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About The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.) 1891-1962 | View This Issue
The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.), 03 Aug. 1921, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053034/1921-08-03/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
’■>\ *¡L A . I' i l íí\f b> ¿*¥5 _ *■ '. '■’iiC'4 V î ‘ c-V“-^ K\ ' 5 , b * ’ - ’’ ' - ’ * * j !,' \ V : . ’ .\: V ' ’•\/'. . ; i ;’ -.^'>\1 „•'. • .'■; ' -:. ' 5 V .' ■. \.'■:> .'-V.\-’ .\■■'*■ ' , ' V . y >,'«•' - ‘ r. ■ •-.;' “ V - v / - y - v • ,;•\. ; '• • .- . = . - .v\;-;:- - / . ' '•/»' j ■;>'-;’-; v* % ’filii&jfr Volume XXX. DILLON, BEAVERHEAD. COpNTY, MONTANA, AUG. 3,1921. CHESTER CAbiV IS IN TROÜt^ WITH ROY WATSON IS AC CUSED 0 7 ROBBING BOND STORE BILL STROTHERS, SPIDER, VISITS ^DILLON Number 52. Scales Walls of Andros Hoipl find White Block Saturday Men Plead Not Guilty-Heavy Bonds Are Fixed by Court Sheriff Dan Mooney was In Butte last Thursday where he placed Che» ter Casey and Roy Watson under ar rest. The young men are accused of breaking into and robbing the store of the Bond Grocery'company in this city. They were brought to Dillon Thursday evening. On, Saturday they were arraigned and both men plead not guilty. The bonds of each one was fixed by the court at $6,000. The Bond store was broken into on the morning of Tuesday of last week. The locks of the safe were broken off with a sledge hammer and the con tents of the safe taken out. Over five hundred dollars in currency and Bllver belonging to the firm and one hundred and fifty dollars in liberty bonds, belonging to Sol Sobolski, a member of the firm, were stolen. Af ter ransacking the safe the men went up stairs in the building and sorted out various notes and legal papers they had no use for. Casey was arrested at his room in the Berkshire hotel, while Watson was taken into custody at his flat in an apartment house. Both men stoutly denied any part in the crinu, Casey is well-known in this city, where he resided for a number of years, being employed as a teamster and with the county road crew. Ho Was drafted with the first contingent from Dillon, during the World war and had’ a good aTmy Tecorff.' Ubob his return to Dillon he was accused of a number of petty thefts and in December, 1919, was arrested for breaking into the house of George Tush and stealing a quantity of li quor. He plead guilty to the crime and was sentenced to a term in the stale penitentiary from which insti tution he was discharged last spring Watson is said to be a brother-in- law of Casey. Both men have re tained Attorney John Collins as their counsel. » Bill Strothers was in towfi Satur- v Strothers is known at{ the hu nk spider. He gave an exhibition here two years ago and liked the people so well that he' decided to make a return trip. Saturday even ing he gave a wonderful demonstra tion of climbing by scaling the walls of the Andrus hotel and the White block. He climbed to the top of the flag staff on the former building and spectators held' their breath while he rode around the cornice of the latter building on a bicycle. AVIATORS UNO IDAHO HAY MEN WORKING HERE ATTEND MILITARY FUNERAL OF PRIVATE H. EIGHORn ARE ON AIR TOUR TO GOLD- FIELDS OF FAR SI BERIA Daring Young Men Encounter a Stiff Breeze From Ogden BIG INFLUX OF LABORERS FROM ALFALFA REGIONS IN IDAHO With Additional Laborers Ranch ers Speed Up Haying Operations Piloting his swift aeroplane before a stiff wind, C. 0. Prest, a daring Strothers, with his manager, Ar- ’ young California aviator, effected A thur Hill, is making a tour of the landing near Dillon last Thursday at- west. ternoon at one o’clock. Prest made the journey, from Ogden, Utah, a dis tance of 360 miles, in five hours and a half and faced a high wind the (en tire distance. THENEWBUICK HAS ARRIVED FOUR-CYLINDER MODEL NOfr A MACHINE OF REALITY , During the paBt few days there has been an influx of laboring men in this city from various parts of Idaho. The men are looking for work in the hay fields and they are being hired as fast as they arrive at the wage of $2 per day. The men have just completed their labors in the alfalfa fields in Idaho , . . . and want to work in the hay fields Prest is making a transcontinental; her0 untn the graln crops are roady tour of four thousand six hundrtd;to be harvested at their homes. The and thirty, miles, and is accompanied men are experlenced bands and lhe by L. M. Bach, another native « ^ O f ' ranchera all over tbe county ar6 gUd \ The young nfen left De laborers American Legion Sends Delegation to Melrose Friday California, j-m, , UUue u^u to secure tbem> « lay field at Venice, Cal,, twelve days With the arrlval of thQ jago and after flying over¿TIa Juana, Mexico, swung off on their' long Jaunt to far Siberia where they will inspect from Idaho those engaged in haying aro able to Becure full crews and to speed up the work of gathering the and study placer mining conditions . , „„„„ . OTr„ Read the Specifications of This in that country. The trip is being | word t0 thelr £rlends tp come to ¿Tea- New Model in Today’s . . made for the purpose of securing first I vorhead county and hyava explossed Paper ;hand information in regard to gold ^mselves as entirely satisfied with — ■<— | mining in Siberia and to test the to** j the wagog belng pald. 0 h the other ' ! 8lblllty of eBtablishlng an aeroplane hand ,0Cftl farmera are glad n eul. ploy the Idaho man. One rancher declared, “ I have the best ertw I Announcement 1 b made today of route for commercial purposes, the presentation before the motoring! Tho machIne driven by the young piibilc of Bxiiek's^new four-cylinder men was designed by Mr. prest'whO have been able to secure in year*, no. There are four models in^the iB ftn experienced mechanic as Well as Most of them own small ranchos of line, including roadster and fife- ft is an unusually light,Hjret jtheir own in Idaho.; They realize the P“®8e“ Ker touring in th® °P®“ ° f rB’ strong, aeroplane, weighing thrbe j condition of the farmer today; they pud three-passenger coupe and five- hundred poundB ieBs than the Curtis need the work, need the money and passenger sedan in the closej models. michlne of similar c o n s t r u c t e d kndw that the farmer is paying him Inasmuch as it, has been known in ' wlng Bpread i„ thlrtyrflve and' tfie - 1 well.” the automobile trade for some time half feet. It is equipped .with a nlnpty' that Buick purposed^ adding a line pi horse power motor and has a speed fours, considerable interest attaches o£ gp miles an hour in compart soil to- tbe speciflcationa covering \the n&-mile speed inede b y » ^ new models. In motor construction c ur£js machine. Prest is one of the Buick has/ adhered to the valve-in- most adventurous aviators of the pre head principle with which its name BOn£ time< Four years ago he estab- has been so prominently connected jjghed the world’s record for reaching for twenty years. The cylinder bore an altltude of 18>i 00 feet. is 3 and 3-8 inches with stroke oL After leaving California the avla- a . . n oc , .6. Ea° °r ,6Ve * tors made their first Btop at Las Ve- ops between 35 and 40 brake horse gaS) New Mexic0( then to Salt Lake'his young wife to Dillon and found power and road tests have shown CIty and then tQ Qgden and then on jher in company with another man at that the power piant will deUver up Btralght through to Dillon. Bach a local hotel. Swearing out a war- to 50 miles an hour with ease. Fea- came on ahead tQ Dillob tt) choo36 a rant for the couple he charged them ores of motor construction are the, plaC0< The spot selected was with adultery. The man gave his large three-bearing crankshaft and , 0Q the eagt bench, but Brest missed it name as Sampson in the Justice court. Beaverhead Post of the American Legion sent a delegation of men to Melrose last Friday to attend, the funeral of Private Henry Eighorn, who died in France. The young hero was given all the honors of a military funeral, the Butte post officiating. Those making the trip from Dillon were Hugh Anderson, Dr. R. D. Cur ry, Raymond Schwartz, Bud McGrath, Walter Brown,Commander J. B. Clu- ley, Alex Tait, Frank Poole, Ike Pat terson, Earl Opp, Lonnie Llnson, J. Zooko, R. R. Price and J. W. Gallo way. LEGION DANCE AND BARBECUE BIG CELEBRATION WILL BE HELD SUNDAY AT ELKHORN INVITATIONS TO EXECUTION LIMITED NUMBER ALLOWED TO ATTEND HANGING OF ALBERT YEIK No Women or Children Will Bo Allowed to See the Execution Everybody Invited — Everything Free—Bathing for All ! HONEYMOON OF THE INNES*' ENDS RATHER ABRUPTLY Irate Husband Trails Young Wife to Dillon— Arrest Follows The brief honeymoon of Charles and Ina Innos ended rather abruptly last week when the husband followed Will Have Chance to Rest Pete Shea and John Beegan were arraigned in Justice Hathaway s court last Thursday on a charge of beating their stage fare. They were taken to the Swanson ranch and af ter a good supper concluded to look elsewhere. Shea seemed willing to work and while sentenced to 80 days in the county Jail, sentence was sus pended upon-his going to work and giving an order on his employer lor stage fare. > Beegan was more defiant and had already been up here this season. Wheh asked wliy he didn’t stay, ne replied: \Oh I was tired.” The Justice sympathized with him and sent him over to Sheriff Mooney for a 30-day rest— Anaconda SStandard. Murray in Town— Roy Murray was clown from Butte yesterday to attend to business matters. In company with Mr. Walker, Minneapolis rep resentative of the Buick company and Jack Nemick of the Montana Auto Supply company, he enjoyed a fishing trip to the Centennial valley. 12-inch, long connecting rpds, extra long rods being provided to reduce vibration to a minimum. A circu lating splash oiling system gives au tomatic lubrication throughout. An-; which is by several miles and landed near the , 4 ? ; Kohl ranch. After arriving at Dillon Prest flew over the city and took a snapshot of the town below. De parture was made here early Satur day morning for Anaconda, where other important feature, standard. equipment on all Buick . . . .. . . _ .. , .. . .. . . . A after a short stop, they flew to Butte, cars, Is the automatic carburetor heat ‘ T, . . . . . . , .. f . . . . . . . It took them just twenty minutes to control through which ideal vaporls- . . _ ,*• , „ .. hntnn | . .reach Marr field in Butte after the nome ing conditions are obtained. I Both plead guilty. The man was fined $25 which he paid and then left town. The woman was given 24 hours in'which to leave. The American Legion will hold a barbecue and dance at Elkhoi^ Springs next Saturday and Sunday. The outing 1 b being given in the in terests of the Beaverhead post, and everything will be free. Frank Felt, promoter of' the springs, and an enthusiast of the great outdoors, has volunteered furnish the meat for the barbecue/ Three big beefs have'been slaughter ed tor the occasion and will be cooked to a turn. Everyone will be served- absolutely free.' i The dance will be given In the new ranger station and there will be no charge'. The station house is one of the finest in the state and is brand new, with a floor that has been pol ished for the occasion. ' Never before have the surronnu lngs about the springs been more beautiful. Everything has bee., cleaned up in splendid style, and the plunges and dressing rooms are as presentable as the most fastidious housewife’s white kitchen. Ail spring water is used in both plunges and the bathing is the best in the state. Those who have visited Elkhorn Only a limited number of invita tions will be issued to the execution of Albert:Yeik, sentenced to pay. tb» death penalty on the 26 th day of thin month for the murder o f Sheriff C. K. Wyman. The. execution will take place in the courtyard at Dillon at half past four o'clock in the morning: No women or children will be al lowed to witness the hanging. No boyp under twenty-one years of age will be permitted on the grounds and housetops and upstairs windows will be cleared before the execution takes place. Invitations will be sent next week to sheriffs and other officials residing in other parts of the Btate while the remainder will be mailed the week following. Invitations will be sent only to various state and county officials, newspapers, mem bers of the posse and others who have been connected with the arrest and trial of the condemned man. Although Yelk maintains a bold front and shows no outward signs of mental stress, that he Is suffering under a great mental strain Is show» In his physical being. He has de creased In weight no less than twenty! pounds Blnce sentence was pto^ nounced the last time and neither does he sleep as well or as much ae- he did. PIONEER MATRON DIES WEDNESDAY The husband declared that he year are more enthusiastic than would leave his wife without a cent, over before. Every bungalow and but the sheriff officials finally per- cabin is occupied, and the camp suaded him to buy her a ticket ground resembles a tented city. The man left on the Bouth- hop off at Anaconda. Prest and Bach ; hound train Saturday for his hom0, LEGION TENNIS COURT The transmission is of the sélective left Saturday evening for Helena, ne-[ In Boise, while the wife took the sliding gear type, three speedB^^ for-1 gotlatlng tbe distance between Butte northbound train. ward and one reverse. The unversal and tbat dty ^ fifty minutes. Shelby I - ----------------- - -------- Joint is of standard BuicK construe- be the lai!t town t0 be vlslted ]n CHILD DIES THIS MORNING tion, being virtually an integral part Montana. Stops will be made at Cal- \ FOLLOWING AN OPERATION of the transmission and automatically gary( Edmonton, Jasper, Prince ------ — lubricated from the transmission. George, Hazelton, In Canada, and at Little Son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mrs. Mary 'Dbemond Succumbs Fol lowing Attack of Pneumonia— Funeral Held From St. Rose Catholic Church Friday. The clutch is of the multiple disc dry Telegraph Creek, White Horse, Daw- plate type, built In exact accordance Bon( Fairbanks, Ruby and Nome, in with the principles which have guld-: Alaska. At Nome the aeroplane will ed clutch construction In Buick sixes. ba equipped to carry the aviators to All moving driving parts are closed. Welch Dies at Hospital TO BE USED BY PUBLIC o. Devotees of Summer Pastime to Have » I. Fine Grounds. At a meetlng'of the American Leg ion last Wednesday evening It was voted to allow the new tennis ground voted to allow the new tennis grounds next to the Hartwig theatu Joseph, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Welch, died shortly after ten en* St Meichel, Siberia. Prest and Bach o’clock this morning at the Curtis . to be used by the public. Thu expect to be back at their homes in. hospital, following an operation for .grounds are'in fine shape and those Front axle of the four-cylinder California for Thanksgiving dinner. car Is an I-beain forging. The rear i ______ ________ _ axie 4s three-quarter floating type, ^ 8 fr q m all the weight of the car being car- the removal of tonsils. The child , using them, will be required to wear withstood the operation and had been ; tennis shoes'and to be responsible put to bed. In a very short time he for ail damage done to the grounds. ried on the axle tubes and only drit- ! ing, torque and steadying of wheels: (Continued on Page Five) I DILLON, SCORE 4 TO a Mrs. Mary Desmond, wife of Pat rick Desmond, died at the Desmond ranch home on Horse Prairie last Wednesday shortly after noon. The cause of her death was pneumonia and she had been ill for about ten days. The remains were brought w Dillon Wednesday evening. The funeral was held from the dt Rose Catholic chufch lh Dillon Frtr day morning, Father Foley conduct ing the services. Interment wa» made in the Mountain View cem etery. Mrs. Desmond wj \ 72 years o f age. She was born in Ireland and there spent her childhood and youfix womanhood. She came to Montana 38 years ago, locating with her hus band on the Desmond ranch near Grant, and had since made her homo there. She was the mother of ono child, Mary, who is the wife of Ches ter Barrett, of Grant, by the people of the Horse Prairie. Mrs. Desmond waB dearly beloved She was a kindly woman and loved her home better than anything elBe, in late years seldom leaving it even to visit her neighbors. Her death is deplored by her many friends. A score of residents were here from Horse Prairie, Medicine Lodge and Bannack to attend the funeral. Rancher Buys First Machine in County £ had died. The funeral will be held j Those who wish to use the court In this city the latter part of the can obtain the net from George Gos- Mr. and Mrs. Tom Craver and two week. j man and must return It to him at the children visited In Dillon yesterday Meaderville. ball players returned : The boy was five years old and was close of the evening. I from Medicine Lodge, to Butte Sunday evening after taking born in Dillon. Besides his parents ■ - _ - a spectacplar game frpm the fast Dil- one brother, James, age'd eight, sur- lon city team there earlier in the day, I vives him. 4 to 3. It was a pitchers’ battle all- the way with \Shimmy” Crnich gti ting the verdict over Joe Cavanaugn Ardent Dairyman Installs One of Famous Pierce Free Machines at Cost of Thousand dollars— Equipment-Will Milk 50 Cows in One Honr. Henry Tatro, yardmaster .at Lima and well-known rancher o l the south end of the county, just recently in- ■■ stalled a milking machine, the first of - the kind to be brought to Beaverhead county. Mr. Tatro Is an ardent be- i liever in a great future in the dairy 0 .. industry for this county. A year ago he bought a herd of fifteen bead^of ■: the finest milch cows that money oopld bny and he intends to buy more every year. Mr. Tatro found that, the -old fashioned method of milking the - >«ows*y hands Was a tedious one, and y • •* he decided to buy a machine. He invested more than a thousand r dollars in his equipment. The milk- Meaderville ....... ...... . ........ 4 ink machine is a Pierce Free and u as Dillon .... .. 3 3 2 Batteries— Crnich and Penbale; To Visit, in Dillon Judge R. L. Shackelford and wife; Sunday’s.tilt the fielding of Mea- are expected to arrive In Dillon this * Ha\ ie sportsmen _of_Dmon HaveJSooi H. E. Mrs. Joseph Monroe for some time. 3 1 Mrs. Shackelford is a sister of Mrs. 3 2 Monroe, Wild Turkeys and Pheasants - A r e Being Imported N ow Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bennett and two children, who recently motored to Dillon from their home at^fountain Home, Idaho, drove to Dillon Friday Luck with Eggs of Wild Feath ered Game—To Import Grown Pheasants—Hope to Make Tur keys and Pheasants Game Bird. manufactured In Chicago.. Power is'furnished from a three-horse pow- and Golman“ er gasoline engine and compressor which established a vacuum and tho * ! milk is drawn from the cow In that Former Sheriff Is Dead manner. A double unit receptacle is Word was received in Dillon last' afternoon from Argenta used for catching the milk. Two week o f the death of Addison O. Rose accompanied by Mrs. J. T. Ross and wild pheasant eggs which they set cows are milked at one time. More who died at Reno, Nevada, on the'Mrs. Carl Roodei Mrs. Roode too*! along with the eggs of domestic can be milked at one time, the double 23rd of last month. Mr. Rose was the afternoon train for Seattle and fowls. Tho results exceeded their unit receptacle being always utilized 78 years of age and his death was other coast points where she will (most sanguine expectations, and now for two cows. -The -milk from each due to infirmities incident to old age. ytyit before returning to her home In, they have a small flock of the young cow Is kept separate. It takes Just j The deceased was a former Bherlff St. Louis, Mo. She has been viBiting turkeys and pheasants scattered four minutes to milk two cows. Fifty of Beaverhead county, serving for, at the home'of her parents, Mr. and throughout a number of chicken Last spring Senator Frank Hazel- baker and Mayor Roscoe Cornell They were' secured a number of wild turkey and I ’ I , cows can be milked in one hour with four years. He later served the Mrs. J. T. Ross, at Argenta for the yards In the city. The gentlemen do not Intend to keep the birds in captivity, but to re- but two men working to .accomplish county in the lower; branch of the past two months, the task. Mr. Tatro expects to in- state legislature, being active daring crease his dairy herd to forty-five the campaign when Dillon was select-1r Njek Birrer was In town yesterday lease them Just as soon as they show this fall. j ed for the site pf the Nonna! college. ( afternoon from his ranch at Lima.; a tendency of wanting to hunt a wild er and more remote home. It is the belief of the two local men that, with the proper protection, the birds will multiply and in fire years will afford some real good shooting. Gratified with his first experiment. Senator Hazelbaker has sent to the state game commission of Oregon for a number of the grown pheasants and as soon as they arrive they will be taken to conntry districts and turned loose. ’ '/ While wild turkeys have never ex isted in this section, it is thought they will flourish here. Pheasants were hunted here at one time but have been killed off. All. good Sportsmen are urged to assist in the protection of the game birds and to repor^lny violations of the law. »‘ A^rewarf iHll be offered for. the' arrest of anyone shboting any of the turkeys or the phbasanta. ,, , „■>