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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 15 April 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-15/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Minstrels To•Night ftiie•AA , 11 , 1/ 4 4441, 1 1,A41101 , %fill , %4 4 11 ,4 4 , 1 1 0/41/ 41 4 ) To. FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1910. Minstrels Night Clinton's Hall. The census taker is looking for IOU. . H., C. Collins, with his . wife and da ` ughter, were in town Tuesday. F. H. Nsgley local wateloo re- pairer for the N. P. railway. [4TI Rev. Fred Whitford - will preach at Waterloo riext Sunday at 11 a. and 8 p. Wi J. Elmer and E. Speck, two Pleasant Valley farmers, were in town W ednesda t y. • Mills Mary • E. Lewis of Silver Star was the guest of Me. Mabelle Johnson last week. Germania Hotel. all New Fur- nishings. Miss Eva Root left on Wednes- day for Potions, Califorcia;vliere -- R et'. 'Edward Laird Mills wilt hold services at Waterloo Monday evening April r 18; at 8 p. in. • Mrs. J. D. Zink went.to moot Monday morning to care for Mrs. Roy Hungerford and Want. Just received a carload of lum- ber.—C. \V. Winslow. [5-tf. '114 minstrel show given hy local talent fonigict will eclipse any per- fortarnte of the Jiind ever seen here before. George Rowland put down a well this week on the premises occupied —by F. E. McCall and owned by Ike E. 0. Pace. J. F. Jackson has purchased F. L. Grandey's \itutomobuggy.\ Mr.. Gnindey is about to take a trip to New England. , For Sale—Road Grader.—Ad- die.. \Box' 31.\ VlsitehaJl, Mont, • 18 tf. Mrtslennie Houghton's Sunday school class will give a dime social In Ow§ Methodist I:pis:cent church on Saturda.y, April 234, Mt.: Andrew Less has purchased a new Ford automobile of the same style as the one recently bought by )4. J. McKay. The order was placed with the Jefferson Valley Auto company last Monday. Germania Hotel gives the But Ascemmodatione [Slit Dr. Packard reports the birth of_thin boyito Mx. and Mrs. 110.v Huntterford of Piedmont on Sat- urday, April 9th. Only one of the babes wait living. It and -the 4 tnother are doing well. • AI'beet Schmidt arrived here Tuesday afternoon from.Spokane. He will make a trip to the gulch to note conditions, and if the snow does no preventoperations at the mine will soon be commenced. t• 3erd Potatoes, large white Dil- leee*ecial, 80e. per cat., if you furnish wicks.—Daniel Noble. (8-2t • Mho. Nellie A. Thompson of Missoula, Grand Worthy Mat- ron of the Eastern Star, will be ; the guest of Acacia - Chapter at iteasext rregular matins'', Tuesday . entrg. April 19th. AB menu he41. . are cordially invited to he orient on that occasion, !bight's moving picture show at Clinton's ball Monday nnd Tuet- de414a drew very *small nu- diikeis'an4 ftelatistnatt left the to r e !iuinileValat tlisgitit* - d with til t'mtit:ma given him and vow- :i t /in:1 , 4 ; ftiesd;sy evening's enter - twee the last he would- • ...- onlin this ton - it. , (lie to Negley for watch repair- ing. All work guaranteed. rtf Mr. and Mrs. F. II. Nezley and Mrs. 13Ieik pf Butte made an autos tnoill trip to Town -end and Hel- ens - last week. Returning . Sunday evening, they wcre accompinied by hirs. 0. M. Lanstrum of Hel- ena. After spending two or three days of this . week with Mrs. Neg- q t e ley the v . ' 'ng ladies returned to -s•-, 4 . tlick re ' •ve how , . . The sale of personal property held at the Johns ranch in Pleasant Valley last 4titt1rday - was well at- tended, and we are informed that the property was disposed of RC good priees. Mr. L. C. Puce arrived here Wednesday morning from his home in Lincoln, Nebraska. In speaking of weather conditions and the rain which fell here dur ing Tuesday night.Jie remarked. \This is the first rain I have seen in seven weeks.\ It is evident that, in more than one sense, Lin- coln is dry. For Sale—very gentle Saddle Pony, auitable for children; good pack-horse.--M.Ttittle,Whitehall. , (9-2t Forester B. ' F. Thompson re ownsen where he 'went n week ago on a visit to his people. Ile reports Townsend thriving, and Pays the dry farmers in that section have flattering prospects of a fine crop of fall wheat.. He says the mining boom at Radersberg is expected to furnish employment for one thou! sand to - fifteen hundred men. When you want a good smoke, tobaccos, pipes or n nice box of candy call on Fay McCall, While here leave your laundry. (440 Woven' Picalla, aged 45 years. died at his home on what is known as the Powers ranch located on Pipestone creek n short distance above Pipestone Springs. on Fri- day, April 9th. Deceased had been in ill health for some months though not long confined to bed. The cause of death Is stated u miners' consumption. The family had lived near Homestake the past twenty years and- had moved to the new . honwi on the ranch -only about a week before Mi. Plasalies death. A wife, and sig children are left to mourn the logs of a hus- band land father. Arrangements for the burial on Monday were completed, even to the digging of die grave, but on the day set for the funeral the plans were changed and Undertaker Less shipped the body to Butte where the funeral and burial took place Tuesday. Arrangements have been made With the Cempbell - 4oil Culture company of Lincoln, Nebraska, whereby we are able to continue until March I, 1910, the Offer of the Montana Sunlight, Campbell's Scientific Farmer and the 1905 Manual for $ 4 2.66 We can A* furnish you Campbell's latest Manual; in combination with the two papers at a reduced !trim If you are interested in scientific methods of wet -or drY farming you cannot afford to Limo up this offer. Order theni NOW. . You can't get such a chance after June 1st.- - 434 -If Ball Team Benefit TO -NIGHT! CORRESPONDENCE. =NOVA April and Fisher/1 Everyone' is fishing now -a -days, and the flail taste good, too. The fish were biting splendidly Sunday and there were crowds front city and country. Two automobiles trought . loads from Butte, one from Whitehall, and some came over the Milwaukee. We expect the excursions to start soon, when the people of Butte will have an opportunity to get out to the country at least one day. - lirrold Smith and John Killui have gone to Idaho where they are interested in fur/ping. , (Intim is working on the itififtrit i fftt eneorterr4h . Clinton's Hall. looking fine. • • The ,teachers at tie Pleasant Valley school ,.are bus preparing the children for the closing exer- cises and also for examinations. The people in this locality were delighted to hear of ti3 birth of R lovely pair of twin boys to Mr. and Mrs, Roy Hungerford of Piedmont. Later they were sad- dened to learn of the premature death of one of the boys. The people here, who dearly love Mrs. Hungerford. eish for her speed% recovery and the boy's rapid growth. Itirrn.ak. CARD WILL. • A pril 14.-- Mr. May preached a vIry . interesting sermon in Johns hdll last Saturday evening. Mr. and, Mrs. Harre Noble drove to Whitehall one day last week. Mist, Nellie Newkirk was a pas- senger to Whitehall Sunday night. Miss Love was a Butte visitor last week. The Misses Roberta and Marga- ret Drysdale,' of Butts spent Sun- day win; their sister. Miss Mary Drysdale. Cr. L. Johns made his weekly business trip to ‘Vhiteliall. Mon- day. The dance at the A. 0. U. W. hall was fairly well attended and proved to be a ino.t delightful af- fair. S A , • S. !Aloud wais a Hutto visitor last week. The Country Club met with Mrs. Cliff. Noble last Saturday. A pleasant time was enjoyed by all present. Nate et Special Meeting of School Distik1 Nisbet Fifteen. . There wilt be a special meeting at the dihtrict sehoohouse onlatz urday. April 211d, betwen the hours of 2 and 11 p. in., for the purpose of voting to hood the disttict to the Rnionnt of Two Thousand Five Hundred (2,500.00) Dollars to build and furnish a schoolhouse at Piedmont/ 1 • AssAtsed valuation of ill ; OPRAT in &strict No. 16, $4110.97411600. _)ated April 5. 1919. . ti. W. lk/crti. D. F. Moos. Trustees. W. J. Etnaa. Advertised Letters. List of letters remaining un- called for in the postoffice at Whitehall, Mont., for the week ending Apr, 13. 1910: Burke, Mrs. May. Cashman, Morris. Polley, Joseph. Persons calling' for the above Mrs. McKeown returned from Spokane Wednesday where she has been visiting a sister who was very ill. The Montana fish hatchery's ear delivered to Harry Saery twenty thousand trout which he Planted in the South Boulder. This in- sures good fishing. after a while. Harry is building it large addition to his house of about twenty rooms which will make it n•fine summit' resort. He is very nicely situated between two high bluffs near the Jefferson and South Boulder st.reiMA \ On Tui‘sday night Mrs. Alexan- der gave a supirise party in honor of Mr. Alexander's tifty-se4nth birth*. Instromental and vocal music was furnished by tiss Drys- dale. _Mrs Johns, Mr. and Mrs. 4.4. - 4ltirry• Saart, • 6 dereious luncheon was served by the hastens, after which more music was enjoyed by all. The guests deported abotit twelve o'clock wishinie Mr. Alexander many more happy birthdays. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Will • Seery. Mr. and Mrs. harry Seery, Mr. and Mrs. John Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff. Noble, Mr. and Mrs. Irvine, Mr. end Mrs. Li U. Brown, Mrs. Johns. Mrs. Johnston. Mime Drysdale. Metiers. Spencer and Reid Joleisloti - Yours Truly got lost somehow and didn't send in any news last week. If You know of any items just mil up the.X, P. depot. and I will do the rest. Pry'. The Modal Coolest. The Womai's Christian Tem- perance Union held a medal con- test last Flittuiday evening in the Methodist Epieeopelehurch. The meeting was\ coiled to order by -Mrs. E. J. Stanley. The contestants were Mrs. Ida Grimm). Mrs..arnee Smith, Mrs. Emma Jones, Mr. Lydia NIcUall, and Mrs. .lennie Houghton. Preessor Clapp, Professor Cory and Miss Nites acted as judges, after which Professor Clapp. with fitting remarks on the excellence ofilie cause, presented the medal to Mrs Jennie Houghton. Miss Mcihnield and her t -lass, Mrs. Whitford, Men. McCall and Mrs.. - Jones rendered vocal selec- tions which added to the enjoy- ment of time evening. A very de- lightful evening was spent. About twenty-five Butte anglers were here &nutty trying theti lack. - .Semis of them returned with their baskets full, and other, with—(f). Mr. Robinson came down from Butte Saturday with his wife\ -for a visit with his, brother. a genial North Boulder rancher. A Mr. Speocer froMOhio issis- it-big A: L. Johnson's. Dick Mitchell and George Spar - roll wont ;to Helen Wednesday morning. • - Mr. and Mrs. Harry Seery were pasitengers to Whitehall Wednes- day. returning the some day. . . • John Powell ie unfoftding a car of shingles for his new barn. . -• • Mrs. Schmuck_ clime over fron Butte Wednesday. The Country Club Will hold its next me: , ting at the home of Miss Myrtle Dillet May 7th. Merle Irvine Was visitor Friday, 'Gene Motley went to Butte Tuesday night. \Rill\ Sleeman left last week forPortland and other coast points. Bleemen Went to jilutte Ved- a Mammoth letters will please say \ofror . ,noodoi morning from where she died.\ 0. 11. DAvirr; P. If. may go to loin him. Famous Scout Dead. • Philip Livettn, scout and Indian tighter, died and was bulled at Culbertson a few days ago. Lar• atta, who was eighty-three years old, was. of •zpirnisli descent and was born in Mexico. lie came to Montana after the civil war and served in the capacity of a scout under Generals- Hazen,. Whistler and Bromilereon. During Custer's campaign against . the SiOnXII lie married disp,turbem.. from , Miles City So Fort 14.0ettei r Kt . a sperial act ropgress a few ago MC- 01(117All his V1116 , 0101, 11 Pg1 hies 'to the country and 2earited him small pension. German Paternalism. The Oherpostdirectionsbesirksrevisor --otherwise a district inspector of the peek:ace departntent of Germany— on a tour of inspection found a tele -phone operator in a small town \wear ing a white silk waist, cut low at the neck, instead of the blue' uniform waist, and reported the offender to the chief of the inspection office. Not only.\ said he, were the regulations of the service violated, but the silk gar- ment was cut 1,ery low.\ The chief office directed the Immediate discharge Of the telephone operator and gave warning that women in the Imperial Service must \dress irs keeping with the service regulations.\ Utfference of Opinion. Mrs. Cobden -Sanderson thinks that American w,omen, with the possible exception of Chteago women, ere too much interested in their own Individ usiltr and think too little of the com- munity, in other words are larking In civic pride. In England, she says. there Is not the sharp line between men's interests and women's Interests, but the policemen *ho are detailed to keep the ladle. out of the house of commons may have a different opinion oil the subJcaL • The WHITEHALL TRADING CO. NEW ARRIVAL of Sprint' Millinery! Ae Lk kaunteemeersessite , rieg ri tve • 4111 • f..s• 1.r144.p.elp !,• fc , ' All the latest styles in street ,and dress hats , Expert Trimmer from a large eastern millinery establishment The WHITEHALL TRADING CO. 1/4%41•4.141\4 01 101 , 11A) oavica or VINIMAN ,PRINTEL amilimom ishhis Manutlus Author of laymen. of Punctuation. Punctuation by means of stops and points, so as to Indicate the mean - Ins of estntences and assist the reader to a proper enunciation, Is &Scribed originally to Aristophenea, a gram- marian a Alexandria, Egypt, who lived In the third century B. C. What- ever his system may have been. It was subsequently neglected and for- gotten, but was reintroduced by Charlemagne, the various stops and symbols being designed by Warne - fried and Alculu. The present system of punctuation was Introduced in the latter part of the lifttenth century by Aldus Menuilua a Venetian printer, who was ro spensible for our full stop, colon. semicoloa, comma, marks of inter roeatIon and exclamation, parenthesis and dash, hyphen, apostrophe anti quo tation marks These were subsequent- ly copied by other printers, until their use becatne universal. Most ancient languages were Info. cent of any system of punctuation. In many early manuscripts the letters ire placed at equal distances apart, with no connecting line between even In the Matter of spacing, en arrange- ment which must have rendered read- ing at sight somewhat 411\.cult. THE LADY AND THE UMBRELLA. Not Every Woman So Lucky as the Heroine of This Tale. In the storeroom that every rail- road maintains for the safe keeping cf lost articles left In its care by for getful passengers there are always to be found hundreds'of umbrellas. lint not eVery umbrella left In the care Is lost long enough to find Its way to the lost departmeut; it may forth-. timely be recovered sooner. Hers was a woman who had Just stepped front an elevated rallread train, to find It raining, and thus re- minded: \Oh! my umbrella!\ she said. and, turning to the train, which had al ready started along, she added: \Wide minute!\ a request by the train un- heeded. And yet this woman recovered her umbAilla In a mcment. \Here it Is,\ said another woman. who was traveling with her, .bad got off the car after her, and had gathered up her friend's umbreni with her own as she came along. Bo this forgetful passenger recov ered her umbrella promptly, but nol all are so fortunate; thousands of um brallas left behind by passengers go to the lost derrtmenta every year Liberty—Principle and Sentiment. No theory is of much set -vice in the matter without • character responding to the theory—without a feeling which prompts the assertion of individual freedom and is indignant against ag- gressions on that freedom, whether against self or others. Men care moth - log about a principle, even if they un- derstand it, unless they; have emotions responding to It. When adequately strong the appropriate emoticn prompts resistance to interference with individual acetone, whether by an Individual tyWint or by a tyrant major Ity, but at present, In the absence of the proper emotion, there exists al- most everywhere the miserable super stition that the majority`has a right to dictate to Ito individual about every- thing whatever.—Ili' Herbert Spedrel, In letter to M. ft#WWVIA4WWWWW1 , 414 , %% F. ii. NEGLEY Drugs and Jewelry F'rewescrIptIcsrm arta JesweAry IRefpeslro sp , oeiesity Drugs, Perfumes, Soaps, and Oils, $110 4 11‘101114 5 1^ 4 1Ailifie/ Paints, Watches, Clocks, Silverware - 141960EMIWA614 On the Scientific Plan. room CAMPIRLes'eLYRIITEVIC \PARKER. Mary lied a little farm, It baked dry nnd brown. She thought she'd trade it off, And get a place in town. Then came a Campbell. wise. A nd told her what to do, Sheiook his ndvice. A ad got his ideas. too. Then she tilled her farm On the scientific plan And grew crops of wheat As big as any man. Her neighbors said it was a fake, But Niary acted sane, And continued to grow Enormous crops of grain. Now if you, weary Farmer. Will resist drouth s e dusty ben. Till your farm as Mary did -- On the scientific plan. - \Campbell's Scientific Farmer,\ monthly, and \Cmpbell's 1905 Soil Culture Manual\ --a book of 95 pages—tell all about Campbell Methods and Scientific Soil Culture. We can furnish you the Manual with the Farmer and thet taillight one year for pnly 2.65.. Old and new iufisCribers--all look alike to us. $2.65. Op, tp xsperoaweinfasociinflorowstro.r ALL MATTER OF PROPINQUITY. It is the Event Near at Hand That Counts Most In Everything. The derth of hundreds of people in a distant part of the country from where we live hardly arouste more than passing interest, and the more or less sudden taking away of thousand of lives In some far remote land evokes no more than a Ford...of sym- pathy front those a law -I - distance away. But the single death near at hand, the funeral across the street. makes mind. kesthe . strongest possible mark on the Propinquity, in that as in everything else, Is what counts. The death In the fatally cuts into the -heart for years If accompanied by details that make a horror, the shock often remains wItie the survivors to the end of their own lives. If thrlost relative has Met a violent death, by accident or other- wise, the anguisn of those left behind Is all the more poignant and endur ing. Worst of all, and most lasting is Its effect upon the survivors, is the death where unexpected financial die tress or ruin follows the loss of the family head. It Is a wretched home circle for many a year when the chief ..awsfaseu a*ay, leaving only debts. with tio, property. not even a 144 ill —Erma _InAta._ tam. _ - - THE - Cash Market We sell Best Meats Fresh Eggs Everything First-class w. W. PleCitlid +narfte