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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 03 Oct. 1902, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1902-10-03/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
One Year ne in advance), $2 00 Six Months.......... i heenns ae * Three Months w Single Copies....... 6 eee THE MONTANA ‘SUNLIGHT. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY W.L. Rickard & co. SUBSCRIPTION PRIOE. ADVERTISING RATES. Diaplay—One Dollar per inch per month. Locals~Ten Cents per line first insertion; five cents per line cach subsequent insertion. All communications intended for publica- tion Jn this paper must bear the signature of thé suthor; otberwiso they will find their way, fo the waste basket. Entered at the Postoffice at Whitehall, Mont., as Second-class Matter. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1902, oe a a = ENGINEER OWEN DIES As a Regult of the Tujuries Received in the Wreck at Muir. A special from Livingston to the Daily Record dated Sept. 26th says: David Owen, Northern Pacific engineer, died here tonight at St. Luke’s hospital, as a result of injuries received in-a collision this morning between — two light engines on the mountain west of this city. Engineer Frichke of the west bound engine left his engine stand- ing on the siding at Marr, while he went into the telegraph office for orders. During ‘his. absence the air leaked and the locomotiye started Republican Candidates. JUDGE WMe k.. HOLLOWAY. Judge William L. Holloway the Republican nominee for justice of the supreme court was born at Kirksyvitle, Mo., Nov. 8, 1867. He attended the public schools of Kirksville and graduated later from the the Missouri state normal whool. He then taught school four years, after which heentered the Michi- department, gan university law from wnich he graduated “in 1892. He came to Bozeman in August of that year and opened a law office. He was elected county attorney of Gallatin county in 1894, being the down the steep grade. into another bight engine that was going west, gineer Owen and fireman House, who did. not s¢e’their danger tn- It erashed in charge of En: til it was ‘too late to jump. En- gineer Owen was pinned in his cab and frightfully scalded by escaping steam. His legs and tight side were literally cooked. His fireman was thrown through the cab window and escaped with a few slight ‘bruises. It is said that the fireman of the ruraway engine was asleep when it started down the bill, and knew nothing of his perilous ride unti) the cok lision occurred. He escaped with a few scratches. Our Exchange Table. [Avant Courier, Sept. 26.] Mr. G. EB. Tower, of the bureau of forestry has been in the city during the past week making gome scientific investigations re- garding the trecs of this part of the country, , particularly the pines. He expects to remain in this district about six weeks. Capt. W. F. Mannix, of Mis- soula, who spent a few weeks in this city and then disappeared un- der unfavorable circumstances, after having a number of checks cashed on # bark where he had no deposit, was arrested at Victor, by sheriff Fowler last Saturday and brought back to Bozeman, where he will be tried for obtaining money under false pretenses. It -is said that Capt. Mannix claims he must have been under the influence of liquor when he committed the wrong. He has generally been considered honor- able in his actions up to the time of this escapade. [Chinook, Sept. 23.] Worthy Noble, of the Noble Mining company, was up from Whitehall Saturday, with the cheeks for the employes at the mine. This company is one of the solid institutions of this acc: | tion. The Lake Shore mill 1s now running day and night—-two shifts. They are just completing an elec- Whatever you drink outside, let your home beer be Schlitz. That is pure beer. No bacilli_in it --- nothing to make you ~ bilious. Beer is a saccharine product, and germs multiply rapidly in it. of impurity quickly ruins its healthfulness, We go to the utmost extremes to prevent The slightest taint that. Cleanliness is a science where Schlitz beer is brewed. We even cool the beer in plate glass rooms, in nothing but filtered air. Then we filter the beer. Then we sterilize every bottle. -And Schlitz. beer is aged. The beer that makes you bilious is green beer. : When you order beer for your home, get the healthfulness without the harm. Get a pure beer - get an old beer - get Schlitz. first. Republican county attorney} Both engines were derailed and |tric light plant and the mine and elected since Park county was cut] badly demolished. Passenger | il} is now lighted with electric- from it, carrying it by 400 major- trains were delayed several hours) i¢y., J. M. Quirk is putting in ity. |by the wreck. . The injured nan | yj, apparatus. After serving for one teri as|was at once brought to this city {Madisonian, Sept, 25.) county attorney he ran for district | and taken to St. Luke’s hospital.| “4 yesident of this city when judge of the Ninth district, but was Mrs. Owen, who had been visit- |driying past the home of 8S. B. defeated by Judge Armstrong. In| ing in Butte, arrived here shortly | Page of Alder, was surprised at ; 1900 he again ran for district judge, | afterw: ards. jseeing a well kept orchard. The carrying the district by 147 major-| The remains were taken to! branches of. the apple trees ity’. Butte the following day for burial. | of that orchard are bent down by Judge Holloway bas always been| Mr. Owen was a member of the} ihe we ight of the great number a staunch-Republican, and sinée he| Masonic lodge at Bozeman : and of | of large, beautiful apples with aati Gallatin county has always|the Knights of Pythas of Butte. which they are loaded, It. is in- been an active party worker. Since}The funeral was held under the sight and one not 3 jdeed a prétty his accession to the district bench [auspices of the Knights of Pythias. | often seén in a drive about this The ex- he has rendered many important|He was employed on this division} section of the country. decisions and gained considerable} for a number of years and leaves periment of Mr. Page ard a few } repute by his fairness. a widow but no children. He was/ others only goes to prove that well kuown among the railroad iby a little care and trouble fruit |people here, Mrs. Owen being a *|member of the Eastern Star. McKay & Carmichael, Whitehall Agents. JOSEPH M. DIXON. Joseph M. Dixon of Missoula the Republican nominee gressman, is the son of Quakers. He was born in Snow Camp, N. C., | orchards and gardens goes « long| in 1867, and was educated at Guil-| Two people of a somewhat sim-| way toward making the country | ford college, N. C., and Earlham} ilar temperament can help each | home an ideal place of abode. college, Richmond, Md. He gradu-| other. So frequently does one | It is reported on good authority ated from Guilford in ’89 and came|see the case of a man and woman)|that one of the most important| to Montana in 1891. He has beena married when young and when | real estate deals that has occurred practicing attorney in this state | poor who have made their way to-| in Madetn cotety for FEM. ee ee Fade ee eT aaah. wr Re at sal eee } since then. gether over the glaciers and slip- | recently consummated in Butte.|™ore fit to race for any cenit EFFERSON ‘HOUSE GET YOUR | In 1893-4 he was deputy prose-|pery mountains and perilous ice|By the transfer E. H. Sherman, pa pede ee te Lord Vincent, Wes. McCall, Prop. 'Assaying Done at Whitehall. euting attorney of Missoula county. | floes that everybody encounters | the well known undertaker of|Winner of the famous $10,000) ° lade In 1894 he was elected county at-| who tries to reach the fair land of | | Butte, became the possessor of Transylvania stake at Lexington, ee Willoughby, Assayer. torney. and, having arrived, are|the Granite Mountain stock farm Ky., and the owner is William Two years ago Mr. Dixon was|happy in each other’s company | of the upper Madison valley, to- Todd. elected to the legislature from Mis-|and good fuithful chums because | gether with all the stock and other| ‘Electric batteries and z soula county,-receivinga majority | of early stages— inthe diffe elt! ; appurtenances. The land owned }Other stimulating devices are os of 200 when the county | by Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Knight, | barred on the track, but there is can be suceessfully raised in this | portion of Madison coauty. Sir the farm for con- rounding house by} Similar Temperaments. | success Meats 35 Cents, | Absolutely Correct Work Guaranteed. Lodgings 50 Cents. | |WHITEHALL - - MONT. | ebectbe for it. Send it to Friends such i j . = ; j went 500/| journey. inaction mann Swi a bene Democratic. There can surely be no greater|T.~T. Baker, J. H. Harper, Jake pleasure in this world than for | Baker, John Baker, and their MONTANA PIONEERS. nothing in the rule touching on) Christian Science, so the noted) Society Holds Its Nineteenth Annu- al Session in Dillon. The nineteenth annual meeting | of the Montana pioncers was held | in Dillon Sept. 25 and 26, and an interesting and unusually large at- tendance are reported. As the | years pass the number of deaths in the ranks grows larger. Over one hundred pioneers—some of} them not members of the society are reported as having died during | the year. At the first day’s session twenty- seven new names were presented for membership and were passed upon favorably. Treasurer A. M. Holter in mak- ing his report said it was impera- tively necessary that means be de- vised tfor raising furfds to defray | expenses and keep the society in good financial standing; and to that end a ways and means committee composed of one member from each county was appointed. Ed- ward Ryan of Boulder was selected for this county, and George F. Wickham of Waterloo for Madi- son. At the morning session on last Friday sixteen more names were presented and added to the mem- bership. Great Falls was chosen as next yeat’s meeting place. The officers elected for the ensuing year are: Sanders, secretary; A. M. Holter, treasurer. A vice president for each county was also clécted, E> G. Brooke being named for Jeffer- son-and E. M. Pollinger for Madi- oe © There are less germs in the air -@f ‘a well-kept sewer than in a poorly ventilated school room. oe ghana asf such to sit down and talk over the | respective wives was all ine luded | stallion’s efforts to win at the grand trying “points in their travels, of | in the sale, and aggreates several | circuit meeting of the Empire City and the other encouraging, of | |sheer,high prectpices which,alone, neither could have ascended. This | is the true friendship which forms so large a part of the perfect mar- ried life. It is sight of cases like | this that accounts for the thought- ful are apt to fall.—Exchange. Of Such Is the Coyote. The coyote is only a littlé dun colored, mangy beast, with foxy manners and a coward heart; a craven freebooter, a thief of the conventional —‘‘aneak”’ type; an outcast yellow cur slinking through the alleyways of the wilderness. He is the Bowery tough of the brute creation, the very jackal of the American plains, a prowl- ing, friendless scavenger. If you can think of anything else along these lines, say it freely,even to his face. It will not be amiss, nor will he show the least resentment: moods into which bachelors! | times when one was dishearte ened | | thousand acres. sientists Treat a Horve. The following Missoula dispatch appeared in the Standard last week: Local Christian Scientists and others who are interested in the doctrine of that peculiar sect will find food for thought, and perhaps further argument in support of the theory of the influence of mind, which is, oyer mater, in the recent healing of the famdus trotting horse by the methods of the Scientists. Lord Vincent is one of the best known trotters in the grand circuit; and his perform- ances have been brilliant. He, however, -went to pieces two years ago, and in spite of all the efforts of the veterina- rians to restore to his old-time winning form, he remained in the has-been class, and all hopes of further racing on his part had been abandoned when. the Chris- tian Scientists took up the case, and now Lord Vincent is doing -2:09 performances to the satisfaction of instead, he’ll sink his melancholy tail between ‘his cringing Jegs, standing at a cowward’s distance and grinning a siekly grin, watch- ing you with sly eyes and ready to. scuttle away out of sight be- hind the nearest hill 1f you do but menance him with your fist.— Boston Transcript. The latest thing in expensive jewelry is a’ capsule of ice in a cresent of anthfacite coal chips.— Baltimore News. es “The minister has been away on a long vacation, hasn’t he?’ pe (adie “I. thought. the congregation looked rested.”’—Life: his owner and to the complete mys- tification of those who do not un- dérstand the healing doctrine of those who maintain that pain and disease do not exist save in the imagination of those who fancy themselves afflicted. It is a case that is attracting no little attention .in.the.Kast,.and the story of the case is thus told in an eastern pa per whose conservatism is noted. “Local turfmen were astonished today to learn that a promising trotting. horse owner ‘had put an ailing equine Star in the hands of a Christian Science practitioner, and the outcome of the treatment has astonished the horse’s owner, who declares that the animal is oneé ee ET ~ cme an Trotting club next week will not be interfered with. “After he liad won tlie Transy!- | vania stakes two years ago Lord! Vincent went all to pieces. Train) er John Splan and varions veter- | inarians could nof get the | horse in- to form, and “sé he was retired. | Last spring a Christian Science | woman in Youngstown, O., asked | which ie not. | permission to work on the horse, | land Mr. Todd was much surprised | to see Lord Viggent spruce up, | take to his feed and bégin to‘notice | things. He is now going very fast, | and.is said to be a dangerous toni- | _ petitor in the 2:09 clags. ‘Pranklin Blake, Christian Sei-| entist, practitioner and. reader at| the Second Church.of Christ, oni today that he had not heard of the | incident, but he knew no reason to doubt the Youngstown woman’s success. It was a common experi- ence, he said. .Mr. Blake was, asked if it was not harder to treat horses than men, ** ‘Oh, no, tte easier,’’ he said: “Youve got to get a man-in the right mental ettitude and you must ality and his rights, and so forth. All animals are subject to the influ- ence of man’s mind, just the same as man feels man: You just throw the right mental atmosphere over tho-horse-and.it.responds... a mental process, Very. simple and This house is newly opened, and no | effort is spared to make its guests | comfortable and welcome. | J. H. WYETH, Vice President. _ H. B. WYETH, Pres. and Manager. Sec. and Treas. have some regard for his individu- |. It’s all. | Accommodations for Transients: Room and Board by Day | | * or Week. 26 Rooms, SPECIAL RATES to patfons by week or month. WHITEHALL, MONT. (Successor to Negley & Rutland) Druggist Watches, natural, and you can find plenty of instances of the successful -appli- | cation of our principles to animals. | I myself have been, accustomed to| relieving’ suffering in poor dumb | beasts, as well asin men and vom- en, and IT think itis a worthy aud] pleasant service, as all of our poo- | pledo. .” eer ra A Mail Orders Promptly Filled. | Warrenalt : Hlarge, bright and newly fitted up. ~ * F. H. Negley, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware. > —_—— —— - . “Paints and Wall Paper, Noble & Wyeth Improvement Company | (Incorporated.)