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About The Lake Shore Sentinel (Polson, Mont.) 1909-1911 | View This Issue
The Lake Shore Sentinel (Polson, Mont.), 11 Aug. 1911, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053252/1911-08-11/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
r ■ •>‘ > „Tic..-.'• A -.';: va , -■> • .. j . Professional Cards J H. NASH Lawyer Notary Publio POLSON - - MONTANA p . GEO. B. OWEN Physician and Surgeon Surgery, Catarrh and Diseases of Women a Specialty. POLSON, MONTANA DR. W. J. MARSHALL Physician and Surgeon Office second floorOPipes bldg. POLSON, - - MONT. |)R. o. T. HART DENTIST Office over Flathead Drug Co. POLSON - ■ MONTANA £NDREW J. LOWARY L-A-W-Y-E-R Real Estate, Loans, Insurance POLSON MONTANA fRANR C. BAILEY Lawyer U. S. Commissioner POLSON MONTANA The Macdonald Hospital 29 3rd Ave. £ ., Kalispell, Koni. New, Splendidly Equipped, and Strict ly Up-to-Date. None but Graduate Nurses Employed. MISS B. M. RYAN, Manager JOHN B. DENSMORE Attorney and Counselor at Law, Third Street, POLSON, - M ONTANA JJ A. JOHNSON, POLSON, MONTANA, A ttorn ey at L a w . Office Pipes’ building, on B Street ||( P. NAPTON, Attorney and Counselor at Law, POLSON, MONTANA. Office over Poison Drug Co. Drs. M acdonald & Sm ith 137 Main St. K0LISPELL, - MONTANA A . D. M acdonald, M. D., C. M. Praotice limited to Surgery and Diseases of Women. C. S. Sm ith, M. D. General Praotice Special attention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Cottage Hotel DjSTREET AND SECOND AVENUE R o o m s 5 0 c Meals 3 5 c Sepeoial rates by the week Clean rooms and good meals. Traveling public well taken care of, as will be demonstrated by a trial. A . M. GATES, P r o p r ietor Civic Society Directory. A . F . & A .M . Poison Lodge No. 78 A. F. & A. M. Meetings on the second; fourth and fifth Wednesday evenings of each month, at 8:30 o’olook. 'A ll brethern are cordially invited to attend. A. J. Lowary, W . M. H. S. Hanson, Secretary. F. 0 . E. Poison Aerie No. 1957. Meets first and third Thursdays. Visiting brothers are invited. W- R- Wilhite, W . P. -J. P. McCarthy, Sec. W h e n you want anything in the printing lin e phone you r ord e r t o The Sentinel. ' Strawberries with cream, and Strawberry Shortcake at the Model bakery. The Lake Shore Sentinel SAU Y. B. WILLIAMS, Publisher Entered at poetoffiee In Poison. Montana, r , ' second class m a ll m a tter - F o r a ffn «d w t t a lm r accepted a t same price charged loç&l p atrons. R a tes furnished upon a p - pjloattoa. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY NOTICE OE BOND ELECTION. An election will be held on Sat urday, August 19th, 1911, between the hours of 2 p. m., and 6 p. ra.y at the sohool house in sohool dis trict No. 23, Flathead oounty, Montana, to submit to the qualified electors of school distriot No. 23, Flathead county, Montana, the proposition of bonding said distriot in the sum of $9,000.00, said bonds to bear interest at the rate o f six (6) percent, redeemable .in ten years and payable in twenty years, for the purpose of building a new school building in said distriot. Wm. J. Marshall, J. J. Ober, T. L. MoMichael. Trustees of Sohool Distriot No. 23, Flathead County, Montana. Dated August 3, 1911. ------ ® ------ BIDS W A NTED. Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the board of trustees of school district No. 23, Flathead county, Montana, at Poison, Montana, until 6 o’olock m.,- August 19th, 1911, for the erection of a four room and base ment, briok and stone sohool build ing for said district in the oity of Poison, Montana. Plans may be seen at the office of S. C. Bibee, clerk of district No. 23, or at the office of J. B. Gibson, architect, Kalispell, Montana, and at the office of the Chamber of Commerce at Missoula, Montana. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check for a sum equal to five per cent (5 per cent) of the amount of the bid, said certified check to be made payable to the board of trustees of school distriot No. 23, Flathead county, Montana, and placed as a guarantee that tbe successful bidder will enter into a written agreement to erect the build ing according to the plans and specifications and within the time therein specified for the completion of the building; and furnish a satis factory bond, as required, for the completion of the building. BidB must be sealed and marked “ Bid for School Building” and ad dressed to S. C. Bibee, district clerk, Poison, Montana, on or before 6 o’clock p. *m., August 19th, 1911. The board of trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of tbe board of trustees school district No. 23, Flathead county, Montana. Dated this 3rd day of Angust, 1911. S. C. B ib e e , District Clerk. ----- -- ® -------- Blacksmiths’ Protective Association. We, as members of the above named association, hereby give notice to tbe public that we have gone as far as we can with the credit system, and we have agreed among ourselves that each and every black smith shop will be conducted on a strictly oasb basis on and after Sep tember 1st, 1911. Dated July 29, 1911. Signed, J. O. H olt , E. L. T oomey , O xe & Foss. Suggestive Therapeutics HEALS WHILE OTHER METHODS FAIL READ THIS YOU AILING ONES What he did Tor^thls one he eon do for you. Cambridge, Wis., May 19, 1910. “ A goitre I had been troubled with for ten years was entirely reduced by a course of treatment from Dr. Ostlund; (Signed) Miss Georgia Dow Townsend.” Miss Townsend is the daughter of a prominent stock dealer in Dane oounty,. Wisconsin, and was cured in less than a month’s treatment. No drugs, no knife used. More testimonies can be seen at the office. Does a record of over 100,000 abandoned oases cured appeal to you? Well, this is the record of the institute where THEO. ELLIOT OSTLUND. D. S. T. graduated from and is the method he practices and successfully treats every known disease. NO DRUGS NO KNIFE Office at residence oi) D Street 10 A. M. TO 6 P. M.--PHONE 60 ADVICE FREE. < . BORDER TOWNS. Many That Are Partly In One State • and Partly In Another. V. A number of towns and villages'in, .the United States are situated on state; boundary lines. Tbe names o f sotne'pf; these are formed on tbe model of: what.' Lewis Carroll called “portmanteau” ? words. Delmar and Marydell, for ex ample. are on the line between. Mary-’ land and Delaware. Pen Mar Is on the Pennsylvania and Maryland line. Mo^: ark 1 b named from Missouri (Mo.) and1 Arkansas (Ark.) . Texarkana Is partly In Texas and partly In Arkansas. DIP ana Is on or near the Indiana’ line» State Line, which is half In Connect!-, cut and half in New York, with nu merous Instances of the sort. In other states, is a self explanatory name. ‘ Other border towns whose names do not Indicate their position are Port Chester (New York and Connecticut).: Blaokstone (Massachusetts and Rhode Island), Westerly (Rhode Island and Connecticut), Kansas City. (Missouri and Kansas), Guthrie nnd Fulton (each partly In Kentucky and partly In Tennessee), Harrison and Union City (In Indiana and Ohio), and Great Falls (New Hampshire and Maine). What Is virtually one town on the border boundary of Tennessee and Virginia Is legally known as Bristol on the Ten nessee side and Goodson on the Vir ginia side. A number o f smaller towns might be added to the list—New York Tribune. ' ' l l ) ' i f -AT WHAT WE CAN OFFER YOU IN School Supplies FOR YOUR BOY AND GIRL POSTED ON RUBBER. He Couldn’t Be Pooled About the Growth of the Trees. A promoter for a rubber company was trying to persuade Mr! Spangler to Invest some of his savings in. the company’s stock. Tbe demand for robber, he said, was worldwide and constantly Increasing. The company owned Immense forests of rubber trees and kept an army of wprkers employed all the time In gathering the crude robber. The ontput was enor mous, and the profits—well, tbe scheme was certainly better than a gold mine.' “1 have heard,” said Mr. Spangler suspiciously, ‘that the forests are be ing exhausted.” “That’s true to some extent,” an swered the other, “but we are not de-' pending on the existing trees. We are planting hundreds of square miles with new trees.\ \How long does It take for a_ tree to grow big enough to tap?’ \Only six ok eight years.” “That won’t go down with me,” Bald Mr. Spangler, with emphasis. \My wife has had a rubber plant In the: front parlor for six years, where It’s warm all the time, winter and sum mer, and it basn’t-grown a foot in all that time. No, sir; you can’t fool me on that!”—Youth’s Companion. Man Eating Wild M e n .. In the celebrated “Travailes\ of Ed ward Webb (1590) are dozens o f stories that would make Munchausen' turn green with envy. One of the most cele brated of these is bis story of tbe wild men of Prester John, which is as fol lows: “ In tbe court o f Prester lobn there Is a wilde man and another In the high street of Constantinople whose allow- ance Is every day a quarter of raw mutton, and wben any man dyeth for some notorious offence then they are allowed every day a quarter of man’s flesh. These wilde men are chained fast to a post every day. the one In Prester Iohn’s courtd, the other In the high street of Constantinople, each of them having a mantel) about their shoulders, and all over their bodyes they have wonderful long baire. They are chained by the neck lest they speedily devour all that cometh within their reach.” Boys’ waists _ _ . . . . . . . . . . . . Boys’ shirts ...... ............... . Boys’ hose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boys’ suspenders........... Girls’ hose.. ....................... Hair ribbons, per yard..... Hose supporters. . . . _ _ ___ _ _ . . . . . . ..1 5 c t o 2 5 c Serge for dresses ..... .......... . Gingham. ..... ...... . .............. . Percales ................................ NEW GOODS IN A L L LINES IT P A Y S TO TRADE WITH US F . L . G R A Y C O SELLS EVERYTHING Job W ork Neatly Executed at The Sentinel F o r S a l e England’s Uncrowned King. Of the long line o f kings which have ruled England since the days of Wil liam the Conqueror, nearly 900 years ago, there has been only one un crowned king. King-Edward VH the boy king, who met an untoward fate in the Tower of Loudon in 1483, Is the only monarch who reigned without re ceiving tbe church’s blessing or the formal homage of his subjects. Rome people Include Lady Jane Grey among England’s monarchs. If this doubtful claim Is allowed England’s only un crowned queen ranks with Edward V. and deprives him of one distinction.— London Tlt-Blts. A Triumph of Imagination. Tallandler told me that a great archbishop o f his acquaintance In Paris had set himself td make an exact de sign of the Imaginary abbey of The- leme, minutely described by Rabelais, and told him that If such an edifice were to be erected It would be the moBt perfect building every known.— Conway’s Autobiography. Poaco at La*t<: Mr. Hoon—Scrappington and his wife have parted. Mrs. Hoon—Good gra cious! What is tbe trouble? Mr. Hoon —There Isn’t any trouble now. They have parted.—Smart Set No Doubt In Hla Mind. Young Bachelor—I often wonder If 1 am making enough money to get mar ried on. Old Benedict—Well, I don’t know bow much you’re making, bnt yon aln’tl—Puck. Tho Whole Period. \There is a period in a woman’s life wben she thinks of nothing but dress.” “What period Is that?” “From the. cradle to the grave.”— Puck. Neither despise nor oppose what thou dost not understand.—William Penn. ' Real | Estate Bargains For This WeeR 160 aore-relinqdishment, 9 miles from town, good well of water, $400.00. 80-acre relinquishment. First-class land. This is a bargain for some one. 160-acre relinquishment. Small house and stable, good spring on this; good land, $800.00. One acre of land, good house, in Grand View, j . Can be bought at a bargain. Four nice lots, north front, in Grand View, good location, a bar gain. Good business lot on Third street, $750.00. . Some good lots on Riverside at the right price. Good Riverside^ property in all parts of the oity. 80 acres of land 2| miles from town. A snap for some one. FOR RENT. Some nice lake front property that we can sell you right. Three-room house in Grand View, good well, good barn, room for four horses. $12.50 per month. Five-room house,; - Grand View, good honse, screen windows, $12.50 per month. Six-room house, good location, $12.50. Four-room house, fine location, $12.50 per month. Agents for five strong insuranaee companies; better have, your prop erty insured and proteot yourself. MONEY TO LOAN on good farm lands. Ober & Gregg Third A v e . P o is o n , Mont. Typhoid fever is curable in less than three weeks by up-to-date methods: No drugs to overcome; no lingering illness. See the Neuro- Ophthalmologists. S tr . C ity of P olson Regular Night Service Between Poison and Somers L e a v e s P o ison daily a t 5 a. m ., d irect to Som e rs. L e a v e s Som e r s 8 :1 5 a. m . daily f o r Bigarm , Dayton and w e s t s h o r e points. L e a v e s Som e r s 5 :0 0 p. m ., daily d ire c t to P o is o n . Meals Served on Board TICKETS GOOD ON KLONDIKE AND C IT Y O F POLSON TF you want your clothes to possess that distinctive style, have them made by JOH GRONAAS Merchant Tailor TJHRD AVENUE POLSON, - - MONTANA Steamer KLONDIKE GENE HODGE, Captain Somers to Poison direct, Poison to Somers at 12:30 p. m. via Bigarm and Dayton, daily Passenger, Freight and Express Steamer iïÉkâüa siili