{ title: 'The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.) 1913-19??, September 05, 1919, 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/sn85053313/1919-09-05/ed-1/seq-1.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053313/1919-09-05/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053313/1919-09-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053313/1919-09-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.) 1913-19?? | View This Issue
The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.), 05 Sept. 1919, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053313/1919-09-05/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
INIFRED TIMES WINIFRED, MONTANA. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1910 PRICE FIVE CENTS ** ******** ********* * ** 3*** * ********************** REYLECK'S CASH STORE VVINIFRED, MONTANA SHOES! SHOES! Have advanced from 50c to $2.00 per pair for the last thirty days. We purchased our shoes almost four months ago, so when you buy shoes from Rey- leck's Cash Store you are Saving 50c to $2 on every pair for I haven't changed the price on a single pair of shoes in my stock, and will give you the advantage of this saving as long as the present stock lasts. Buy from your home merchants and build up your own country, A Square Deal for Everybody *************-310,-************* - ***** ***** - ***************-1F*41-tieil*i** *****1 School Opened Wednesday With Large Enrollment \SAFETY\ Is the watchword of the National Banking System. Reports from the National Banking Department show practically no failures of national banks for a long time past. Your money deposited with this bank is as safe as this nearly perfect system can make it. Don't forget that farm loans are our specialty. Let us talk it over with you. The First National Bank WINIFRED, MONTANA FEDERAL RESERVE MEMBER 11111111 , ..,„.\YSTEll — -- - The Winifred schools opened Wednesday with an unusually large enrollment. The first, sec- ond and third grades enrolled twenty-three. This, Miss Helen Blough's department, is located 1 in the new building. The room is splendidly equipped and the patrons of the school may feel assured that their children are working under an exceptionally favorable environment. The fourth, fifth and sixth grades enrolled thirty-one. Miss Stella Paullus is instructor of this department and, looking to the past, we feel assured that the boys and girls of this division are starting on a school year that will be progressive in all branch- es. The seventh and eighth grades enrolled eighteen and the high school seventeen, with more to follow later. The enrollments in these departments are particu• larly gratifying, as they exceed the estimates made when the high school was determined on. Let us all be boosters for the school and make it one of the best schools in the county. _ . • — _ An Amortized Loan. One loan, no commission mort- gage. Twenty equal annual payments pays off principal amount and interest. Can prepay at ANY TIME without costs, interest, bonus or commission. No association to join, no paper other than your own to guarantee. • Additional loans without extra expense. The loan is never sois 41), A low average interest of 6 per cent. Under government supervision. The New Loan of the Union Central Life Insurance Company ,of - Cincinnati. HOWARD C. GEE, Local Representative. New York Help. Advertisement in Gotham paper. 'Colored girl wants half time. general Sehsework ; no washing, or anything. Miss A, 246 West 14th street.\ March's Repair Shop Hard times prices on shoe work: Men's shoes half soled $1.15 Ladies' shoes \ \ 85 Rubber heels, fixed on .50 Reasonable prices on children's work. The best Oak tanned leath- er used. Despondency. Sufferers from indigestion are apt to beelme discouraged and feel that complete recovery is not to be hoped for. No one could make a greater mistake. Hundreds have been perma- nently cured by taking Chamberlain's Tablets and can now eat anything that they • crave. These tablets strengthen the stomach and enable it to . perforrn its functions naturally. If you have not tried them do so at once. Smallness of Soul. i 0 e man who cannot forgive a wre.:Ig. like a dog Oppressed of a hilt- tal master, cannot claim superiority of soul. --THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE-- Putting More Fun Into Life in the Country Bozeman, Mont., Sept. 1. — Miss Mignon Quaw, author of the play, \The Long, Long Trail\ which was presented in many parts of the state last year, un- der the auspices of the state col- lege extension department and Mrs. E. H. Lott, aloof the state last year, just returned from Berkley, Calif., where they have been studying the problems of rural recreation during the past few months. Thby will devote week as the result of a - strike of train SEVEN DEATHS IN 7'7; 7 KNOXVILLE RIOTS \rn • Cows!kAaeam• • TROUBLE FOLLOWS ATTACK OF MOB ON JAIL TO GET NEGRO ACCUSED OF MURDER MACHINE GUNS FREELY USED Lieutenant and Private of National Guard Are Among Victims.—Mob Permits 16 Prisoners to Escape in Attempt on Ne g ro Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 1. -- 11finot disorders occurred in Knoxville fol- lowing the race riots Saturday night and early Sunday which were the se quel to the storming of the county jail by a mob intent upon lynchine Maurice Mayes, a negro accused of the murder of Mrs. Bettie Lindsey, a white woman. The casualty list was increased yes- terday by four negroes who resisted at- tempts to search them for arms. All were wounded by national guardsmen, two being shot and the other two stabbed with bayonets. Eleven hundred guardsmen of the Fourth Tennesses infantry under command of Adjt. Gen. D. B. Sweeney of Nashville, and Col. Ewing Car- ruthers of Memphis, supplemented by 200 special policemen and 75 special deputy sheriffs, patrolled the city, dis- persing crowds and searching all ne- groes. The guardsmen, who were in camp near the city for annual target prac- tice, also searched all negroes arriv- ing on trains and established a barred zone In the heart of the negro dis- trict where the worst of the rioting early yesterday occurred. Four ma- chine guns are mounted at a command- ing point in this district and other ma- chine guns have been mounted on mo- tor trucks, ready for eventualities Parade Called off. Union leaders yesterday called off the 1„,abor day parade scheduled for forlay and abandoned all public meet- ings announced in connection with the campaign for municipal offices. There was shooting in various sec- tions of the city all day yesterday and this continued last night, causing doz- ens of riot calls. Most of this appears to he hoodlutnisrn, without injury to anyone. How many have been killed and wounded remains largely a matter of guess work, though it is believed seven are dead. Some sections In which the most serious clashes have occurred have. not been searched thoroughly and reports conflict as to the number of casualties and many may be concealed there. Two white men are known to have been killed. 14 others, eight whites and six negroes. are in hospitals, of which four, two whites and two ne g roes, a re no t ex- pected to recover. Sixteen wounded white men had their slight wounds dressed in one hospital. Many have had injuries attended by physicians at their homes. Prisoners Set Free. The attack on the jail was made by a mob of more than 1,000 whites who believed Mayes was held there. The negro, however, had been taken to Chattanooga. In gaining entrance to the jail, the mob permitted 16 pris- oners, several of them convicted mur- derers, to escape. Foiled in their attempt to obtain their intended victim, and driven from the jail by guardsmen hurriedly brought into the city, the mob spread to outlying parts of the city and sporadic rioting began at once and in- creased in violence after midnight. Troops meeting a hand . of armed negroes who refused to give way. turned machine guns on the _blacks. In the resulting exchange of shots. Lieut. James W. Payne of Providence. Ky., a regular army instructor, and a private of the name of Henderson. were killed. RESUME TRAIN SERVICE ON CALIFORNIA RAILROADS themselves to helping solve the problem of rural evening enter- tainments, especially for the meetings of the farm bureaus. They have brought back 'with them many ideas to be used this season in Montana. Wanted. Two good milk cows. Leave price etc., at Reyleck's store. Los Angeles, Sept. I.—Train serv- ice on the Southern Pacific, Santa Fe and Salt Lake routes, which has been virtually paralyzed during the Iasi men and yardmen, and which was re- turned Saturday morning when the Strikers returned to work, is fast ap- proaching normal, officials of the three roads announce. With the strike on the steam lines settled, public officials and labor lead- ers have turned their attention to the Pacific Electric and Los Angeles street railway strike situation. The walkout of conductors and motormen on these lines precipitated the strike of steam road trainmen. --The Auto Dray for hauling. SEE US FOR Farm Loans Do it Now Can be found in two places, 6/. the ' dictionary and - SERVICE - First State Bank I OF WINIFRED Corn! Cows! *10 The Three Bond Propositions Carry The bond elections held Tues- day resulted in the three propo- sitions, road, seed and feed, and county high school, carrying by substantial majorities. The prin- cipal opposition was directed toward the school bond issue, but it carried by a safe lead of about 300. The vote in Winifred was un- usually heavy, due to the fact that more women voters than usual came out and voted. The I count stood: Road bonds, 181 for, 61 against; seed and feed, 225 for, 6 against; high school, 61 for, 167 against. Woodhawk gave majorities for all three propositions as follows: High school bond, 30 for, 2 against; seed and feed, 28 for, 6 against; road, 26 for, 8 against. Out at Gerhard all propositions were reported carried but the figures were not obtained. The west side of the county generally was against the school bonds, and in some instances returned majorities against all three propositions. The results in that portion of the county no doubt reflect some feeling over the failure of county division. Every town in the county ex- cept Lewistown in which there is a high school turned down the Cream! 111 -11 1 -***IHIeleiwk*****41****4HIsestlfilwit I school bonds, but the large vote of Lewistion, where only fifty- five voted against, together with the rural precincts, was sufficient to carry the proposition by a good majority. Official figures were not available for this issue. All three propositions carry- ing, everybody should be happy. The ro impor of t of tric will . farm proposition is of most to a greater portion p S ttle distribution in the various dis- ad work is started, to not alone the s in general, Sheriff im was notified yesterday of the arrest at Nash- ville, Tenn., of Hershel Towler, who is wanted by the local sheriff on a charge of stealing a Buick car from Mr. Ellison, of near Benchland, several months ago. Sheriff Stephens was notified of the theft, at the time, and he struck the trail at Winifred, where a companion of Towler's, Roach, cashed some bad checks. At the crossing of the Missouri,' north of Winifred, the trail was again established and was then followed as far east as Massa- chusetts, back to Indianapolis and thence east again to Tennes- see. Under Sheriff Dan Corcoran will go after Towler today. Roach was not with him at Nash - vile. — Argus, Aug. 29. .....111M••••••- 1 A ‘‘ III a n instinctively knows quality and style in men's wear. She can understand values, match colors, and appreciate quali- ty. She will recog- nize better qualities it Cofter& Clo•set revs ts You mcn j usti f your good j ud g mt of mens' wear t -N bringin g the woman who understand with you to the store where you both are understood. AT STAFFORD'S 1 •