Montana Plaindealer
Friday, August 26, 1910
Helena, Montana
Page text (machine-generated)
THE MONTANA PLAINDEALER
Vol. 111
Published Weekly by The Montana Plaindealer Company
JOSEPH B. BASS, EDITOR
Subscription, $2.00 per year strictly in advance.
Entered as second-class mail matter in the post office at Helena, Montana, under the act of Congress of March 3rd, 1879.
Address all communications to The Montana Plaindearler, 17 South Main Street, Helena, Montana.
PEACE!
PEACE!
PROSPERITY!
UNION!
UNION!
Beware of the man who does not pratctice what he preaches.
The article in reference to the attempt to lure one of our young girls in this issue, will no doubt be a revelation to many, but it is a sad fact and further, since this has come to light it is known that the same man has made the same advances to other young girls. At any cost, our people must look to the protection of our young girls.
The political pot has begun to simmer and ere long will reach the boiling point and the dear voters will begin to receive undue attention.
Our people should be proud of the opportunity to have in our midst such a man as M. C. B. Mason, L. L. D., and all should avail themselves of the opportunity of hearing him at St James church, Monday evening. He is one of our foremost leaders who is doing much for the uplift of a struggling race.
The loss of life in the forest fires in this section is apalling we are proud that the gallant 25th regiment has in this crisis been able to render such heroic services for which we know all the people are most gratified.
It is not as generally known as it should be that right here in our city we have a colored practicing physician and pharmacist in the person of Doctor Shelby, he is building up a good practice and is deserving of the patronage of all the people, he also conducts a drug store on Helena Avenue.
We wanted it to be clearly understood that when it comes to a question of protecting the morals of our young girls that we take no middle ground. And the man high or low, little or big who transgresses shall expect no quarter for the Plain-dealer, hence we stand by our article which alleges that a prominent member of the church and choir of this city has been
And we without fear or favor denounce the same in unmeasured terms and say to the parents of girls to beware of this wolf parading in sheeps clothing.
HIS SINS HAVE FOUND
HIM OUT
The colored people, or a part of them in this vicinity gag at the gnat and swallow a camel when it comes to the moral issue as it applies itself to the young girls who are being reared by fathers and mothers and as far as getting redress or condemnation for the ones who would debauch or destroy the virtue of our young you will find instead some of our supposed leading men who will uphold those who would lead to destruction our girls.
Not long since in this city the daughter of a well-known citizen was called up over the telephone and was asked to come down to the building where this man was janitor and he would give her money to squeeze her in his arms.
Instead of this man being condemned he has a large following who actually condone and make excuses for him, even though it is absolutely no question of his identity or lack of proof that he did it. The girl herself says he did both personally and over the phone; her father and others overheard it. This man is a leading MEMBER OF THE CHURCH AND A MEMBER OF THE CHOIR. As far as we know he has not even been put on trial in his church for his infamous and immoral conduct.
Now then when a people fail to take conizance of such conduct especially toward a SIXteen YEAR OLD GIRL and fail to condemn such actions it is such conduct that leads up to crimes being committed. Mothers and fathers will have to resort to physical punishment and a six shooter and the bludgeon is none too good for the would-be destroyer of our young girls.
And, what akes the situation more deplorable, is that men who are supposed to the ethical moral standard or word, appear to uphold such conduct. A church or any other institution may thrive by it being known that such men as this are their leading lights, but to a man looking philosophically at things as they are, we opine that they will lose a great deal of respect and influence for good. If we as a race are uplifted we must see to it that the morals of our young are protected at what ever cost.
Now, because a man can go about with a sanctimonious look a leading light in church, join all the lodges he can, is no protection for such a gross offence as stated above. His calibar and kind may excuse him but he will not escape what is coming to him and for all he knows may be walking through a slaughter house to an open grave. From this article parents of the young girls in this city
Helena, Montana, Friday, Augnst 26 1010
LECTURES AT ST. PAUL'S Probably the largest audience of the session of the M. E. conference turned out Friday evening to hear Dr. Mason, secretary of the Freedman's bureau of the church, speak.
They were amply repaid as he held the vast audience spellbound for one hour and a half and at the conclusion of his discourse the applause lasted fos fully five minutes. Quite a number of our people availed themselves of the opportunity to hear this distinguished orator and the colored people of Helena are indeed fortunate to have the opportunity of hearing him as it is seldom that we can see or hear a man of this calibre in this section. Dr. Mason will preach Sunday morning at St. James and lecture Monday evening at the same place. No one should miss hearing him.
The big boss men on both sides have imagined that their house building was impregnable ubt from the murmurings of a few of the big politicians and of a whole gang of the little ones the slates are doomed to be split in twain.
In fact there is a whole herd who are more than anxious to serve the dear public and they say that they want no star chamber proceedings as to who shall be IT.
Some of the wise ones even go so far as to say there must be a harmony committee appointed to iron out the differences in both parties.
Of course the most important proposition is the legislative ticket which will have the election of a United States Senator and there is much lining up going on among the leaders big and little on both sides. A whole lot of the boys who do things in politics are laying low and it has been hard to learn just where they are at but enough is known so the wise ones say, to defeat any slate which the big bosses attempt to put through the convention in either party.
Outside of the legislative contest the next of importance will be the race for Sheriff. It is said that the present Sheriff will be given a renomination and the democrats are to bring out a man who will give him a battle royal to win at the election. The next in importance is probably that of County Attorney. The present incumbent, S. H. Hepner will likely be renominated by the democrats and it is given out by the wise ones that former County Attorney Heywood will be given the nomination on the Republican
This will also prove a very interesting race as both men are very popular.
A. J. Duncan will stack up against some one on the republican ticket for the treasureship and whoever beats Duncan will have to go some as he was elected city treasure as long as he wanted to be and is an all around popular man.
For County Clerk the Slates makers have not completed their job, but Martin Doty will be renominated by his party for a second time.
A County Commissioner for the six year term is to be elected also auditors, justices, assessor, and constables.
THE PLAINDEALER WOULD LIKE TO KNOW THE REASON WHY
The colored voters should be under any obligation to any party in the local election this fall, when they have been refused recognition?
That a man known to be a bad one, receives such ready defenders in his dirt, are they of the same kind?
They are asking "Do you think you will ever go back?"
They call our distinguished friend Father and is Father worrying anybody?
Sheriff Higgins will receive the same support that he did two years?
There are certain young men who call themselves gentlemen, find it necessary to carry big guns around?
The batchelors are getting so jealous of the widower
The man's wife left last week and did not even tell him where she was going?
The voters league don't get busy and get together before the campaign starts?
The time has not arrived to buy coal for the winter nights?
The local pool champion has not showed up of late?
LOCALS
Chas. Sleets went to Butte this week on a short business trip.
Reuben Baker who formerly lived here after an absence of four years has returned bringing with him a wife. He says that he is certainly glad to get back to dear old Montana.
Mr. Willie Robinson was over this week from Great Falls he will eave early in September for Xemia, Ohio where he will attend Wilberforce.
The Grand Ball at Germania hall Septemer 29th will be be a big event of the season.
Mr. William Stone is a new arrival in Helena.
SPORTSMEN AND KINGS
By John H. Raftery.
In the glooming autumn days, thien when the wild geese are trumpeting thie across the cloud-stewn sky, and the bred-head mallard and canvas-back, in R swift and shifting battalions are s
The New York Dry Goods Store Silk Petticoats
We are nowloffering positively the best bargain ever offered in a Silk Petticoat in this city. A regular $7.50 Taffeta, elegant silk beautifully tailored in black, white and colors. Our price, choice at $4.96
I know a score of sportsmen who would blush or curse at the mere suggestion of such "sport" as that which has engaged the Kaiser. For days, the papers were filled with big-worded accounts of the magnificent drives of pheasants that were sent before the well-delivered volleys of the royal guns. It has been heralded that His Majesty, the Emperor, bagged so many hundred birds before luncheon; that a large and enthusiastic gallery of citizens looked on and vigorously applauded the Kaiser's marksmanship. Six flunkies, armorers, masters of the hounds or horse, loaded the weapons and handed them to the royal marksmen. A score of foresters, woodmen, wardens of the forest, beat through the thickets and drove the doomed, fatling birds to their fate.
When you were a boy, before the trick of your weapons or the sense of your power were measured, have you ever stolen upon a sitting rabbit and slain it? Have you ever, in the eagerness for slaughter, peppered the half-tame doves that nested in your neighbor's grove? If so, perhaps you have come to realize the cowardice of mere killing, the useless, pitiful, cheap vulgarity of mere marksmanship.
Later in life, have you sat, numb patient, hungry, keen-eyed in the blinds waiting for the blue-bills to swoop, in a dark, fast cloud, across the water? Have you sat like that for hours, with no comrade but your dog, and watched the livid waters and the leaden clouds, listened for the whirr of wings and fronted the icy gale that crooned amongst the bare trees at the margin, and whipped and whistled among the reeds of the marsh? Have you, when the scouts, two of them, came quartering suddenly above your head, faster than the wind and hurtling with it, have you had the generous inspiration, then, to drop them "one-two" without waiting for the oncoming flock? And as they swept away, down wind, with a warning note and a whizzing defiance, have you felt that they were creatures of the wind and of the water, worth your best skill, your coolest nerve, your quickest wit? And having scored a double, just as they darted out of range, and having sent Ponto after them, you were not ashamed, were you?
A truck-load of game-birds bagged with the connivance of a regiment of truckling game-keepers is not worth one feather clipped from the pinions of a wild duck in full flight by the gun of a true sportsman. A pitiful pile of bruised and tattered creatures; a day on a camp chair with a lazyback and a lunch table at elbow; an outing amongst perfumed lackeys and fulsome underlings who load guns by the dozens and drive half-tame, overfed birds up to the muzzles! This may be sport for Kings, but for men who know things, it is as poor an imitation as dynamiting rivers or seining for game fish.
I should like to have heard what Theodore Roosevelt said, or thought of the bungling lout who trapped a bear and tied it for him to shoot. The hunter—save the mark—who thought that Roosevelt was one of those "sportsmen" who measure their pleasure by the weight of the bag and the ease of conquest! If Roosevelt, the President, was not insulted by so gross an effort to
13
prove him a serub hunter, at least we may be sure that Roosevelt, the plainsman, the fair-stalker, the paragon of woodsmen, must have been griecously tempted to take a shot at his guide instead of at the wounded and helpless quarry. No Western hunter would have made that mistake. No man of spirit, anywhere, but must know that slaughter is not sport and that the motive, the excuse and the zest of hunting, lie in manlike matching of courage, cunning, skill and patience against the native advantages and incalculable devices of the wild creatures hunted.
But, if there is reason for pride as well as stock for the larder in a well-stalked buck and a fair-sent shot, it is yet sure that the chief recompense lies beyond and above these selfish considerations.
Nimrod's priceless secret remain always a riddle to half mankind.
One of these keen autumn days, take your rifle and go alone into the primeval wilderness and sit on a dry log beneath some stalwart oak that is gray and ghostly and vague above your head. How still the world is and, as you watch, how the dimness of morning twilight drives like a fog before the breeze and the glow that comes up from the east. As the day comes stirring, you hear a scramble aloft and an acorn drops in the dead leaves at your feet. Across a shadowy, brown aisle in the woods you see a squirrel scamper. Don't stir. He has seen you and you are a curious animal, far more curious to him than he is to you. He has disappeared behind the trunk of a wide tree, and more acorns are falling. Look quietly aloft and see them—three—four bright-eyed, flirting, busy, brown-furred fox-squirrels. Early risers, these little husbandmen of the wilds, for they are laying in their winter stores of nuts and acorns. They are watching you out of their beady, black eyes, but they are too busy to stop work.
Raise your rifle now, raise it ever so cautiously. See them scamper for safety, letting their fallen morsels rain about you! It is not so easy, after all, to catch them unawares, these pretty little fellows who murder nothing, meddle not with man and work so hard! There is no need to get up. It is useless to walk around the tree. They will scramble around the tree-trunk much faster than you can run about its base. Sit still and hold your rifle ready, if you can. They want to see you. You are an immensely interesting monster. Of course they are afraid of you, just as you are afraid of a grizzly bear, of a mancating tiger, but they can't resist the temptation to stare at you. Some prowling crows hail, slanting in through the tree-tops and perch swaying in a high spar. How purple they look as the rising sun shines on their glistening plumage! The squirrels are reassured now. They see the crows sitting scateless above you. One of them thrusts his lean head across a bare limb and peers at you. Now is your chance! In the eye, mind you!
At the crack of your rifle a splinter flies from the limb just beside your target. There's a scratching scurry of little clawed feet. There goes a big silver gray, leaping from tree to tree! Yonder go a dozen flashes, brown-red fox-squirrels! You have missed. You hear the clutter of tiny, padded feet among the leaves and you sit still, looking up and away where the frightened crows hurtle off in the sunlight. How laminous are the colors that now Continued on Page 4
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MODES of The MOMENT
HE young girls are benefiting by the prevailing note of girlishness which characterizes this summer's dresses, and for once at least they have a distracting number of models from which to choose. Some are lovelier than others and all have lines of grace and girl wears a wide brimmed rose colored straw hat trimmed with a hug black satin bow at the left side toward the back.
White and black pin striped marquette or muslin make a becoming an useful dress for almost any afternoon affair, and it can be given much of a air by the trimming used to brighten it. The dull gray tone of the material combines well with rose color or pink.
HE young girls are benefiting by the prevailing note of girlishness which characterizes this summer's dresses, and for once at least they have a distracting number of models from which to choose. Some are lovelier than others and all have lines of grace and beauty. The majority of those intended for afternoon wear are quite simply made. The materials are a combination representing daintiness and nexpensiveness, and trimmings are limited to fancy collars, entredeux, tucks and soft silk belts and ties, writes a fashion expert in the New York Herald.
Muslins, lawns and linens are the favorite foundations for dresses to be worn at tennis and garden parties, for driving at fashionable resorts and upon the other pleasant occasions in which girls who are not yet In the debutante class are permitted to participate. These simple names of materials do not convey all that they might, however, for the reason that muslins and linens in the finer qualities are really glorified fabrics, sheer in weave, delicate in texture and offered in exquisite colors.
Half a dozen of these thin afternoon dresses are not too many for the average young girl to possess, and it goes without saying that two of them will be white. A white lingerie and a white linen are almost essential to the summer outfit. This leaves four, or more if liked, to be chosen in the wearer's most becoming colors. The shades from which young girls may choose are somewhat more limited than for older women, but the list includes pink, blue, gray, cream or pale yellow, brown and rose. The darker shades are suitable for linens and similar materials, while the sheer fabrics cannot be too delicate in their colorings, if the yare to be made without the velled effect, which is one of the fads of this season.
Among the simpler materials are charming marquisettes, showing delicate phink stripes alternating with an openwork pattern, and there are dotted and figured cotton marquisettes and muslins which have all the beauty of silk and are much better suited to the youthful wearer than even foulards or some of the softer weaves of silk.
The cotton volles, new in weave and finish, were never more alluring, and they drape a girlish figure as no other fabric does. With pink and white, rose and white, green with white figures and in dull gray pin stripes a brilliant touch of color is used, perhaps a satin bow or a piping on a round collar, to give the dress an air. Narrow Valenciennes insertions are used fort he most part on lingerie dresses, and even these are now often trimmed with other laces or with embroidery to differentiate them from the ubiquitous ready made garment.
NOTHING is prettier in cut for a simple lingerie dress than the one made with a straight line across the neck reaching from shoulder to shoulder, after the style of Italian dresses worn in mediaeval days. The line is horizontal, and the front and back are filled in with bands of lace run crosswise. A marquisette or dainty muslin dress made in this style would have an inch wide strip of trimming, either a hand embroidered strip or good lace, finishing the top of the waist, front and back. Then from the point where the two strips meet on the shoulder they would unite and continue down the sleeves on the outside of the arm in a single band.
A pink dotted muslin was made in this fashion with an inch wide piece of Cluny insertion outlining the neck and forming the sleeve trimming. The sleeves were a narrow kimono cut, with a band of the lace finishing the bottom at the elbow, where an undersleeve of fine white tucked linen was seen. The blouse was drawn in at the waist under a crushed belt of pikki silk and the skirt fell a bit full at the waist, but rather scant at the bottom and had a ten-inch band of fine embroidery worked across below the knees and falling over a plain skirt of the stirred material.
There is scarcely any dress designed now for a young girl which does not show a low collar or the neck cut away to disclose the throat in a comfortable and pretty way. Older women have adopted the style to a great extent, but it is one universally becoming to youth, while only occasionally so to women who have passed their girlhood. Low round collars of embroidery are almost always seen on the linen dresses, and any severity of cut is thus offset by the graceful neck trimming.
A deep rose colored dress which would sound a striking note at a tennis afternoon has been selected for a girl with dark hair and excellent coloring. The blouse is simple and untrimmed, except for the rolling collar of rose linen embroidered in rose and edged with a narrow frill of Valenciennes lace set onto the collar with a narrow black satin piping. The dress buttons in the front and has a simple linen belt and cuffs to match the collar trimming. With this dress the
girl wears a wide brimmed rose colored straw hat trimmed with a huge black satin bow at the left side toward the back.
White and black pin striped marquisette or muslin make a becoming and useful dress for almost any afternoon affair, and it can be given much of an air by the trimming used to brighten it. The dull gray tone of the material combines well with rose color or pink, while certain shades of blue or yellow often lend a delightful touch. A dress of this design was made with a slightly cut out neck and a collarless effect was achieved by an application of trimming to surround the neck. The trimming was nothing more than a shaped piece of rose colored silk with ends which fell almost to the top of the wide crushed belt of the marquisette. The sleeves were finished with a cuff of the same rose satin and lace frilling, while the skirt, which was short and narrow, had a deep band of the material cut the other way so that the stripes ran around. This band was headed by a tiny fold of rose satin.
WHILE the severer styles of linen dresses have low necks, the line for these is higher than for the softer models. Volles, dainty muslin and lingerie effects may be cut quite low, comparatively speaking, to disclose the curve where the neck and shoulders round into each other. There is this rule to observe, however, in planning such a frock, and that is to have the curve shallow across the front and back. Instead of resembling a "U" it should be like a crescent. A simple fold of silk, an entredeux or a narrow shaped collar makes a becoming finish for the neck, and then the favorite frill of fine linen or lace may be added below this. Sometimes the lingerie ruffle is set on at the top of the neck and there is no other finish.
Undersleeves are a feature of many summer dresses and these show a little below the elbow or more, from half way between shoulder and elbow to half way between wrist and elbow. There seems to be no hard and fast rule about the length of sleeves for such dresses. As a usual thing they come midway to the hand, but sometimes they end just below the elbow. Few of them reach the full length of the arm, a length which detracts from the cool, summery look of almost any gown. Above the undersleeve the sleeve proper is finished with some trimming, a fancy cuff—perhaps adjustable, which can be freshened from time to time—or with a closely fitting band of embroidery or lace. This may go straight around the arm or turn at right angles on the outside of the arm and end in an upward point.
A buff linen dress buttoning down the front has the skirt cut in a graduated panel and a deep plaited flounce reaching all around from the sides of the panel. The blouse also has buttons in front, following a diagonal line, and there is a medium width belt fastening with buttons. A round, flat collar of fine embroidery finishes the neck and the three-quarter length sleeves have cuffs to match. The blouse is given fulness by having a wide plait laid backward at the shoulders and stitched part way down.
Pointed lines in trimming are utilized effectively in a dress made of sheer batiste with a tiny all over embroidered flower. The skirt has a graduated flounce headed by a band of cross tucking which is edged on either side with Valenciennes insertion. This trimming forms a deep V in front and slopes upward at the sides, reaching almost to the belt in the back. The same scheme is carried out in the waist trimming and it is repeated in the sleeves. A soft crushed pink silk belt and some loops of the silk at the neck suggesting a tie complete this charming afternoon costume.
To Put on a Veil.
How many women know how to adjust a veil? Very few; and when carelessly put on, no matter how beautiful the coiffure or how becoming the hat, the entire effect is ruined. Many women never acquire the trick of adjusting a veil neatly, therefore they should dispense with it altogether, or take time when there is nothing more urgent on hand, to learn the art of disposing of the ends and giving it a finished, tasteful appearance. A veil cannot be put on hastily and look well. In this respect it resembles a shirtwair, regarded by many as a simple garment, but how often do you see the wearer of one looking as trim as this little garment demands that she should! Unless carefully and persistently attached to the skirt, it is bound to bag; a little extra strain, and it becomes completely detached, leaving an ugly space between the waist and skirt, while the belt offers no reasonable explanation for its presence.—De lineator.
Medical College Hymn.
"Have you heard the new medical school hymn?"
"No what is it?"
"Fifteen men on a dead man's chest." "-Yale Record"
NO NEED FOR AN ARCHITECT
But for Demiljohn School Board Might Have Found Out Earlier What Was Wanted.
Mayor Edward Schwabenland on Riverside, N. J., and Henry Tesnow, one of the most popular residents of that thriving little borough, were talking the other day on queer sayings and doings, when Eddie told of a motion that had once been made in a school board of which he was a member.
The needs of the town, Eddie said, demanded that a new schoolhouse should be erected, and after the board had discussed the question to a considerable length one of the members arose to his feet.
"I move, Mr. President," said he, impressively, "that we build a new schoolhouse on the site of the old one; that we use the material in the old one for the new one, and that we don't tear down the old one until the new one is built."
"Well, what did they do about it?" smilingly queried Mr. Tesnow.
"They were a little bit slow coming around," replied Eddie, "but just as soon as they got their breath to working again they sent for an architect to figure out how the thing could be done."
"Did he find the answer?" asked Mr. Tesnow.
"No," was the chuckling rejoinder on the mayor. "He worked on it until the demijohn was empty, and then told the school board that what they wanted was a sleight-of-hand professor, not an architect."
LAUGHED IN FACE OF CARE
New York Artists Turned Eviction Tribulation Into a Time of Joyous Merrymaking.
The trials and tribulations of the large number of clever young men and women who are struggling for recognition as writers and artists in New York city are lightened in considerable degree by festivities in the studios.
One young woman whose landlord was hard-hearted turned a seamy situation into light comedy, and saved expense, by giving what she called an "eviction" party. At about two in the morning, after a generous flow of soul and punch, she announced to her masculine guests that it was time to labor. With much joy each of these became a furniture mover. They burdened themselves with chairs and tables and bric-a-brac and trailed with their loads through the silent streets toward the new studio. On the way they rested in the middle of an avenue, placing the chairs round the tables on the asphalt and resuming the social function. A raising of windows began, and the sound of a bell somewhere created an annoying fear that a patrol wagon might be coming round the corner.
Thus it was that the soiré on the asphalt was suddenly broken up. The window gazers, wondering what this strange proceeding in the night might mean, probably did not realize that they were viewing a process in the land of Bohemia of laughing carking care out of countenance.—The Sunday Magazine.
Hopeful Sign.
That the war on tuberculosis pays immediate dividends in human life is proved by a report of Dr. Bosley, health commissioner of Baltimore. In the monthly health bulletin for July it is shown that the number of deaths from tuberculosis occurring in the city was 92, as compared with 123 for the same month last year. Dr. Bosley says that he attributes the decrease in the number of deaths to the educational campaign that those interested in the fight against the "white plague" are making. "The interest of the public has been aroused," he declares, "and there is a general tendency on the part of the people to heed the warnings and to observe the hygienic rule being promulgated." In ten years, it the present progress is kept up, Dr Bosley believes that tuberculosis will be stamped out.
Haaken Follows the Hounds.
King Haakon of Norway is fond of telling his first appearance with his regiment, when he headed it at parade. It was the King's Own Norfolk Yeomanry.
"I was horribly nervous," he says. "I am not what might be called a 'crack rider', and I had seen the yeomanry on parade and in many cases following the hounds. My word, but they ride like the wind and look as if they could easily go up a church steeple if they got the order or the hounds showed them the way. I felt as I rode along at their head that every man was inwardly criticising my style and setting me down as a hopeless duffer. It was a horrible experience and I never want to go through it again."
Sad-Eyed Party—Say, boss, won't you give me a few cents toward gettin' my wife into the Old Ladies home?
Householder (dubiously) — Why doesn't your wife come here herself?
S. E. P—Well, you see, boss, she's a woman an' you kin hardly expect her to go around admittin' she is old enough for that.—Boston Transcript
Must Have.
"Who was 'The Woman with the Serpent's Tongue?'"
"'The Woman with the Serpent Tongue?' That must have been Cleopatra"—Houston Post
Mattings of the Old and the Young
Now Becoming the Fashion.
Now Becoming the Fashion.
What does it matter how old a man is or what the age of a woman is if they wish to marry? What have years to do with love and that felicity that comes from the tying of the nuptial knot? Dr. Johnson's wife was more than twenty years his senior, and Shakespeare's spouse was old enough to be his mother. They were nappy and why should not those who follow their example in these days also find connubial joys?
It is getting to be the fashion nowadays, this mating of December and May, the New York Telegraph says. Recently a wealthy woman of Hartford made plans f rohrroodni tacinford made plans for marrying a schoolboy at New Haven. She was about 70 and he about 20, and her children and grandchildren, when they learned about it, went to the courts and said she was crazy. But the judges knew otherwise, and set her free and let her continue mistress of her own fortune. Then there was the lady of a noted American family who lived in her mansion on the Hudson. For 68 years she had lived alone, and then she married her hostler, aged 24. What of that? Shall a woman who has lived nearly threecore years and ten and still is an old maid continue so until her death?
Mue, Francoise Mantaiselo, 57 years
old, and Arthur Springer, 23 years old,
have taken out a license to marry in
this city. Speaking for the lady and
himself, Master Springer made this
statement: "It is no one's business
except ours if we marry." The boy
is right; he can marry his step-grand
mother if he wishes, and not even the
law can say him nay.
THE FAMILY DOCTOR
Why We Cough, Sneeze and Sigh.
One of the most interesting facts about the human body is its power of self-preservation—Its power of evading or overcoming the thousand and one conditions which, unless corrected would be injurious or destructive.
Among the most common of these acts of self-preservation are the cough, the sneeze and the sigh. Every one it familiar with these acts; yet few people ever ask themselves the cause, and fewer still could explain them.
One of the simplest of the body's devices for self-protection is the cough. The cough is merely a blast of air propelled from the lungs in such a manner as to forcibly dislodge some foreign substance which has been drawn into the throat, the windpipe or the tubes leading to the lungs. The membranes lining these parts of the body are very sensitive, and when a foreign matter comes in contact with them, an alarm message is at once sent to the nervous "headquarters," and the suit is the sudden, spasmoid expulsion of breath which is called a cough. Very often the cough is accompanied by the irritation of the accumulation of mucous on the surface mentioned. In this case, as in the case of a foreign body, the cough is merely a means of expelling the matter.
So, you see, a cough is merely one of nature's methods of self-protection. The ordinary cough cure contains some drug which, by paralyzing the nerves, prevents the cough and allows the mucus to accumulate. Thus the cough medicine does only harm. The cure for cough is to cough—to cough until the excessive deposit is removed. Meantime, of course, measures should be taken to prevent added deposits. A sneeze is exactly like a cough, save that the obstruction occurs in the nostrils, owing to the deposit of some irritant or foreign matter, and that the blast of air is thrown out through the nose instead of through the throat and mouth.
Why do we sigh? When grieved or depressed, the tendency is to hold the breath. This means that the body suffers for oxygen; and the long, deep breath which we call a sigh is merely a means by which the body obtains for itself the necessary amount of oxygen.—Dr. W. R. C. Latson, in Health-Culture.
Her One Anxiety.
Thrown from her luxurious motor car, the fair girl had lain insensible for many hours. Now, however, the operation was over, consciousness had returned and she spoke faintly in the darkened room.
"Yvonne?"
"Yes, mademoiselle." The malo bent over her.
"Yvonne, tell me Did I, or did I not, have on my new silk stockings?"— Judge.
Bliss for Her.
Miss Sweet—Poor Belle's in trouble.
She's had proposals from two men and
she doesn't know which to accept.
Miss Elder—Goodness mercy! You
don't call that trouble—Boston Trans-
script.
Fair Office Exchange.
Stenog—Oh, Frank, will you please
sharpen my pencil?
Clerk—Yes, if you'll please sew on
this button—Boston Herald.
Sometimes fate sets a man up on a
nigh pedestal for the purpose of giving
him a hard fall.
FEED FOR WINTERING STOCK RHEUMATISM
Numerous Catch Crops to Supplement Hay When Latter is Failure
—Soy Beans for Silo.
On many farms where the number of animals raised on the farm and kept through the winter is dependent upon the amount of hay harvested, the farmer is unable to winter all of his stock when the hay crop is a failure unless he grows catch crops to supplement his hay crop.
Oats and peas make a very good catch crop and will produce a large amount of palatable and nourishing hay.
Corn fodder makes an excellent catch crop and affords abundance of rough feed, although corn that is allowed to reach a more mature condition will afford the most nourishment.
Millet is another excellent catch crop and will thrive under a wide variety of conditions, but like most other crops will produce better crops when it is raised on land that contains an abundance of plant food. Barley and peas are very valuable for fall feeding and may be cut late and cured for hay the same as oats and peas. This mixed crop may be used for soiling purposes until late in November. Rape is a member of the turnip family and makes an excellent late forage crop for sheep and hogs any many farmers pasture it with young cattle but it is not adapted for feeding dairy cattle, owing to the danger of its giving the milk a bad odor, similar to that imparted by the turnip when fed in large quantities.
Soy beans are recommended highly as an economical source of protein and may be grown in most sections of the country where live stock is fed. Many fall with this crop because they do not wait for the ground to become warm before they sow the crop. Soy beans may be drilled, planted in hills or in rows. On farms where there is a silo they will do well when sowed in the corn field and run into the silo with the corn crop. It improves the food value of the ensilage and has no bad results.
KEEPING COWS OUT OF PONDS
Dalrymex Make Big Mistake In Allow-
ing Animals to Drink Dirty,
Stagnant Water.
Many men who think they are good
farmers allow their cows to drink all
summer from any old pond that hap-
pens to contain enough water.
No matter how filthy it is, or how
warm or contaminated by vegetable
growth or droppings from the animals
themselves, so long as it is water.
A greater error never was made.
You cannot get good milk or butter
from dirty pond water.
The cow is a wonderful milking ma-
chine and she often transforms some
pretty poor stuff into milk, but if she
is given nothing but dirty, stagnant
pond water all her powers of alchemy
cannot turn it into a fluid fit for child-
ren to drink.
There is one way, however, in which pond water may be used to advantage, but it is not to allow animals to go into it or drink from it direct. A pond on the Oklahoma station farm holds a million gallons and supplies 100 head each of cattle and hogs. It drains a large area which is on a hill to the barrus and feed lots. That is different. As it runs from the faucet it is as clear as the average well water and it tastes good. The cost of building the pond and of piping the water about one-third of a mile was about $400. Barring usual accidents it should cost nothing for repairs and it does not cost a cent to operate it. There are many localities where the ground is more or less hilly where this system of supplying water could very easily be adopted without great cost.
The Science of Farming.
If the world's attention determines the importance of a science, then the science of farming is receiving deserved recognition. For the world is certainly giving much attention to the farm and the people who work upon it. This is not to be wondered at, for upon the farm and its products depend all other industries. Without this science all other things must fall, whereas the farmer could, if necessary, make a fairly good shift at doing without all the rest.
Knowing how is just as valuable on the farm as in any other branch of Industry. The subject of "Dry Farming" is an illustration very much in point. One man experimented until he learned the secret and as a result many people have profited. What he learned does not seem very wonderful, but it was the thing needed to be known, and in the semi-ard west, where crops are being grown by this method, they doem it quite an achievement. It always pays to study one's business.
Palmetto Asparagus
Palmotto asparagus is the most popular variety for commercial plantations. It is rust-resistant to a large degree and makes a strong, vigorous growth. Columbian White Mammoth is a splendid white variety. Asparagus should be grown more largely for many eastern markets. It nearly always sells readily at good prices and brings the grower a cash return early in the season before many other vegetables are ready for sale. If market conditions are favorable, plan for setting a bed next spring. Grow your own plants, if possible. If not buy from special growers who produce strong plants free from disease.
IT WILL CURE
Get a 25-cent vial.
If it fails to cure
I will refund your money.
Munyon.
A Hair Dressing
If you wish a high-class hair dressing, we are sure Ayer's Hair Vigor, new improved formula, will greatly please you. It keeps the hair soft and smooth, makes it look rich and luxuriant, prevents splitting at the ends. And it keeps the scalp free from dandruff.
Does not change the color of the hair.
Formula with each bottle
Show it to your doctor
Ask him about it, then do as he says.
At the same time the new Ayer's Hair Vigor is a strong hair tonic, promoting the growth of the hair, keeping all the tissues of the hair and scalp in a healthy condition. The hair stops falling, dandruff disappears. A splendid dressing.
Made by the J. C. Ayer Co., Lovell, Mass.
Howard E. Burton, Assayer and Chemist,
Leadville, Colorado. Specimen prices: Gold,
Silver, Lead, $1.00; Gold, Silver, 75e; Gold,
50e; Zinc or Copper, $1.00. Mailing envelopes and for mail sent on application. Control and Umpire work collected. Reference: Carbonate National Bank.
Angry Man (at the telephone)—You go hang yourself, Snithers! (After a pause) Do you hear me?
Central—Your party hung up!—Puck.
Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes.
Believed by Murine Eye Remedy. Try
Murine For Your Eye Troubles. You Will
Like Murine. It Soothes. 50e at Your
Drugists. Write for Eye Books. Free.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Dr. Emde. You may take a drink
with each meal.
Mr. Booze. If I eat as often as that,
Doc, I'd have indigestion.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup the best remedy to use for their children
during the teething period.
The work "pageant" originally signi
figured the fixed or movable scaffold on
which plays were presented.
THE KEYSTONE
TO HEALTH
IS
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH
BITTERS
When the digestion is bad you need something that will not only relieve but will strengthen the digestive organs and assist them back to their normal condition. This calls for the Bitters first of all. Try it
DYSPEPSIA
"Having taken your wonderful 'Cascarets' for three months and being entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise is due to 'Cascarets' for their wonderful composition. I have taken numerous other so-called remedies but without avail, and I find that Cascarets relieve more in a day than all the others I have taken would in a year," James McGune, of THIS OUTLET'S STORING Remedy Company, Chicago, Ill., and receive a handmade souvenir Bon Bon FREE.
Try a Package of—
Inland
Crackers
They are crisp and wholesome.
All grocers sell them. Mfg.
by Inland Empire Biscuit
Company, Spokane.
SASH AND DOORS
DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY TO YOU.
SAVE 1-4 TO 1-2 ON BUILDING.
SEND FOR CATALOG 82.
O. B. WILLIAMS CO.
1943 FIRST AVE. SO. SEATTLE
TRY MURINE
EYE REMEDY
When Your Eyes
Need Care
You Will Like It
said Form 25c. 50c
Salve Tubes. 25c. $1.00
Sp. N. U. '10 No. 30
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS
PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER
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LOCALS
Trade with the Helena Packing and Provision Co.
Mr. H. Gancey who runs from Butte to Great Falls, visited in Helena for a few days this week
Ed Johnson saws that he has arranged to put on the grand Trail Blazers' at Germania hall during fair week.
Mrs. Corrie Johnson has as her guest this week, her sister's little girl from Great Falls.
Harry Jacobs returned to Helena, Wednesday, after several months absence from Lewistown
Mrs. J. E. Ingram who is visiting in Missouri write that she is having an enjoyable time but the Helena people excel all others.
Mrs. Louise Harrison visited in Missoula this week.
Mr. Chas. Golden of Missoula stopped over in Helena last week en route for na extended trip east.
Mr. and Mrs. Maginnis will leave in the early part of Sept. for an extended visit to their former home in Kansas and Chicago.
Mrs. Emma Fireman is over from Lewistown for a few days on business.
Geo. M. Lee made a flying visit home from Boulder last week.
Mrs. Nannie Mitchell is expected home next week from her visit to Kansas.
Rev. B. R. Guy who has so signally succeeded in this pastorate has been returned by the bishop of the Puget Sound conference to serve St. James A. M. E. church for another year for which the people of Helena are thankful.
Dr. M. C. B. Mason who is attending the M. E. conference in this city wil deliver a lecture at St. James A. M. E. church, Monday evening. Dr. Mason is an orator of national reputation and everybody should turn out to hear him. Admission free.
Mrs. J. Gaines has left Helena for the East.
The party given at the Dam was in every way a big success everyone enjoyed themselves to the fullest.
Jesse Brooks who is well known here will eave Great Falls September 8th for Western University where he will go to school. Mrs. H. E. Saulsburg writes that she is having an excellent visit and is now visiting friends in St. Joe, Missouri. Mr. Wm. Rounds formerly a mail clerk on the Northern Pacific was a visitor in Heelna this week from Boulder Springs.
THE HIGH COST OF LIVING
according to JIM HILL
"COST OF HIGH
Think of the days when
get and start a saving acco
times. We allow 4 per cent
will be ready for you when y
have to sell something to get
UNION BANK AND TR
Union Bank
according to JIM HILL is largely due to the "COST OF HIGH LIVING"
Think of the days when money may be hard to
get and start a saving account during prosperous
times. We allow 4 per cent interest, and the money will be ready for you when you need it. You won't have to sell something to get it.
UNION BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
HELENA, MONTANA
Mrs. H. C. Simmons was given a surprise party for her birthday, Wednesday evening. Quite a number of her friends gathered at her home and spent a very enjoyable evening at cards, dancing, etc., in fact one of the best times which ye scribe has ever had in Helena. Mr. M. H. Nelson premier pianist was present and highly entertained the assembled guests with high class selections both instrumental and vocal. Mrs. Simmons received many handsome presents. Mrs. Walker, Thompson and Clark are to be congratulated on the singula success of the affair.
THE DANCING PARTY
The dance which was gicen by Miss Pearl Palmer and others at the Odd Fellows Hall was in every way a grand success and the occasion was highly appreciated by the dancing folks for the long lay off from tripping the fantastic toe. Madame Erikie furnished the music for the occasion and it was in the small wee hours of the morning before the dances departed. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Glenn spent a week at Canon Creek dam hunting and fishing, returning last Monday.
Harry Clifford who has been sick is now at the hospital and reported as being much improved.
P. H. Keys was over a few days last week from Lewistown on a visit.
Gus Mason who is employed at the Lambs Club is taking his vacation.
Mrs. S. E. Bickford of Virginia visited in Helena for a few days last week.
Mrs. E. G. Coles' dinner of last week was largely attended and she is very thankful to her friends for their patronage.
H. J. Baker has been compelled to lay off from his work at the Grandon on account of the illness of his daughter; she is reported much better now.
L. P. DRIVER'S CAFE
Buffet in Connection
Everything Neat and First Class
When in Anaconda
give us a Trial
L. P. DRIVER, - Proprietor
DRY LAND FARMING.
"Dry Farming Practice in Montana is the title of the pamphlet just issued by Director Linfield of the of Montan Agricultural Station which contains a mass of practical information and points out the methods which, when followed, will insure success in farming without irrigation in Montana. The authors are Alfred Akinson, and F. S. Cooley, superintendent of the armes institutes. Every in Montana could have a copy this pamphlet which will be sent free, on request, by J. H. Hall State Commiss of Agriculture, Helena, Montana.
L is largely due to the
HIGH LIVING"
when money may be hard to
account during prosperous
ment interest, and the money
when you need it. You won't
get it.
TRUST COMPANY
Trust Co.
MONEY TO LOAN AT 5 PER CENT
We will bup you a $1000, 2000, 3000, 4000 or $5000 home and allow yon ten and one half years in which to pay for same at the rate of $7.50 per month plus interest for each 1000 dollars borrowed, and with the privilege of paying all or part of the loan at any time with six months grace on your paymntns in dase of loss of position or sickness.
We loan only on real estate and require first mortgage. For full information aud particulars, clp coupon below, enclose same and return postage and we will mail you literature explaining our plan.
The Standard Home Company "Jur"
The Largest Company of Its Kind in America ASSETS OVER $720,000.00 L. E. Mathfs SPECIAL AGENT 1023 10th.Ave.
Western University
QUINDARO, KANSAS
THE GREAT EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION FOR KANSAS AND THE WEST
DEPARTMENTS: Theological, College, Normal, Sub-Normal and State Normal
Leading and Best Industrial School of the West
PATENTS
Book on patents. "Hints to inventors." "Inventions needed." "Why some inventors fail." Send rough sketch or model for search of Patent Office records. Our Mr. Greeley was formerly. Acting Commissioner of Patents, and as such had full charge of the U. S. Patent Office. GREELEY & McINTIRE PATENT ATTORNEYS WASHINGTON, D. C.
Sportsmen and Kings by H. Rafferty Continued from page 1 slant through your silent cathedral What a cadence is that of the rising wind among the gaunt, resonant branches! In the dim recesses you can hear the dead leaves rustle as with the tread of unseen footsteps, and the perfume that rises from the sun-warmed mould reminds you of flowers that were tossed into a grave and crushed beneath the piling earth. In a day like this you are a hunter. How many squirrels did you bag?
APPOINTMENTS
The following are the appointments for the ensuing year made by Bishop Grant of the Puget Sound conference recently held at Seattle: Rev. W. T. Osborn Seattle, F. L. Donahue, Spokane, S. S. Freeman, Spokane, F. G. Barr, Portland, S. J. Collins, North Yakami; W. J. Tolliver, Great Falls, S. E. Bailey, Havre; G. T. Kinchion, Missoula, H. C. Redd, Butte; E. D. Abbott, Billings, Wm. Gaillias, Ellensburg, S. E. Clemmons, Everett; Rev. Browman, Anaconda, and B. R. Guy, Heelna.
Missionaries Needed In New Jersey. The recent quarterly conference of the colored Presbyterian pastors of New Jersey, which met in Paterson, was highly interesting. The address of the Rev. Charles H. Trusty of Jersey City revealed some startling information. His subject was "The Spiritual Condition of the Colored People." In the course of his address Dr. Trusty said "there are 70,000 of our people in the state of New Jersey without any religion at all" and that vice and crime among them might be minimized through the assistance of the church
Adress
Mayor Fitzgerald has appointed former Department Commander James H. Wolff to be the orator of the day. The exercises will be held in historic old Faneuil hall. Commander Wolff is one of the most widely known Afro-American veterans of the civil war in the state. His voice has been heard on many patriotic occasions. But this will be the first time that one of our race has been selected by the chief city official to deliver the Independence day oration.
WILLIAM D. CRUM GETS
Taft Nominates the Ex-Collector as Minister Resident and Consul General at Monrovia.
The announcement that President Taft had on Tuesday, June 7, nominated Dr. William D. Crum of Charleston, S. C., to be minister resident and consul general at Monrovia, Liberia, stirred Washington politicians to new anxiety.
It is said that the choice of Dr. Crum for the position coincides with the opinion of southern senators and that there will be no opposition to his confirmation by the senate from that source.
Dr. Crum achieved fame when President Roosevelt appointed him collector of customs at Charleston on Jan. 5, 1903. Senator Tillman led a fierce fight against his confirmation on the sole ground that he was a Negro. No charges were preferred against him, and he was admitted to be a man of integrity and high standing. Action was prevented until Jan. 6, 1905, or one day more than two years. During that period he served under a series of recess appointments.
President Roosevelt on Dec. 8, 1908, named Dr. Crum for another term. Early in January of the following year President Elect Taft made speeches in the south in which he gave assurances that Negroes would not be given federal offices in antagonism to popular protests.
When the special session of the senate following the inauguration of Mr. Taft expired March 14, 1900, Dr. Crum had not been confirmed. It was then squared up to President Taft to stand by his speeches and name somebody else. He did so and designated Edward W. Durant, Jr. a
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The Mallory
Soft and Stiff Ha
and Stiff Hats are the
Soft and Stiff Hats are the best.
WE SELL THEM
MART, SCHA
FINE C
GANS&I
ESTABL
HEL
PHCKING AND PR
whol
OYSTERS, FISH POUITR
T, SCHAFFNER
NE CLOTH
NS & KLEIN
ABL HED
HELENA
AND PROVISION CO
wholesal
FISH POUITRY FRUITBUTT
MART, SCHAFFNER & MAR
FINE CLOTHES GANS & KLEIN CO. ESTABL HED 1866
C. J. Bausch,
TIN, COPPER and SHEET IRON WORK Stove and Furnace work a Specialty.
315 N. JACKSON ST. Helena, Mont.
Strangers visiting the Capital City will be given a hearty welcome at all times at the
17 South Main Street
Helena - - Mont.
Car Specialty Diamond Setting
Expert Watchwork Monogram Engraving
Chas. H. Pratt
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Cut Glass
and Novelties
19.N. Main Street
pp. Grand Central Hotel Helena, Mont.
FURNISHED ROOMS
R RENT
Inquire 221 Breckenridge St.
Mrs. M. A. Cole
Eugene Bourquin
Dealer in
Sawed and Split Wood and
COAL.
Yard, 437 W. Main St. Residence
370 Water St. 'Phone 632-F.
Helena, Mont.
CENTRAL BEER HALL
1 ESTUARAT-
Heury Rossman Prop. Phone 186
118 S. Main St. Helena Mont.
The
Tinner.
Hats are the best,
AFFNER & MARX
CLOTHES
BKLEIN CO.
HED 1866
LENA
PROVISION COMPANY
lesaIe
ENTRY FRUITBUTTER & EGGS
LODGE DIRECTORY
Helena, Montana
Golden City Lodge, No. 3455, G. U.
O. of O. F., meets the 1st and Third
Tuesday evenings of each month at
their hall, foot of Broadway.
J. D. Hart N.G.
N. Ford, P. S.
G. M. LEE, E. S.
Unity Lodge, No. 101, A. F. & A.
M., meets the 2nd and fourth Wednesday evening of each month at their Hall in Galen block.
E. L. CLARK, W. M.
H. SAULSBURY, Sec.
Mount Helena Commandry meets 4th Monday evening of each month at Unity Hall foot of Broadway.
E. L. CLARK, E. C.
J. B. BASS, Recorder.
Meridian Chapter meets the 2nd Monday evening of each month at Unity Hall. H. SAULSBURG, H. P. A. Palmer, Sec.
Pride of Montana, No. 4. K. of P. meets the 1st and 3rd Monday evenings at Unity Hall foot of Broadway.
SPENCER SMITH, C. C.
E. L. CLARK, K. R. S.
Besheba Chapter, Eastern Star,
meets 1st and 3rd Thursday evening of each month at Unity Hall, foot of Broadway.
Mrs. R. J. ALEXANDER, R. M
Mrs. C. C. MATTHEWS, See.
Naomi Chapter, Household Ruth,
meets the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of
each month, at Unity Hall, foot of
Broadway.
Mrs. Cora Johnson M. N. G.
Mrs. C. Howard W. R.
St. James A. M. E. church, cor.
Fifth and Hoback; services Sunday,
11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Friday night
class. Sunday School class, Sun-
day 1 p. m.
Rev. B. R. GUY, Pastor.
Second Baptist church, 417 N. Main
St., services Sunday 11 a. m. and 8. p.
m. Sunday School 2 p. m.