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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 20 Jan. 1905, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1905-01-20/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Yol. XV, No 38. $2.00 Per Year. CHOTEAU, TETON COUNTY, MONTANA. JANUARY 20, 1905. Carter Elected. Thomas H Carter was elected last Monday to succeed Hon. Paris Gib son as senator from Mon'ana. He wo*- elected in the joint assmbly on tb*» first ballot, it being the fifth day on which a senator had been voted foi in the joint assembly. Early in the morning it was whispered that tin* halfbreeds would go into the sfal wart camp, and later the rumor pioved to be correct. The largest ci o d that has yet watched the vot ing for senator saw Carter elected. As a result of the first two weeks of i he session of the legislature, 62 bills have been, introduced. The house is responsible for 48 of them an ! ihe senate for 14. Two of the bill. have become laws, and one is in tin hands of the governor for his ac tion. These three measures originat et! m the house. Two bills for mak ing appropriations for the espouses of the session, snd one is the fellow serv int law. \I lie interesting feature of the sen ate session Tuesday was theintroduc tir.n of a measure by Senator Mahon, of Valley county, for the appoint ment of a joint committee to iuvesti gti'o charges that have been made agmust the management of the state penitentiary. The charges are con- tan. cd in a book recently published by Tom O’Brien, an ex convict. Two bills were introduced in the house for the creation of the thir teenth judicial district. The house in committee of the whoie, with Everett in the chair, or dined a favorable report Tuesday, on tin* joint resolution introduced by Samian, asking congress to call a con vei.iion of the states to amend the it-.ih ral constitution so as to make federal senators elective by popular vote. There was no opposition to the measure, is nator Ralston introduced a bill pioriding for primary elections. GENERAL NEWS. Senator Burton of Kansas has been grouted a new trial by the supreme court. A, fire visited Big Timber the first of he week and done damage to the amount of about $37,000. ¡’here was a cutting scrape in Mis so ila lust Sunday in the bar room of tlm Grand Pacific hotel, and a man bv the name of Schullo was severely sl-jshed by Ralph Zerlain. ' Schullo m.iy recover. A tire visited the mining camp of Rochester in Madison county last Saturday and destroyed the Wood ui-u ball and other buildings, the li m being about $15,000. S. R. Buford, ex-seaator of Madi sen county, died at Virginia City last Monday morning. He had been a sufferer of inflammatory rheumatism foi a number of years, and a few weeks ago was taken seriously ill wish bowel trouble, which caused his death. In 1865 he loft Missouri with at ox train and landed at Alder gulch where he has lived for 40 years an l in the meantime acquired means Be conducted one of the finest gro ce y stores in the state, and was one of i ho largest shehp owners in south er i Montana. Jack Carey sustained his wrestling ab lity last Monday night by throw ii g Ole Marsh, the muscular heavy weight from Iowa, at Great Palls. Frauds aggregating $17,000 are al 1 ged to have been perpetrated against the county government of S .It Lake and adjoining counties dur Jug the last three months, through duplicate payment of bounties on the bides of wild animals. Several ar n *(8 have been made. Several Pueblo officials have been indicted by the grand jury of Colora do, charging them with conspiracy a'nd the placing of fictitious names ou the registration lists. The packing house fire of Chicago started last Sunday and at the end o' 36 hours the loss amounted to $660,000. San Juan, Jan. 16--In the legisla Impyoves {he flavor and adds to tha hoalthfulness of the food. ' PR IC E CAKING POW DER CO, CHICAGO ture today a bill declaring for inde pondenee under an American protec torato was killed. The bill was intro duced by a member of the Unionist party and the Republicans supported it, but it was defeated by Unionist votes. More than four million pounds of copper ore wore shipped from Butte mines last year. London, J ad . 18—A dispatch from St. Petersberg from a news Agency leports that an earthquake at Shem akba (76 miles northwest of Bakupy) buried hundreds of persons in the ruins of buildings destroyed iu the lower part of the town which was densely populated despite the deci sion, after the earthquake of three years ago, that no more house should be built there. Bedford, led., Jan. 18.— Frank Evans was arrosied today on a war raut charging him with the murder of Sarah Schaeffer, tho Bedford high school teacher who wa3 killed on the night of January 21, last. Evaus is a stone grinder. Elmore Browning, a day laborer, was arrested later this afternoon for complicity in the murder. Exhibits Arriving. With more thau four months still remaining before the opening dav, June 1, exhibits and displays for the Lewis and Clarke Centennial are be ginning to arrive in Portland by the car load, and are being stored in finished buildings on the Exposition grounds. From this time o d , the cars of exhibits will continue to arrive in largo numbers until all tho displays are ready for the opening of tho great Coast Fair. California haR sent ono car, con taining a part of her display in education and sooiul economy, and more are expected in a few dnvs. One car of tho Idaho exhibit has also been received, unloaded and stored in the European Exhibits Building, while I wo cars containing part of the Massachusetts exhibits are expected in a few days. The Massachusetts exhibit will bo stored in tho European Exhibits building until the Massachusetts Building, work on which will bo begun soon in ready to receive them. A cargo of exhibits for the Mines and Metal lurgy department is on its wav from St. Louis, and cars containing various manufacturing exhibits are reported on their way to the Fair city. All but one of the Exhibition Pal aces are now completed, and the arrival of exhibits at this early date makes certain the readiness of the Fair on the opening day. Subscribe for (lie Montanian Hay For Sale. I have 125 cons of good hay for sale at reasonable price. Cali or ad dress. T heodore H asson , Farmington Settle tip All person knowing themselves in debted to me are requested to settle up as I have disposed of my business and need the. money. L a whence D avis , Choteau, Mont. TENANT BESTS LANDLORD. Objects to Children So Renter Makes Out Lease in Name of Child, Re versing Conditions. Landlords. In Paris are becoming day by day more absurd in the restrictions they put on their tenants. Some will not allow a dog to be kept; others will not permit any pet whatever, and some even will not allow children to be In the house. A clever individual has just managed, however, to overcome this last objection. He had seen an apartment he liked and well knowing that the land lord objected to children, ho said noth ing of the existence of his only child, a hoy of two years of age, but simply had the lease made out in the infant’s name. When he came with his family to take possession the proprietor flew into a passion and objected most strongly to the baby. \Pardon me,\ replied the astute dip lomatist, \but it is my child and not my self who has hired the apartment. You have made no objection to his asking his parents to stay with him. So hero we are!” Hippocrates, the father of medicine. 2,000 years ago imposed upon all his stu dents a remarkable oath. It runs as fol lows: I swear by Apollo, the physician, by Aesculapius and by Hygeia, by Panacea and by all the gods and goddesses, that I will fulfill religiously according to the best of my ability, power and judgment, the solemn vow I now make; I will he. ar 2 S my father the master who taught ms the art of medicine; his children I will consider as my brothers and teach them my profession without fee or reward. I will admit to my lectures and dis courses my own sons, my master’s sons and those pupils who have taken tho medical oath, but no one else. I will pre scribe such medicines as may be best suited to the cases of my patients, ac- :ording to the best of my judgment, anil no temptation shall ever induce me to administer poison. I will religiously maintain the purity of my character and the honor of my art. I will not per form the operation of lithotomy, b leave it to those to whose calling it be longs. Into whatever house I enter 1 will enter it with the sole view of re lieving the sick and conduct myself with propriety toward women of the family If during my attendance I hear anythin'; that should not be revealed I will keep it a profound sscret. If I observe tlrs oath may I have success in this life and may I obtain esteem after it; if I break it may the contrary be my lot. LIVED IN MIRROR PALACE. PAINTS STRIPES ON HOUSE Tenant Decorates Home with. Red, ’W hite and Blue and Landlord l6Sues New Lease. , A man recently took a house upon a lease In a certain crescent in London without examining the terms of his agreement as closely as he should. After a time the landlord called upon him and pointed out that he was bound to do all the outside painting at cer tain intervals. He protested, but It was “so nominated in the bond,” and there was no help lor him. After a good deal of thought he hired painters and di rected them to paint the whole front of the house red, white and blue—in stripes. When It teas finished tho neighborhood—It was a fashionable part—was up in arms and tho landlord was frantic. The tenant politely ex plained to him that there was nothing in the agreement about tho color, and that red, white and bike, in stripes, was his favorite combination, but he thought ho might, perhaps, be better pleased with the painting of the back, which he proposed to color green with yellow spots. The landlord, who well knew that not another house cou*.d be let In tho crescent If ho carried out hla threat, nearly had a fit at the Idea, and within a week tho tenant had a new lease, in which the landlord un dertook to do all the outside painting himself. IVY EXCLUDES DAMPNESS. true of Vine Upon W alls of Building M akes Rooms Dryer—Reason Given by Scientist. \I have of late been very frequently asked, writes a Canadian professor, \about the effect of Boston ivy upon the walls of buildings, some asserting that the covering of walls with the above named vine caused dampness in the interior. I am convinced that this idea is a fallacy. It will be conceded by all that the plant maintains its growth by the effect of moisture, either from the ground in which it is planted or from any other source obtainable. No one will deny but that stone and brick walls absorb a large quantity of rainfall, more especially brick. The vine to obtain a certain amount of vitality naturally absorbs the moisture from the walls of brick or stone, and I have yet to learn of any room in any house becoming damp by the growth of the vine on the outside. The very op posite must be the result. I would suggest that no property holder need be afraid to plant the above named creoper on his or her building, for bo assured the interior of the house will be drier with the ivy than w ithout Prodigal Russian Who Squandered n V a st Fortune Is Sent to Insane Asylum. From Tomsk comes a curious history of a modern Narcisus. Hisnam cis Vlad imir Yevdokimoff, the son ofoneof ti-.c richest merchants in Russia. After sprnding millions of rubles in all sori3 of foolish ways he retired to Tomsk with a considerable fbrtune in his hands, ho bought a wooded hill in the neighbor hood and on the summit of it bulk a glass palace. One of the largest of tho rooms is a mirror hall, in which walls, rcof and floor are formed only of mir ro r s . In the middle of this hall Yevdok- intoff had a throne erected which re volved on a pivot like a piano stool. Here he woull sit for hours, turning ban’ ward and forward and adm irkg himself in the mirrors. Gorgeous rcl -. were in a neighboring room, and in course of the day he would change 1 a garments a score of times. His l - miration of himself in the mirrors was sometimes varied by elabroate b qurts, to which only women were fu- vited. and which are said to have re- scr hied the Thracian mysteries. They wrr-' attired as Bacchantes and he pre sided, crowned with roses. In five yea ; lie squandered 7 000,000 rubles and is now in an asylum for the insane. EXPECTS STRANGE VISION, Distinguished W ar A rtist Has Queer Dream and Constantly Expects Its Fulfillment. _____ _ i ''hBUniV^*11 ii i now in Manchur.a ai e said to be taking an almost uncanny interest in his re- tr-n from the scene of war. It rises out of a strarge story told by the nr!'?: self Years lefore the arils. I • \ h ; rcc'.;.-d cf campaigns he v.as out wr. ir;.; along a quiet square in his na- t.v i ky when, looking down, he :->..d- raw a pool of blood on the pavc- . Ir.-.tar.tly, the story goes, from cf the sight, he went off into a si.; .\ . f trar.eo He was cn a b'.ea’ plain rur\ t .; for his life from three pursuing hr---f -r lie saw their faces, knew tk:.’ h efforts to escape were hopp le-- --c then a swift blade descended ••off hi? head. After that became ‘ •• and resumed his walk but he » s •» ■ cr.viction that this vision ■ -i •-!' tip manner of his death - i .: r r -■ mrrpaign In the Scudrn. a her. Bt. square wan bro’ en h.i -vr.- p —-cd. It was with rrilei that he rc'i.g-k.ird tr i t the mounted pursuers were no; his men the men of the vision lie wonders still when he will .meet them Get your horses shod tvitn Never Slip thocs at J. F. Bond’s for $2.50. Montanian $ 2 .0 0 a year. If you want to get good returns for your money put an ad in the Mon tanian. HAS GAME, BUT NO SNAKES Newfoundland Teems w ith Animal Life, and, as In Ireland, Ven omous Reptiles Are M issing. The American who happens into New foundland will find innumerable causes for interest and surprise. The interior of the island Is a wilderness primitive and practically unexplored. A quaint, slow, uncertain railway traverses the heart of the island, but for 500 miles of travel over mountains, through dense forests and by the margins of salt water hays and estuaries not a town Is to be seen. Herds of caribou, ns tame as barn yard cattle, stand staring at the passing train. From the bosom of lake and river trout and salmon are forever leaping. Brant, geese, wild ducks, grouse and many wild birds that migrate hither in the summer can be found all over the Island. Here they mate and breed, and their goslings and chicks make the woods and waters vocal all summer long. Newfoundland, like Ireland, is Innocent of snakes or reptiles. RADIUM HAS TRADE VALUE. Bsperlm ents Bring Discovery That a Diamond Becomes Graphite Under I t s Raya, In the course of some expérimenta concerning the effect of the emanations from radium upon diamonds, Sir Wil liam Crookes made a curious discov- sry. When a diamond was placed in the path of the radiations it was con verted from the carbon crystal into the common form of graphite, while in addition its color was quite changed. As a result of this strange metamor phosis Sir William Crookes suggests that the radiam rays may prove of great commercial value to the jeweler sinco by this means diamonds which are of indifferent and defective color may be appreciably increased in their commercial value by treatment under the radium rays. He also observed that prolonged action of the radium also Increased the intensity of the pale- çolored gems. W orshiped God in Hospital. The most interesting feature among the early physicians of Egypt was a priest of Ra, tho sun god, named I-«m- hotep, who lived during the third dyn asty, nearly C.OOO years ago, and was succeeded by a cult of priest physi cians, who carried on his work of heal ing. Temples for the worship of I-em- hotep, which were also hospitals for the sick, arose first at Memphis, and then extended to other parts of E g y p t Here the priests not only treated the sick, but also embalmed the bodies of men and the sacred animals. Scandal in B ritish Navy. The British admiralty is investigating a grave naval scandal. It appears that; the ship's police at the naval schools of the different ports have been allowing the names of men who are on furlough to remain on the messing books the result (icing that rations were drawn for the absent men and the food or its value ap-^ propriated by those who made the false* entries in the bocks. The robbery h ^3 been going on for years. Have you seen the latest samples at Jerome Koleake's RIVALS PETER THE GREAT. Frince KhilkofT Goe3 to England to Learn, But W ines Up ub En gineer in United States. Telephono 28UF. J # P. KEGAN, P. O. Box 371. Prince Khllkoff, whom the czar has made one ol the secretaries of state; is the* head of an ancient house and in youth was regarded by his family as a crank and a dangerous one to boot He had to undertake the management of the family estates at about the time that the serfs Mere being emancipated and his magnanimity toward his under lings did not please the rest of his fam ily, so young Khilkoff went on a pilgrim age. He thought it would be good to follow the example of Peter the Great and go to England to learn. Ho went to Birkenhead and worked there as an or dinary artisan News of great railway developments In America called him here and he came to the United States and worked right through the fitting and engine-building shops and learned to drive an engine. He returned home to perform a similar office a t the time that the railways of Russia were be ginning to boom. Employed first as an engineer, he was promoted to the con trol of locomotive works, was made head of a line and, pushing his v,--y step by step, proved himself the idra! man for the post of minister of ways of com munication. Attorney and Counselor at Law. Rooms ir> and 1C Conrad Building. Special Attention Given to Land j Practice anil District Court Work. I Write mo about your case, j Great Fulls, - - - Montana. For Rent. Due four room house, and kitchen. Good accommodations. Address: J ohn H obbins , * 1 Choteau, Mont. F. E. J. 0ANNEY, M. D. SURGEON and PHYSICIAN. 35 yours practical experience. 11 years hospital am) 7 years railroad Surgeon. Past professor in Surgery. CONRAD MONTANA. » & ¡ t í* f M e * i* * u v i'c * * * c i* c * > * * n NORWAY HOT AS CHICAGO. Man In Op an Car Tells Real Facts About Coolness of North- j •rn Country. ' j \It’s funny how people talk without knowing what they are talking about,\ . said the man on tho end seat of a Chicago open car. \Half an hour ago I heard a , man saying he’d like to be in Norway just now to get cool ’’ “Welt, Isn’t it cool there?” was asked. \I was there just a jear ago this time and In one day there were 1C cases of sunstroke in the town where I was stop ping and that same night three prisoners In the lockup were bitten to death by mosquitoes. Ice was 20 cents a pound, with little to be had and 1 walked two miles to buy a glaf still of lemonade and then found it scalding hot. \No. sir-e-e. Don’t you do any longing for Norway. You just eat a hearty boile d dinner take two glasses of hot scotch and then get an end seat on a car a mi let lor go Galla gher and keep your j n’ui fan a--,\riving. This hotness is all 'mac nation You won’t make more than one round trip before you'll want to get hnni'* ar.d tum ble into a feather bed a n d draw a pair of woolen blankets up to jour ears.” #****£* I 1. E’ WEBB, AZTECS AS MEDICAL MEN. Ancient Mexican Erce Believed to Have Been Par Advanced in Heal: e g Art. T h e a n c i e n t A flic e r - . c c o f M e x ic o w a s f a r a d v a n c e d ir. e ¡ - a c t t í * o f t u e d i - c i n e . T h e n a t i . c 1 ' r -■ : -, p r n c t i c c d m a s s a g e , s p l i n t s v, r - i ■ tj in th e c r e s s - I n g o f fr a c t u r * \ ; t . - s . :r fia n t e « ! g u m s w e r e l a n c e d w ! i . » :in i n i v es a c h i n g t e e t h w e r e e x . - v i ' a i t w a r u ' o d a s a n a n t i s e p t i c . a m f l u i < ir - f i . i r m .it a d u s i - in g p o w d e r i- ft* < - o f l i x — m a l e s a n d jo i n t s w a ? • • * , r \ a : ; a t h . w o u n d s w e r e *( • * \ . r h a i r , t h e a c t u a l c a . V to t h e e d g e s o f v, o n ; c - 3 i \ t ! ( I j V» r.s d r a w n o u t o f p o 's r ,: r . V. ' *.!i b y t . c i . I n g . w h i l e b i c c r . it :■ va* \ Cf>(' in o b s i i - n a t e h e m ’ - i - ) ' • it- h - ' T r . c o f th e t e e t h w a s v . l i r,n erf '• 'jf r , • -cry h o t fo o d h e i r : : s < ’ • < L i* * : i' i v e o f c o l d T / a t o n f t r F , « r ’ ' < g : Y . • d o n t o o t h p i c k (•’• -•i o v r <• r e d c h a r m s ’ - ' r . ' i - » r » (* it: ort. t h e p r . v ; ’ .» r t ' r> p r* e a r l y M r : : s <• ,r* » « (.' c r y a c r n b l y w i t h t h a t ,:i .< -h e t i m e o f t h e la n d i n g o f th e p.l •n f a t h e r s . R e a l Estate. Farms, Stock Runchos, and Town Lois. Choteuu, . . . Montana. J G. BAIR Attorney-at-Law, JHOTEAU, MONTANA. PHIL I. COLE, Attorney-at-Law. Notary Public. Collections promptly attended to. Choteau, - Montana. T. BR O O K S , Physician & Surgeon. Successor to Wamsloy & Brooke. OiPoo Noxt to Court House. H . B E A U P R E , 3D E3 3ST T I S T Teeth Extracted With out Pam. All work Guaranteed. I’linTKAU. MONTANA. F. A. LONG, Physician and Surgeon lilici iii Jackson Building. Next lo Telephone (Hike. Eye« Kefractotl ami tlasses fitted. iJlUl’KAt., - - MONTANA. BOOK SALESMAN FLOORED, j Massachusetts Woman Pronounce« , Crowninshiejd «s Guinsel and j Man Nearly Faints. ' \I have always rather priced myself | on the accuracy of my pro::u>-ciation,\ said a salesman ir. a Chuago book store to an Inter Ocean njiorier, \bat a woman from Massachusetts who came in yes terday floored me flat. She said she wanted a book tho name of which sho had forgotten, but it was about an Amer ican who visited some people at a French chateau. This e’e n’t £’*,e mo any de finite idea of what book ihe «anted. \ ‘You must l.aie it.’ she sale. ’It’s by a very prominent Washington woman. Her husband is in the «ivy. Hcrnam ela Grunsel. Mrs. Grur.rol * \I could not for tie l.fc of me recall any Washington lady r anted Grunsel, so I asked the lady to write the name down and give me time to look it up. What on earth do you think -he wrote? Why. Crowninshie’d. She told me, too. that It’s an old Marbhhcad name, and that nobody up there ever calls Crowninshield anything but Grunsel.\ C.W A R N E R , U. S. Commissioner, CUOTKAU, MONT Laud filings and proofs. y^ALTER MATHEWS, U. S. COMMISSIONER, SURVEYOR, Folophono No. 27. CHOTEAU, MONTANA. Dr. EARLE STRAIN, OCULIST and ÀURIST, .<17 Fir->t A’ ‘Utm North, ' G ,.£ftr FALLS, MONT. OUici.» Hours: 1 p. tn. Inlp. m. Raises Fanning to Science. At Farlngdon, Berkshire. England, farming has bec-n raised to a science. Mr George Adams, of the royal prize ¡farm. Wadley house, forms some l 0‘M acre3, of which about half i-; arch'- and half pasture. He employe? from 200 to 250 laborers, milks 50'j cows daily, keeps about 40 Shire brood mares, a, score of breeding sows, ard from 3,000( to 4,000 laying hens. grows about j boil ¡acres of grain, besides allu d in g to I other multifarious items in the ordi nary course of farm practice. About 1 1,000 acres of meadow hay are harvest ed annually. All the work, cutting, 1 carrying and ricking, is done by piece- . work. The Finest Watch Repairing Done in the City by j S. O, HUSETH, Jewelers M Opticians, Great Pal!*, 323 Central Ave. 'CHEVALIER LODGE NO. 12, ! K . o f * -P. Lesson in Street Cnr Manner*, The following notici ;r. bold, h!c<;l. let-, ters on w.hlte enamel is displayed at the end of every street cnr .‘a Belfast, Ire land: \The Molinai rule is, 'Women antj chUdftn first ‘ '* Sauer Kraut at the City Meat Market. Vents Every Thursday Evpnlmr. vifrirmg Hrotlir*»n Cordially levi let] to Attoud. J ames SI ebritt . C. C. Hu. T. B eo ok s . of B * S. Montanian $ 2 .0 0 a year. Corner of Choteau Avenue and Humiltou Street. W A L T E R G ORHAM . H. R. TH O M P S O N. LETOBKIDaE & NELSON Single ton delivered $ 9 00 Load, 3 tons or more 8 75 Car lots at Collins - 5 09 By the ton at Collins - 5 50 Small quantities delivered on Sat urday only. Terms Cash. Loavo orders at Byron Corson s. Telephone No. 53. The Cliotean, Dippr, BMloel S T A G E L I N E . W. A, LEECH Proprietor. Special Attention Given ti« Passengers and Express. Covered Coaches, Heated With Lehman Heaters. Leave Choteau daily, except Sunday nt 7:00 a tn, arrive at Bynum a-. 0:30 u tn; Dupuyer at noon. Re turning leave Dupuyer at 1 p a. Bynum, 3.30 p ui; arrive at Che. temi at 6 j) m. O ia f C . F j e l e L Land, Reservoir and Ditch S u t. veying a specialty. S H E L B Y . - - MON7Z- CHOTKAU AERIE, NO. 56F HEP. O . E . Meets the 1st and 3rd Saturday < the Town Hall. Visiting Eagles are eordial'y invited to attend. J. \V. S h i e l d s , G e o r g e A d l a m , Secretary. Worthy I’res. Iiit. GILMORE’S ■ of the World JIair Grower , either sex should to day write . • 1 1 Mfg. Co., 538 W. Lake Sb, Lima- . Mid secure terms aud territory for the : }t of the abovo truly wonderful Hair Producer, Preserver and Beautityer—.» boon to tho Halil and Beardless. To a.t osittg their hair nud to young men wish ing to raise a mustache, nothing is more saleable than Quern of the world ila.r Grower. Send M. O. 50c. for $1 samp « bottle. It haB the merit to win its ow « way. (Mention this paper.) Manager Wanted. Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage business in this county and ad joining territory for well aud favorably' known hou-e of solid financial standing,. $20.00 straight cash salary and expense paid each Monday by check direct from, headquarters. .Gxponse money advanc ed. Position permanent. Address Mau- Corno Block, Chicago Illinois- •' 47-12. ^ If you want a first- class piece* jf-'. j-b TVOïk. g o t & done at the Montan an office. - ~ : - h