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About The Ekalaka Eagle (Ekalaka, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Ekalaka Eagle (Ekalaka, Mont.), 04 May 1917, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053090/1917-05-04/ed-1/seq-8/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
' . THIBIWICALAXAfriAGil Let Us Keep Our Money A Home! WHY NOT SELL YOUR HIDES TO . MONTANA BUYERS?, Snell Bros. You Can't Accumulate Money Without Self Denial Are you looking forward to the day when you will have all the money you now want and de- luding yourself with the idea that you will then begin to accumulate money? That day will never dawn for you. Each day will bring a new want, and if you continue to indulge in them your life will end in want. Indulgence today means for you future want, while self denial to- day means future indulgence. Start an account today.. Watch over it now and in the years to come it will watch over you. It will cos . t you nothing to keep an account here. It may cost you something not to keep it. MENEM Ekalaka State Bank Capital $30,000.00 , Surplus $5,000.00 , A Home Bank Interest Paid on Time Deposits Under State Supervision. Real Estate Loans Safety Deposit Boxes Negotiated For Rent 800 HORSES 800 AT AUCTION Miles City, Montana Thur.-Fri., May 10-11 THE MILES CITY HORSE SALE CO. will sell on Thursday and Friday, May 10 and 11, Eight Hundred broke Horses, Mares and Mules. These horses are from MONTANA and THE DAKOTAS. THE RUGGED, READY To WORK KIND. Always plenty to se- lect from. The largest horse market in the Northwest, where we always have the horses and never postpone a sale. See our SALE DATES for the coming SUMMER and FALL. Miles City Horse Sales Company Col. C. N. Moore, Auctioneer Guy Crandell, Manager 1 1_1 , 3ERTY HORTON, the beautiful American girl, and „ Iter soldier lover met in the garden, undisturbed by the hostile atmosphere hovering over the Mex- ican Border. This beautiful love story nuts through each episode of Whim \LIBERTY\ The Idlers Slept be amazed and delighted week after MARIE WALCAMP JACK HOLT- EDDIE POLO are the featured stare in this newest, most original and most timely of all serials. The supporting cast is made up of well known Universal Players, while the entire production makes use of hundreds of soldiers, Mexicans, etc. If you want to week be sure to visit this theatre and see \LIBERTY.\ SEE IT AT The Play House Every Saturday Night Live Merchants Are Eagle Advertisers INDIANS HOLDING THEIR OWN Remarkable Change Effected In Race Within the Memory of Men Who Are Not Old. Not such a great while ago, people who lived on the far side of the Mis- souri river read the works of Cooper as humor. He gave the Indian an air of dignity, a high standing for honor, even an aspect of industry. Trans -Missouri settlers knew In- dians. They • came in contact with them. Cooper'a concept seemed so different from reality that, with no effort at all, the reader could make himself - believe he was reading satire. Now of all the changes which time has wrought in the plains and moun- tain country none is more marvelous than the alteration of opinion on the subject of Indians. The aborigines have actually come into a new world as regards the white men's attitude toward them. It is no longer consid- ered a worthy simile to speak of the town loafer as being \as lazy as an Injun.\ It is no longer the right and proper thing, to be encouraged by the best citizens, to skin Indiana at bar- ter, to reduce them to a nakedness by trickery. Today, it is crime to kill an Indian. There are men who have not yet reached the stage of grandparentage who remember when the slaughter' of .ans was a virtue. This great transformation has been brought about by the Indians themselves. They have bettered their living conditions. They have ac- quired education. Thirty per cent of all the Indians in the country talk the English language. Eyen more of them wear the white man's clothes. As property owners, they are to be envied. As workers in the field, rail- road laborers, storekeepers, office- holders, lawyers and capitalists, they hold their own.—Toledo Blade. The Phonograph The F,knIttka Public School Paper May 4, 1917 No. .11 Inuit Schot I You said spring was here. Did you mean door spring, bed spring or what? Lyndall McKay returned to school Tuesday after ,a few days sickness. Walter Malmquist and Norman Winchell are absent this week on account of farm work. Botany examinations w qr e heard from on Tuesday. The re- sults were good and the two best papers received 93.5. Most of the note books contained the re- quired 100 sketches. Cadet practice was held on Wednesday of this week instead of Tuesday. In the absence of Walter Malmquist the boys have elected a new captain for Squad No. 2, and they are going to keep up the work this summer. The First Aid girls were caus- ed some trouble this week in try- ing to convince Wilford Holt that he was supposed to have a brok- en leg. The girls are surprising themselves by the skill they have attained, no one being carried around now by their broken part13. 7th and 8th Grades The aid girls think Roy Bolton should be careful with his left eye until it is better. Weather conditions have been too disagreeable for Grant and Fae Mefford to attend school regularly. The attendance in our room has . swelled to thirty, the increase being due to the addltion of the fifth graders. C. RAY REESE NOTARY PUBLIC Always st your service. Off ice with the Grant & Fuqua Land and Livestock Co. Ekalika, Montana. The Beaver Flat Mill Is now ready for work, grinding whole wheat flour at 50 cts. per 100 lbs. feed at 40 cts. per 100 lbs. 8 miles west of Ekalaka. W. C. SACHT See Me Before Selling Your B. Freiberger 516 S. Montana Ave. Miles City, Top prices paid. I will call at your place to make purchase. SHIP TO ME! If my prices are not right, will return shipment, and pay all transportation charges. Win Rodgers. Oscar Gilbertson THE CORNER Ekalaka's Thirst Emporium WINES, LIQUORS, & CIGARS Good treatment. Give us a trial. 1 The Eagle Covers Carter County Completely b, 11111111•111111111D 011111/5151111 MIND •111111•1110111 • 01111111111111111/ flab HOUSE DRFSES THE Electric BRAND . 03ARMON'S or BUFFALO Special 1 7 e,!frrem i\.4 , •1•1:-. 1 ,!, V.) 'II, ,•••, 7 I 1,.)a • a• Roo, ly Ann -holes . • ntrongThread •r..-.1 Taped to • .; o• Fl‘r.older SCRITIS • 0nahad Button .1. • , '•Ies to 1,o' 2 each Ilutton •II . )arntary Factory sr.: (....ond Labor st: We Have 1 1 1 Prices from $1,25 to $2.75. Them In All Sizes I NEW GOODS ON DISPLAY Howar d Waists, in the fancy Silks. The very latest creations. We have them in your size and it will be a pleasure to show you them. Prices from $5.00 up. None Better Amermal t• d i I 'Fib Silk Waist. We know that you will like them. This line is complete and we urge you to make your selection early.,\ From $2.25 to $5.00. • Wash Waist. Here is something you will like. Purchased at Ino a price within reach of all. Nothing cheap about them only the price. We have- these also in all sizes. Selling at $1.50 „ e • • a ers o THE R. C. U. •y STORE. ammonamp• ammo ammuseammomeseismestd 0