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About The Choteau Montanan (Choteau, Mont.) 1913-1925 | View This Issue
The Choteau Montanan (Choteau, Mont.), 23 April 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053031/1915-04-23/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
V y î > * - * s H * * f - ' /E*?«? t ; U. COLÜMIfe -ví ‘-‘ .“& V 'i ,‘¿ --.rv - • > -» rí ï --Juüfei * -* j r ‘T S - •* » . ' V .■■ ¿¿}\s*e¿ Copy furnished by the ladies?;' of Choteau W. C. T. U. 5 P R I N O T 1 M E Will Soon Be Here Now is The Time to See About that Harness We can please you. We guarantee to give you your money’s worth and also guarantee material and workmanship. Do not wait until you are ready to use the harness, but buy now while our line is complete. We will be glad, to show you the goods. We also keep a full line of collars, saddles and strapwork. ROSS HOUCK Choteau, Montana List Your Ranches with the Choteau Investment Company Present Address: I. A. STUB, 19-21 Dunn Block Great, Falls, Mont FOR , SALE.—Goocf w o r k horses. A. O. Longmuir, Farm ington, Montana. For H o t M e a l s ein ci S h o r t O r d e r s Go to THE LITTLE OEM RESTAURANT J. W. JOHNSON, Prop. O P E N A L L H O U R S D a y and night Calfjn and see us. We can please Sou S P R I N G C R E E K D A I R Y Fresh milk and cream delivered in bottles, at Choteau, everg morning of the gear. Pure and wholesome. Cattle tested bt) inspector and have been found to be free from all disease J O H N L Y O N , Proprietor You will always fina welcome at The Family Liquor Store Choice W I N E S , L I Q U O R S A N D C I G A R S That Famous Am erican B e e r on Draught Bottled Goods is our Specialty LOUIS TH O M P S O N , PROPRIETOR Should a new beverage be universally introduced to the peo ple which would make thè healthy, sick; the prosperous, poor; the loving father and hus band brutal to bis family; and cause nothing but sorrow. and degeneracy to those who used this new drink, there would be a gen eral uprising of the people to pre vent its sale and manufacture; Alchobc indulgence does all this and more, yet the custom still prevails. Alcohol is a powerful, chemical substance produced by fermenta tion of sugars, (except sugar in milk.) Fermentation is caused by a one-celled germ known as the yeast plant, entering sweetened fluid. The air is full of these minute forms of vegetable life. They produce something which is called ferment. Therefore to pre vent fermentation, the air or any thing containing these y e a s t germs, must be excluded from sweetened fluid. When it does enter a fluid it buds and multi plies very rapidly, breaking the sugar into alcohol, water and car bonic acid. The bubbles of car bonic acid gas rise to the surface but the alcohol remains in the fluid. When alcohol to th e strength of 13 per cent has ac cumulated in the fluid it injures the yeast plant and stops its growth. Alcohol is a narcotic, irritant, water absorbing, anesthetic drug, that is classed by druggists with opium, chloroform and cocaine, and should be feared by these people as are these drugs. It has power to create appetite for itself, and is found in all fer mented liquors, such as wine, beer, and cider. The bodies of all living things are made up of cells of many kinds. Thus we haye blood-cells, brain-cells, muscle-sells, fat-cells, nerve-cells, liver-cells and many othevs. • These are grouped into organs according to their work. Our life and health depend upon the strength and working ability of these cells. These groups of cells, Dr. T. Alexander MacNichol, of New York, likens to a state. “ Each group of cells is a community having its own work and local government, but all subject to the central government, the brain. “ Some cells are architects, others are builders of solids, or generators of fluids, some tear down and remove rubbish, others like policemen arrest and imprison offending germs, others like scav- angers gather up the waste and dispose of it. Let any consider able number strike for shorter hours or more provision; let any narcotic poison check their work or slay them, and the entire or ganism of the body will be de ranged; and if the strike be long continued the whole machine will be shut down and the manager will go out of business.” If any cell or group of cells is depressed by a drug, the vitality of the whole organ is lowered. Alcohol is now recognized among the prominent poison9 (such as lead and the toxin of infectious diseases) that have a depressing effect upon cell life. A substance that impairs cell life has no power to sustain life during health, or to repair wasting tissue on sickness and should be avoided as are other dangerous drugs. The sheriff of Toole county has notified local authorities to look out for a person having in his possession the following described articles stolen from the Shelby drug store on the night of April 6 last: One black leather medi cine case; one stethoscope; one black leather surgical case, con taining four skimmers and other instruments; one hypo syringe; also a quantity of “ dope.” many changes will be made in the' run- nving time of trains on the Great Northern railway in and out of .Great Falls. One of tne most important changes is on the^Bur- ,lington-Great Northern l i n e . Trains 43 and 44, whjch fo r . a number of months- have been operating only as far west as Cut Bulk, will be put back on tfieir old'schedule and will run through from Seattle to Kansas City. The Great Falls-Billings morning and.evening locals. 241 and 242, will be put back on. -The early morning train be tween Great Falls and Butte will be taken off and instead 235 will run through from Havre to Butte. Considerable change will be made in the schedule of the Great Fails-Havre locals 223 and 224 and these trains will be run through to Glasgow. Train 235 making connection* at Havre with train No. 3 from St. Raul, will leave Havre at 4.40 a. tn., arriving Great Falls 8:45, leaving Great Falls 9:05, arrive Helena 12:30 p. tn., leave Helena 12:40 and arrive Butte 3:55. Train 236 will follow the pres ent schedule arriving in Great Falls at 9:40 p. m., leaving at 10 and making connections at Havre with train No. 2 for St. Paul. In the Kansas City Seattle ser vice but little change will be made in the running time of west bound train No. 43, it leaving Billings at 6:10 a. m., arriving Great Falls 2:10 p. m. and leaving tt 2:25. In the schedule of the east bonnd.tiain No. 44 a big change will be made. At the present time the train arrives in Great Falls at 6 a. m.. but under the new schedule it will get there nearly four hours later. This train will leave Shelby at 3:12 a. m, arrive Great Falls 9 45. leave Great Falls 10 a. m. In the Butte, Great Falls, Lewistown service, but little change will be made. West bound train 237 will arrive at 1.30 p. m.. as at present, but will remain here five minutes longer and will leave for Helena and Butte at 2.15. East bound train 238 will run 20 minutes later than at present, arriving at Great Falls at 2.15 p. m., leaving at 2.35, arriving at Lewistovn at 7.SO. In the Great' Falls-Shelby and Sweet Grass local service a change of 30 minutes will be made in the west bound train 239, which will leave Great Falls at 7.30 a. m. instead of 7 at present. East bound train, 2.40 will run 45 minutes earlier, leaving Sweet Grass at 2.15 p. m., Shelby 3.55, arriving at Great Falls at 7.45. While no announcement has been made to that effect, the Montanan has been reliably in formed that the service on the Choteau-Bynum branch w i l l shortly be considerably improved, the running time of the tiain to Great Falls in the morning being reduced nearly an hour. The train will leave Bynum at the usual hour, but will arrive at Great Falls at 10.55 instead of at 11.55 as at present. No change will be made in the running time of the train returning from Great Falls in the evening. Aldrich Burled Providence, R. I., April 18.— Leaders in political and financial affairs of the nation were present today at the funeral of Nelson W. Aldrich, for nearly a generation United States senator from Rhode Island. The services were conducted by the Right Rev. James de Wolf Perry, Episcopal bishop of Rhode Island. Among the honorary pallbear ers were ex-pre9ident William H. Taft, former United States Sena tor George Peabody Wetmore, Senator F. Lippitt, Frank K. Sturgis, George F. Baker and Henry P. Davidson. The burial, was in Swan Point cemetery. Attractive Prices 49 lb Ceretana flour ....... .. $2.15 Sugar per cwt .. .............. $7.50 49 lb Rex flour ............ .. $2.15 Sardines, can ..... ................... 10 49 lb Cascade flou r ....... $2.15 Ham, lb ............ .................... 20 9 lb sack corn meal .. .. .. .40 Bacon, lb ......... ...................29 Seed potatoes, evt ..... . $1.75 Macaroni, pkg .. ............... ;10 Large bottle jam ........... .. .35 Spaghetti, pkg .. .................... 10 No. 1 baked beans........ ... .10 Vermieella, pkg ................... 10 No. 2 baked beans .......... .15 Crisco, small .. . .................... 30 No. 3 baked beans........ .. .20 Crisco, medium . .................... 60 No. 5 corn syrup ......... ..30 Crisco, large ...............$1.15 No. 5 molasses .......... . .. .. .30 Milk, large can . .................... 10 No. 5 cane and maple sy ru p . 65 Milk, large can, lo z ........ $1.10 1 lb can salmon . . . .. .15 Campbells soup . .................... 30 Qt jar olives ......... .. .50 Dates, p k g ........ ........ . .15 Garden Seeds of All Kinds E. J. Roberson and Co. Phone 25 Prompt Delivery W e i c h ’ s G r a p e J u i c e . Why buy other brands When you can get Welch’s at our store, in the popular 4 oz individual bottles?. . . . . . . . half gallons pints, quarts, C h o t e a u D r u g C o . Oldest Drug Store in Teton County Choteau Meat Company t t t t H M BEEF, PORK, VEAL AND MUTTON Fresh Fish and Oysters in Season Highest Market Price Paid for Hides Low Prices for Quantities Start on Alaska Railway Seattle, April 18.—The first rails for the government railroad in Alaska were shipped tonight on steamer Mariposa, which saih'd for Cook inlet. The shipment consisted of two carloads of steel, to be used in building working terminals at Ship Creek, which will be the base for this season’s operations. The Mariposa also carried large shipments of lumber, construction equipment and sup plies for the Alaska engineering commission. Lieutenant Frederick Mears of the Alaska engineering commis sion, and 45 surveyors were among the 291 passengers on the steamer. Report states that the Great Northern is buying this strip in order to change the present bridge site and eliminate all curves and run the main line on the south side o f the side tracks through town. The present bridge is much too light for the new and powerful locomotives that are now in use and the bridge will have to be strengthened at any rate. And it is thought wise to eliminate the curve and also have the main line on the south of the yard tracks at the same time as the bridge is changed.—Cut Bank Tribune. New Bridge at Cut Bank The Great Northern railway has purchased a strip of land 2600 feet long and 50 feet wide from Charlie Allison. This strip is just across the river and ad jacent to the preseht right-of-way on the south west 9ide of same. Negotiations for this sale have been under way for several months. Arthur Rowland, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Rowland, of Bynum, who has been attending the Boze man Agricultural College, has been elected president of the “ School of .Agriculture Literary Society” for the coming year« At present he is residing at Poplar, Montana, where he is employed as manager o f the 14 Ranch Farm Experimental Station. FOR RENT:—A four house-in North Choteau. of J. M. Weaver. roomed Inquire \