{ title: 'The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.) 1910-current, October 06, 1910, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075296/1910-10-06/ed-1/seq-2.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075296/1910-10-06/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075296/1910-10-06/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075296/1910-10-06/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.) 1910-current | View This Issue
The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.), 06 Oct. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075296/1910-10-06/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
ft- X > ^ V I V T W T i r i i r C U I D T C E x q u i s i t e a s s o r t m e n t o f s o m e 7 5 S k i r t s t h a t l i I n L / T f u l l i K 1 u w i U p l e a s i n g l y a s t o n i s h y o u f o r t h e s m a r t n e s s o f s t y l e s f o r t h i s f a l l a n d w i n t e r . . . . . . . W e H a v e J u s t U n p a c k e d T h e m L a d i e s a n d P l a c e d T h e m o n D i s p l a y . . . L a d i e s U n i o n S u i t s f a l l a n d w i n t e r , . j u S t u n p a c k e d t h e m A i k o n e h u n d r e d m e n t h e n a m e o f t h e i r f a v o r i t e s h i r t I w l f t n C I I f l l f C l l i i c t h e a n s w e r o f n i n e t y - n i n e o f t h e m w i l l b e t h e . I . w U l l 5 I n t e r s t a t e — t h e m o s t p e r f e c t f i t t i n g s & i r t t h e r e i s m a d e J \ , ™ c c ( l n u V e f r o m $ 2 . 0 0 t o T h i s s e a s o n ’ s I n t e r s t a t e s s h o w t h e m o s t e x q u s i t e p a t - T t e . b e s t m a k e s o n l y r e p r e s e n t e d i n o u r t e r n s , t e x t u r e s a n d # c o l o r i n g s w e h a v e e v e r s e e n * N o o t h e r s h i r t m a d e i s s o u n i v e r s a l l y s a t i s f a c t o r y a s t b e I n t e r s t a t e S h i r t i* u n d e r w e a r s e c t i o n . A s p e c i a l s h o w i n g o f u n p u i t s m w o o l | s i l k * a n d w o o l * a n d w o r s t e d s * E V E R Y T H I N G F . L Capital Stock Food ek Thrive. Saves Feed. Tons* up U m System. Made to Suit Montana Condition*. Manufkcturad by i i t a l S t o c k P o o d C o m p a n y V / H IL E N A , M O in r. * y, ' t, 4‘ ' -T.** '' i\ ■ ■* L GREEN, Folson, Mont, 1 E R A K E R Y v imp m a d e B r e a d , F i e s a n d i k e s . . L i g h t L u n c h e s . H o t r a p . C a k e s b a k e d t o order. M r s . C . B & r u t h l u k *■ tke H a t k e U K e s e n ratiM 1 S T N A T I O N A L B A N K POLSON, MONTANA. >SITORY r O l i STATE O r MONTANA B abbis , Pre*. J. L. M c I ktx **. Vice Pres. P ir t j , C»*mer M / p p * W , A » 't . Cashier la n t Security P rom p t Service W O T D IT O S IT M X C S r O R R E ltT D irectors am i Shareholders J. L. Mclntlre. W .E . Wells. Mike Matt f. N. NoJbinger, C. B. Harris, H. Mllbank A. W. Pipes i s t h e T i m e t o B u y |VE anything you want from the St Kitchen article to the highest grade »re for prices that will compete with |he northwest. >mplete line of i g e s a n d C o o k S t o v e s In d ie th e c o m p le te lin e of Jo e r n s frs F u r n it u r e in D ressers, C o m o d e s , In e r s , B u ffets, C h in a C loset, E x te n s io n Tiling T a b les, D in in g C h a ir s , Rockers .lild r e n s ’ ch a ir s . Desks of * J J K in d s . In C a b in e ts fro m $ 6 to $ 3 0 . A r t I R u g s , L in o le u m and M a ttings. In jiy th ing you w a n t in the line of H o u se things. You can g e t i t o f th e i o n H o u s e F u r n i s h i n g C o T V S F O R J i O I I E n t w n H W J M G n ta F« Yirat Although there are many good pit* tens to be bad nowadays and tbey cope pretty doae to actual measure ments, still tbere are aome wbo con* tinue to bare difflculty In setting tbelr clotbes to St. It you flnd after catting oat your waist from tbe paper pattern you bave pure baaed tbat yon mnet cat here, take np tbere and abave out tbe armbolae tbe beet plan to adopt Is to cut out a waist from aome cbeap ma terial or some old stuff tbat you may bave around tbe bouse. In cutting oot tbls waist cut It perfectly plain, allow ing an Inch tuck to be stltcbed down about three, Inches alongside of tbe annbole. Now proceed to lit tbls per fectly. making tbe needed attention*. Then wben you have flnlsbed thin ■ucb cut out a pattern fnm good, stiff paper, allowing tbne-elgbths of an Inch for aeams. also an ettra balf Inch for dosing In tbe back or front, which ever you may do. If you cloee In tbe front do not use tbe balf Inch In tbe back, and vice vena. Tot another way le to cut a pattern fnm an old bodice tbat flte well, having flnt ripped tt up. If tbe eleevee bother you by being too long, too abort or not large enough around tbe arm try tbe same method, cutting a pattern for a eblrt waist aleeve and one for dreeeler waists. The skirt, too. might be handled In the came way-that ia, for a good plain gored aklrt In tucking material Cor aleevee and waist alwaya tuck flntand cut oot afterward. Ton will And tbe above advice very helpful and the saving q fY fffat many minutes that would otherwise go to flttlng! With these patterns flttlngyou perfectly you can go abead wltb yonr ratting end sewing together, trying on ouly for draping, trimming and gen eral effect and flnlahlng up In half tbe time It no doubt took you befon. Of conrae tbla applies to ordinary bodices, which Juat now a n used for lining* and foundations. THE OPIUM HABIT. Ite Cffaets aa Dascribed by ■ill Nye In Hie Memeire. I bave always had a honor ot opi ates of all kinds. Tbey a n so seductive and so still in tbelr operations. Tbey steal tbnugh tbe blood like a w0'f on {he trail spd they seise on tbe heart Wltb their wblte fangs till it is still fonvcr. Up the Laramie tben Is a cluster of ranches at the base of the Medicine Bow, near the north end of Sheep mountain. Well, a young man whom we will call Curtis lived at one of these ranches years ago, and, though a quiet. mlnd-your-own-business fel low who hnd absolutely no enemies among bis companions, be had the misfortune to incur the wrath of n tramp sheepherder, who waylaid Cur- ! ds one afternoon and shot him dead ! as he sat in his buggy. Curtis wasn’t armed. j A rancher cnme into town and tele graphed to Curtis’ father, and then half a dozen citizens went out to help capture the herder, who had fled to , the foothills. 1 They didn’t get back till toward day break, but they brought the herder with them. I saw him in the gray of the morning, lying In a coarse gray blanket on the floor of the engine liouse. He was dead. I asked, ns a reporter, how he came to his death and they told me, “opium.” The murderer had taken poison when ho found that escape wns impossible. . I waa present at the inquest so that : I could report^ the case. There was very little testimony, but all tbo evi dence seemed to point to tbe fsct that life was extinct, and a verdict of death by bls own: hand waa rendered. It was the flnt opium work 1 bad ever seen, and It aroused my curiosity. Death by opium, It seems, leavea a dark ring around the neck. I dM not know tbla before. People who die by opium also tie tbelr hands together befon they die. This Is one of tte eccentridties of opium poisoning that I have never aeen laid down in the books. I bequeath It to medical science. Whenever I run up against a new sdentiflc discovery I Just hand It right over to the public witbout coat Ever alnce the above incident I have been very apprehensive about people who seem to be likely to form the opium bsblt. It Is one of the meet deadly narcotics, especially in a now country. • Caught a Tartan Senator Tbeodon B. Burton of .Ohio, who to a bachelor and haa never beep ensnared by the wilae of women, tella a story of a young lady and a Judge of his acquaintance. The former w u a witness In tbe letter’s court Tbo proe- ecutlng attorney had npsateffly'-put to ber questions which she persistently evaded under tbe plea tbat ahe did aot comprehend hia moaning, whereupon hie honor undertook to bring oat the proper reeponses. Leaning over, be said In a kindly and fatherly manner; “Young woman, wby la It tbat ydu Insist la refusing to understand ths questions of counsel? Tou a n a per eon of cbarm, grace, beauty and mon than average Intelligence aad”- “Thaak you, your honor,” Interrupt* ed tbe young woman, I f It were aot for tbe fact Judge, that I am under eeth I would ntura tbe compliment” -National Monthly. Tbe “Stint\ ef Qeetfc, Tbe etlng of death physically la noth ing; a vm who baa lost coosdousaoss ft the water, a maa who bas been un- flier aa aaaestbetk, a maa atuaned In ea accident—these bave been la effect dead, aad yet tbey kaow nothing of death. Ia apeaklng of It tbe meet glaring contradictions pass quite nat urally for axioms. It Is tbe “gentle hand,” but It la also tho “grisly ter ror.\ It Is “beautiful'’ and “wonder ful,\ bat It te also \terrible.”—London Spectator. ______________ A Cargo Hard te Handle. Asphalt Is said to be tbe moet diffi cult cargo for a vessel to unload. Tbo asphalt ts taken out of tbe asphalt lakes In Trinidad In a semifluid state snd by tbe time tbe vessel rescbee a northern port bas hardened, so that to unload It it is necessary for tbe men to go into tbe bold and dig It out wltb pick and shovel This takea time, and a vessel carrying sucb cargo alwaya baa to arrange for a consideraUo stay tn port ______________ Hippocratio Pees. Tbe blppocratic face is a condition of the human face produced by death, long Illness, excessive hunger and the like. Tbe nose Is pinched, tbe temples hollow, the eyes sunken, tbe ean cold and retracted, tbe skin of the forehesd dry, tbe complexion livid and tbe Ups relaxed wltb cold. This appearance Is so named from having been accurately described by Hippocrates, the fatber of medicine.—New York American. On* Thing Unbroken. Standing Over tbe shattered remains of tbeir Inst Dresden china statuette, the exasperated mistress said to the awkward servant: “Is there anything you haven’t broken since you bnve been witb me?\ “Yes, mum,” replied the servant. “I have yet to break mo record for de structiveness.\—Baltimore American. A Cattish Suggeiticn. Ethel—My poor head aches fright fully. CInire-Wby don’t you take your hair off and rest it my dear?— Llppincott’s. “The poorest way to face life is to face it with a sneer.”—Theodore Roose velt. ill t t t t t t t t t t S t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t H a d Y o u N o t i c e d I t ? THE GREAT MAJORITY OF ALL THE PLACARDS and BILLS PUT UP IN POLSON CARRY THE IMPRINT C o u r i e r P r i n t e r s THERE IS A GOOD REASON FOR THIS AND IF YOU WANT PRINT ING OF ANY KIND YOU WILL DO WELL TO COME TO THE C o u r i e r O f f i c e f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t FOR jfi “ W E R U N C U R C W N B U S I N E S S ’ J}} A N D f t f t to O u r Competitors A d m it They Can’t Compete' ^|\ f t