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About The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.) 1905-1925 | View This Issue
The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.), 14 Feb. 1924, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053048/1924-02-14/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
BOYS AND GIRLS W® take up our duties day by day From the dawn 'till set of sun. And loving: ihonghts will linger al ways Of our boys of sixty-one. Wherever the dsar old flay unfurls -That tells o f a worknrell done; j Yon will always And the loyal girls Who lived I n slxty-ono. In the bye and bye when we answer the call. That comes from the great beyond, We shall meet again where there's room for all <Hrls and boys of slxty-one. T. V. Kilduff, T H E CLOTHIER CHORUS: WHITEF1SH Comrades you-are growing, growing BERKEN & H ELLEN GA Proprietors W A G G E N E R 8c C A M P B E L L DISTINCTIVE FUNERAL SERVICE ! summer season. J He is a Spanlsh-American war vet- i eran and .served through the FhiUp- i pine trouble with the First Montana. ' During the Indian uprisings he was ;.a scout in the government service and is fond of recalling Incidents sur- j rounding the surrender of such fa- ! mous characters as Sitting Bull, Rain-in-the-Face and Chief Gaul. He has been acquainted with Sanulver for 25 or 30 years. T h e B U S L ' O S o M A N m ■ T o b e euccew fulin handling yotir business a ft airs, no mutter how-extensive or how limited they may he, you must handle! them' in a businesslike manner. Faying all bills by Check Is one of the first steps, since it gives you an absolute record of receipts and e x - - peudlturos. . ’• Bank of Columbia Falls, Inc. T H E O L D R E U A B L E C O M E T O T H E > G A Y L O R D C A K E F O R T H A T Special Sunday Dinner From 6:00 to 8:00 p. m., for 75c * ♦* ♦* * * » * ♦♦.♦ x » *« * 8 x e*e»;e * y ♦ Steam Heated Electric Lights Rooms With Private Baths Shower Baths V h e 7 f e w S a i / t o r d j f c o t e i f o A n € . jC o w is , ¡P r o p r i e t o r C o lu m b i a J a i h , 97?ont. Catering Especially to the Traveling Public, With Rates Consistent W ith Highclaas Service. Run in connection with H otel Glacier o n Lake M cDonald in Glacier National Park. THE GIRLS OF 'e| We have met once more, annlve sary day,.' A new yew has Just begun. And we still -keep on in the son old way. The girls of sl<!y-one. To our friends who have come from far.and. near. V. • Let every kindness be shown. Give them hearty welcome with words of cheer, They are. girls of slxty-one. Our memory takes us back to the years When the struggle was going'on;. We were left alone, with both' and fean -. . For our boys of slxty-one. They went from our home? our flag to save. Into danger and hardship unknown i There was love In their hearts, so true and brave, For the girls of slxty-one. ! We are resting in peace and quiet today) ‘Fifty years have come and gone, [ And we see llmm. claap bands, the ’ \Blue\ and the “ Gray;\ They are all Boys o f Slxty-one.’ | We have grown old together, these girls and boys. And many are loft alone; 5 Still the passing years have brought many ji.jri To the comrade* of slxty-one. For every willing heart and hand There Is still a work to be done,/ And shoulder ^to shoulder with pride we stand By our boys of slxty-one. Warm Caps For Cold Ears WINTER CAPS WITH FUR LINED LAPS THAT MILL KEEP YOUIt EARS WARM AND SNUG ON THE COLDEST DAYS. AND YOU WILL -> SAVE MONEY IF YOU BUY NOW. FOR PRICES HAVE BEEN SPEC!A 1,1.Y REDUCED FOR THE BALANCE OF FEBRUARY. KALISPELL Phone C W e Pay 3 6 W e R ender Serv- Long Distance ice Anywhere Phone Calls : * Flathead County SAM P L E R O O M S F O R TR A V E L IN G MEN E U R O P E A N PLAN BUS M EETS TRAIN S » * * ce* exe:r.exr-r.M;»:i:e CATARRHAL DEAFNESS Is often,caused by an lal of the mucqu*.JlnlngrtBi. Tube. When this tuba I hove a rumbling hearing. Unless I bo reduced, your stroyed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for lt-rld your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused - by Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Catarrh for over Forty Tears. Bold by all druggists. F. J. Cheney A CO.. Toledo. C i TIE C1UB BARBER SHOP : r Children’s w o r k our specialty • [ Fine line o f tonics. If its ■ p Service, w e have it I E Batli Room in Connection ! J. R. Armenia Ship Your Cream To The Get Your Copy Of ‘MONTANA, MY HOME” Popular Waltz Song Kalispell Music Co. J. J. T U C K E R Monumental Work of AH Kinds. Fine Material. Best of Workmanship. See me for Prices. THE NEW ROOMING HOUSE Strictly M o d e m . Every thing New, Bath. S0cta*l. Trmnsacnta Trade Solicited With the flowers of spring comes our\ labor of love For thfe living and those that are gone; We «reave the crowns that are placed above Our boy* of sixty-one. Sandpoint, Idaho Honest3Weights. Correct Tests. Prom p t Settlements. Courteous Treatm e n t - Butterfat, Sweet Cream S i c A master in a large school room called upon Smith, who stutters, to parse the sentence: \The propin quity of the porcupine made pot shooting a£ the hippopotamus vir tually Impossible.” Smith gave a wild glance around the room anr said: \Professor now ain't t-tthat a d-duco of a question News. Who Was First Glacier Park Guide An artrePTIkpiJearing in a recent me of the Spokane Chronicle, quot ing Jack Wlstjfpformerly of this country, but now at Walla Walla, Wash., brought forth considerable discussion during a recent meeting of the local Whittier’s club 1ft regular session In the Hotel Gaylord. Wise, in his statement claims to be the oldest guide in Glacier National park and_aays that the claim made by Sam Sansavere to1 that distinction is not correct. Members o f the Whittier’s club In sist that-there are others entitled to that honor even ahead of Mr. Wise, mentioning the names of Joe Rogers, Geo. Snyder. Chas. Howe. Bert Bry ant and-eeveral others, lncludtag Joe Dawson of the east entrance, who officiated as^ guide for hunters and explorers. Following Is.the article as publish er in the Chronicle In which Mr. Wise claims to be the first- guide: Walla Walla, Wash.. Feb. 8.— Johh S. (Jack) Wtee of this city takes issue wifh the published state ment that Sam Sanslvere irth e old est guide in Glacier National park. Wise thinks, he has the exploits of ! that famous guide to numberless parties of tourists antedated by sev eral years. He states that he first took a party Into the park lu Sep tember of the year 1887. There were four people in She party, two of them Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stanton of New York state. The trip was made up the Flathead river by rowboat which w rowed, -poled and pulled by ropes thfe mouth o f McDonald creek. Up the [creek they-*obt Into Lake McDonald, where they damped at the head of the lake, hunting and fishing, for two weeks. ~ Later, W<*e says, be assisted In cutting and laying out all the park trails weet -of the main range of the Rockies and was with Dr. Lyman. B. Speary when he made his survey of the park-and discovered the glacier which bears his name. From 188T until 1 8 1 0 ,1 » guided ikunters, fish ers and tourists through every nook and corner of that .wonderland, con tinuing such work unUl four years ago, since v^en he has .been employ ed In varloys, capacities about the park, last sBhapn occupying the po sition of night clerk at the Belton ¡hotel. . J 1 Wise was born I860. He migrated to ‘Moutana when 12 years of age and in 1900 home- beaded throe miles west.of Belton, which Is the western entrance to the park, where he resides during the summer months when not employed In the park. For the last twelve years he has spent his winters in I the milder climate of Walla Walla, returning to ibis ranch about the of April to prepare for the , FROM OLD FRIENDS Many Columbian readers will be interested In the following letter to The Columbian from rae John Olson family, for many years residents of this city, but now located-at San Jose, Calif.: ' ,£W1I1 you change the addi our Columbian again, this onr street address, for about three months;s; plan to move nearor Oakland. this time to í wliybe here i tnon we \Have you ever been In Califor nia? I? is a huge disappointment at first’ as It does not live up to its advertisements. However, the cli mate and the people are very fine. We all came here sick, and are well now; the sunshino Is wonderful. There is a Moutana club here; Flor ence said '\Ihero were a thousand members of the Montana club pre sent at the meeting she attended In Los Angeles. \People tell us that spring In Cal ifornia is like Fairyland, with miles of blossoming orchards. There ha*- been very little rain here this year. so nothing is green. Prayer was held In the churches, beseeching for rain. They got It, too; two days of Howevor, I cannot imagine of any place having a more beautiful spring than Columbia Falls; no where else have I seen more beauti ful wild flowers. . \LILLIAN M. OLSON.” T H E UNIVERSAL CAR Forecasting A Tremendous Spring Demand 739,626 more Ford cars and trucks were pro duced last year than the previous year, an increase of over 50 per cent. In spite o f this tremendous increase in production, it was impossible t o meet delivery requirements during the spring and summer months when orders for 350,000 Ford Cars and Trucks could not be filled. This year winter buying for immediate delivery has been more active than ever before— and in addition 200,000 orders have already been booked through the Ford W eekly ________ .Purchase Plan lor spring delivery. These facts clearly indicate that the demand during this spring and summer will be far greater than ever, and that orders should be placed immediately with Ford Dealers as a means of protection against delay in securing your Ford Car or T ruck or Fordson Tractor. - ----- Detroit. Michigan J ? See the Nearest Authorized Ford Dealer * r - -