5.00. John B. Bitch, cash advanced, $9.- 30. John S. Marshall, cash advanced, $2.05. N. J. Littlejohn, appraiser court house property, $16.00. L. W. Eldridge, apprasing lots in court house block, $16.00. T. J. Brice, insanity examination, $6.00. Stough & Mitchell, supplies, WO& Glass and Prudhomme Co., supplies, 80 cents. James M. Croft, services deputy treasurer, $154.16. W. J. Lakey, quarantine, $10.00. Power Mercantile Co., merchan- dise, $40.05. Phillips Drug Co., books, $2.50 . John Finnegan, road work, $60.94. John Finnegan, road work, $80.49. J. D. Clark, viewing road, $10.50. T. J. Waddell, blacksmith work, $7.00. Montana Lumber company, lumber, $412.65. 1. Wilbur, drayage, $4.00. Judith Hardware Co., supplies for road and jail, $43.00. Montana Hardware Co., merchan- dise, $108,85. J. Wt Leslie, road work, $72.00. E. P. Chandler, cash advanced, $2.00. J. E. Stewart, road work, $5.00. J. W. Leslie, road work, Wm,. Stough & Mitchell, supplies for road district No. 34, $7.40. Stough & Mitchell, supplies for road district No. 34, $7.40. F. B. Connelly, road grader, $227.00. John Kelley, road work, $31.25. E. L. Jackson, bridge planks, $12.17. Box Langevin, blacksmith work, $20.00. Homer Knerr, road work, $16.00. Sam McCollum, same, $86.00. R. W. Noble, bridge planks, $16.00 Ralph Pratt, road work, $16.00. H. C. Burnett, road work, $268.00. W. J. Adams, same, $254.00. L. L. Carpenter. same, $28.00. Karl C. Mier, same, $82.00. A. T. Dennis, same, $22.00. D. constable, $4.00. Georfgl W. Anderson, ?Libor and material, $12.25. L. P. Slater, cash advanced. $62,60. F. W. Mitchell (rent for building for J. P. Court, Stanford) $15.00 . Charles Woodworth, special deputy, $12.00. J. W. Newton, rebate of taxes, $22.59. - Mar King Joe, board of prisoners at Stanford, $8.40. W. E. Coppidge, special deputy, $3.00. C. M. Kelly, repairing typewriter, $12.00. F. F. Attie, autopsy, $3.00. S. 8, Hobson, fencing and material, $270.63. C. E. Williams,, constable fees, $1.50. C. E. Williams, constable fees, $1.30. C. E. Williams, constable fees, $1.80. Lewistown -Billings Mutual Tele- phone Co., toll and rental of phones, $160.72. H. B. Gibson, testimony, etc. $5.67. H. B. Gibson, mileage, $44.20. R. L. Henderson, typewriting, $4.00. Lewistown Telephone Co., toll, $1.90. John H. Weingart, services as con- stable, $4.00. Pat Flanigan, special deputy. $13.50. D. M. Sherman, abatement of taxes, $30.45. Board adjourned until 9 o'clock a. h., September 4. 1907. Board met as per adjournment. All members arid clerk present. Bills were allowed as follows: W. D. Murphy, road work, $65.00. Al Nettleton, same, $75.00. Christopher Mier, same, $16.00. H. C. McEvony, same, $72.00. Victor Landoc, same, $94.50. J. E. Boone. same, $30.00. A. N. Johnson. same, $209.00. J. E. Spragg. same, $103.00. Andrew Knox, same, $8.00. John Marshall, same, $40.50. 1111 .'Alfred Nettleton, same, $27/0. Thomas Geer, lumber, $11_25. Thomas Geer, lumber, $72.50. Richard O'Brien, road work, $52.50. E. W. Norton, work on flume near poor farm, $18.00. William Oliver, part payment on court house, $7.00. Lee Hilliard, road work, $361.40. Albert Wledeman, road work, $71.00. Albert Wiedeman, road work, $17.40. W. L. Smith, road work. $186.50. George Dew), road work, $16.25. W. Hanna ,road work, $16.25. W. L. Smith, bridge work, $21.60. Charles Wledeman, road work, ..16.00. 0. F. Wasmansdorff, salary as coun. ty surveyor. $360.50. Edward Brassey, rent for office, $5.00. Ordinary clothes are easily fousrL Lt it is more cliffienit to chseover meets that will satisfy young Men who Imow a swagger Snit or Oven:rest wiles they see it. Make it a point to sec Youisi Men'. 'Viking Systen \. Cletisisig manufaetured by Becker. Mayer, es, Co.. ar;ctrib. The \Viking erefitewif label is In tame, the mark of escseikee..0or Cuarenteaw For Sale in Lewistown by HART & Co. cut down °snide Lewis, as they were wollege and le lettatied milting out sormsf tine nury s s i g. Betatebusy . ../ di cut trees • , -,1They bio f of core paid no furthe on to ttilitin than to break blossoms by the armful when we wanted floral dec- orations. The cherry trees were, much to the ownere agtonishment, loaded down • very large — perfeet fruit. ' He' could not understand it; such 0. thing had not happened in years. Early in the autumn while waiting for a swarm of bees to settle I ob- served a nunrber of line tipples upon one of the conderfillted trees. When the landlord's attention was called to them he was completely mystified and called in his neighbor* to Dee the won - der. Later we gathered from tltly tree nearly a barrel of the !blest fall pippins ever seen in that vicinity. No argument could convince the man that \them pesky bees\ had any- thing to do with the yield of fruit on the place. He insisted that some sort of fertilizer must have been used. Since that time I have demonstrat- ed by scores of experiments that trees which had for many seasons past borne little good fruit, or possibly none at all, have been brought up to a high standard of productiveness by the presence of bees. They car- ried the pollen, fertilized the blossoms and a bountiful harvest was the result. —Suburban Life. ZOO ELEPHANT IS A MUSICIAN. Hattie, the Central Park Baby, plays The Mouth Organ and Does Tricks. \Hattie the baby elephant of the Central Park zoo was put through her paces yesterday afternoon by her namesake, Hattie Snyder, the keep- er's 15 -year -old daughter, who nas learned from her father the art of handling the animal. To a group of men, women and children, the beast showed to what extent her education had been developed since bed admits- sion to the zoo three years ago, when she came as an infant, 2 years old, anti was turned over to \Bill\ Snyder practically in arms from her home in Ceylon, India. The animal at the slightest word from the keeper's daughter obeyed without the least semblance of surli- ness. \Stand up on your hind legs,\ said the young trainer, and the elephant obeyed. She was then told to creep like a baby, which she did, creeping' around her cage after the manner of an Infant: - 'Then fettowed veldt* to - the crowd of sightseers, after which she sat on a tub and crossed her legs as though taking a much needed rest after her exertions. But the final exhibition caused some what of a furore among the audience. The girl placed within the trunk of \Battle\ a small mouth organ, which had been specially constructed by Keeper Snyder for the purpose, and commanded her to play a tune and give an exhibition of her ability to do a cake walk. The elephant without a moment's hesitation started a strain which the onlookers said resembled the air of \Home Sweet Home.\ Afterward, Keeper Snyder said that that was the air the harmonica had been set to. While playing the tune the beast waltzed about her -cage—at least it gave almost the idea that it was waltzing, Keeper Snyder is now training a French bulldog to perform with \Hat- tie,\ and says that when he has fin- ished the education of the two ani- mals, they will give an exhibition that has never been seen this side of Mars. He has several other new ideas, he says, but insists that the public will have to watt for- a few months for them.—New York Times. For a Sprained Ankle. A sprained ankle may be cured in about one-third the time usually re- quIred. by applying Chamberlain's Pain Balm freely, and giving it ab- solute rest. For sale by C. H. Wil- liams. Ch. BEES MAKE THE FRUIT GROW. Miracle Wrought in Barren Orchard By Bee Colonies. Honey producing is only one of the missions of the bee. Indeed, for ac- tual profit the honey is but a minor item. Some years ago I moved to a small place up the Hudson river. I wanted • bee farm and selected for that pur- pose a spot among apple, Cherry and plum trees, same of which had never kerne fralt,ietbere,,ema. gpr years past. My laedloN1 told me I might For job work in any line, neatly executed, call on the Argus job office. MAYOR OF SUNBURY Says Pe-ru-na Is a Good Medicine. Hon.C.C. Brooks, Mayor of Sunbury, Ohio, alio Attorney for Par niers' Mink sad Sunbury Building and Loan CO, writes: \I have the utmost confidence In the 'etrtnerefirswelterilliewserestleneteeetnee I have need it and I have known many' itie my friends who have obtained ben°. -.Mai results treat • It. use. 1 canna Melee PorrossIoriali~ HON -C. o. BROOKS. Pr HERE are a host of petty atimen te which are the direct result of the weather. This is more true of the exceisive hest of summer sad the Intense cold of win- ter, bet is partly true of all seasons of the year. •• Whether it be a cold or a cough, ca- tarrh of thelitiad or boirel compiled; whether the liver be affected or the kid- neys, the MOWis very liabie to be the same. The weather slightly' deranges the mucous membranes of the oreags and the result id some rnnettonal disease. Perniaghas become a standby In thoweanfa at homes for minor all - meats cre e ` , 4 SO\ WANT TO BUY LAND I have Inquiries from parties who want investments in good land properties and will be pleased to receive detail- ed information, with price, terms, etc., from persons de- siring to sell. MR. RANCHER If you have land for sale list it with me. Listing blanks sent free an anyone. Send postal card for blank. S. E. PETERSON Moore, Real Estate, Loans, Insurance Montana Drink' After the fatigue of the day's work— after the dinner is over and you sit down for a comfortable evening at home, a bottle of Pabst Blue Ribbon will add to your enjoyment, and aid your digestion. .11 JUL ile tiro on. is brewed from Pabst Famous Eight -Day Malt, which contains all of the nourishing, wholesome, food properties of barley -grain in predigested form. These properties, together with the tonic quality of the choic- est hops, give nourishment and tone to the system. The very small percentage of alcohol (less than 3%)i* a mild stimulant a that prompts the stomach to do its best work. When ordering beer, ask for Pabst Blue Ribbon. Made by Pabst at Milwaukee And Bottled only at the Brewery Munz & Ketelsen, Lewistown, Montana. Pabst - Blue *bboni The Beer of Quality , fit tie is 139 Its CENIRAth MEAT MARKET , 1,,,F , W e H s OLESALE AND RETAIL Fresh 8 rri and Salt Meats „ isvc-Ish and Oysters In Season AO\ • ABEL BROS• • rdp\ Phone No. 122 t