{ title: 'Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911, April 29, 1910, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-29/ed-1/seq-1.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-29/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-29/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-29/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 29 April 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-04-29/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
- N, 0. .... VOL(TIOC IX. AN A WHITEHALL, MONTANA, FRIDAY. APRIL 99, Mo. TIE MONTANA SUNLIGHT RVISRY FRIDAY. W. I.. RICKARD • Proprietor SUBSCRIPTION PRIOR. Oast Year. Unvastabir in advance) • 00 Six Mouths 100 Three Mouths 40 instele Copies Miatered at the PostoMee at _Whitehall. Moat.. II Sewed -elute Matter. ADVERTISING RATE& ftWay-One Dollar per Inch per InOnt1 5 . _ Lecaus-Ten Cents per line tint insertiott; ay • estate per line each antaseinent LinertIon. NOTICE All communications intended tor publica- tion in this eaSer must beer the signatures, the author; otherwise they Will And thole way to the weete basket. _QQL.TNTY OFFICERS. iwmasrdbie-J.Lew. L. yr,' timoieres..-. .4‘. .... „P. J. aniline Caber Shea:. ---).. . ...E. W. Woi venon , J ailer .... ,... ............... .. AL B. Sumner laMaL ue Sr • .W. RLUUD4ICP it and Iteeortiet X it, McCall County Attorney .D. _. Kelly ssessor Jas. H. Mitchell A r ae ot A li tl i allIs i tn n4ne - . 'Ilt,ilifeb=7. B. aren•r Lunt& Denbow surveyor ; .. consussioszas. ha ts Steele, Obit:lean Basin li. gem Clan. e . 17.77 McKay • • - • Whitehall _I:Litt:trier meetimes of the hoard of twenty men been 011 the first Monday in Vart — h. Juni. September and December. The limisbers also serve as • hoard of equalbta - Rob meeting her this outwits on the third Needay In July. • - ACACIA CIAPTER, Ne. 21, 0. e. 11. Meets on FIRST mai THIRD TUICSDAY evening. of each month at Masonic Hall. Visiting.psentbers are cordially invited to attend. WASIf 3. NSUI031. W. M. Mu Lute L. tivancer. Sec's. MYSTIC TIE LONE, Ner. IT, 4. F. Is A. M. station the liKCOND and FOURTH TUES- DAY *Yell ner0 of each month at Masonic Hall. Visiting members ere oerdiall , le - ',rued to attend. FRANC K. NII110111. W. M. A. A Nituonms. Sec. Ike E. 0. Pace,,,, •TTORNF.Y-AT - LAR • ID NOTARY PUBLIC. Whitehall, Most. •-•-• int HMIs* X. L Tuttle, Prop. Prices are Moderate. Special Rates to Boarders L. R PACKARD, Ilwaymissimm and Surgesom. 1919 yiquItins hospital tare anon sptielal attention. essleaLOMet) and Residence on First Onset. \A/hitsaha.11. Mont. 54 •r7 1 , 1411. , aid If •ClalaC • • mararl.•in. waybay. Lank about elatrae. as comactlea. ba me Ma. Pea. pea Ora Pao. Otani. Is.. .ap 0.• If pa ma. th.• parr. Sums MI' Sampson rub. cm • 0••<.• ft . Idea We& ehet semen ....,stem. • tt. • it C “ Pear oGealIT Sada it. la.tal afar. an m. ly pea •••••••• . Ora* aaam, amass as eared. ample ropy fa If pa nation InI.paa Antsrisse PistaenOy II Moses M.. lala. • aileCALL PATIN/NS .• Celebrated tor style, porfast kr,sistipiteitY sad nhability surly 40 , yen. fold Mt svap nay amid lawn m the tinted Mates and Cenahl seby mail direct Hors meld tinn ether make. Send foe tree estemene. IMIteaLLNI IMAGAItiNt ' • Hors subscribers then may other fashion magairlae-millie. a month, Invaluable. Lat. leat stela, patterns, dream/114.ln,, millinery, \Ws anring,foncy needlework, huIrdeessing, h ata nod lfk.,dAtibttleadasii 0.1 tst 11 . ' • 0 ttern s . misy seed for casopla. pa copy. WORIDERIPVIL ifilibUCIUMIENTS • • 14 A !;•tot•. TO•011 LrIngs pr.....,.. OateOgla sad new cash prise Glib's. Address CO.. ref te 2411 iv. Mb Se. NOW pan 110 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATEN TS TRADC MARRS Oregano COPYRIGHTS &C. AnreessoMag • none and dmerintIon ma, MIteble &mortals. Mtn onioIon mem *bather m Itvent Inn Is probably natittabibiornmunlm tionastrIetlyennedanttal. AND on Patent, 'wont fro. MHO meaner meo ne_Ipatant. Patents taken inennsh Mann tb CO. riael. oottm, without Mans. t scientific Brayton. A baadsomaly Illustrated sisal?. Lamest alc. natation fltma,auesloVIOLto sil n 't e rzus. • f ir& C T salans UN 0 381Br..\. , New , Jrt _ qh THE NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS. One of the Most Interesting Proposi- tions of Science, and What it Means. the outside. This breaking off of the ring is supposed to be hastened by the inability of the outride to keep up the swift motion of th central mass, both on achount of the slight cohesion and of the cen- trifugal force. Bet this portico tar part of the argument has nah. ing to stand on if the first law - of motion is true. In the successive stages of the sun's contraction this process NU repented over and over again, un- til several riegs were whirling aroung tba central orb. They - \'VAL ,worStraNk-_ 2. .tits in the sable pla &. t't _rte. oet.rings, not be- ing uniform it mass or thickness, would each strati:lit:11y accumulate toward the densest poi tion until they, too, would form it ball which would subsequently flatten, and if the substance continued nebulous and the ball was large enough the.% would also slough rings. Of course the rings the sun late discarded have hecouie the planets. which, as required by the Oleo's, are all very nearly in the same plane. The rings that the planets formed have become moons rind satellites. So we are di - A - en to to conclude that our sun at one time filled all the splice from his present position to the ,farthest planet In the solar system. From this theory there is an- other thing that we have to believe. and that is that every stnt in the heavens has gone thru this MIMS process and has a family of plan - eta sailing around it, just its mir sun has. It wwild he impossible to see these planets. of course. for It is impossible to see a star, even with -the greatolit hold necrPe: exec pt as a mere point of light. As regards the proving of this tieulsr hypothesis, of course it cannot be done. But everything points to its accuracy. Many neb- ulae are seen even now among the stars that seem to be going thru the delnyed process of world form- ing. Around one of the planets of our own solar system, Saturn, are three rings, which are proba- bly destined in time to become moons, in the opinion of some scholars. -A. T. Hodge in New York Tribtine. Here and There. According to lewspnorr rneorts W. J. Bryan favors local option in Nebraska and state-wide prohi- bition in Missouri. The Missouri- ans are willing to be shown. Percy Honeychur -11 end Frank Barry two Butte boys aged 15 and 13 years. threw a piece of haling wire over and electric wire which carried power to the Silver Bow mine Tuesday and both boy. were elect roc ted. The Radersbtr 6 ' old Mining coni- pant , , capitalized at one million dollars and, bunked by Butte. Ilel- ens, end Spokane men, has filed articles pf incorporation with the secretary of state. The company intends operating mining proper- ty at Radersburg. President Taft's nomination of Governor Charles E. Hughes as the tuccessor of the late Justice Brewer of the United Staten su- preme court ought to be satisfac- tory to the entire country. and it will be to republicans. altho there are those who had hoped to see _Gov. Hughes elected president. Everybody has heard the phrase, nebular hypothesis, but what is iti In a few wiNtda this is the mean leg of \nebular hypothesis:\ that the sun, the planets and all that is in them were at one time in the in- conseivably remote past' a vast ef.aboatie. iAr2iakiamia, k ke ail. jumbled together in an enor- mous nebula, or cloud. To begin with, the first concep- tion that science has dared to [mike however, takes us one step further back. Without mentioning the origin of matter itself science con- ceives that in the beginning all matter was uniformly distributed thruout space -that there were no stars, no planets, no aatelites, but that all space was filled - with the matter we now have divided up Into very fine particles some dis- tance apart. The consistency of such material was rterforce very thin indeed, much more rarifieci than they highest vacuuni we can obtain now by air pumps. From this state to the nebulous state the theory hit. a missing Ilnkone that can only be satisfidd by supposing divine command, for it arsumee, in the words of Professor Todd, that \gradually centers of attrac- tion formed and these centers pulled in toward themselvea other particles. As it result of the in- ward falling of watt,/ toward . these centers, the collision of its particles and their friction upon each other the material masses grew hotter and hotter. Nebulae seeming to fill the entire heavens were formed—luminous tire mist, like the filmy objects still seen in the sky. though vaster and exceed- ingly numerous.\ This.process is supposed to have gone on for countless ages, faster in some re- gions than in others. Many mil- lion nebulae were formed and set in rotation around their own axes. This happily can be explained by science. Whenever partielee are attracted toward a center and are kept from falling directly to this center a whirlpool is formed, ro- tating in one direction. An exam- ple of this, though humble and not exactly analogous, is the rota- tion of water in a basin when the stopper is pulled out of the bot- tom. Gravity attracts the water immediately above the bole, which which starts flowing oat, thus leaving a space to be filled. The rest of the water rushes in from all sides to do this, and the whirl- ,: pool is the result. Now each cot these whirling neb Lila(' became exceedingly hot, and each formed what is known as a star or sun, our sun being one. The earth and other planets had not then come into separate exist- ence. of course. as it is supposed that they were thrown off later from the sun. Our sun in its nebulous form and rotating swiftly on its axis gradu- ally flattened at its poles on ac- count of centrifugal motion. This phenomenon is entirt ly familiar to those who have seen a ball of clay on a potters wheel flatten. file motion was so swift and the mass so nebulous that the sun to be took the Aerie of a disk. 4 As time 7.eat on the outer part became cool and soinewhat rigid, while the inner part cintinued its cooling and con- tracting. Thus the inner partdrew away from the outer, . leaving a SEND POTATO= FOR SALE. Early - Ohio, 60,cents per cwt.; New York Rival, 75 cents per cwt. Splendid Seed, true to the name First year grown in Montana. Buyers furnish snake.. ring of matter Irbil ling around on 10-3e J. A. Wm.. Rooevelt Invited to SivtA Pea Carnival • • — Bosemen. Mont., Apr 28, 1910. Theodore Roosevelt, Care Americtin Embassy, Berlin, Germany. the people of hlotitanu invite you to attend Montana's most gor- geous event and greatest Fair, Bozeman'. Sweet Pea Carnival and Inter -State Fair, August 29th to September ad. !lave been ad s viaed that you will be in Wyoming, Augu , t 31st. Full letter of tiarticulars will be peesented you upon arrival in New York. Answer, otyisepense. The foragoing meseige, signed by A. G. Besthot, mayor of Boze- man, Walter Cooper, president of the chamber of commerce, Chas. E. Dunlop, chtitan, carnival committee. and A. C. Bomber, president inter -state fair, Aim sent by cable to EX -President Roose- velt Thursday. Sluggers Med. Sappington, A pril 24. TheSap- pington Slow, S 1 , 0 , e ball team di • (rated the iVillow creek nitro at Willow Creek today by it score of 17 to 13. Features of the game, brilliant fielding of J. C. Cran- will, right fielder. Cole's Warm Ones. Flirtation is attention without' intention. If you don't like your Imo, fire yourself. Suspioion.has Icing icgit and talks as it strides. Hendecises ere a rrat he'p tow ard good resolutions. Reform is a mighty good thing -for the other crowd. It is all right to be radienl, if you are radically right. People who live in glass houses should raise early vegetables. Men are just as fickle as women. but they 'have less opportunity to I nhow off. Don't say availing you might wish you loidn't mid, and don't take off anything at any time of the year that von might have to put back on. Your Uncle Ira often finds the English language inadequate. hence his frequent use of \dainty re- freshments\ when some hostef-s serves a lunch of bologna and sauerkraut. S2V1NG * MACitINL ROLLER IligAtINS. SIGH GRUM S 25..vt Money HIS HAT .1AN'e WEAK SPOT. IN Nothing Else Do CenventIon'a iror Laws Show lie Strongly. There are things, It is • oornfort tc know, which oven • man cannot do and a man Is supposed to he able tc do almost anything. Nuw a novelist vs) , pet hie hams me'. hat on her head 00 any angle he chooses -It Is one of the few privL lease of womanhood- and leave net not a bit lees charming or dignified, but I defy him to put his hero's bat at a rowdy angle over hie ear at a crucial point In his career and ten,. him still heroic! - The Achilles heel of a man Is hie hat. He must grard that as he duet his reputatIod, toe at onoe his strength and 'teahouse, re; s a wriest ilionsion's tdoattdr. It vaunt hurt an archhinhon,linet4 the.vvea of Ike pubilt - commit a aims than to wear his hat on the back of his sacred head -real Wickl- and so exhibit himself to distres* mil diocese. Still, if he is in tn.tned, why should not a good and groat man wear his bat over his noise without creating tut favorable comment , 'The fact is, h• cannot. He is ruled by convention. and convemion is red tape of so der -Y. The cestiron lass of fashion, which Is only another name for eonvention, Ire such that If the greatest man in England were in walk with all his aci oustornon dignity from tbe Marble Arch to the hank with a training pea coen's feather attached to the bang of his silk hat he would be followed by a mob in tw^ seconds and by the time he reached Von, street the out- raged majesty cf the law would take bins into custody is • suspicious char. actor. HAD A PAVING SUSINESS. ----- Utast Sweeping Net Afteeether Old for charity. A parchant in • Scotch city used to ity. SS old croseleg sweeper WI. pone *eery Saturday. One day he siscoversid he had given him half a sovereign by mistake. So he hurried back Is the crossing. The sweeper said is reply to • question: \WM you ease, sir, after four o'etota to this 'dares., and I will see If you are right shout the coin.\ The merchant did so, and round swill *ace and two clerks busy at work. Presently the %weeper up ;sand. bat oh, so siscivnt H. WIt Iteeely and lowied * bwelsege man \OS. Tea.\ he said to the nston Sad warobant. \you wero cotrect. Our reedits to.eay were about ten shillings more man usual so here Is your halt se - nut's \ 's the mer chant left the cake, eou.ag he would ' sive to the rogue again, the sweeper called after him - You've forgetter, your noun/ sixpence, sir.\ Whore Cannibals /bound. C,anniballarn exists, in svits of thr thctutn of the report of the inquiry eon:omission. Dr. ithidie has 0)111 thil after one particularly murderous bat tie, ta which the Serra Rotetela Whip, of Congolese negroes had been used against the Arabs, every member ol these cannibal allies bad at hetet one body to eat. \All the m.at was • oonsd and smoke -dried, and forme.: provisions for the wimple of tbe force sad for all the camp follower, for many days afterward.\ 14r Made presents a somewhat sons! point of view: \Lnir- lag the war in which we were now en gaged for two years, we reaped. per baps. the only advantage that coil,. be, clarined for this disgusting custom. In the night following a battle or the storming of a tawn these human wolves disposed of all the dead, heav- ing nothing eyed for the incl.'''. and thus eared ea, no doubt, from many by beyfne thk reliable, honest. high grade sew- ing machine. STRONGEST GUARANTEE, National Sewing Machine Co. Belvidere, an epidemic \-Inverybcdv's Neeau• Work far F -Green. Horseman Fred Do n b7 s of englit• sompany 34 of Itrightt,-. says that while his compaay was f.,:hting • fire in Allston the other day an old maa mulled his way through :he crowd, land, grasping a fireman hy the shout - der begged him to e go hack into the house and save the.,oid man's Obit 171I. 'It's worth $30 t• me. yelled the loser, \and I can's afford to lose it; and while ym.'re up .l - c s you might bring down a box of rut:' which a lit- tle fellow who lives In the house says were cut oft soma yeats ago.\ -Boston Herald. The Inetieet to Play. A scientist attached to the Smith. widen lasUtution at Washington will shortly publish a report wherein he undertakes to show that the duke to indulge In play Is a true instinct among the lower creatures. As in man, the tendency to play is stronger In young animals. The scientist lo question divides animal sports into s number of classes. Among them are \play -hunting,\ in which the prey Is sometimes such as the animal natural- ly chases, and sometimes a 'Maktebss Ileve;\ \play-OghtIng \building -play.\ \nursing -play, - \plays of imitation and others. Held Her Tongue. \Hiss Antoci( has each an unfortna ate dispositlon su disputatious and sd sensitive aboitt hor age.\ \Yea she woe In i•effeef agony the other day whfir Col Itrogg was telling some rentintsceseev. She knew he was wrong, blit it wst sernetbing that isappened-le en - 3 , • N MBElt 11 RIGGS REAL ESTATE BULLETIN. waiit to sell your ranch, list it with me, as I have many Inquiries for good ranches. Now Is the time to sell. I have one good !9,J acre ranch for rent. WIII rent for Gash or pore of crop. See at • D. F. Rigg, Whitehall, Mont. have you tried our Gicssies7 We have them just to suit your fancy and your purse, What about Shoes'? We d eep usa cheep, shoddy shoes. We have shoes to wear. You mates, GP hall -sole end near sonic MOM. You do not have to buy am many shoes. hut N1111 nlanyn have - .C3cbc.el \Shoes if you -buy at Clerk's iWe can also sell you the best groceries at the lowest prices; take your 'imam re for v new louring suit: take your order for the latest in well covering; take yoor order for carpet, 11A.1 us know what you want mind we will fit You out. iWhen you huy goods, get the lel there is for the money by 'buying of - W. S. CLARK & CO., Renova, Mont. 1 Th Whitehall State Bank 1C.ospItioI Iaid Its, ...ION .000.0Cs Cil As. H. JOHNSON. A..1 Mt NA V, President. Vice Pre...Idea t. Irooter• CHAS II, JOHNISIE. IL J. TUTTL A. J. Mc AY. L. IL PACKARD._ W. sin to emend to our eitateeters every a..eommod•tIon • entmln'eht nlih COnoerpitiper banking . WE REMPICCTIPI'LLY POLICIT YOUR IWININ113111 J TT fri 4 . 401,101,104\01\Aq1AA016 You get the BEST if you eat at The Butte Cafe JENNIE L. WILLIA1S, Prop'r I Open Day and Night Furnished -:-Rooms Meals at Ail Hours In connection Whilte•hall - - Moratetraa C. W. WINSLOW Van Brunt Drill Emerson Foot -lift Sulky, Gang and Disk Plows, Disk Harrows, Alfalfa Renova- tors, Boss Harrows, Standard Mow. ers and Rakes, Harrow Carts,Van Brunt Drills, and Newton WAGONS AND BUGGIES ' Harness and Saddles ft/%41\0'44 , 41WV%$ F. B. NEqL1EV Drugs and jewelry - Prescriptions; etteci ..Irrytteelry Repairs Cl Eip4e.t: 'ratty 0.1•1•1•11Meillimill•••=1 Drugs, Perfumes, Soars, and Oils. Paints, Watches, Clocks, Silverware .e; -•••••••