{ title: 'Hendricks' Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.) 1903-1905, November 07, 1903, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053047/1903-11-07/ed-1/seq-2.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053047/1903-11-07/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053047/1903-11-07/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053047/1903-11-07/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About Hendricks' Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.) 1903-1905 | View This Issue
Hendricks' Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.), 07 Nov. 1903, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053047/1903-11-07/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
VfiT y m t in advmoe within 90-day b from date ----- — .— . -|1. per square monthly. Local* 20 cents per line each irtscition. Special rates by contract. '*Ehtfefed Jnfle 20, 1903, at Columbia SATURDAY. NOV. 7, 1903. ‘..The hot a ir pumps are still working it the Amalgamated press of Montana. .John S M Neill, proprietor of the Wesa of Helena, is a Cleveland democrat. When Neill gets a good chance to be sella. No wonder he loses patience with Heinse, MacGinnesrand the Butte Judges. - S P . * U /. 7 / f a i n 7 / f e r c a n o i l e C o m p a n y Oldest fleneral Department Store in Mead Co. m HUNTRESS. I know a.huntress fair indeed • And womanly sweet is she; Full many a trophy of the hunt In her home you may daily nee; And many a story of the glory ‘-sOf the chase she-has told to me.' How for away in the morning light Where the forests drip with dew, With shortened skirts and still-shod feet She wanders the woodland through, And swiftly creeps or quiet keeps For her prey to come in view. She has caught the deer Hn their Besom _ __ ^ _ C o lum bia Avails Politics is beginning to shape in Flat- head county for the next campaign but tWa big-ereets will not be pulled off td Mr* Democratic confidence will be gre atly restored when it is-learned that the democratic mayor was elected in New York by a majority of-70,000 votes. > The hnttlingDf gravel* to-'main street will greatly improve that thoroughfare *» soon as the trayel has smoothed it ddWn a little. Supervisor Willis ttf bo doing hie whole daty. - If the standard Oil Co., through its Amalgamated Copper Co., can throw 16,000 men out of employment in this state when opposed by Heinze what in thunder can they and would they do if Heinze was not in the way? Ndahr'tras th» first man to adverjtise. He advertised the flood knd it. came all right. The fellows who laughed at the advertising*got drowned, and it seryed them right. Ever since Noah’s time the advertiser has been prospering, while the other fellow is being swallowed up in the flood of disaster. One of the many commendable feat ures of our moat ezellent public schools is the-vocal i nstroctions which are be- iayiatfeti't. Sorely Columbia Falls has the best public schools in the county. All the teachers are giving full and en tire satisfaction an d take an interest in their work that is delegated to their pupils and from the pupils to the par ents. Now if some mean Contemporary don’t take this up ahd add that the ed itor of” the Columbian was-jacked up by aome of the pretty schoolmams-it will be all right. Those people who wanted incorpor ation so bad last week seem to have dropped out of existence entirely. All in the world that would be required to get the matter squarely to a vote of the people would be a map and description oi the proposed district to be incorpor- fffSH and 100 signatures of the residents within the boundary ltneaf The county commissioners would do the rest and we would then have a warm political cam paign-something to wake up the inter cuts of the people in the town cf Colum bia Falls. There would arise the ques tions of additional expense in taxes and the question of high licenses and low licenses and myriads of other things that would cause the grizxled heads to scratch their pates three or four times before going to the polls and voting for ( gainst incorporation and if the tnove- tfieni carried then all these questions and many more vHTuld be added in choos ing a mayor and common council who Wfca favorable or'unfavorable to the dif ferent ideas* of the people concerning city government. The Columbian would have lotsxif interesting muck to print it seme one will just get the petition out. As they drank from some rock-bound pool, And the birds that come for their morn ing dip In its waters sweet and cool, Yes, many a raid has my huntress made On-the pupils in nature’s school I But never the forest has heard her gun Or its shadows seen its flame, And never a bird or beast has known They were prey of her deadly aim. Yes those she sought were surely caught AVhen into her range tbeycame. A-camera only my huntress takes, A*nd she joys in life so free; There comes no thooght of struggle or pain When she shows her “game” to me. And her eyes are bright with kindness light, For womanly sweet is she. SOME TOA8T8. Here's to-Dame Fortune; may you never meet her daughter, “ Miss-fort une.\ The Chamois lives among the Alps; He wipe the morning dew. He leaps from jag to jag. Do you ? Here’s champagne to real friends, And real pain to sham friends, Here’s to the heigh ta of heaven, Here’s To the depths of hell; And here’s to the girl who'll have a good time With sense enough not to tell. To our sweethearts and wives: May ur sweethearts be our wives, and our wives our sweethearts. Again to our sweethearts and wives; May they never meet. Here's to the wine we sip, For it drives away a tear. I t is not-ag sweet as a woman,s Jip, Bijj/i ----- sight more sincere. Our country—may she always be in the right; but our country, right oi wrong. M o n tan a IE. II. Snyder £• Col | DRUGGISTS j ^G u a r a n teed' M e d icin e s t S nyder ' s R heumatic Ccaz - \ B lood Pcainsa •* K idney R emedy “ C olic & D iarrhoe R emedy \ H eadache R emedy \ N rvrauua P owdeee ' If KILL 18 HYSTERICAL. The Press of Helena last week gave five pages to the situation in Butte, tfle course of which after paying its re spects to Heinze, MacGinniei and the Stiver Bow Judges in the most approved Amalgamated stvltJ, if lectured the Shpreme Court under the head, “Pro- cfldents and Technicalities,” in a i ner quite out of the ordinary. The only hlrm that i. likely to flow from such htsolent rtileries, if Allowed to go un punished, is in the fact that such lang uage tends to create a popular contempt for our highest courts o t justice arid to ' J their dignity and It seems loo bad that Neill t dignified by?*the Supreme any notice of him, and still • forgotten that there are in Montana who are no he ia, and many who *: aa he knows. Held Up And Shot. A young man named Sam Foss was held up and shot in a box car on the Great Northern a t Sand point, last Fri day morning. He was brought to Hath- drum-and placed in the hospital. The bullet pierced the stomach, inflicting dangerous wound. In company with a friend, Henry Peters. Foss was beating bis way from Columbia Falls, Mont- When the train stopped Rt Sandpoint, they saw a beside the track and decided to get out and warm themselves. As Peters climb- ad out of one side of the carj two robbers entered it at th# other side, covering Foes with a revolver and relieving him of twenty cents. Having »12 in his shoe and fearing the robbers Would get that, also, Foss seized the revolver and giap pled with the thug. In the scuflie, the robber shot Foss in the stomach, whereupdfi both highwaymen, made their escape. Dr. Moody, of Sandpoint, extracted the bnllet and dressed the wound.—Ratbdrum Tribune. CUPID‘8 CAPERS. The man who flirts with servant girls has domestic taste. A faint heart has been known to win when backed up by a fat pocketbook. It is said that misery likes company. Probably thftt’s why so many psople marry. No matter what is a girl’s political creed, she always wants protection. Girls may never become successful pugilists, but they will continue to train or the engagement ring. When a fly gsta stuck on a fly paper and a man gets stuck on a girl-well, they both get their legs pulled effectual ?y- WOMAN‘8 WAYS. Money talks. That’s Why they put a woman’s head on a silver dollar. Borne women are so timid that they are several years shy when it comes to telling their age. It is sai'P'that women do not possess the creative faculty, and yet some of them succeed in raising large families. Telephone oporators are always bound to have the last word. That's why females are always employed in that capacity. r *m -\ willll bi Keeps the best liqnora that money wi buy. Always money in the safe to cash checks COLUMBIA FALLL, - - MONTANA 1 MAN‘8 MISHAPS. Men are like pins—no good when they lose their heads. Itr doesn’t always take the ruffles out' of man’s temper to iron him. The man who tries to serve two mas ters at the same time is liable to be ar rested for bigamy. Usually there is nothing in a name, but there ara at times when a man puts everything he has in his wife’s name. It is the man who has always been customed to corn bread and bacon at s who does the most kicking on a trip. Carr & Pose handle everything. No lore complete general department i ' i the west. Columbia Lodge, No. 43*, meets every Tuesday evening a t their hall in Colom bia Falls. Mont. Thos. Thornton, Sec. The Geo. B. M e d ia n Post, No. 24. • A. K., meets every 1st and 3d Satur day each month, aC 2 p. m , at the Sol diers ’ Home. E. Keener, commander, N. H. Morley, Adjutant. All classes of building material, _ . .. nd doors, building paper and bnilding hardware at Care'A Poes, at> lowest price. The Hub has goes to sell. Millinery. Fine assortment of Fall street hats, and the latest styles in Ladies’ Tailor made Hats, also Caps,Tames and Toques for children?* school wear. M rs .-F oster . A complete line of furniture purchased car load lots at Carr A Poss will be sold a t right prices. ti m i l » Watch this space next week. ZT/y 77Aat S i / v e r S p r a y 3 3 e a r 77/ado b y th e ? 9 7 ? o n t a n c i b r e w i n g C o . S r o a t J a i l s . 97/ontanH . V h o b a s t b o a r o n o a r t A f o r fa m i l y a n d g e n e r a l u s o i J f a n d t e d b y a l l p r i n c i p a l d e a le r s a t C o lu m b ia J a i l s . B BELLMAN. Jr.. Proprietor. Just Opened' Except the Whiskey Good music all the time Dancing floosies to entertain yon while-you waft SUMMONS In the District Court ol the Eleventh Judicial District, ot the Slate oi Montana, In and lor the County of Flathead. Catharine Irene Burr, plaintiff, against 8. Claude Burr defendant. The stale of Montana sends greetings t named Defendants and to each of them r ro hereby summoned to answer the com plaint In this action, which ladled In the ol Clerk of this Court, a ropy ol whiel herewith served upon on* of you In each county wherein any of yota reside, and to die yot answer and serve a ropy thereof upoir the tff Attorney within tweitty days after the scrvfaenf this summons, exclusive ol the service; and In caaa-of your failure .. appear or answer. Judgment srllf* be taken* a- gainst you, by default for the relief demanded complaint. Said action. Is brought obtain a decree of dlrsrrc dissolving thabonds of matrimony Misting between rhe plelr and defendant on the grounds ol habitus! temperance andTanure to suport. Witness my hand and the teal ot aald court this »th, day ot October, 1903. Seal J ames K. L ano , Clerk. J.K. M iller , Columbia Falls, Montana. Attorney for Plaintiff. First Pub. Oct. 91* , 1903- MII.LINERY AND DRESSMAKING. It.takes the combined efforts of sever al ppreons one whole week to print a week I j* paper. A whole week’s work 41 well \.n „ d o s - ,h , K, „ , WMberwoman or roilkm.ll. ,, M n . t W u t t . m u , , If you w a n t the real thing, take the Co lumbian. It gives you all the news all the time. .U e f HOW DO Don’t pass by just because you can't see in W e handle the best goods that money can buy and will treat you right all the time. LOU SM ITH T h e r e Is But* One D a v e G r e v e Dr. A. Howe . 18 * iS D. i. IM f Mb Its P. J. HOFFMANN prepared to do «trictlv first rli __ up-to-date millinery a t,d:dTessfnaking at Best in Montana. Whitefish, .»* *** Montana. m ■p JAMES BOLICK P a i n t e r All classes of painting and paper hang ing, also retllrpaints, oils and wall papdr* UouutBr*. F ails . . . . M o W ana -