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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 25 Nov. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-11-25/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
ALUM The BAKING POWDER That Makes the Baking letter _raflures are almost Impossible with Gigumet. We Iowa. , that It will give you better results. We knew that the baking will be parer -.more wholesome. We know klyat it will be more evenly raised. And we kw. that Calumet Is more economical. both in its use and cost. We know these things because we have put the quality into it -we have seen it tried out in every way. It Is used new in millions of homes and its sales are growing daily. It is the modern baking powder. Have you tried it/ Calumet is highest In quality - moderate In Price. Rae.trod Hi g hest Alma- Warid'ePere Food Exposition. 6 r mi kt - • BAKINGn cHICAC30 Pk -Mate Shoes Are Best for Children ly the hem material and workmanship goes to P1o. - 1'1o.t NoUno the pi of the shoe.— I t follow • natural linos and lows the foot to develop normally. The a like them becauae they Cr. soft, flexible d ao comfortable -the parents Ilk. them be. use while they cost a little more, they are the cheapest in the end, all time pairoj Ple , ..-Blatiba Moon outlast two weirs of ordi- nary shoes. aud they bold their shape so well. Sista to lb, In all suitable leathers and In lace, button nod or- fo-d styles. If you can't buy Pi••. - IeLlaTel BUOY from your dialer, send us his name and Mete size and style and we will are that you are quickly supplied. Williams, Hoyt a co. al.711& $2.00 Rochester. N.Y. PUT 'EM TO SLEEP. Novellst-When I'm writing a novel, lose considerable sleep over it. Critic --Ohl well, what's your loss hi our readers gain. He Couldn't See. Little Jack's father was the teacher f the Sunday school class of which ack was a new member. He had been d that as this was his that Sunday e would not be asked any questions ut her -must pay close attention just Berne. So, on the way home his father ked him who it was who killed !lath. \I don't know, I was sitting on the ack seat and couldn't see,\ was the ady answer. -From Norman B, ack's National Monthly. Reason for Strange Names. A little colored girl appeared on ne Of the city playgrounds the other ay, accompanied by two piekanin- les, who, she explained, were cousins f hers, visitors in Newark. \What e their names?\ asked the young oman in charge of the playground. 'Aida Overture Johnson and Lucia Sextette Johnson,\ the girl answered. 'You see, their ptips, usrl to work for opera man.\ -Newark News. \Don't Amid) , \ A single dish of Post Toasties with sugar and cream tells the whole story - “The Memory Lingers” !edam Cereal Company, Leg. Battle Creek, Met. I NEWS Of IIIONTANA Important Fiappenings of the Week Briefly Tcld. STUDIES LAW IN JAIL. .lonvleted ,Montera Murderer Hee 3,000 VOILIMC3 in Prison. ---- Butte.-An Attempt is being made by the miners' union to secure the aardon of Tom Riley, the Butte miner zonvicted twelve years ago to a life :erm for the murder of President Pat- rick M. Largey of the State Savings Bank. The committee from the union in charge of the petition has secured several hundred named, Most of them being miners, city and county °Metals. Riley was one of the victims of an sxplosion in 1895 that caused the 'ath at every fireman in Butte, all to:d fit- ly -six lives being lost. He lost his suit against Mr. bargey for personal injuries and later shot him in front DI the bank on Park street. Riley has accomplished much while confined in the prison. In a letter from Warden Frank Con- ley it is shown that Riley is ready to be admitted to the bar. Riley has also taken a correspondence course in min- eralogy. He has degrees in law and mineralogy. Ills library consists of over three thousand volumes. Riley was one of the first miners who came to Butte. 'CONRAD DPE1413 . TOGA RACE. Montana Banker Announces Candi- dacy for Federal Senatorship. Helena. -In the belief that the ap- proaching legislative assembly will be Democratic, W. Gl.sConrad, millionaire banker and mining magnate, announc- ed his candidacy today for the federal senatorship. T. J. Walsh, millionaire lawyer, is also an avowed candidate should the complexion of the legislature be defi- nitely determined as Democratic. W. A. Clark will again enter the arena, it Is thought. Democratic State Chairman Stewart this morning claimed 54 of the 102 members, while the Republican chair- man lays hands on only 53. In four counties the vote on representative is Jose, and the official canvass may be required to determine the result. The Republicans appear certain to have the better of it in three of these and the Democrats in the other. It is not uulikely that the legislature may be a tie, in which case the deciding vote will be cast by Allen. Republican lieu- tenant governor. WOMAN GRUEN A DAY IN PRISON. Lewistown. - Mrs. Lillian Back - stein, wife of Harry Backatein, brakeman of Melrose, Minn., was sen- tenced to one day in the penitentiary and to pay a fine of $200 on oonviction of bigamy in having married Frank Lambert, cashier of the bank at Roundup, Moat. The light sentence wag due to many mitigating cIrcumatances and the fact that she already had been confined is the county jail for a long period, MULTIMILLIONAIRE IN JAIL Butte -James A. Murray, multi -mil - Bonaire and one of the best known capitalists in the Northwest, was sen- tenced to jail for contempt of court by District Judge G. G. Lynch, there to be confined until he was ready to coin - ply with the court's order and turn over mining stock valued at about $25,000 in the Butte Monitor mining ease in which Murray le plaintiff. Mr. Murray refused to comply with the court's order until the officers were ready to carry out the court's order and then he yielded. Mr. Murray is extensively interested in Seattle ship. yards and real estate in that city. Montana Man Schoots Self. Aiiaconda.-'red Priebe. a well- known rancher, threatening to shoot his sofi William if he loterfered, re- moved the clothes in which he had visited in town, which he piled on a log, donned a pair of overalls, placed the muzzle of a rifle against his nose and pressed the trigger with a steel bar. The bullet tore off the back of his head. Official Census Figures. Washington, D. C. - The popula- tion of Great Falls is 13,948, a de- crease of 982, compared with 14,930 In 1900. Great Falls Wroth Over Census. Great Falls. - At a special meeting of the board of commerce to consider the 1910 census figures it was decided to make every effort to have a re - enumeration made. The board decid. ed it would pay all expenses of an enumeration to be taken under the supervision or the government, pro- vided the census bureau would give the city the rating to which the board claims it is entitled. Indignation was shown at the meeting because of the figures of the government making the population 13,948, a decrease of 982. DEMOCRATS WIN IN MONTANA. Control Assembly Which WIII Elect Senator Carter's Successor. -- Helena.-The final official count in ye us close counties Insure Demo- cratic c'intjol of the next legislative assembly which will elect a successor to U. S. Senator Thomas H. Carter, Republican. The official returns give the Democrats 63 votes on joint ballot, without Custer county, where unottl. dal returns given the election to W, b. Terrell, the Democratic candidate. Homesteader Dies on Maitre. Bismarck, N, D., Nov. 19. -Henry Olsen, a Morton county homesteader, was found dead in his bed by neigh- bors, supposedly about twenty-four hours after death. He has suffered hemorrhage of the ltfrifis and expired He was living alone on a claim upon Which he flirt] alo.ut three years ago. Nothing is known of his famill or his feru:e., 'tome. Earthquake in West Indies. Fort Be France, Martinique, Nov. 19 '-Severe earthquake Shock, moving from north southwards was felt hers last midnight. No damage was dons Youthful Wisdom. Father -Why did my little boy song Young woman Makes 350 -Mile Trip his papa a letter with oely a capital U.S. AGENTS Busy From Perry, Okla., to Law- T written on the page while he was reties, Kan. eway? — Little Son -Because I thought you'd Lawrence, Kin.-Mise Mabel Edi Ransom arrived at Lawrence from h and say: \y boy is only four years t4 go around among your friends with it M ro former home at Perry, Okla., after old, and just'see the capital letter hi riding 360 miles on tLe back of herl WrItesr-Judge. little two -year -old pony, Lady Barber Ascending Mount Oread, the youn woman left her horse long enough t register in the department of horn economics at the school. Remounting she rode to a house on Ohio street where her mother has recently move from Perry. Then she entered tile regular state university classes in which she had enrolled. The young woman decided to ride to Lawrence, because of her great love for horseback riding and partly be cause of her love for the pet pony. \There was no way I could bring her with me,\ she declares, \unless. I shipped her in a stock car. 1 was afraid she might take car fever or be injured during the trip, and finally hit upon the plan of riding from Okla - RODE A HORSE TO COLLEGE and I was nearly two weeks late in starting before she finally consented. \As nearly as I can calculate I rode on an average 50 miles a day. It was the finest trip I ever had. And I brought Lady B. through without a scratch.\ she added proudly. \Of course, I did have a few unusual ex- periences, but they did not cause Inc ally alarm. One day when it was cloudy and ocaddet- see the sun -f- lint my way in a 3,500 -acre pasture. Some persons living in the neighbor- hood warned me not to attempt to ride throes* it, but by so ;fang I saved several miles. Near Fort Riley Lydia E. Pinkham's I lost the road and wandered about Vegetable Corn pound Chicago, Ill. -\I was troubled with fa and inflammation, and the doe.. tors said I could nett get well tmless had an operation. I knew I could not stand the strain of one, so I wrote to you sometime ago about my health and you told me what to do. After taking Lydia Pinkham's 'Vegeta. ble Compound and Blood Purifier I aM ya womsin.\-Mrs. Wu -LUX London -To many American tour- AHRENS, 988 W. 21st St., Chicago, Ill. lets the English seem to be a nation Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com . - of beggars. Hts royal highness, the pound, made from native roots and Prince of Teck, begs that you wilt nerbs, contains no narcotics or harm- ful drugs, and to -day holds the record subscribe to his pet hospital fund; for the - largest number of actual Cures old Harry, from the gutter, begs you tof female diseases any similar rriedt. to buy a boot -lace. Today we read sine In the country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on els the Pinkham laboratory at LM Mass., from women who have enred from almost every form of Female complaints, Inflammation, We eeration,displacements,fibroic tumors, fined a lexicographer as \a compiler hvegularities, periodic pains,backnchn, of dictionaries, a harmless drudge.\ Indigestion and nervous prostration. Every such suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham'S Vegetable Compound a triaL If you would like special advice about your cane write a conilden• Rai letter to Mrs. Piakliam, at Lynn, Maas. Her advice is free. and always belpfuL Unless Steps Are Taken to Prevent It, Dr. Johnson's House Will Be Destroyed. the advertisement, \Wanted a mil- lionaire.\ who will come forward and secure for . the nation Doctor John- son's house In Gough Square. It was here that the man who de - Miss Ransom and Her Pony. homa to Kansas. Put I had to per- suade mother that it was a good plan DISTEMPER in all its terms among all ages of horses 5 is well as dogs, cured and others in same stable prevented front having th e & erase bottles S guaranteed. DISTEMPF.R CURE. very bottle Over 800,000 sold last year d.50 and $1.00. Any Fn d druggist, or send to manufacturers. ents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., spa. tagieus Diseasea, Goshen, Ind. Scant Paeturagtk \I am afraid the moths Will get into my bathing suit,\ said Maud. \It would be a shame,\ replied Hay- alio. \The poor things would starve to death.\ Pneumonia and Comminution are al- ways preceded by an ordinary cold. Rare- lins Wizard Oil rubbed into the chest draws out the inflammation, breaks e.gi the cold and prevents all serious trouble. A bachelor girls' club Is an associa- tion of women who think they are more likely to get husbands by pr.e tending not to want them. Pettit's Eye Salve for 25o. Relieves tired, congested, inflamed and Sore eyes, quickly stops .eye aches. .All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Women seem to live faster than men. iltany s 'loan has lived taill7Littillt - t4\ daughter of the woman he calte near marrying. DR. J. H. RINDLAUB (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Fargo, N. D. How would you like an unbossed and lobbyless legislature for a change? Pere. Whissows r i L e i'm\I d .T. : goo : ainas'Vtr l = i e t a t:-tValier.itaous: wesiu There's many a penitent man in the penitentiary. DESTROY WHISKY AND WINES AT THE POINT OF A PISTOL. (NOS ARE THOROUGH Indian Agents Find Secret Cellar Filled With High Grede Liquor -Saloon Keepers Had ignored Orders. Bemidji, Minn., Nov. 17. -In a bold expedition against two Bemidji sa- loons which had .1gmbred the govern- menee order to close, agents of the Indlau bureau faced a shotgun In the hands Of one of the liquor men who a moment before had htt Agent Matulye oll the head, knocking hint from a high platform, where he landed on a brok- en bear bottle, inflicting • deep gash on the leg. The Indian agents drew their revolv- ers and proceeded with the destruction of liquor valued at several hundred dollars by the saloonkeepers. In one place the agent discovered a secret room in the basement built of cement and filled with whisky and high priced wines. A blind trap door was the only enteautos. Thearguatha anaglgts. through titter tloor 'end wish s.was smashed ee,e.,,.. eral barrels of whisky and casks of wine. Special Agent Matulys led the raid and the first place entered %vas Dudley and Mahan's, In the heart of the busi- ness district, well equipped and do- ing • thriving business, T. E. Brenta who has charge of the Indian bureau sub -agency in Be- midji, was in the expedition. He ap- proached Mr. Dudley and told him three warnings from the government had been Ignored, reminded him he had opened his saloon but recently, after having once been allied by the government, and that upon telegraphic order from W. E. Johnson. head of the Indian bureau, he should be compelled to destroy his stock of liquor. Taft Popular at Panama. Panama, Nov. 17. -President Taft HER willl sail for home today, delighted at the progress being made In the con- struction of the Panama canal and with cheers of Panamans ringing in his ears. - -e president', tweeds moult Just L III_ -Tb n by igh p t res at id a e n d t In A n r e o r sena g m i v e e n t i i n n t w its hic h h on h o e r tha United kItIE the reservation for several hours. But I just kept going and everything came out all right. \I have ridden a horse ever since I was old enough to cling to the Bod- die, so I suppose I had more confi- dence in myself and my pony than had the thing been entirely new tri me.\ DICTIONARY WAS MADE HERE Old Johnson House, compiled the dictionary which has helped to make him immortal. Commissioned by the chief book- sellers In London in 1747, for a fee of $7,600, the dictionary was completed In eight years. The attic of his house was fitted up like a counting house. In which he gave to his Six copyists their several tasks. The words partly taken from other dictionaries and partly supplied by himself, having been first written down with a space left betWeen them, he delivered in writing their etymologies, definitions and various significations. The au- thorities were copied from the books themselves, in which he had marked the passages with a lead pencil, the traces of which would be easily et taced. Roast Python. Paris. -Every year the Societe d'Ac- climation de France holds a banquet in Paris at which strange dishes ap- pear on the menu. This society was founded in 1854 and numbers some of the most illustrious men in Franco. This year the dish about which the most intrest centers was furnished by two venerable pythons. The snakes came from Borneo 15 years ago, and each was considerably over ten feet long. There was some hesitation about tasting roast snake, but the president, Edmond Perrier, set the ex- arnple, and the others took courage. The verdict was that python Is some- thing like eel, neither very good nor very bad, so the public ham not missed much, After all. Mese% \'\me\' - \b Thempsea's Eye Water PATENTS vs* W. N. U., FARGO, NO. 411-11110. Fargo Directory THE Ptosicsa LIFE INS UV. of N. D. All premiums, left la your state for Its develop meat. 0ountry bankers may as co op, depositaries. Policies sear Mailed by Moe deposit. Agents ...m e d. 0.1. Yeekler, lies., Pow, I a , KODAKS rut:MI Write for catalo g ues and literate,* We do developin g and printing Mall orders g iven prompt sicei tisS FARGO DRUG CO. Fargo, N. a States was contemplating the annex- ation of Panama, was published this morning and excited the appreciation of the, people here, who 'Mead upon every opportunity to show their friend- liness toward the American chief ex- ecutive and the government of which be is the head. Taft will embark upon the cruiser Tennessee at Colon at 6 o'clockotonight for Charleston. He will stop at ollart- Warn°. Cuba. Saturday afternoon for a brief insitection of American naval base there. This morning Taft looked over the Pacific division of the canal and from a tug examined the com- pleted section. This Is the president's fifth visit to the isthmus, and his popularity among the natives and canal workers Is shown everywhere. Bluejackets Reach Paris, Paris, Nov. 17.-Grouos of American bluejackets visiting Paris are every- where objects of interest and are cor- dially welcomed. One hundred men from the battleship Georgia arrived from Brest this morning and as they patsed out of the railway station, ap- parently eager for a first glimpse of the French metropolis, they were re- peatedly photographed by representa- tives of Parte journals. A crowd of commuters arriving simultaneously at th e station greeted the Agitrictins with hand clapping. Hides, Furs Pelts P oll° was badly damaged In Hampton Roads To BOLLES & ROGERS today after two charges of 200 pounds FARGO, N. G each had been exploded against her eel o turret. In a sinking condition the ye,. adds en joy...1 el was rushed to Norfolk navy yard. Garment Workers Riot. Chicago, Nov, 17. -Riots by striking garment workers broke out ane.v to- day in several parts of the city, after • lull of several days. About 200 strikers waited at the foot of Gault Court in Italian quarters for hours this mnreing. and when the residents, employed in many instance as strike- breakers, appeared to take street cars for their places of employment, the crowd attacked them. The police used clubs to break up the disturbance. Many of the strike- breaker, were girls and women. Hunting Casualties. Sault Ste. Marie. Mich.. Nov. 17. - True Smith, 22 years old, wan dis- covered today in the woods near here, dead from a self-inflicted wound. Nearby his cousin Samuel, 15 years old, lay dying from a shot believed to have been fired by Trae. Circumstances indicate that the lat- ter mistook his cousin for a deer and after realizing his mistake took his own life. KODAK to every *porta recreation. NO dab way Is easy and simple. eodaks 86 to $110. Ask us for a copy of lb. Kodak Catalog. laiis.keisefk.fassAki SHOTWELL FLORAL CO. Growers and sbl i re .,. ‘101 ii1C. T irhe Melia: vice In the est. for ha* and pest a total see Ming out of town order% • onsbortnoti.. Tnna-si designs model Pho write as Night or astablished • quarter • &Oratory. Send for cab Ismer /WwWiwer a saes game. f..,n,I. • FARGO TANNERY Receives bides and skins for tanning to harness leathef, robe, and coats. Robes lined, bides bought, leather and robes fm sale. Bend for price list, Andrew Monson Prn;,:€7,7° Fargo, N.13, THE PIANOLA A piano anyone can play without instruction. Write for free catalog and full information. STONE PIANO COMPANY Fargo, North Dakota DAVTA CONSERVATORY or HUMP ' an eve = I : :A; t_mala Art. V. . ytzZ Nitroglycerine Does the Work. Fort Monroe, Va., Nov. 16. -In an experiment to test the effect of an un- confined explosion e f high explosive nitroglycerine, the monitor Puritan • - Liners Collide in Hudson River, New Tork, Nov. 17.-Irii a collision In the Hudson river today between the French line steamer LaLorraine and the North German -Lloyd liner Prinz Friedrich Wilhelm. as they were draw- ing out into the stream to sail for Eu- rope, both steamers were badly . dam- aged above the water life and had to return to their piers. Neither was in condition to proceed with her voyage today. The passengers on both linens were panic stricken fore moment, but the assuranced of officers that there was oho denier greedily quieted them. First Auto in Yukon Country. Dawson, Y. T., Nov. 17. -The first automobile to travel to the interior of the Yukon from the coast has just completed a run of 160 miles from White Horse to 'ILathen Croat making es high as twenty Wiles an --, beur in places. In view of the roughness of the road, whieii 'shortly before had been neighed out in many places by freshets, this Is cora:tiered a IcInarK• able accomplishment. This machine is owned by a trans- poriat'on eompany which hopes to dis- place sleigh, with automobiles. • liEtrairefes.E.r\..eliethsa , I aloN„ ALCOHOL -3 PER CENT MiNetable Preparation for As- similating Owned and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of INIANI - I S (MIL U It 1.N Promotes Die,za tion,Chee rful- ness and Rest Contains neither Opium Morphine nor Mineral NOT NAFIC OTIC Rev,' dab? ASV/Ca/Van /1. 1 .4‘. Seal. .dLo Soraw Alm4•11•Ader s. Anise .10e1 . r wieesaleholos• :...rna • Cle.4.14,yee We/kerne Amen A perfect Remedy for Constipa• lion Sour Stumach,Diarrhoea, Worms gonvulsionS.Fever sh• mess and Loss Of SLEEP a l 'Ae Simile Signature of 4(..,44zg67 set Cenvenissi,Comwaiv, , - 1'4117VNt • - YOR . Alb months. old 35 Dos,' ii p c tiNett , Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTOR For Infants and Children. The Kind You Hava Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use. For Over CA$TORIA •sersu• w . f. am woes errs. Dry Your Clothes on a Wet Washday With a New Perfection Oil Heater When clothes can't be bung outside, and must be dried in e room or cellar, the Nt% Perfection Oil Heater quickly does the work of sun and air,u You can hang up the wet cjothes, light your Perfec- tion Oil - Heater, open the damper top, and the heat rises and quickly dries the clothes. Do MI put off washing to *wait a sunny day in order to avoid istiltlew. Dry your washing any di with hot air from a S eao Ls. SS It gives lust as and smokeless. It has an automatle-loeldng flame spreader, which prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke and Is easy to remove and drop back, so the wick can be quickly cleaned. Burner body or gallery cannot become wedged, be- cause of a new device In construction, and can always be easily unscrewed for rewicking. An Indicator shows the amount of oil In the font. Piller-cap does - not need to be screwed down, but Is put In like • cork in • bottle, and Is attached to the font by & chain. Finished In japan or nickel, strong and durable, well -made, built lot service sttst yet light and ornamental. It has a cool handle and a damper top. • THE GREAT Absolutsb smakelea sad odorless much heat as you desire. It Is safe, odorless DmIers Emeryidiers. If irrt el pm,. surifr Cr dritcrfpity• circular to Ms MartJt array 41 fre Contm• ental Oil Company surporatod FOWL —GUN e ncitoit AUT DING HOTGUN The Great Duck and Goose Gun That Has No Rival for Bagging the Limit. Remington Autoloading Shotgun—absorbs the re- coil—easy on the shoulder. The recoil ejects the empty, throws a loaded shell in place, and cocks the gun, to the tune of five shots—three to stop the cripples. Your trigger finger does it all—never a lost motion at the time when quickness counts. \Caw Laws far ISIS\ nailed frus. THE REMINGTON ARMS CO. Arm y: 299 Broadway, New York City EUREKA HARNESS OIL Will Keep Your Harness soft as a glove tough as a wire black as a coal Sibld by Moslem Lverywher• MANUFAcrulsro Cr FOR SAL\ PC Standard Oil Company Continental Oil Company (Incorporated) (Incorporated) Household Lubricant THE ALL-AROUND OIL IN THE HANDY, EVER -READY TIN OILER Is specially selected for any need In the home. Saves tools from rusting. Can can- not break. Does not gum or become rancid. MANUFACTURED eve Stasdard Oil Coopasy (Inrorporsted) (Incorporated) FOR GALA MY Continental 011 Company