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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 01 Oct. 1909, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1909-10-01/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
MONTANA SUNLIGHT. W. L. RICKARD, PtIM WHITEHALL, - MONTANA. ••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • T e l ea. THIS SPACE TELLSMOCHI 1 A Geod Deal of Information 6i1T3 ill a Short, Paragraphical V1:7 Foreign. Orville Wright maae a new record at the Templehof club, Berlin, tor sustained aeroplane flight with a pas- senger. He reamired,in the air for one hour and thirty-five minutes, car- rying Captain Englehardt. He broke his own record made July 27, waen he stayed up with a passenger for one hour and twelve minutes. Louis Pauthan, the French aviator • dying in a Voisin biplane at Ospend. won a prize of $6,000. He covered seventy-three a kilometers (forty-five and one-thirr miles) In one hour at an altitude ranging from 240 to 300 feet. The insular government at Manila soon will ship to the bureau of in- sular affairs at Washington nearly half a ton of opium -the proceeds of many custom seizures. The govern- ment plans to dispose of the opium for medicinal purposes among drug manufacturers. Mrs. Morris, widow of the late Nel son Morris of Chicago, died at Fon- tainbleau. France, from injuries re- ceived in a motor car accident whIcb occurred there September 10. Edward Marjorthanks, second baron of Tweedmouth, who was first lord • of the admirality In the Campbell -Ban- nerman administration, and later lord president of the council, died in Lon- don. He was born in 1849. Teeing advantage of the prevailing shcrtage in and the advanced prices for canned meats, the thrifty British war office is reported to have reaped a handsome profit by selling back to certion houses large stocks of canned meats ordered before the prices ad. vanced. i . .1 . g General. • During the two weeks ending Sep- tember 14 there was forty-seven cases of .bubonic plague in Grayquil, four- teen of which resulted fatally. Robert Hoe, aged seventy, head of R. Hoe & Co., printing press manu- facturers of New York and London, died in London after a short illness. The colored people of Douglas coun- ty, Neb.. obseried emencipation day by holding • masi meeting In the auditorium, where 1,(.00 or more of them gathered. Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island, and Prof. A. P. Andrew, mem- bers of the United States monetary commission, are in Paris conferring with M. Pallain, governor of the bank of France and other distinguished . financiers and economists. Forty newspaper reporters were given audience by Dr. Cook, the ex- plorer, to whom he told his story. More than ten lives were lost and property worth ever $2.000,000 was . destroyed In the cyclone which re- cently swept over the province of Pinar Del Rio, Cuba. Governor Johnson of Minnesota died in the hospital at Rochester In that state from the effects of an operation performed some days previous. Lieu- tenant Governor Eberhart now be- comes chief executive of the state. By special request of the weal - dent no effort was made to operate street cars during his visit to Omaha. In the street car strike at Omaha, now on. there has been some rioting, but no fatalities. The thirty-sixth annual convention of the National Women's Christian Temperance Union meets in Omaha October 22 to 27. Six hundred dele- gates will be in attendance. Dr. Cook, the explorer, arrived in New York and says he brings along proof of his discovery of the north p ole. ''' Revenues for the year ending June 30 last are greater than the railroads earned in the preceding year. Business of the country continues to expand, passing the mark of last year, and approaching that of 1907. The T. H. Bunch company, one of the largest grain concerns in the Unit- ed States, filed a petition in bankrupt- cy at Little Rock, Ark. It is re- * forted that banking institutions are involve e extent of $300.000. The resit' of Cbarles I. Gibson, general manager of the St. Authors rlant of the American Sheet and Tin - Vats company, was dynamited at Youngstown, Ohio. Bankers at Chicago before adjourn- ing denounced both postal - savings end guaranty of deposits. Proiessor Swezey says that Halley'a cornet recently re -discovered will prob- ably later be visible to the naked eye. Governor ' Johnson of Minnesota underwent operations at three differ- ent times. It was the third that proved fatal. A terrific tropical storm visited New Orleans and other sections along the gulf coast. - The Netherlands financial depart ment has submitted to the state coun- cil a bill providing for an increase of 20 per cent on all import duties. Packy McFarland and Ray Bronson fought twenty rounds to a draw at the West Side Atheletic club in McDo- eoughville, just across the river from New Orleans. Senator TLeodore E. 13tIrton, chair - gain of the National Waterways com- mission of the United States, accom- panied by several of the other commis - donors, spent a day inspecting the Willebroeck canal, which runs from grussels to the River Rupel. The condition of Bishop B. C. Lene ban of Fort Dodge, who is critically has become alarming and it is feared the end is near. A few days ago he underwent an operation for a carbuncle on his neck. An agreement has been signed which assures three years of peace with street car operators in Chicago. L. R. lay's, late chief of the Seat- tle field divisions Of the United States land office, has written a letter to President Taft, in which he says he will publish the evidence in the Cun- ningham coal land cases shortly. The comptroller of thecurrency ap- proved the conversion of the Fort Pierre bank of Fort Pierre, S. D., into the Fort Pierre National bank, with $25,000 capital. William Buckley, convicted of the murder of George W. Rice in San Francisco during the machinists' strike in October, 1901, was sentenced by Judge Lawler to be hanged at San Quentin on November 19. Governor Harmon of Ohio has invit- ed the governors of all the states and territories of the United States to at- tend with delegations the national good roads congress to be held Octo- ber 26 to 29 in Columbus. William Brown of Philadelphia, one of the occupants of the automobile which was wrecked near Reading. Pa., while bearing a message from Presi- dent Taft to the management of the Alaska -Yukon -Pacific exposition, died at the Reading hospital making the second death as the result of the no cldent In a speech at Winona, Minn., Presi- dent Taft gave unreserved support to the Payne tariff law. Export trade of the country Is tend- ng more to gulf ports than to the Atlantic seaboard. Secretary Wilson says high prices for products of the farm are destined to continue. In a running battle with John Schel. ger at Des Moines City Detective Frank Delmege. one of the best known detectives in the west, was shot and killed. President Taft discussed railroad and trust laws in his speech at De' Moines. President Taft was deeply impressee by the reception given him by the school children of Chicago. I ' Washington. A very small increase in the nur. ber of pensioners In the western states, accompanied by a slight in crease In the amount paid in pension s shown by the pension.commission er's report for the year ended June 0 last. The figures for the state ol Nebraska are said to be tdpical. The, show: Number pensions 1908, 15,405; 1909. 15.578. Amount paid: 1904 2,322,826; 1909, 52,650,451. Assistant Commissioner of India, Affairs Fred H. Abbott ts due In Nebraska in a fee days for • miession at the Omaha reservation on the prop erty troubles of the tribe. Commis. stoner Valentine hai 'decided to leave Washington in time to meet Mr. Ab- bott at the Omaha reservation. They will together attend the first meeting of the board which has been appoint. ed to administer the ten-year trust re cently created to cover the unalloted lands of this reservation. Protesting against the treatment they received at the bands of the state and county officials of Oklahoma, 16.- 000 Oklahoma Indians, comprising the Creeks. Cherokees, Chickasaws and Choctaws. have caused a petition to besent to Washington seeking re T• he days of the 13 -cent postage stamp are numbered. Instead of this denomination, by some supposed to he unlucky, the postoffice departmelit will issue • 12 -cent stamp. Acting Post- master General Steward requested the secretary of the treasury to have the new stamp printed it the bureau of eneravIng and printing. President 'lift', appointment of the new tariff commission or board, which was announced from Beverly. Is looked on In Washingtui as the most import- ant development in tariff matters since the enactment of the new Al- drich -Payne measure. The make-up of the commission Is such as to leave no doubt that President Taft has con- cluded the tariff question Is not set- tled for an indefinite period. President Taft, In his speech at the Wisconsin state fair, spoke strongly in favor of the establishment of postal savings banks Dr. Cook sent a message to the American people telling them to :ie Patient and he would prove his claim. That former Governor Folk of Mis sour' will be induced to stay out o the senatorial fight next year, under promise that he will be given the support of the Missouri delegation for the Democratic nomination for president in 1911, is the latest \tip' from the Inner circles of the Demo 'ratio state committee. Personal. Dr. Cook In New York finds himself overwhelmed with business and pleas- ure. Wilbur Wright and Glenn Curtiss are preparing for flights at the Hud- son -Fulton exposition. Mourning for Governor Johnson is not confined to Minnesota, but is na- tion:wide. More than 50,000 people, it is es- timated, viewed the body of the late Governor John A. Johnson, which lay In state in the rotunda of the state capitol nearly all day. The cabin boy aboard the Roosevelt was told in confidence by Dr. Cook that he had discovered the pole. Unless signs fail the pre . Ident and congress will have a brusl when the next session begins. Packy McFarland ard Ray Bronson fought twenty rounds to a draw in New Or:eans. Cecil P. Drake, John D. Strong and Harold M. Lewis, three young bank clerks of Victoria, B. C., were arrest- ed at the Waldorf Astoria in New York at the request of the chief of police of Victoria. Former Vice President Fairbanks delivered an eulogistic address at the Methodist church in Manila. P. 1., on the life work of President McKinley. President Taft was given a vocifer- ous welcome at Chicago, and put in s busy twelve hours. The will or E. H. Harriman leaves all his property to his wife. The party of United States congress men who have been touring the Ha- waiian islands are no - v on the way home. Commander Peary says be is willing to compare records with Dr. Cook in establishing claims. Secretary Meyer will have a fieht on his hands if he attempts to abandon naval stations. General iemes Sherkel'ord a here • the Mexican war and prominent n the south, died at hie Rummer cat tags in Port Huron. Him -h. luDSON .. FR joN News of Montana sp [AK s AT FAIR SHAFT TO MEMORY OF INDIANS A Soarolty, Indeed! 'What's an anomaly?\ Monument Erected as Tribute to Poi. tawattomlee Unveiled Near Plymouth, Ind. \A man who wears long hair and a velvet Goat and hates notoriety.\- Cleveland Leader. ART ROBBER IN TOILS? GREAT RAILROAD BUILDER DE- LIVERS TELLING ADDRESS COUNTY FAIR. tEAT CELEBRATION FORMALLY BEGUN IN NEW YORK, THOUS- ANDS VIEW SPECTACLE. i Butte Shorn! May Have Notorious Criminal,\ Says Informant — Plymouth, Ind. -The seventy-first anniversary of the removal of Chi ef Menominee Potta.I Guess why the little boy doesn't chew Wrigley' s Sp e ar m int . H e mu t es any -that' s why' Butte. -In tho person of Gaston Gorderon, alias Fitzgerald, who, with J° 1111 Grow. Is accused of swindling k N e l e ck pe B r. u os ll u t r, o a f $ 17 0 a 0 1 0 Gr o e f ek whch re i staura n g n oo t was recovered, Sheriff O'Rourke has as a prisoner the alleged head of one of the most notorious gang of.Orooks in this country, Charles Guignon, a ranchman, rest& Mg near Whitehall, having read news- paper accounts of Gorderon's arrest, hurried to Butte, and on his arrival here identified the man as one of the gang who swindled him out of $6,000 In New York city nine years ago. _ He says Oord eron Is believed to be responsible for the theft of • valu- able masterpiece from the art gal-. len' at Brussels, less than • decade ago, and his band of 869 wattomies from Marshall county, ll diana, was marked by the unvellin of e first monument ever erected to It may get so some time that a man who attends to his own business will be called eccentric. -Dallas News. M- 9 CUMBER ALSO TALKS th ISTORY IS REPEATED an Indian through state or federal ap propriation. The shaft is at Twin Lakes, five .1...A9 surTA,\Wg &Mier .,,,, 1, .\02:t .A. 'O.., Zu• .71 . tak2 Llscassikagiessau••• At en &ales Over 7,000 People Listen to Founder of Great Northern -Made Won' der-ful Plea for Better and More Intesive Farming. ' ,nry Hudson Again Troda Deck of lallent Ship, the Halfmoon.-Ful• ton's Clermont Again Pushes up - the Hudson River, miles from Plymouth, and Is in mem- ory to the aborigines that once held the Hoosier hunting grounds. The ceremonies were witnessed by hun. The spiritualistic medium finds sic, hidden treasure except In the pockets of the credulous living. dreds. The granite was unveiled by Miss Julia Quakano Pokagon of Hart- ford, Mich., a granddaughter of the Dr. Pierce's Pleresnt Pellets rvsnbat. Cod orate stomach, h.., .nd boor). litagioorw i t WV emotion lam to take aseently. - wahpeton. N. D., Sept. 24.-J. J. Hilt the great relieved! wizard of the west was the chief attri.ction at the Richland count) lair and 7,000 people flocked to Wahpeton today to hear his address. Senator Porter J. McCumber also delivered an address. Both men pleaded for more Intensive farming and both are optimietic for the future prosperity of North Dakota. The great railroad budder made I wonderful plea for better and more in- tensive farming throughout the state. Mr. Hill was at his best and he spoke In strong terms In favor of diversified farming and stock -raising. He gave ngures to prove that the production of foodstuffs Is not increasing in pro- portion 'o the demand, and laid specie; emphasis upon thy important poaltior farmer, occupy in the great businee world* He stated that if the farmers wont.' adhere to the teachings Of the a g ri- - -- 411 5 -- - cultural college, that they would find greater prosperity. ilew York. Sept. 25. -:-Henry Hudson, o melted from view three hundred ire ago into those arctic mists from Ich two American discoverers have t lately returned, walked his quarter ,k again today and in sea boots I plumed hat surveyed the changes ft and ashore that makes his second it to these shores scarcely less me table than his first. ludson was an English adventure. fitted front Dutch funds. and the ster of a mixed crew. England and Band are today, after America, the :Ions sharing the most Prominence the celebration, although twenty in have sent their envoys and live ie their ships of war. - er, 7 ultures voyage of adventure ove. se °I same course to test the power VII came just two hundred years er. A reproduction of the Clermont ay followed the reproduction of the If Moon on the waters of the harbor. i. conservative eitimate tonight ces the number of those who wit- ised the naval parade today at 5,000,. probably 750,000 watching It from :union steamers, The crowds on ire were not content with roofs, idows, walks and drives: they over- red onto the railway tracks below, ng the drive and massed on the sides until the fields, gay with the ors of women's skirts and hats, med 'own with daisies and poppies iambus Pottawattomie chief, Pokagon, who died not long ago . The monument to the memory ot No man can pray right while he lives wrong the Pottawattomie Indians llt the ra- suit of consistent work on the part Hrs. Winslow'. Soothing Syrup. or chtidzi tee y t . T . Ltu i Li: i ni: , the L imo, = i n . : . C.,..., The true Christian does a great Ft many things he does not have to do. Mitchell And Friends Released. -A special to the Record Helenei. spec from Miles City says that Ray Tarbell. who killed George Mitchell in • range quarrel near Solway September 8, has been released on $10,000 bail, as have Roy Mitchell. .1. W. Jackson, J. H. Woodley and W. R. Eubank, of the Tarbell party. The bond of the tat- ter w as flied at $1,000 which each fur- Wished. The verdict of the coroner's Jury does not entirely exonerate Tar- bell and the members of his party, nor does it absolve them from blame, and all are held on an assault charge. The evidence disclosed the fact that Wood- by and Jackson first engaged in a shooting match, the latter's milt being grazed and hls horse shot from under him. Mitchell, the victim, got Jack- son's gun and started in a semi -circle around Tarbell, but the latter shot first, the ball going through Mitchell's body, death ensuing immediately. k. \s 'I'\ - --- . -_ 1/ 4 /-------'\_. ' 1 ;/r / .!/ ....„.-:_.\ --....'\\\\ -....- I r p --. r r -7 7- DODDS 4 '/ Ir%KIDNEY% Pi PILLS • 1 I --e e ir re- - r.. - . iKIDNEY ,__ - .i---- I re __ '- ___\_ ii 4 4 1- 1Cu ------- gle. 1 ‘ . MA 'qt., •-- 5 t i . HT 's --1 ABE.TE-' — — DEATH FROM SHOOTING. Pottawattomie Monument. of Daniel McDonald of Plymouth, who, I' i 're 7, . 4 G smell° New Rockford, N. D., Man Victim of New Nece Fa f e er rf d Fearful . Mta u isks. Sept. 24.-Att James Carroll of this ' plac, • broth: of Se merei n e . J. D. Carroll, died early this ' g from blood poisoning al the result of an accidental shooting affair last evening. Attorney Carroll had l ee es e t n ow ou h r f h a u h n ou ti t ng 7 , o a o n io d eiL return m ed e hhrootmhs. e fo r w -i o. n-l e it o w ww ho ho tt ee rriv o ed em yeste e e rdey o of fro h not 1vl, was getting his gun into shape to go hunting the next day. He did not know that Mr. Can -oil had arrived home and he stepped to the door and fired a shot at random tc try his gun The charge entered Mr. Carroll's le\ and made a terrible wound, - - - KILLS SELF AND CHILD. as a member of the Indiana legisla- ture in 1907, secured an appropriation f $2 500 f th o , or e purpose. The site is one of the beauty spots • -• . WRIGILICY'S I -717 c .LIAVotiL Ts Of nature. It is near where the old chapel of F a was the r b B u a il d t, en u . nd i e e r twhehidehi. Indianred-ion Menominee and Ms band, who had embraced Christianity, worshiped for many years. . The monument was cut from Vermont granite. The pedestal is ten feet high, surmounted by the statue of an Indian seven feet high, in native costume. It is near the center of the Menominee reservation. The story which leads up to the monument's erection Is briefly told. In 1832 a treaty was made with 11011:1111 Indian chiefs by which they ceded their lands to the United States for _ ... jfilh. \ The for For SS nothing $1.75 5 $2.1111 eiww. learned 1.10.-kleic Slums made anywhere for little it means comfort and al along natural line. 's e, welt, nee genu i ne Shoes Best Children years we but make Sver Y thin g la embodied - the See folks. efeet lor•th The soles arc Goodyear, Shoes have children'', we in b ee t the Mt• to dertrop of sod dons , ha,. uw e n. fail Committee For Taft's Reception.P16:14Oste Anaconda. -A meeting of the citt- mime committee appointed by Mayor Gangner to arrange for the reception of Peesident Taft was held at the council chamber. The program for the visit of the president has hereto. fore been announced, and the details will be left to committees on arrange- meats, police and decoration, E. P. Mathewson. A. C. MacCallum. A. M. Walker, Dr. W. T. Orton and J. M. Miner were appointed as the corn- mittee on arrangements; F. A. Jones, TAFT BACKS PINCHOT. er Conference Pinchot Says Ho Will Not Resign. alt Lake City, Sept. 25.-A• the re I of several long conferences with let Rorester Gifford Pinchot here to- i. President Taft tonight caused tt issued a statement in which it is lared that never at any time during Ballinger-Pinchot controversy has president intended to reflect upon chot. and In--\Ich Taft takes a re forward stand than ever in favor the Roosevelt policies for the con Divided Family and Then Turned OS the Gas. of the natural resources. W. L Collins and U. Kingsley on Chicago, - Sept. IC -Dividing her two I shall not resign.\ declared Pin- transportation; Chief hfentrum and children between her husband and $14,000 and agreed to remove to In.&hoes extension heels for protecting upper..pere. These I after the conference, and that he Frank Tucker, on decoration; Mayor herself, much as • judge might do in (Ilan Territory within two years. Menominee refused to sign this treaty into meitzt ill th o lt t • : Nu t t : of \gt„-Ma k te r oll', to continue to terve the gov- Gangner, Chief Barney Fitzpatrick, • divorce case, and arranging the or release his land to the government. Shoe. They corns in lace ° , button \ of a a nd \ °l e ft; same ment along the me lines as he Sheriff James O'Keefe, T. C. Davidson home for the use of the husband and shape •nd in all sizes from 4 to 12. Just try I pursued in the past. end John Alexander, on police, his half of the children. Mrs. Agnes When the Indians who had signed the nezlfroho-chi.d-;jth-- ;:.gx;.e.r.f7,nn.at A committee to meet the president Plata, despondent over in health, kill- treaty were ready to remove knother your dealers, send us his name, stating glee 'IRE BURSTS; WOMAN KILLED style desired and w• will see that you esel herself and her baby, Adeline, by attempt was made to get the Menomi- and at Silver Bow, with the special train, are PP turning on the gas. nee lands. will be nomad later. WILLIAMS. HOYT & CO.. ilecIneekw. ff. T. to Plunges Into • Telephone Polo, _ A council was called at Twin Lakes Throwing Occupants Out. ONE DEAD BY CAVE-IN. and after considerate discussion Col. einsfelt Case Dismissed. . Tastes like a Min 'ampa, Fla., Sept 25 -Mrs, Lee Pepper, the Indian agent, told Chief Helena -At the request of the as Three Other Workmen Seriously In- ele was killed and Mrs. Alfred Idenomlnee that he would have to re. hoed et Pierre, S. D. Juley without ncy and Chauffeur Walter Beeman thor of the complaint, County Attoe lease his lands and remove peaceably or be forcibly evicted. Then Menomi- the\ ul \ •e) probably fatally injured Iasi ney Hepner has moved and the district Pierre, B. D.. Sept. 24. -Four men were. burled In the caving in of a l ht when the rear tire of the large court has granted the dismissal of the ep sewer trench hers today. Three of nee arose, drew his blanket around ring car In which they were riding case of the state against Peter Bins - them were taken out alive and sent to him and with dignity and eloquence ist, causisig the car to dash into felt, whose arrest ten days ago on the the hospital. .1. B. Wilson. who recent- that would have done honor to famous elephone pole, wrecking the car and charge of obtaining goods under false owing the occupants out with gm/ ly came here from Carmi. III., was Chief Logan, rebuked the white man dead when he was reached by • for usurping the country. The coup - ca. pretenses created a decided sensation, It having been alleged that by means force digging for the victims of the ell adjourned without result 'he car was making fifty miles at of announcing himself heir to • la - Me accident, ir and it Is said that the chauffeur Later the Indians were accused 01 estate. he had duped various mei , I been drinking. Mrs. Steele's head ,.. molesting the white men. They were chants of the city. Binsfelt still clings e‘.._ s crushed. ‘3 surrounded by the military and foe to his story of being possessed of an I HOT FROM THE WIRE. I d 0' i cibly evicted. It was a gad scene DIES AT THROTTLE, equity which Is the immediate future e The village was wrecked. Mass was e delicious 4 means a windfall of at leant $90,000, rimy°. N. 11 -The board of trustees oefnotive Engineer is Found Dead at and says that he will remain in Ile!. of \ergo college today elected Rev. C., sung in the little chapel by Fathet / /flavor of real mint His Post ena and compel respect from all. He C. Creeran, D. 13.. of New York city, Baden, the first Catholic priest or president of Fargo college to take the dained in Indiana. leaVer City, Neb., Sept. 25. -Dead at v, leaves is fine for declares he has been • resIdent-of place of Dr. Vittum who resigned. The On September 4, 1838, the proms t , throttle of his engine. and the train Montana for twelve years. Other dm new man takes charge Oct. 16. sion started south. Many Indians fell I teeth - finer yet ming itself, was the situation pre- velopments are expected. London - Ordinary Improvement ill. The soldiers were unsuccessful . ,ted on the paseenger train of the having failed to check the suffragettes and finally withdrew In favor of the for digestion! Int Francis branch of the Chicago. Will Offer Scholarship. riots • magistrate at Birmingham has rlington & Quincy railroad near priest. Father Baden fulfilled his mis , radon, Ras. Helena. -Mrs. Peter Larson, widow sentenced two or the leaders to serve Mon and his journey, but on his re. of the well-known railroad contractor, a term at hard labor. rho dead engineer was George Pron. Grand Forks -North Dakota Bap- turn he died. His body now lies af WRIGLEY'S mining man, broker and lumber king, ., a veteran in the service of the npany, who had succumbed to heart has announced her intention of pro. Vats in convention here decided to Notre Dame. NO for the establishment of $100• ors ease while at his post Tiding for • four-year scholarship at raise • state college in connection with the The Wolf In Sheep's Clothing. . •• ils rigid position drew the attention Trinity college, Washington. The only state university. A wolf. clothing himself in the skin the fireman, A. Koler, who ran the condition announced is that the corn- Spier, Utait-President Taft artly- of a sheep and getting in among the look fur the spee I he flavor ldst s In to Saint Francis. petition must be confined to high ed In Utah today on his tour of the ' hi means took the oppor- school graduates in Montana. The country. He will be given a royal fleck, by t a me ® scholarship is valued at $5,000. welcome at Malt Lake City. tunity to devour many of them. At - HOT FR11.1 THE WIRE. I last the shepherd discovered him anti .._. St Paul-Gnv. John A. Johnson left 0 cunningly fastened a rope about hi* Found for pound Meat Duxbury, Mass. -The end of Montana Gets 111711.000. •n estate of rot more than $16.000 to • world not yet having come accord- Helena. -Governor Norris received his wife' neck, tied him up to a tree which Quincy, Maas - The battleship stood hard by. Some other shepherds r to the schedule arranged by the re- a letter from the acting secretary of North Dakota, . a. now nearly corn- happening to pass that way and ob- • lone sect which has been awaiting agriculture, stating that Montana's yards of the Fore Riser serving what e was about, drew neat! plated at the Rhd Alabastine the here the actors have gone to their share of the forest reserve receipts Shipbuilding Co. here, will be the first and expressed their admiration at it t it meet still with explicit faith that the in this state for the year ended June of the \Dreadnaughts\ in the United \What!\ says one of them, \brother san - at — y wall matin g , is I will come in a few daps 30 amounted to $78,000. This money States navy to have her government A n ,,, n guaranteed to cover MOM make hanging f a h 9 \ s cep. Moulins. France. -While palming over t the d d school funds in standardization trial trips. The date - ' -'1 o goes o e roe an sc t national road which leads from \No replied the other, \but I make wall surface than any hot counties in which the reserves are sit. has been ret for Oct 15. over the Rock - rim to Antibes and when at the hanging of a wolf whenever I catch 'and Mein, course. Of cold water kalsomine. ight of between 600 and 100 feet. the ' 111 `\ \'' him. though in the habit and garb of _ Madrid -it is treneranv believed here Buy only in packages ench dirigible military balloon, Re- that complications, which have arisen a sheep.\ Then he showed them their blique. exploded this morning and Osteopaths Meet at Bozeman. between Spain and Mule! Hand, the mistake and they applauded the Jim- labeled I to the ground. The four men on Bozeman. -The Montana associa- sultan of Morocco, are likely to result tice of the execution. -Aesop (seventh erd were killed. tion of osteopaths opened its conven- Iii a Spanieh-Moroccan war, that is, -entury B. C.) Washington -In the private office m Bon here, the feature of the session a war between Spain and the forces e secretary of the treasury the new being the delivery of a sensational of the Sultan of Morocco In distinction Alabestine riff hoard conferred over its Make Good Husbands. plan, add b President H T A hl k f to the resent fighting which is limited address yH. T. a Cfe 0 D stet -Orly. It was the first meeting of Countess Carle Dentici Di Frees°, The SanitaryWall Coating at body, and all of Its member.- Butte. In which he charged medical to Moorish tribesmen, inhabiting Riff who was Miss Georgians Wilde, and of. Henry C. Emery, chairman; Act- doctors with an attempt to absorb country. g Secretary of the Treasury Rey- osteopathy. Northwood -E. K. Spoonhelm, P. K. formerly lived in St Louis, says that Spocutheim and A. C. Riddell, all well foreigners are much kinder to their ,,,, AI : i t i r t w inel “\ ood „7 1 7,, b , 1 1,7,:1:: ° :, , tt e '\ Ids and Elvin Sanders of Chicago- known business men In this town, wives than the Americans. Her bus- Alabaatine teen •labester powder rwdy Cr. present. to net, with sold water sod apply with Montana Saengerbund Meets. have organized the Spoonheim-Riddell band works as hard as any American Washington. -Fifty million postagea wall brush. Missoula. -The first Montana Sean-companywith a capital Motor Sale. man, the says, having his business amps. Issued by the postoMce de- irtment In commemoration of the gerbund in the history of the state stock of 510,000. The company will do and being a member of parliament Tr3r it. All Dealers. a opened here with chorus of 200 a general business in automobVes and udson-Fulton celebration, will be ra And yet he finds time to come home aced °flute!e this morning at !various voices representing choral societies it has already arranged for an excel - for luncheon and see his wife sew [ices throughout the count17. from all principal cities of Montana, lent line. eral times during the day. The die - - MARS NEARS THE E.ARTH. tonnes in Italy, she says, are just as .; , s - .. K ~icon MilIienaires Like New Tar. ., HAIA4.13A14 BILLINGS TO WELCOME HILL. great as in New York, and an Amer- = a besetiOse the MIL if Law. — 15,000,000 Miles N Earth Than for ican business man would never think Billing,, -Word was received erom Fifteen Years. of going home to luncheon. A Euro. 2l ital: to It V Washington. Sept 25. -Millions ot I . S. Hill, OEM mop diatom chairman of the board of peen man In politics depends upon his * ii: .' -• eed store idlers worth of valuable paintings are Washington, Sept. 24. -Nearer to the directors of the Great Northern road wife's aid to further his aims, and - sing bought abroad by American mil- ' earth by 16.000,000 miles than it has onalres for free entry under the new that he woula attend the national dry teen for fifteen ) ar,s, he planet Mars when in business he reasons that two miff law, farming congress at Billings, Mont., today is the object of immense inter- heads are better than one, and is will- Teasury department advice. show on Oct. 25-29, and that he would ad- wet to astronomers throughout the lug to concede that his wife's intelli- tat one Philadelphia millionai re alon e vise the discussions of the congress world, particularly at the United gence is equal to his own. This men- PATENTS w--gx0--0 ... lorton &rote roe. icently imported 8200.000 of thee. and contribute liberally to the prizes St•ttes naval obeervatory here. tal intimacy, she says, makes the mar- ea red au. SiSlab'weesse. ass mums orks of art The law provides that to be offered for exhibits at the inter- The average distance of Mars from riage of American girls and foreigners, orks of art over twenty years of age the ears ,,. as a general thing, very peasant, and national dry farming exposition to be earth i 50000003 miles The hi l trCOIrO',l win 'T`tompson's Eye Water •,....., . lay be brought In free of duty. distance from the earth today held in connection with the congress. vial is the reason for fewer divorces abroad . It Is stated that private as well as only 36,000,000 miles With this prox- Governor Norris, of Montana, tweed- h I than - in this country. N. D. N. U., NO. 40-1909. ohne galleries are being greatly en- 1-ttv interest in the planet. which a Iched by the operation of the new law. dent of the congress, will preside. always keen, will become Intense. - Makaa' Idea of Hospitality. .... - A DOSE OF READY FOR WORLD'S END. At the Game. PRISONERS KILLED. The commander of a punitive force In the Cameroon' sent to chastise \Charley. dear,\ said young Mrs. somn recalcitrant natives has Just 1 S OIS West Duxbury. Mass., Sept. 24. --In. Yorkina, \I am learning a lot about nt Try to Escape From Russian Prison... mad his report to the German gov- pired by a conviction that todsy baseball. 1 can pick out the umpire iould bring the end or the world, SOO every tine,\ Are Shot Donw. ern nt. The tribe giving trouble is nd more members of the Latter \Oh you can!\ known as the Makes, and they de light in cannibalism. Awn of the Apostolic Church or the \Yes. He's the gentleman with th CURE 'Hone Immersionlets . as they prefer Marcell. waves on Ma chest.\ .. • oik Aida \ n oss i a , E i nt. f ri . .. 4 The chiefs, according to the report, ) be called, sasembled early about up of nineteen prisoners attempted fatten slaves to eat them. Capt. Dorn- TR StS1 saran nit q .. 11.1aS412% reir place of worship. There the to escape from the local jail last night. Inik Rays that it is the custont of the is as safe as it is effective. Guar- pvntees •waited the destruction and An onoseien. country, should visitors arrive unee- Who( our for exercise they attacked anteed to contain no opiates. It is ' urification of the world by fire, in Knirker-Did your talker OVID Pie pectedly. to bring in one of the slaves ilfillment of their own prophesy. an auto? the guards and made a break for and kill him as we should • fowl for ray palatable too—children like it. There was little comment when the Becker -Yes, but he didn't endowimerty The military guard fired on the entertainment and welcome of the MI Droustees. 211 Cents our designated for the finality of It. them and killed nine. Nine others 1 .00411L .___ _____. ----------. - ------ GF wn ye wh bu det an al vie OU ma Ho na In all 0th the ste lat tod Ha rie flea 00 ex eel for alo hill col see Af clear ration an still Ch day be dec the the PI mo of se rho I. ern has Au Ste Mo we nig to bum at th form ho hal wa the rut se Fa Bu He cot of tr th in Ilg ho en th PR Fr pit fol th ta N . a PT in no Wi t h at if A 11 ft were wourat ot sway.