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About The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.) 1910-current | View This Issue
The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.), 11 Nov. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075296/1910-11-11/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
TIE FLATHEAD COURIER C. P. Cowman Printing Co. Publishers. W H E R E M A R Y ’ S A P R O N G R E W Published Every Thursday at Poison, „Mary> your opro„ grew on a tree, Montana. Yes, It did!\ repeated seven-year-old Jimmie, laughing at hia slater's re- ' Jtetered as second class natter May istb itio protcbful look. st the postottlce at Poison, Montana. \I MW my motber make it,” said Mary, taking up oue coruer ot the s u b s c r ip t io n RATES dainty muslin apron and looking at It Os* Year Vis Months Threo Months tm canfBUy. i.» H i * stuff I t la made ot grew on a inAdranco W Uttla trss tbat looka ju s t like our blush sp e c ial r a t b i N M tres,\ Insisted Jimmie. \A u n t Vatll further notice three months subscript Btbsl baa a book f u ll o f plctuna about will be accepted at SO cent*, and sis i t OMM tad aee I” f W \ g Mary months at 11.00 ADVERTISING BATES Less than 10 Inches one Insertion Ite per Ineb Over 10 Inches one Insertion .UMo per Inch TIME CONTRACTS Less than 6 mohes .lifts per Inch per week Over t Inches 10 cents per Ineb per week. BUSINESS LOCALS I cent* per line per issue. Business locals will poatlveiy not be placed on flrst pece or to local news columns. Carda ot Thsoks. Obituary poetry. Iksolutlom of B< Okuroh entertainments for the purpose of ralsinc money, charted for at renter rates I G e m e I n T e r a e OLD FAVORITES. THIS WORLD'S ILLUSIONS. ffU a i world te all a fleeting shew A Por man's Illusion given. The smites of Joy, the tean eC wm , Deceitful ablna, deceitful flow. . There's nothing tne but hearts! A ND false the Ugbt eo gtaVe piune \■ As fading hues of even. And love and Iwpe aad beMty'e bleem Are bloeeoms gathered for tbe tomb. There’s nothing bright bet heaven! pOOR wanderers of a stormy day. from wave to wave we’re driven, And faney’e flash and reason's cay genre but to Ugbt the troubled way. There’s nothing calm but beavenl -Thomas Keore. THB DAYS OF OUR YOUTH. O H, talk net to ae ef a name great In ales? I The daye of oar youth are the days ef our glory. And the myrtle aad Ivy ef eweet two-end-twenty Are worth all year laurels, though ever ae plenty. What are garlands aad crowns te the -.M**that le wrtaMedt •Tie but as a dead flower wttb May dew beeprlnkled. Then away with aU such from the head tbat tip boiiyl What cere I for the wreathe that ean only givegteryr O ftoae, If 1 e'er took Might In thy praleea Turns less for the sake o t tty high gOVBdlBt fihriMfl Tban to eee theMgbt eye ot tbe dear ■he thought that 1 was not unworthy tel lovener. A o n chiefly I sought tbeet th in only l] found thee. Ser glanee was the best of tbe raya that •unwind tho*. When It sparkled o'er aught tbat wael bright In my story I kaew it was tam, and I fMt tt was I by tba band, Jimmie trotted out to tbe plana wbere Aunt Btbel w m aewlng. “Aunt Ethel, did tbe stuff my apron la mad* of grow on a Uttle tree like a Naabnabr aaked Mary eagerly. ▲nat Btbel took bold of tbe mualln apron aad tbm nodded smilingly. “Yes, a y dear,\ ab* aald; “your apron Is made of cotton, and cotton grows os a plant It ia tbt fruit of a plant\ \WUl 1 didn't know clotb grew,\ eald the little girl. \I wlU tall yoa about I t ” ssid Auut Btbel, lifting Maty Into ber lap. \Then wben you hear about cotton clotb and cotton tbiead you will know Juat wbat It means.\ \Does tbiead grow tool\ \See aald Aunt Btbel, bolding up tbo apron, \tbla cloth la made of bun* droda of One threads. So you aee tbe thread la really made Drat\ \TeU her about the cotton plant” aald Jimmie. \Some day,” went on Aunt Btbel, “you and Jlamto will go to Soutb Carolina, and.lnatead of fields of grass you will see flelda of cotton. If It be In July all tbe cotton planta will abow a round i r t l t about na big as a walnut. In August, when thla fruit baa ripen* ed, It bunta open, and tben out come lovely white fluffs of lin t And this white lint la cotton. \It ia all picked from the planta and cleaned, and tben tbe wblte strands are spun Into tbiead, and tben the tbiead ta woven Into clotb, and your mother buys tbe cloth and cuts Mary out an apron and aews It with flne cot ton thiiaad, aad bars It la. Therel\ said Jimmie. \1 told you tbat yonr apron grew upon a little tree.” \Wbo picks tba cotton l l u t f aaked Mary. “Negro boys and girls,\ Mid Aunt Btbel. \ I muat go and tell my motber about cotton,” Mid Mary, allpplng down from Aaat Btbel'a lap. \Perhaps sbe will aat oat aom cotton ptata and we can raiae our own clotb.\ But Auot Btbel shook ber bead. \No ahe Mid; \It haa to be a rery warn climate tor cotton to grow In, a gnat deal of anallgbt. Your awtbar cannot raise cotton here.” \Well aald Mary thoughtfully, \we can raiae lovely rosea. Motber Is at work aow bi tbe toae garden, and 1 am golag to tell her about my apron. Whkb do you tblnk te beet. Aunt Btbel roan or cottonr \What do yoa thinkf* asked Aunt EtbeL \Roses anewered Mary. “Cotton, of course,’’ declared Jimmie —Youth’e Ooapaaloa. S A Y Y E A R S AND DO YOV KNOW W HO I AM? W E L L , i r YO V DON'T, ASK SOM E B O D Y . I'V E C O M E H E R E TO STAY A FEW T E L L Y O V W H E R E TO BUY HARDW ARE AND THINGS. I'L L D O SOMETHING DIFFERENT EACH W E E K . LO T S O r M Y YOVNG FRIEN D S A R E GOING TO CVT ME OUT O F T H E P A P E R E A C H W E E K AND M A K E A SC R A P B O O K . Y O V ’L L FIND THIS LOTS O F FVN. N A T E H A R T o n h a n d a l a r g e l i n e o f t h e w e l l k n o w n a n d r e l i a b l e C O L U M B I A H E A T E R S w h i c h w e m u s t m o v e t o m a k e r o o m f o r o t h e r g o o d s . F o r t h e n e x t t h i r t y d a y s w e w i l l m a k e i c a s h d i s c o u n t o f 1 0 P e r C e n t o n a l l w o o d h e a t e n S e e o u r l i n e a n d b e c o m i g . c e d t h a t w e h a v e t h e b o t h e a t e n i n t o w n a t I h e b o t p r i c e s . W a l k a f e w b l o c k r a n d s a v e a f e w d o ll a n . M A JEST IC and VNIVERSAI RAN GES N A T E H A R T Come in and gel our m o n thly Yd* Kid Calender it's yours f o r t h e u k i q j ffBABS, \TEARS IO L I Idle team, 1 they -Byron. • TKARS.\ know net what Than from ths depth of same dirtae do- fUee In the heart and gather ta the eyes In looking on the happy autumn dsMe And thlnklog of the days that a n more. os tbe flrst beam guttering on That brings our friends up from the u » I derworid. . Sad as tbe last whieh reddens over one Tbat sinks wltb all we love below thel Se ead, so fresh, the days that a n ao | mere! A H, sad end strange as in dsrk suss. I A mer dawns The earliest pipe ot belt awakened birds To dying cars, when unto dying eyes The easement slowly grows a glimmering | squsre- So sad, so strange, the days that are no | morel A Cola THek. I f a glass Is fail of water It bardly poeslble to place anything else la I t but If you follow out tbe Instruc tlons given ben you can put a number of coins Into tbe glass with out causing it to overflow. You m u s t gently Insert each coin Into the. w n t e r edge flnt nnd xr, b e n It Is a lm o s t Im mersed drop It Tbis op eration to to be repeated with coin aft er coin, dropping eacb one Into the center of the glass. This experiment is Interesting, and it will amuse botb yourself and your Mends. H E A R os remembered kisses after death ^ And sweet as those by hopelees fancy feigned On Ups that are for others; deep as love, Deep as flrst love, and wild with all re gret— Oh, death In life, the days tbat are no morel -Tennyson. OO, LOVELY ROSE. /\IO , lovely wee, v* Tell her tbat wastes her time and me That now sbe knows When 1 resemble her to thee How sweet and fair sbe seems to be. ffUSLIa her that's young ■I And shuns to have ber graces spied That hadst thou sprung In deserts where no men abide Thou must havo uncommended died. CSMALL is the worth ►J Of beauty from the light retired. Bid her come forth, Suffer herself to be desired And not blush so to be admired. m H E N die tliat she X Tlio Tlio common fato of all things rare May read in thee. How small a part of timo tbey share That are so wondrous sweet and fsirt -Edmund Waller. An American Heroine. Grace Darling was not the only daughter of a lighthouse keeper that Mred the Uvea of shipwrecked sailors. Tbougb tbe British girl that saved nine men from drowning In the sea near Bamborough castle has been celebrat ed In poetry by WUIIam Wordsworth, an American girl has as great a record. This girl was Ida Lewis. Ber fatber waa tbo keeper of the Llmerock light house In tbe harbor of Newport, Conn. When ahe was only eighteen years old ahe Mved tbe Uves of four men, and not long afterward sbe rescued another man from tbe water. A few years later she added three more rescues to her credit, the next year picked up a child that had survived a wreck and later, wltb tbe help of ber brother, saVcd the lives of two men whose sail boat had capsized.—Chicago News. WANTED-To buy a relliiqulsiiineiit. Address; of Courier. Rooms for rent- furnished or un furnished. Over Nate Harts hard ware store. White Plymoth Reck Full blooded cockerels for rale. En- quire at Diabrows Second Hand Store. WANTED-To sell half interest in a good paying business, Call at this ofllce. FOR SALE—Cheap a new second' hand bjeiclr. Inquire at this ofllce. lf yon need surety or contract bonds, see Chas. E. Redeker. If the Doctor is satisfied to let us fill tlnslr prescriptions, you ought to be.—Flathead Drug Company. If you contemplate purchasing a watcli see me before you buy, I can save you money. Arthur Mixell, Jeweler If you have a house to rent 1 will get you a tenant. Its my husines __ Charles E. liedeker. When you start tliat bank account see “Tour home Bank.” The Security State FOR SALE—Two placer mining claims near Blue Hay. Address, care Courier. ..... ...... . ------ lf the Doctor is satisfied to let us All tlielr prescriptions, you ought to be.—Flathead Drug Company. For Post Cards, souvenirs, novelties j and Indian moccasins for house wear, see Wyeth, 3rd st. FOR SALE or EXCflA NO E-Three houses and lots, all elate in. Will sell or exchange for farm property. Janies West, City. If your watch or clock need fixing, get my prices before having it done. 1 can save you money and 1 guarantee my work lor one year. Arthur Mizell. Fire Insurance—strong solid com panies, prompt service. See Chas. E. Redeker. WANTED—Several houses to rent at once. Charles E. Redeker Townsite addition snaps,—Riverside —Poison Heights Grandview—Larrl* vee’s,—Lakeside, acre tracts.—Chas. E. Redeker. j \ ' S H O E ' i ^ P A I R I N t | A I I kinds •( shoe rsH if, work neatly and I I O le Nylin z On C s ti s s i betw e en 3rd and C R A M E R B R I L U M B E R COM P A N Y W h o le s a le : \ :: ~ ^ It prepared to furnish all kindi 6 O ’CLO C K C h ic k e n D inner Every Sunday at Cottage Hotel 35 Cents Our mw madwnt t will turn out as fine L e i^ can be made anywhere, so we can furnish 1 1 “ I from bottom to top, just as wanted If you wish an t t t l m itt for a build in* of any sizt, got it from ut Consult your < interest and ronize H cim dustry. For Sale: skids ready Sutherland. Three-room house to be moved.—C. Persons thinking of relinquishing their claims on land, will do well to see Charles E. Redeker at once, aa he can place same by direct sale. FOR SALE—Yearling Poland China 8 ows.—W. D. Darst, 3 miles North west of town. Grain and hay insurance is impor- j tant. Get rates from Chas.E.Redelcer. MISS ANNA E. ROLLINS Teacher of Voice and Piano Inquire at Poison Hotel LIFE. T IFE Is too swift Between tho blossom and the white snow's drift, Between the silence and the lark’s uplift. For bitter words. In kindness nnd ln gentleness our apeech Must carry messages of hope and roach The sweoieet chords. I —Selected. Birds That Livo Long. A parrot has been known to live eighty years, n raven sixty-nine years, and Imperial eagles, fifty-six years, a sea eagle forty-two years, and a gold- on eagle forty-six yenrs. A pair of eagle owls of (treat age also hnve been recorded: one died at the age of slxty- elght and the other at fifty-three The zoological gardens at Amsterdam possessed a Rateleur eagle nnd n cou dor which lived to be Ofty-Ore a ml fifty-two respectively. Jinny birds hove lived to be forty. For Jewelry repairing and manu facturing to order, see Wyeth, 3rd st. Public dumping ground for manure, earth and proper debris is now af forded at llie west of the town in the gully on E, street al Riverside ave. No more dumping of refuse isallowed on the lots south of town, Your plate glass be insured. Hates Clias, E. Redeker. windows should are low. j\sk The Security State Hank lias change of a i this week—Read it. WANTED To Buy A RelinquUhment. No Real Eitate Man Need Apply Addreit, L H, OATNESS. _ , Polion, Mont General Delivery, Dr. G. A. Rohrcr I Surgery a Specialty Office, 209 Jamieion Bld’g. Spokane, Wellington. OFFICE ON THIRD AVE. TELEPHONE* NECT10N WITH YARD. PROMPT DEILV ROOMS TO RENT Nice, new furnished rooms at very reasonable rates by or week or month. Central Hotel South Sacurity Bank o n 4 th A ys . ! Drs MacdoflJJ and Sfl 137 MatoSW*, Kalispell • A. D. MACDONALD.1 Practice LimitedIte W*1 Diseases of ” C. S. SMITH, General M * Special Attends Eye, Ear, No** *** 1 E . K r i n g l e n A r c h i t e c t Office between 3rd and 4th on C »t „ L Weit of Security State Bank £ The-- McDonald 29, 3d Ave»w Kalispell, New, MISS B. M. RYAN , 1