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About The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.) 1891-1897 | View This Issue
The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.), 29 Oct. 1896, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053046/1896-10-29/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
71 IE COLUMBIAN. 1 * SIXTH YEAR. COLUM B IA FA L L S , MONTANA, TH U R S D A Y . OCTOBER 2D. 18‘Jli. NUM B E R 44. C O L U M B I A F A L L S IS S U R R O U N D E D B Y M O R E N A T U R A L R E S O U R C E S T H A N A N Y C I T Y O N T H E P A C I F I C S L O P E . B A N K DIRECTORS: A. J. Davis, : : ButUi, Ml. James A. Talbott, Hutto, Ml. •T. E. Gaylord, : ■ Butto, M(. B. Tibbey : : Butto, Mt, L. C. Trent, : : Salt Lake. of the United States a: aaaaaaamtauaaaaaaauuaa T H E BEE HIVE STORE.* aauuaa WE SELL AT LOW PRICES p R Q C K E R Y , T IN W A R E , Wgopjgn Ware, Kitchen Utensils, 1-amps, Etc. pnppr.fi Call an d Look Over Our Stock and Get Prices. MAIN STREET. Columbia Falls, Montana. rsnKrcrnnnr.rr.rnr.r.r.r.rnnf.r.r n Carter. Rebuked by Hu* Voter Great Knits. 80 per Cent of Whom Are for Bryan. KIBE AT. THE KI/ATHBAI) AGENCY iyo Little Girls Suffocated In Their II i i II it Belt-Yolk Brewery in Ashes. ~J~ * Grout Falls had rival political do:n onstrations hint week which admin istered an effective rebuke tp trailers and double dculers and showed most mipliutieally that HO per cent of the rotors of Great Falls will support the Aire list of silver candidates. Thos. Carter was tlie goldito speaker. Ho I with cries of traitor, traitor, utid hisses all over the.house, ‘Slippery Tom” commenced by praising Greut Fulls aud taking of the angry interruptions. He soon had the iiudieiico in good humorand was listened to attentively whilcL lie talked about u protective tariff uiid its importance. the Flathead Indian agency destroyed the ngoncy office and the bouse adjoining. All of ttiosub- sistouce supplies for the Indians wero destroyed, together with u quautity of dry goods and some light hard- Tlio fire started in the middle of the building in tho room nhpro Supplies are issued. A large part of the books und agency records wort No estimate of loss hu: been made I ut it is heavy. It uil replace tho building uidito lay iu a now supply of raticius before the cold weather sets PROFESSIONAL CARDS. D. F. SMITH, A t t o n \ e \ j - a t - L a W : gOMMISSIONER y.§.p ! R C U | T C O U R T LAND FILINGS AND FINAL I’ll OOFS MADE. COLUMBIA FALLS, - MONT. A. H. BURCH, ^ D E N T I S T . Offices: Conrad Block. KALISPELL, : MONTANA. DR. J. A. G H E N T , Consulting Physician. R ftliepell, M o n tana, TheDnroc-Jerseys Are tho MOST PROFITABLE lie nzbtcaee. hiring been bred for F. E A R L Y M A T U R IT Y . Wholelittori welch 2 5 0 lbs. onch at f •anU nor pound on board ear*. I iwiid lint (o _ _____.Inn.rti nil rlmlui.r. .1 n. I ,nu to farrow during February and March. ^It^hM ^u^rOTed m^jth^bjrjictunl^ over a dollar n bouhrl. Don’t breed cnmni OF TRAITOR g Wm m. .1. Itryan Marches on to Victory Amid the Cheers ofjfmulrctts of Thonsauds. HIS TRAMJCKH8 ABE ANSWERED coivflfi injuries from which ho died. Willium George, o Cornish miner about 34 years of age, lost his life by falling down a flight of stairs at tho Pacific house, Butto. Ho\was pretty woll loaded with whiskey uml^wluyj j he reached the hood of tho stairs.il is supposed that lie attempted to turn around tho railing but missed his footing nod fell backwards down tho winding flight a distance of nbout fifteen feojibrouking his neck. X. W. Marshall was killed while engaged in freighting wool on tho Melville road ten miles north of Big Timber. Ho leaves a wife and one! child. ] Tiin O’Neill was instantly killed in \ ,u- J ’ Br.van 001 tho Minnie Healey mine in Meador- ol Ohio on tho 20th. villo. O’Neill was 22 years old and I ,ll,ller\lS recepUon at Youngstown, unmurried. ]There ho found the largest crowd li Received is the Hero of the Hour ai r Town in Indiana at Which He Stops. il miner iu Steven- near Livingstou, KNOCKED OFT. ed during the day, his admirers iu Youngstown having their number increased from the outlyiug districts of Ohio and Peuusylvauia. There Were free-silver clubs from Mc Donald, Pa., mid from several points ill Ohio. The McDonald Liucohi Republican Silver club carried a bau uer readi ug: “Even bishops cau - not prevent us from voting for the poor man’s friend.” There were several hundred in lino in tho procossion und from tho dopot . . . i to tho places of speaking und then no ot tho preliminaries,, , . , . . . . , ,. I back to tno depot again the nominee woro obsorved in either . . . , . Court Decides Against Hie Silver Repinilicau Ticket, Tho supromo court in its decision on the iiijunctiou asked by Elmer Metcalf, of Lewis and Clark county, to keep the Citizens' Silver ticket off the ballot, reviews the evidence «to show that of eonVenlioiis id a continual ovation. Steubenville was visited tho day before by ‘‘Tho Gonorals’ of tho speakers attacked tho DUROC-JERSEY STOCK FARM, The grand lodgo of bdd Fellows oloctcd tho following officers for tho ousuing yoar: Grand master,.I. S. Kemp, Missoula; deputy grand mus- ■Iallies M. Rhodes, Gleudivo; grand warden, R. \Y. Neill, Heleua- grand treasurer, Thos. \ j . Trees, Butte; grand represeu.ativo to su- lodge, Alasscnu Bullard, Holcim. A terrible accident occurred qt Holt causing I lie death of two littlo girls, ;pd 21 and -1 years, respectively, luglitors of Mr. aud Mrs. Alex Kautti. The father and mother wero temporarily absent, when suddenly the house, which was u small ouij, observed - to bo euvolppad iu •s. When entrance was effected, torriblu sight was presented. This older girl was lyiug apross the bed, burned and suffocated, und tbo younger one lay iu a cram|>ed posi tion*, behind u sewing machine, nko dead. The iiro is believed to have .•aught from tho stove. Tho dnmugo o tho buildiug was about $200. There wus no insurance. Marcus P. Lund, foreman of tho Butto City Water company, was run down by a hack aud diedlato iu Mur ray and .Freund’s hospital. At a regiilur meeting of the silvor rofmblioun' club of Lewis and Clurke county, resolutions were adopted con demning tho course persued by tho Hon.A.C. Botkin as inconsistent with thp cou'Jitiops undpr which ho was nominated, as iuiinical to the cause of silver,-usa violutiou of the-confidence ropospd in bin) by the friends of sil vor. and that ‘'wo are under neither tnoral nor political obligations to uc cord to him our support at tho pulls.” Tho Volk brewery, two miles up the Missouri river from Great Falls, burned to tbo ground. Tbo plant, iu eluding machinery and slock, was valued at *30,COO; insured for *17,500 Tho fire originated in.tho roof of tho boiler room, wboro a watchman slept. aroused with difficulty and dragged from the room after the idol pierhead ling half burned av Mout|Uin Pjslrict Assembly No. H*J, Kuightsof Labor, met at Great Falls and adopted uu address to the labor ing people of (ho United States. It re minds all workingmen tliuln decisiou ibout to be given whether or not they will secure the rights at ud privi leges guaranteed to them by the stilution; whether they entei higher regard for humanity than gold, and that vital as is the money question there is. one more vital do tnaudiug attention, for the great cor porations are nllurraycd a gain.si tin people's rights, and oQjtTT have moulded legislation and influenced even tho decisions of courli case of corporations vs. tho common pooplo- is now on trial. A vote foi McKinley means tho ondorsuiilcnt of those methods. A vote for Bryan means condemnation of the Ezra Altucr, a 16-year-ol jMrs. M. Altucr, residing at Chico,! Adveilisc in Tho Columbian. the county convention or tho state converition of the Citizens’ Silvvf party. It says that twenty or thirty j persons met in tho <>>uucii chamber . , . . . „ ,,,, r ., , ,, . . . . pension record of Mr. Bryan. When of the city ball on tho night of Oct, f, . , . i . . I tlio nominee arrived there no answered 1, elected W illium Tompson chaitmnn ,, , . . , , . . , . , n , , , , , tho statements mado by saying ho and J. A. Baker secretary, appointed „ „ „ betl(,r ftj, uj of (lle soldier than and at onco organized in- th0TO-wl|O wilth(K, l0 Hubiult tlu, , .... ’ 11 n°'v' .BB financial policy of this uation to tho ■ns Silver party,‘‘tho begin- ,. , . , .. . dictation of foreign powers, vstificd tbo secretary, “of a J I Tho next stop was in the conuty i which resides (lie republican uomi- »o. It was at Alliance, aud thoru iveral thousaud people listened to . .. , tho democratic candidate for twouty commit I to a political party, tbo Cilia niug,” testified new national party.’ A county ticket identical with tho Auditorium ticket was named. Then the convention adjourned tho stato convention named tho Brynu electors. Tho ... prerne court says no call for a state I convention’ was'ever given and no| delegates ever elected by any county I Convention. ‘'The whole history of | tho party,” 'says the court, “covered one short evening. It originated ouo minutp.iiQnvonod ns a county conven tion tho next, convened as a stato convention the noxf, then promulgat ed its principles uud adjourned. W*o doubt if political history records tbo undertaking of another so vast a work as this in so brief a time. ho whole theory of representa- as fairly iutouded by the lavy entirely ignored. Thp vigorous authority of the electors of tho party was lucking, and unless rolief is grant- eh cases tho voters of tho state, who are members of tbo Citi- Silver party, may be confronted with a ballot containing the names of persons in whoso nomination they opportunity whatever to take part by delegate representation. W’e cau not assent to such a method us a convention nomination of candidates.” Muincsotq fur Bryan. L. A! Rosin, cbnirmun of the demo- utic state central committee, and liotnas D. O’Brien, member of thp national committee fpr Minnesota, issued au address to the voters of Minnesota. It says: ‘A careful cauvass of thp situutiou i demonstrated conclusively that Mr. Bryan will receive tho electoral vote of this state. The people ovo.ry- ro made Ills cause their own, and there is no county iu the state of Minnesota iu which the froo silvor will not largely exceed tho for- total vote of tho opposition to the republican party. When it is ro- membored, therefore, that for years l this stuto the republican party lias ad at least 20,000 votes lessdhab ae-balf of the vples of (he slate, it till bo seen how certain the reform fqrotfc are carrying the stato this fall,’1 X-Rays I’olsmiwl Him, Geo. L. Novvcoinbe, of Saloni, O. who bns been exporiinenting with tin X-ray, asserts that ho has been obligor to renounce futhur investigation as i: was poisoning him. He hoc! experi roented chiefly on his right hand. At first the symptoms were very much the same as ivy, or other vegetable poisoning, tho sensation’being •hiug, hunting and smarting. The skin turned to ii dark purplish br< and a burning sonsution increased, with oach suuoossivo exposure. Tho skin ponied off while every hair upon tho hand foil out. The nails of the fingers turned purple and lost life aud gavo indication of fulling off. When two women love tho sumo man, tho wrong one always gets him It doesn’t mat tor which one. I minutes. R was an appreoiativi •d, and applauded tho speaker often. Tho speech was deliverer] composod for tho most part of workingmon. There was an other good crowd at Ravenna, when Mr. Bryan receivorl another enthusi astic demonstration. At Kent there wus.a repetition of tho crowd at* i at so much per save” he alluded tho veterans. On n platform erected n a few yards of tho homo of Gon. Lew Wallace ho roplied in vig orous language to tho author of ‘Bou Hur,” who, in a speech mado omo time ago, ulludcd to Mr. Brvan .s uu anarchist. Th*» enthusiastic meetiug of the veiling in Terre Hauto was a fitting closo for the enthusiastic day. Tho roeeption wok one of tho greatest, if not the greatest of tho day, und tho ration given tho candidate was flat ting in tho extreme. It was at Crawf- rdvillo that tbo sensation of tho dny occurred and at tlmt meeting Mr. Bryau mado his duration that he was willing to put up his patriotism against any man on earth who endorses the republican .platform. ~ o crowds ai Lafayette woreonor- i. They ran up iu tho ton thousands, aud went entlmsisastic to a great extent. Here ho spoke from three sides of the court house, aud ut side tho streots wero packed. Ex-Presidout Harrison came .ill for auothor touchiug-up there. Danville was the first stop of the orningon the 23d aud from a stand ■ar tho court housoMr. Brynu spoke nu assemblage which numbered i in the thousands. Enthusiasm prevailed at tho meeting. It re mained for the little town of Charles oh to originate n conveyance differ- mt from any found anywhere to lake Hr. Bryuu to the grounds where he vas to speak. A gaylv decorated platform was provided und placed ou wheels, and after .Mr. Bryan and his pnrty had ascended it 200 strong and willing hands wheeled it ton va cant lot, where tho nouiiuee addressed large crowd of demonstrative farmers. At Multoou there was tho largest uwd of tho morning und it was in sympathy with tho free-silver doc trine o.xpouudod by its standard- bearer. Indinua was invaded on tho 21st. Mr. Bryan spoke to a crowd of sever ai thousand at Rushville from a plat form erected' in a vac.’fut lot npar the center of tho city, fur tho first timo during b>s campaign Mr. Bryan, at Nuwoastle, roforrnd to ox-Presillout Harrison stumping tbo state iu tbo interest of the ropubliran nominee. Ho said that cx-Prosident Harrison !ected to the presidency on a platform that denounced Mr. Cleve land’s administration ou the ground that ho had tried to demonetize sil- r.and that to-day tho former presi dent was stumping the stafe trying to got the republicans to o:/lorso Mr. Cleveland's financial policy; that tho policy of the last administration was worse on tho money questiou than tho first administration, but a change over Ifio republican loaders (hut they wquted tho American people to submit to tho policy which they denounced eight years ago. There was a large and enthusias tic crowd, and they applauded vigorously when Mr. Bryan olurod he could prove his posi by evidence deduced from republican SOU I cos. A bowling, cheering, excited jam of humauity to tho extent of several thousand welcomed tho candidate of the bimetallic purtics to Audi Out on tho open prairie a stand had boon erected, uud a crowd assembled vbich would bnyo clone yro(l|t to u illy’of much luvgor size. Enthusiast!: vas provident, and it lasted from tin uiomout-the crowd first saw Mr, Bryat until tho'train pulled out.' Mr. Brynu addressed three monste meetings in tho evening iu Fort' Wayne. Tho first was at tho Wayuo hotel, and when Mr. Bryan spoko from tho balcony of that hostelry the big double block iu front was packed to such au extent that the windows were broken iu by (ho crowd. The block measures 1 0 0 by 60 feet, was packed until notafoot of space was left unoccupied. Il was several minutes before Mr. Bryuu could tnuko himself heard, und when he did to talking ho was often stopped by tumultuous applauso. The trip through Indinua 22il was of interest, not only because of tho enthusiastic crowds countered at nearly every stop. Ind because,of the aggressive nature of (lis speeches. At Delphi he refuted tho charge of ox-President Harrison (hat wheu he spoko of thoso who had EGGS FOR JOHN G, Secretary Carlisle Given-the Wrong Sort of an Ovation iu the State of Kentucky. FASTER TAJiXEB WAS A VICTIM A Princess Married and an Actress Di- nreed—Bits of News Gathered the World Over. 1 howling, shouting, cheering afowd welcomed Mr. Bryan to De wit it r. When tho train pulled in a great crowd surrounded the car and with difficulty that Mr. Bryan roached tho conveyance which totako him to tho place of spoak- Hcro tho outorprisiug com mittee weui tho Charleston committee bettter aud a motocycle was brought into use and tho candidate conveyed in this horseless car riage. Tho crowd was tho feature. It was a crush from tho start to tho finish, nud when tho platform at tho court house square wus readied it was im possible for tho uomiuoo to gain it. Wbilo tho crowd was not so large as many places, tho crush was the rat experienced for many a day. Tho other carriages conk) not get within top, feet of that occupied by Mr. Rryan and the crowd of short- band moil with tho party and for the locul papers could not got near igh to report tho speech. At tho second speech the press correspon dent could not hear one word in fifty. The return to the dopot was a con tinuous ovation and it was hard to keep tho excited admirers of tho from breuking over tho police aud doing bodily harm iu the desiro to show their affection. Tho greatest reception of tho day us uceorded Mr. Bryan when ho ar- vod iu Peoria. Tho streets wero crowded, and ho was given a continu al ovation from tho timo ho left the.de pot until ho had startod to spoak. At -thodepot a trolloy car was in waiting to which was attachod a fiat car covered with a canopy aud ablaze •bed •y.raudeawiut lights. Mr. and Airs. Bryan woro taken over a lothrough a solid mass of cheering people, many of whom fell in bohind and murchod along iu the pro- Throo meetings wero hold in Peoria, ouo in tho luboruaclo, which Holds 8,000 people when crowded as that night; auothor iu historic s hull to an uudionco of 2,000 mado up exclusively of trade ,.u(id a third in the open court house square. Thousands i unable’ to gain admittance to tho hull, nnd thousands ui tumble to get within sound of tho speaker's voice ot tho open uir meet ing. It ivus urur 11 o’clock before Mr. Bryan finished his work, aud bo retired at once to his cur. U. S. G. Cherry, chnirman of tfuT stnto central committoo of freo-silvor republicans of South Dakotu, gavo out an iutejviow claiming tho state for Bryan by 8,000 majority. Ho has returns from 1,000 voting precincts, showing more than 10,000 freo-silvor republicans having signified u deter mination to vote for Bryan. Ho bases his largo majority t)u tho fuel of plotoand harmonious fusion. cordance with tho plan of the new ex ecutive to reduce the running ex penses and that tho men who wore dis charged are thoso who could boat stand a layoff. The ordinary rules of promotion and discharge were dis regarded, and many of the oldest in tho shops, but who wore sup posed to be silver men, were dis- DEATH OF CHARLES F. CRISP. Secretary of the Treasury John G. Carlisle made tho first of his soriesof Kentucky speeches at Covington. Mr. Carlisle wus interrupted continuously during his speech and eggs thrown about the hall, four being ii upon tbo stage, the most orderly scene was at the close of the meetiug, wheu hoodlums gathered about theexit with insulting remains. o many noisy pooplo in the at root und iu such spirit us to threaten violence ns well as insult to the secre tary. Tho authorities had net taken radical attention to prevent disturb ance up to this time, but after the meeting tho mayor and chiof of poll promptly furnisbod a detachraont of 20 police, who safely and quiotly cortod Secretary Carfislo to tho n donee of Frank Helm. Henry, Baron Foullon Von Nor- beck, an Austrian scientist, who b visited many groups of the islands the south seas and bad numerous e citing experiences with the uatives, ■hilo traveling with au armed guard vor tho mountains of Solomon island •as sot upon by the bushmen and slain, together with throe others. Dtiriug the desperate conflict which followed the assault many of the party wero dangerously wouuded. Tho steauior Arago, owned by the Oregon Coal & Navigation company, from Coos bay for San Francisco, was carriod off by the current and driven the rocks off the jetty at Coos Head. Sho will be a total loss. In atteuiptingto laud a boatload of pas- seugors aud crew the boat was cap sized. Twelve wore drowned, four pnssongors and eight of the crow Tho seeond victim of tho fire which destroyed a largo pottory plant at Akron, O., is now kuQwu to be Dr. nnor, whose right name was Frau- Hnrrisnn, who was mado famous by n long fast iu which ho once in dulged. Tho body bus not yot been found, blit is supposed to lio under a great heap of brick aud stones. Tan- a strange character. Several years ngo ho sold hia wifo to Adam Hild, a German, for *10 and at nviug machine. The Red Cloud Mining company of Hailey, Idaho, has passed into the hands of a receiver. Tho marriage of Princess Holene of Montenegro to tho crown prince of Italy took place at Romo ou tho24th. Senator Butler, as chairman of the populist national committee, issued strong address calling on all mon bers of tho party to stand by Wm. Gustavo Pnbst has been granted ivorce from AInrgarot Mather, the ■tress, on tho allogod ground of ii humuu and cruol treatment. Two passenger trains collided net St. Louis, killing eight persons and injuring twenty others. NO STONE UNTURNED. Railroad Corporations Reported I Using Fair Reans and Font. The Spokesman has an interview with a gentleman just returned from Minnesota as follows: 'Another thing that came to my at tention,” said Mr. Theis, “showing tho despicablo methods of tho repub licans’ was a fact that I booame ac quainted with when I loft Minneapo lis tho other day. Tho first two unpleteiy filled with working- l circulated among them to learn tho reason of their moving at this time. I found (hut thoy employes of the railroad, who were going out to Dakota to go to work on construction. As a matter of fact there is littlo or no work for them to do, but it appeara that tho railroad is nioviugsection men aud othor classes iployes about, Thoso in Min nesota who are known to be for sil- or about whoso voting there is doubt, are moved to Dakota, and the Dakota men moved to Minnesota, thus losiug their votes.” Word comes from Tacoma that ovor 180 men have been discharged from tho Northern Pacific car shops at South Tacoma since Sept. 20. With tho exception of possibly five, every ouo of these mon was favorable to Bryan and the people’s party ticket. The shop officials have stated that The Ex-Speaker of the Honsc ot Rep resentatives Breathes His Last at Atlanta. 3noof Free Silver's Warmest Advo cates and Would Have Been Geor gia's Next Senator— Loved and Honored by All. Charles F. Crisp, ex-speaker of the house of representatives, died ot At lanta. Ga., on the 23d iust, at tho age of 51. Crisp had been au inmate of the sanitarium of Dr. Homes for sev eral woeks. His condition bod been reported low, but no fatal conclusion of bis illness had been expected so soon. When the rumor got abroad several days ago that he was sinking, it was doniod at the sanitarium. His untimoly death makes tho choico of . senator a matter of great uncertainty. Whoever is named will be an advocate of free silver. Speaker Crisp’s death was not alto gether a surpriso in political circles, it hasbeon known for some months that ho had not long to live, and 'er again could be an activo figure public affairs. The speaker had had several spells of illness in Wash- >n. Ho suffered from asthma and later from heart trouble. His ill Health, however, did not become a matter of public knowledge until last spring, when he was compelled to abandon a sorios of joint debates ar ranged with ex Secretary Hoke Smith, by reason of the advico of his physician. He said that it would im peril Crisp’s life for him to continue the debates, which had attracted great interest, as it involved the posi tion of tho democratic party of the state on the silver question and the seuatorehip of Georgia, for which :-Spoakor Crisp was an activo candi date. Tho silver men won tbo fight, and had ho lived he would havo been the next senator from Georgia. Ho was a forceful speaker, a man of groat tact, and possessed of quali ties that fitted him for loadorehip in a parliamentary assemblage. His first prominence in national affairs came from tho skill with which he led his party in several warm election con tests. Ho was elected to the speaker- ship after odo of the most memorable asses in the history of the bouse. His chief opponent was Senator ~ jr Q. Mills of Texas, whom he defeatod after a struggle prolonged so that the house of representatives, contrary to its custom, assembled on the opening day with the question of the noxt speaker io doubt. Any impartial judge of beer will admit that our own Flathead beer mado from Flathead barley beats the imported brands in brilliancy, strength and flavor. Why then should you send your money east for what you can buy better and cheaper at home! B . C. S elvage . Look for now clubbing rates for TK« Columbian and other papers. It will interest you. Do not experiment in so impor tant a matter os your health. Purify, enrich aud vitalize your blood with Hood’s Sursaparilla and thus keep yourself strong and healthy. m POWDER Absolutely Pure. A CREAM OF TABTAB BAX1NO POWDEB. HlQUEST OF ALL IN LEAVENINO STHENOTH —Latest United States Government Food Report. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO 106 W all St., N. Y.