THE MONTANA NEWS. itaj Safety .f Mwtwaj VOL. II. LEW'STOWN, MONTANA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1904. NO. 18.

farmer then it is necessary to know tures of communal administration of whom we speak. Even with the in the matter of landed property too 'She Farmers greatest care and the widest know• peculiar and too closely resembling T5he Socialists ledge it is almost impossible to those elsewhere considered in the avoid ascribing to the type what is case of the historical village com• characteristic only of a single sec• munity, to permit of any other sat Are For Peace Real Condition tion or class. isfactory explanation than that of If we are to select any particular inherited Saxon customs." Again section as a type, which shall it be? on p. 78, "Wherever in this common Shall it be the New England Yankee Saxon land the student may care to The American farmer is a distinct with any new ideas concerning bis wresting from his stumpy and institute researches into the begin• BY ERNEST L'NTERMAN'. and peculiar social factor. No other own industry. t rocky soil a niggard subsistence and ning of ciyic life, there he will find The enemies of Socialism claim is a calm and well weighed state• age has anything comparable to him. The reverse of all this is true in swapping his products with his if he digs deeply enough, the old that we Socialists aypeal to the low• ment of historical evolution through No other nation has his counterpart. America. The American farmer en• neighbors? If so, when we seek Saxon principle of land community- est passions of the moo, and set class class antagonisms, and no amount His problems, his history and his tered upon a virgin continent in him in his native states we shall find uniting men upon a common econ• against class. If this charge is made of ingenuity can overthrow the testi• fntnrc evolution present complica• more senses than one. It was as him displaced by French Canadians omic basis and around a common in good faith, it shows a superficial mony of history, since the introduc• tions and relations unknown else• free from social and political forms and Irish immigrants, and if we center." where. At the same time he is more as it was from industrial improve• understanding of the Socialist phil• tion of private property, which sub follow up his children wc shall It simply means that there in New closely united to great world ques• ments. The settler built a society osophy. If it is made in bad faith, stantiates this analysis. hardly recognize them in the tillers England the same economic condi• tions than any previous race of tillers as he reared bis log cabin. That it is a calumny. In either case, an It is true, the authors of the of the broad prairies of the west tions arose that in the time of Taci• of the soil. He is part of the great society, as is always the case, was explanation is due to the people who "Communist Manifesto" speak of a with a mind and hospitality as wide tus caused the formatioi of the iso• social development of his age to a determined by his industrial devel• are searching for truth. "revolution" and of "force." Hut and as fertile as the teeming soil lated communistic settlements desi• greater extent than the farmers of opment and his physical surround• The class struggle is not an inven• in the first place, at the time when beneath their feet. Or is the gnated as the Mark. The New any other nation, past or present, ings. The first of these was as di• tion of the Socialists. It is a fact the "Communist Manifesto" was American Farmer best typified by England village, like that of the tor these reasons the voluminous verse as human history, the latter which they discovered by a scientific written, there was no prospect of the early pioneer, that strange early (Germans, was a little clearing literature on the '''Agrarian (Jnes- as varied as terrestial geography. analysis of human history. The solving this problem by peaceful combination of hunter, fisher, lum• in the midst of the forest. It was tion" in European countries is of He came from a multitude of differ• class struggle was raging in human means in any European country berman, farmer, trapper and scout, surrounded by hostile Indians with little value to the student of Ameri• ing nations through a period of four society thousands of years before the but England. In the second place, now well-nigh extinct, but to whom no strong central government to can agricultural problems, save in centnries. However similar might Socialists discovered its existence Marx has later shown in his "Capi• we owe Lincoln, the best and most preserre order and protect the set• relation to the most general phases the traditions of those countries as and pointed it out. So did the strug• tal" that the capitalist class, by typical American citizen? Or shall tlers from its savage neighbors. of the subject. a whole, their customs and social gle for existance between organic revolutionizing industry through we find him in the south, amid the Fences were erected by common institutions were never simultaneous• and inorganic creation, and between concentration of wealth and indus• Any discussion of the subject in cotton, rice and sugar plantations? labor around the entire village, ly identical. Kaeh of them was in the various divisions of the organic tries, through the expropriation of Europe must, to a large extent, be And if here, is he white or black—a shutting it off from the rest of the a dif erent stage of social develop• creation, rage for uncounted ages the small competitors and of the based upon the survivals and rem• memlier of ante-bellum aristocracy world. * An independent owner ment, and the immigrant brought before Darwin formulated his defini• mass of the people, use more force nants of feudalism. The ure.it es• or "poor white trash?" If purity who would not fence against the the customs of the stage prevailing tion of it. Hut the first enunciation and destroy more property and lives tates had their origin in this social of American blood is to be the test, outward world, both giving and at his departure. America fused of the class struggle in human lang• than will the revolution of the work• stage. Hundreds of details affect the latter will demand first consid• taking the protection of neighboring these matvekmsly varied and diverse uage was no more a gospel of hatred ing class, which is merely the birth ing the present relation of landlords eration, for in few places is the fields, must move out and must let traditions and customs into an than was the assertion of the strug• act of the new society. to their tenants have their origin in foreign strain less present than a better communist approach to amalgam different from any or all gle for existance by Darwin. It was the days of lord and serf. The among the moon-shining, feud fight• seek family inclosure." The land The history of the Socialist a« liv- of then and then cast them in a simply the statement of a scientific manner of tilling the soil, the nature ing mountaineers of Kentucky and about the "meeting house," which itv in the parliaments of the various mold of such an intricateand unique fact in plain scientific terms. of ownership, even the order of the the Carolinas. Or is the typical was the center of all social life, as countries has amply shown that we a pattern that even yet no one has rotation of crops, are still more or American farmer the resident of the well as the geographical center of The first Socialists who pointed! are the only element in present so- been able to grasp its complete less affected by traditions of the great arid irrigated belt, a depend• the village, was assigned to the dif• »ut the existance of the class strug- ciety who really and truly want plan, to say nothing of comprehend• time when the land surrounding each ent upon a great water company, ferent residents in such a way that gles did so only to show their histor• peace. And above all, we know ing all its details. ullage was either assigned by lot to raising almost fabulous crops and those nearest the central point re• ical function in the development of and declare that in a country with the serfs of the lord or the manor, The conquest of the continent of receiving a beggarly return? Or is ceived the smallest share. The farm• society, and to declare that their aim the political liberties of the United :o be tilled by them according to America has been marked by a ser• he the Slav, or Italian, or Dutch ing land around the village was di• was the absolution of all class strug States, education and peaceful con• mstoms handed down through ies of social waves and until recently truck farmer of the city suburb, vided into the commons and culti• gles. This alone should be sufficient quest through the ballot must be uany generations, or else was held it has been possible to find simult- working beneath glass and aided by vable land. The former embraced proof to the unbiased mind that the the only means by which the class is "commons" for the free nse of taneonsly all stages of society from steam and electricity. Or shall we Socialist philosophy is a scientific struggles shall be ended. • pasture and forest land and was ill, subject to certain cu.tomary the half savage hrntet and tcout 10 find him upon the dairy and stock foundation for a new etiiit s, not a I wish 1 c .uld say ii much or sometimes assigned to individual emulations This system of feudal the highest developed and most con• farms of Illinois, Iowa and Wiscon• philosophy of hatred. capitalist class and their official owners and sometimes divided each sin was much the same in all centrated capitalism on earth. The sin? Or is he a fruit farmer, and In 1K47, Marx and F.ngles, who spokesmen. season by lot for cultivation while Cmopean conntries and hence con- continent on which this tremendous• if so is he in tropic or temperate then called themselves communists The Socialist conception of the the title was still vested in the com• fA titutes a common base or starting ly complex social problem is being climes? Is it all of these, or none, in distinction from fre I'topian So• class struggle is the ethical codu of munity. Even where the land was » >oint for all discussions of agricnl- worked out is as varied as the prob• or part of each, or a composite pic cialists of their time stated the fol• the working ( lass. It tea( lies the nominally owned in severality it ure in those countries. The result lem, it is characteristic of the city ture of the whole that makes up the lowing truths in the "Communist working class to educate itself. It could not be sold, especially to non• pv» s that whenever the word farmer is and especially of the city of capi• American Farmer? Manifesto:" endeavors to subdue the evil pas• residents, without the consent of JN^ ised a definite set of conditions con- talism, that it levels all before it. " The history of all past society- sions w hich the economic conditions It will be the object of the follow the community. A common herder has consisted in the development of of capitalist society , and to ing study to seek in some degree to for the cattle and sheep and often a CI class antagonisms that assumed dif• prevent the outburst of the untrain select from out these various ele• common sheep fold were provided ferent forms at different epochs. ed and untutored masses which ments the common factors and to by the village authorities. "Hut whatever form they may capitalist production inevitably analyze the fundamental facts and have taken, one fact is common to produces. Instead of sowing the relations that determine the present all past ages, viz., the exploitation seeds of a bloody revolution, we condition and probable future evo• Sheep Shearers Union of one part of society by the other. are straing everv nerve to arouse lution of the American Farmer. For the benefit of the sheep No wonder, then that the social the intelligence ai the niTftl and As we shall have occasion to no• shearers and others interested in consciousness of past ages, despite to make reason the master of blind tice frequently in the course of our this line of work, following will be all the multiplicity and variety dis• fury. investigations almost every portion found the "Scale of prices of the plays, moves within certain com• It is the capitalist class that in• of America has passed with more or hand and sheep shearers I'nion No. mon forms, or general ideas, which cites to class hatred by the vulgar less rapidity and elaborateness of 175 A. L. I'., for the season of cannot completely vanish except display of wealth in the face of the 1004. detail through all the stages of hu• suffering multitude. It is the capi• MONTANA ANI> wTOMUM with the total disappearance of man history from savagery to the talist class that destroys the homes Minimum prices for the season class antagonisms. most complete development of mod• and families of the workers, and of igoi in the states of Montana "When in the course of develop• ern social organization. New Kng confiscates the property of the mil• and Wyoming shall t>e as follows: ment c lass distinctions have disap land being one of the oldest settled lions. It is the injunction, the riot Eight cents per head straight and peared, and all production has been portions of the country and hence bullet, the bull pen, the police club, U'.i'd. or nine cents per head concentrated in the hands of a vast having been more nearly synchron• and the militia laws that speak the straight without board, for yearlings association of the whole nation, the ous in its social evolution «ith language of hatred and passion. ewes and two year old wethers; public power will lose its political Europe, exhibited these successive No Socialist makes any single cap• Nine cents per head straight and character. Political power, properly stages in much greater detail than italist or their whole class responsi• board; or ten cents per head straight so called, is merely the organized the remainder of the country. ble for their deeds. We recognize without Ward, for wethers three power of one class for oppressing At the time of the earliest settle that the capitalist classs cannot act years and older; another. If the proletariat during ments in New England, European otherwise, bet ause their own self in• Hucks to be two strings for each; its contest with the bourgeois i.-. society was still at that stage marked terest forces them to concentrate Shearers to pay nothing for tying compelled, by the force of circum- by common ownership of village wealthy, form trusts and use the po• w > >ol j stances, to organize itself as a class lands Hut the econo m ic conditions litical power ft r their own ends. Hut Shearers at all times to have the if by means of a revolution, it in New England were such as to we also recognize that the logical privilege of boarding theuisebes; makes itself the ruling class, and, develop a much earlier social stage counterpart of the trust is the trade Employers to have the privilege as such, sweeps away by force the and so we see a reproduction of the union, an org ini/ation which edu of furnishing machines and repairs; old conditions of production, then institutions corresponding to the cates the working class to class con• but where shearers furnish machines it will, along with these conditions, conditions in Kurope centuries In- sciousness in their economic dealings and repairs, all prices shall be ' have swept away the conditions for fore This does rot mean that the with the capitalists. We also recog• cent per head higher than given the existence of class antagonisms, traditions of these old conditions nize that the economic force exerted above. and of classes generally and will APANESE TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYER CRUISING NEAR were revived and the customs copied HIM thereby have abolished its own su• by the capitalist! inevitably begets froi.i the ealier days, or that they economic ton e on the part of orga PORT ARTHUR. Minimum prices for the season of premacy as a class. are traceable to inherited customs nized workinginen. Capitalist ethics Life on a torpedo boat dsatroyer In time of pence when th*» weather la 1904 in the state of Idaho shall be "In place of the old bourgeois vaim IM unpleasant mid datyproua enough, hut In 11 wluter emnpntgn the as some of the foremost historians is powerless to bridge this chasm, as follows: sin letv, with its classes and class atuatlon la well nlgb Intolerable. The Japanono who are wutchiug Tort of America would have us believe. because it has no solution for his \r" T from torpedo honta and torpedo bout ilentroyer* are suffering great Seven cents per head straight and antagonisms, we shall have an as class struggle between the capitalist anrdahlp*. Off the Uuaaian port the sea IN full of Ice, and hllr.Mrda aru (0 I'rof. Hcrl>ert II. Adams in board; or eight cents per head sociatioii in which the free develop •MM class and the working class. Hut "The (iermanic Origin of Nan straight w ithout hoard, for yearlings nient of each is the condition of the the class struggle is itself an ethical England Towns," (John Hopkins ewes and two vear old wethers; free development of all." I ni\ersit\ Studies. \ ol i attempts power. Tlio very necessity to orga Fight cents per head straight and There is not a word of hatred crning the fundamentals of the lit- London, Paris, New York, San to trace the evolution of New I K nize and to find a way out of the hoard; or nine cents per head taught in this statement, nor is there Frain I SCO and Yokohoma diller but lation arise in the mind. Whatever land town government from ;lie capitalist labyrinth by themselves straight w ithout board, for wethers anv sentence in the whole "Com liflew mca may exist in various tia- little in essentials. They are all acts as an educaton on the working time of Tacitus through (lei man and three years and older; ions the I uropenn fanner is always man made all .from the same pattern. munist Manifesto" inciting to class English history to America. He class, and counteracts all attempts of n hereditary peasant, generally ig- Hut the farmer is more nenr'v r Provided that in hatred. A scientific criticism, be it show; t'.nt the New Hnfttftd villages PVMJC ('OK K AIM the capitalist class to create belief in .)iant and reactionary, nnd de product of nature and relle< ts all couched in ever so sharp terms, has resemble those desciibed by l.u ittis the harmony between capitalists and lending upon a ruling class to direct the countless variation! of nature. Minimum prices shall be seven certainly nothing in common with a When we speak of the Atnen. even in minute details. Speaking of im in his work and to provide him fanatical appeal to passion. Here I I MtlntHK At ; 'vmonth, he savs, " There are fea (Continued on local page) !

whether wo As not do It does net rut ADD3 TO THE COTTON AREA. much figure In our treasury. Our atork- JUDITH-BASIN NEWS holdera would never know It. But you would know It. Your cities would know Paraguay la About to Engage In the It. Every man living In the broad Stats Culture on a Large Scale. J, II. WALHH. Publisher WARNED BY J. J. HILL of Minnesota will know It. If Mr. Cham• berlain's policy Is put In effect you will The recent advance in the price of know It gr»itly to your sorrow. r-otton In this country and In England LKVVISTON, MONTANA I said before we are ready to keep step England's Tariff Policy Means Death to the North• with you to the very farthest limit thst Is haa btlrnulated the culture of tho plant possible, but we ran t make ourselves n other countries. The possibility criminals In the eye of the law. Mmc. Patti will take home $400,000 west Unless New Markets Are Established. He asked the farmers what they were that the cotton manufacturers of the profits. If that Isn't farlas well, what doing to help. He Hald the people of world are facing the prospect of a Washington were awake and when they to! found that the Interstate commerce com• learth of raw material seems to have mission was about to Issue an order that excited the people of Paraguay. Cot• Within Ten Years Manitoba Can Supply England all rates made te or from Asiatic points It begins to look as if the Missouri shall be published they petitioned the ton grows wild In that country, and Automatic Fuel Stoker. commission to refrain from making such mule may aa well be getting ready With All the Wheat She Needs. the cultivated product, though differ• With the Introduction of the all an order because It would practically (or a aea voyage. give our rates to foreign competitors and ent from ours, has a long and fine sta• brake on railway trains the train• they would underbid the American rats ple. man's occupation no longer consists of Ths Minnesota Stats Agricultural so• Mr. Hill said that a year ago last win• and so divert the shlpmenta of produce Japan has millions for war, and It from this country to others. That mat• As In Peru, the plant Is a small tree the combination of calling stations and ciety held its annual meeting In Minne• ter he wont to the State of Washington to attend a meeting of farmers. They ter is now pending before the Interstate would do well to keep them for loco• rather than a little bush, and it lives handling the brakes, the latter duty apolis on ths 12th, ISth and Hth Inits. were getting less than M cents a bushel commerce commission. He read an ex• and produces for several years. Euro• having l>cen eliminated by an appa• motives and brlc a-brac. Ths conspicuous feature of the meeting for their wheat. He gave them a reduc• tract from ths memorial sent by the ship• tion of 10 per cent on the freight rate, pers of the Pacific roast protesting pean manufacturers have reported ratus under control of the man In was ths following* address hy J- J. Hill, but what he tried to impress upon them against having Amerlran commerce c;ood results from Its use. The Para- Turkey haa promised to make full president of ths Great Northern railway, was that they needed new markets. There handicapped In the Interest* of foreign charge of the engine, and enabling were not enough people to eat wheat In nations by auch unwise action as this. everybody, because we nil depend upon the man. as I aalil before, who cultivates gestions to (he government and assert the engineer to be his own fireman as to raise my hand or voice in whatever will the land, I want you to eee that our hat cotton will yet place Paraguay on well aa brakema^? It would certainly King Edward swore the other day help the country In which we live. The hands are not tied, that the markets are nation always has and always will de• •he high road lo prosperity. seem so, from the invention of a and now New York is threatened not closed to VS. and If the farmer Is pend for everything that goes to make have made has been greater than 1 • taxed 10 cents a bush11 on his grain snd They ask the government to employ western man, which Is shown In the with a shocking wave of profanity. the country worth living In upon the men a proportionate tax Is placed on his pro• expected Ave ycais ago to make dur- • the services of men of science, like picture. Should the point be raised who cultivate the soil. There la more In• lng my lifetime. • visions, his hogs, his cattle, his lard, his telligence, more patriotism, more of every• tallow, his cotton which he has to sell, Dr. Hertonl, to prepare pamphlets for ihat the engineer has enough to do In And jet many more persons have thing that goes to make good citizenship, • ••••••••••••••>•• going to Great Britain, bear In mind, you Last February and March the mills in distribution In the cotton trade of watching his engine and tho track been hurt in railway accidents thla on ths farms than anywhere else In the will pay the tax. When you have no Minneapolis began. In a small way. to surplus or only a very small surplus, Oreat Britain, France and Germany, ahead the answer can be given that year than in flying machine accidents. country. (Applause.) It ha« always been shin flour to Australia and to China and then they will come here and compete the arrangement Is almost automatic, so. from the early days to the present. to Japan. It seemed a long way to send for your food If they need It. descriptive of the nature and qualities Many of us here can remember what, a flour to market, from Minneapolis by way of Paraguayan cotton and tve facili• and only a little attention while stop few years ago, we called "the late un• of the Pacific coast to Australia, but by Trlde Before a Kali. Learned ethnologists have discov• ped at a station is needed to keep the pleasantness." The men left their plows taking advantage of all the conditions You may say "Oh. well, they have got ties for producing large supplies of It. ered that all tnbh. within the arctic in the furrow, half way across the Held, entering into the question of transporta• to buy their bread from us or their peo• They ask that Dr. Bertonl. Mr. Anlslts circle are of one race—tLe blubber to follow the flag of their country, and tion, loading our cars In both directions ple will «tarve." I will call vour atten• tion to I he fact that twentv years ago and other experts be engaged to make ths farmers' eons were the men who most with full loads, we were able to give a race. rate from Minneapolis to Hongkong of the Province of Manitoba did not export distinguished themselves. Country life Is a survey of the lands adapted to cot 40 cents a hundred- 40 cents a hundred S bushel of wheat. Of the last crop It ex• a better ltfs to develop a man than that for 8.000 miles- Ss a ton! It is a mill a ported i (MO bushels. At the rate vour ton cultivation In the republic; also There are heavy fogs in Paris this In ths city. It gtves him better oppor• ton a mile the lowest transportation that American farmers are going Into that that the government print and distrib• tunity, if hs will take advantage of it. ever was thought of on the face of the winter, owing no doubt to the sud• country. In ten years they will raise all ute among the farmers of the lowlands And I want to Impress upon the fathers, earth. The rate of transportation from the wheat Ureat Britain needs. Then den good will between that city and and the mothers. If they are here, that here to New York (l.»a> milesi is i"> cents you will pay the tax, or you will hold the best information as lo the method* a hundred. a ton. It is 2.i*»> miles of London. their children in go-owing up on the farm vour wheat, or vou will find a new mar• 'j>f cotton-ralslng. ahould not look forward to the time rail transportation from here to the coast, ket You may then appreciate the value and then H.oOO miles of water. when they can leave It. when they can of the Oriental market. Possibly Its In- "We may In a short time export I have been charged with everything All Fools' day appears to have have their hair banged and soaked down i i th< to Blmmelsteln's. Between hogging that ten or lifteen vears will wipe them farmer in Minnesota shall send his wheat Increase being $4Ki.0O0. of which I14J* 0M being actuated by an auxiliary enginr where It goes to get the exhibits for was nt Thief River Kalla. out entirely. The trees that are left stand- to the Orient, ss thnt the man In Ohio pardons of and granting pardons to my Now. I commence in North Dakota obtaining steam from the boiler its beauty shows. Ing In your forest* are practically all shsll send It, because that much wheal Is taken out rf the markets In Eur ape. Larimore (west of Grand Forks shout near r.elghbors, 1 managed to read a Should the engineer discover his steam counted. You have In Minnesota the thirty milesi. Increased from tldl 00O lr few paragraphs In my newspaper. indicator climbing too high he ha? A man named Solomon is 'n trouble moat valuable Iron mines in the world, Well. now. our efforts In that direction lHS.i to lian.non In HUB; Park River from but you have no coal, you cannot make hsve been crowned with remarkable suc• 90O.QIM to HW.OfW; I^angdoii from f!>7 n-». One of them told of a remarkable And only to cut down the amount of feed at Hamilton, Ont., over a little mat• Iron. All you can do Is to dig Iron ore cess. 1 think I can give you some figures lo I3S7.000; Devils Lake from 11.12 n* by a Nippur expedition of the Univer• for a time, and even this portion ol ter of two wives. How the Solomons with steam shevels and take it to other that will be of Interest to you on that sub• to IS2S.0U4: Can do from |115.000 to tJM • sity of Pennsylvania. It was nothing parts of the country where they have coal ject. uin. I.'ugbv from Mrt.ooo to IP"..„, the work could be looked after auto have degenerated! Granville from nothing- to • »<» Mlnot and coke and can make the metal Into He quoted In detail the ports In Aus• $1.".: less than a well preserved and thor• matlcally by connecting a stop itfH Iron and steel. You cannot do It here as tralia and the Orient where shipments from fUM.OOO to M01.OIO; Souris.' where the road was built ;wo years ago am! oughly authenticated tallor'a bill near with the safety valve. There Is nr things are to-day. and it is very doubtful of wheat and flour hed been made, show• Prom the comments it is Inferred ing that for the fiscal year ending June the station two years old (we have notn- ly 5,000 years old. If iron will ever be successfully made In opening of the furnace door at fre• that New York considers "Parsifal" an. 4.3W.0K! bushel* of wheat and l..">t>5,- Irg bark five years ago to compare wit hi Minnesota. 4eS barrels of flour had been .hipped *•"*!».(««; Bottineau from $48 000 to I1N-J . Since Blmmelsteln himself Is en• quent Intervals to ascertain i.he con superior to Pete Uailey. but not quite That leave* vou the farm, from which That business has only begun, and > et every man In the state must draw his one. gaged In the clothing business. I dltltsn of the fire and shovel In more so good as Willie Collier. the largest orders for flour that have living Your cities, vour churches, your These ten towns, five year* ago had a ever come to Minneapolis from any quar• thought hv. *ould be interested In this coal, but the draft through the firebox schools, vour universities, your lawyers, business of $7313.000, sgainst git.mono ir ter have come from the Orient So great your dociors. vour merchants, your mill• the Mlnnesof i towns. Minnesota has ancient relic, so I told hlni about It, Is maintained continuously, and undei Sir Thomas Liptcn is accused of is this demand that to-day It is making ers everybody", make their living out of grown to I1.4.1.VO0O. or an Increase ol Itself felt In the price of every bushel of but ihe story seemed lo make no Im• these circumstances It should not be falling to live up to his financial ob• the men who cultivate the soil, and this «4v:. ooj> Dakota has grown from I7IR,. wheat that Is sold in this market. The must go on In Minnesota for all time nrw in $2,304,000, or an increase of *t - pression on him. a difficult task to gauge the apparatus ligations. Still, that's a commm fall• most intelligent Wheat authority I k" v Now. what are you doing to help the ."" noo told me. within a few weeks that the "Hang It. man," said I, "don't you so that the pro|>er amount of fuel farmer? To help him means to help ing for Jolly good follows. lowest estimate that he could make of yourself. The state has a most excellent understand? It's a tailor bill almost would be discharged into the combus• the enhanced price of grain, owing to I i Kt. *^ o experimental farm, or a department at• tion chamber continuously. this Oriental demand, was already 11'.• 4> The time has co-ne when vou are • •VwM years old." tached to the state university. It does The French MMtof who intends to cents, and he thought that actual figures • not growing a* fn«t a« you think vou*) little more now than help to get appro• "Veil," he answered, "vot lss it good would show it to be seven cents, a b ishot. • are There are large area* of the • subjugate wild African tribes by pho• priations for the other end. • best land In the Slate nf Mln- • for? Dey can't gollect it." Was Younger Thea . Now. If It Is Ave cents a bushel an ISO.- raisjllrag Handy Cover for Books. nograph in i .iess Mm to fit all the • t esota where there are not a* many • There was a time—twenty years last nm«*«i bushel* tailed In our three \ >r*t*i A acres under cultivation as there weio 4) So great Is the demand for literature cylinders wits "Hiawatha." spring In thin state, and particularly In western state*, it amounts to $l).(S*l.l«J0 • twelve or fifteen year* nero. Some e> No Plain Cooka. the northern part of it, when no rain It I* worth saving, it Is worth making in thla century that .n public convex SMn'ts of our road In Minnesota I go • fell fn>m seed time until the 1st of July. an effort to bring It about, and we haw Sir Thomas Home, the president of • through at nlirdit beenuse I don't want 4t am os people will be lound devourine, The duke of Roxburgh** renews his The grain stood green In the fields, barely In every way In our power tried to make • to see the absolute neglect snd In-• the Canadian Pacific Kuilroad. made diving. In July some copious showers it possible to carry that into effect. the contents of bookn while on their declaration that he will never come • famous farming. • fell, and they made a little more than Now. what help do we get' recently a tour of inspection over the to America again. Nevertheless, we • ,•••••••••••••••• way to business. To meet this want half a crop. I didn't know as much thei If any of you gentlemen think thst T Pennsylvania line from Philadelphia ihe publishers are Issuing nearly all wish you a hajpy f'ew Year. as I do now. a I was younger and had have painted the picture In ton high col• When we make a rate that is the •o Pittsburg. less experience. I thought 1 would heu> lowest rate that ever was made for ors bv calling your attention to what of the standard works In small vol the farmers of the state, so that they Mr Chamberlain Is doing, and to what transportation in the world, we have Sir Thomas was much pleased with nmes. which can he- slipped In tip Thla year has added 5,723 miles to would not depend on one crop. I thought to defend ourselves from the state Is t'le absolute and Immediate effect that I would help th«m to some good stock the service and cuisine of his dining and from the nation because we are you may and must look for, I will be pocket or grip and carried about with the mileage of railroads in this coun• and cattle and hogs. And In my Inno• "restraining trade!" Absolutely de• ready to answer for the faith that is In car. He inspected the kitchen and cence (laughter) I thought when they ease. One difficulty, however, has try. Let us sje that this does not fending out selves from "resttuining me. I know I am right, and I know the had the opportunity they would take ad• time Is coming when you will have to showed great Interest in the skilled risen in the frequency with which Increase the number of collisions next trade!" It Is said that If we have vantage of It. I got together some excel• bear an additional burden of from twentv maneuvers of the cook. lent herds of beef and dairy cattle for the power, the power must be used 4> these volumes become soiled and tra\ year. to restrain trade. 4> to thlrtv million dollars s year In these myself, and I brought out within two three Northwestern statea unless you The cook, who was something of a •••••••••••••••« years, mainly from the North of Kngland can find a n»w market for vour stuff. '"'.ey forgot that In order to compete wag. described to him distinguished It Is rumored that Mr. Morgan of• and Scotland, about WO thoroughbred Where will you go? Csn you taks It bulla. Something over tlOO of them were with the merchant marine of every na• there for nothing? visitor the kitchens of the great New fered $260.""0 for the or.ginal manu• tion fl>lng a commercial flag on the high distributed In this state and less than *•> The African will est corn meal. He York hotels, where the walls are of seas that we must have power to catry script of "Paradise Ix>n." Wonder In North Dakota. Now I want to say doesn't care so much for wheat flour. If that the people of North Dakota derived that trade forward. It takes power lo is a singular fact, but It Is true, that glass, the floors of vitrified brick, the what he'd offer for 'Paradise Re• more benefit from less than '.''«> than the carry that trade to the extent we have every nation Including India, once thev tables of white marble, and the cook• gained?" people of Minnesota did from 00". What carried It. Who else has carried It? Who get wheat Hour, prefer It to all other did they do" Most of them sold them else haa raised their hand for it? Hat food I was ta'king to an Intelligent ing utensils of German silver. (Laughter.) I gave the pigs and they they forget the greater contains the less. Japanese the other dav—a professor In "A great hotel chef." he srld, "has What a vast sum that Missouri man killed them In ths fall and they were The power to expand a trade and build one of their universities, and in his good winter pork! (laughter I This is it up and make it great and make It pos• country an eminent physician. He told from fifty to aeventy five assistant* with the "scrupulous conscience" actually what they did with pigs thst I sible to ship a barrel of flour from here me that the c.au*e of their great tend• under him. I know one of these chefs must have secured by foul means brought from the old country or with the to Hongkong at 3U cents more than It ency to dronsical complaints was the stork which wss bred from them, and for costs to send it from here to New Yml large proportion of rice which they con• and I visited him two weeks ago. HU when he has returned by stealth more which I paid as high as Kino for a single that takes some power. The power to ex• sume, and that sn Imperial commission assistant cooks were all young women animal. ThoSe I sent them were Just ss than $2,000. pand trade makes us criminals, and w» had made this report to the government, good. They were misled. A lot of de• are defending lawsuits to-day because we snd for that reason they wanted to buv — the prettiest lot of young women • signing demagogues—rank demagogues— are charged with the power to restrain more of our flour ever saw. who care no more about the farmer than An Indiana man has written a finan• trade, and that If you have the power Now. you have always been In the habit. they do sbout the wind that whistles. It to She trade on you must ha>re I think, of feeling that we are at all times " 'Why. Gaston,' I said to my friend cial history of the world. Hut who they can get his vote, told the f a» r.iers awry some power somewhere, no matter hiw ready tn do anything In our power to help that I was trying to reflect upon the why pretty girls you employ!' cares anything about financial mat• you exercise It—you are a public criminal you, but when the exercise of power In great wheat-raising State of Minnesota, against the law of your country. iLauicn- the carrying of your business to new "'Indeed, they are pretty." said he No More Soiling of Bindings. ters now? What we want Is a treat• trying to Injure its good name by bring• markets, to take the place of ths market ing the best stock that I could find and ter.l Plnln cooks won't do here.' " ise on the liver. that you are losing, becomes a crime, ft stained while In use, often render distributing It free of price to the people Now the time Is coming when It won t and we lay ourselves open to fine and Im• of the state. It was discouraging, but I be my funeral it will lie yours. Mr. prisonment. I have got to tell you thnt lng them unfit for a place on th< kept It up and showed them that they Chamberlain a year ago took a leaf out Are Kind to Their Horses. we don't want either, and you have got shelves of the library without reblnd Those hand-painted stockings that might In Mlnnesots feed cattle success• of our political economy and started out to see. if you want to, whether your rep• Ev.dently there is one place whert —we learn from the fashion maga• fully, snd send csttle from Mlnnesots to a political campaign In Urcat Hiltain In resentative* are ready to stand lng, an expense t*Ki great for the mn compete with our friends from Illinois. I favor of there Is little need of a society foi zines—the girls are wearing now For or Against loar Interest. Jorlty of book-lovers. To servo as i fed stock ten miles from here, raised the A Preferential Tariff, As far ss we are concerned we are per• the prevention of cruelty to animals, should have been just the th ng to fodder they ate. and I have a hatfull of protection for book covers while beini fectly hnppy. As I said before, our divi• gold medals that 1 took in competition In In fsvor of a tariff under which C.r»st and that Is Jersey. The farmers thert up Chrlftmas eve. dends won't suffer whether we carry on* handled, and also to aid in marklni Chicago with our rrlenda from Illinois Britain would admit the agricultural barrel of flour or one million barrels of are so careful of their horses thai snd Missouri, and Iowa, and Nebraska, products of her colonies free, and the passages and Indicating the pages, th< hour. There Is very little In It. But snd Kansas, and Indiana. (Applause » colonies In return would give her free they do not work them more than li Little Robby von der Goltz of Cin• access to their markets, and tax every• there Is thla In It: I have always held, as convenient shield shown In the Hint body else; Oreat Britain, on the other a principle, that In operating a railroad absolutely necessary, and frequently cinnati, who found a $30,000 legacy iration has recently been designed, h Mr. Hill proceeded to say that one year hand, agreeing to put a tariff or a tax on our greatest prosperity came from the do work which la done elaewhere by in his Christmas stocking, was doubt• be sent only a single steer to the live the Imports of svei v other nation. ftreatest prosperity of the people living on Is preferably made of cloth, and li the line, and unless we can take the nat horses. less disappointed because it wasn't a Stock show St Chicago because they had The agricultural industries of this coun• fitted with pocketa, in which the cov pleuro pneumonia down there and he try are enormous. Last year the figures, ural resources of the country (and your If a farmer has to plow a heavy era are Inserted, while the center 01 red wagon or a pair of skates. took seven first prises. He had taken thn as I remember them, furnished by the natural resources sre confined practically sweepstakes sgalnst all of the states agricultural department of the general to what la raised on the farm) unless we piece of ground he Is obliged to use the back has longitudinal openings when he showed four or Ave animals. Hs government, gave three thousand million csn take the natural resources of the his team, but If the ground which it In which any number of small nhii.it Wos y Oil Is reported to be In hid• said he held for a Minnesota fed steer, dollars as the value of the products of country to some market where thev can be sold with a profit to the man who to be broken up Is light It is very ing. It Isn't likely, however, that a the highest record In the I'nlted States of the farms of thla country. Ureal Britain markers can be Inserted. The illuss percentage of dressed to live weight "4% raises them, who creates them, ths time and her colonies buy from us above '» probable that he will take the place tration shows the process of placing •nan with as much money as he is re• per oent killed In Chicago In competition per cent of all our exports. Suppose I* not far distant when wo will slop creating them or a horse. ported to ha\<- carrried away with with all the states. As illustrating profit they put a tariff of 12 cents a bushel on the protector on the book, the covers In stock raising In Minnesota, he related our wheat Remember that the aurpius blm can keep out of alght very long. You csn sell out or shar on your farm At first glance labor of thts klnc being drawn back and Inserted in ths that two years ago he bought a bunch of wheat we export Axes the price of the en We cannot absndon our railroad. W« steers snd took them to his farm «en lire crop, that which we sell among our• might sell the shares, but the railroad may seem very Irksome, but It really pockets simultaneously. It la a aim miles from Minneapolis He paid 130 for selves snd thst which we sell lo go must t.e there it Is under contract to pie matter to cover the book, and any With riots and murders and hold• Is not, for the farms In Jersey are ths steers, gave them Si a worth of food abroad. The suiplus grain always fixes be operated and it has got to lie operated one can well appreciate the merits ol ups making life exciting in Chicago, snd sold them at 170 per head, a profit the market price. If your wheat (• taxed Now. It la our most selfish Interent to stnnll snd It does not take long to •f g.1fi per head. 10 edits u bushel on INO.OOO.ISSI bushels [oil the whole situation where It I* within cti'livate the ground. Still. In other having a washable shield soiled In• the Chicago pflice have received In your three Northwestern states It Now. If I can do this, sny fsrmer In your reach, within the reach of ths neo would amount to lls.uon.iKm That you places whore the farms are equally stead of the book Itself. strict ord-t* tl.it heieafter— they the state ran do It. If he only will. The pi- living on the line, to develop the have got to pay. These conditions ure time will rome when he must do It. and [oral Interests, whatever they may he. small, no one thinks of sparing the must keep their trousers nicely not far from you. Kvery day you see in It is everybody's Interest in the state to with a profit to tbem*elves. or else our Mrs. E. B. Schreak, of Philadelphia, the newspapers that Mr. Chamberlain is horses, and there Is little doubt that creased. eee thst he has a fair opportunity. Investment Is worthless. And. following winning his way. He has made mors Pa., Is the Inventor. Hpeaklng of ths public domain, he raid' that up, I hsve tried In every way that up to-date agriculturists consider the progress In ths first year than he ex• There was a time when our popular I could to find new markets for your pected to In the first three years when he Jersey farmers far behind the times Fancy what a dull place the Island campaign song was "ITnrle gam Is rich stuff. Before we built a mile of road took It up a year ago, and it Is only u Telephone and Phonograph. snough to give us a farm." To-dsy he west of the Rocky mountain* we hsd men because tn the kindness of their of HajU would be If they didn't have question nf time when yuur have got >,> has not any farms to give us that we can in the Kant seeing what the business was The Ixindon Dally News says that par this tax If you send your wheat to hearts they are aa lenient to their those revolutions. You csn't expect cultivate. All af the agrlrultural land snd how far It might lie developed. And Ureat Britain. an English engineer named Ernest that can be cultivated without Irrigation we have kept men there from that time horses as possible. people to be satisfied with no other George Craven, who for some tlniw Is gone, and the people are selling their Now, what will you do? What other to this excitement than chicken lights and homes In the tTnlted States snd moving market have you got? You may rely He ri ad quite a lengthy report from an was one nf Thomas A. Edison's as• Into Northwestern Csnsds, west of Win• The Masquerade. the break bone fever. on us; you fay say. ' We are depending agent In China, which he bad Just re• sistants at Menlo Park, has Invented nipeg, where they can buy land at from on you to give us this Oriental mnrket. ceived, showing how llusala and other 9*. to 110 an acre. More people have gone Masked dancers In Ho- Hi of life a machine which combines tho prop• We cannot disobey the law. (Applause.) countries were getting their grasp upon We move sedately wearily to• there than many of our men would like We will do anything In our power to help I>ong Oee. a Chinese laundryman the commerce of China and the Orient gether, erties of the telephone and phono to acknowledge. They have a Inrge area you. We have from the beginning. generally to the exclusion of the prod near No* Work, has applied to the Afraid to show a slejn Of Inward strife, of country A couple of months ago, at urts of the tTnlted States grsph. As the sound Is received over We hold our souls In tether. courts for a divorce from his wife, a Illsmsrck. I made a statement In regard •eeeeeeeeeeeeeee Now. I have read you thl* to show you the telephone It Is recorded on a wax to their country, snd was to some extent We have l»d In every reduction of that It Is not all fun It Is not the easiest Chinese woman, and nil their friends We dance Willi proud and smiling Hps. cylinder, from which It can lie repeat- misquoted, and I will take occasion to rste* on agricultural products thai task to compete with nil the nations for and acquaintance feel Intensely and corrert It They have an area north of has been made In twenty years In With frank, appealing eyes, with shy their trade, and with all the adverse con• hands clinging ex! when desired. Several successful us equal, practically, to that of the the Northwest We have never need• ditions we have to meet. And It Is a still thoroughly scandali/.ed at his Amer• United Btstes. Only a comparative!* ed a spur. We have Increased the We sing, and few will question If then demonstrations. It Is statetl, have been harder Job when we are told that It I* slips ican conduct small poii p.ti nf that ran lie cultivated traffic a* fast as we could, snd by a given at the Dally News office In lam- against the law to do II. And when It A sob into our singing. with profit. They probably have an area larger tonnage ws srs able to reduce cimes to a point where you need I hat ttuee times that of the I'nlted States the rate. don. market. If you are burred out of It. It Rsch has a certain step to learn, Rill Nye's grave In North Carolina where they ran cultivate ths land with won't he our fault profit, and they rales good crops. North I mi pi Won, d firo no i order to reclaim ths public domain which A unsnlmous vote nf thunks wss ten• splendid. •aa now practically worthless. barrel of flour from here to HongHonk at dered bv the society to Mr Hill for his Hut all the rest tilp on as In a trance. the equipment nf the road will be 40 cents a hundred. Whether we do It or able addrase. Until the I HI nee Is ended nadc In this country. -Olive Custance. In Living Ags. VER EVANS WAS INVENTOR OF STYLES IN WOMEN'S GOWNS FIRST AMERICAN HORSELESS WAGON A SUBJECT FOR ARGUMENT

The world moves slowly until it gets and he now began to feel the burden of wherefore, nor will Us powers of dis• An Interesting question is suggested voice trerablen for I was tired and was meant to amusp; therefore it was a Egood start, and then It goes with a the poor Inventor. He knew what ha covery be any larger a hundred yeara •iy the address of the clergyman who, discouraged. The man and the wom• polite that one ahould be amused. whiz. Which may be the reason why could do, what he had done, but there hence. The way of the Inventor Is up the other day, poured the vials of his an looked at each other, and then the "Teacher fools," he chuckled. the world has gone ahead faster and was no man with money who thought hill all the time, past, present and fu• wrath ujion the Immodesty, foolishness woman .laid: 'Igarka ain't slngin' In skies." ind extravagance of the fashions of flintier during the last six thousand as Oliver did, and ho struggled along, ture. Evans was dead and burled " 'Indeed, miss, we didn't know we 'How do you know?" asked Miss •he period. years than it did during the previous aa the moneyless must. nearly a dozen years before Peter were hurting you—we wouldn't do Halley. tlx million years of Its existence. As He did not confine himself exclusive• Cooper went down from New York city "In the most degraded days of that for worlds. John and me, and If " 'Cause we got a lark by our house. the Creator of the world had to watt, ly to steam engines, or road wagons, with an engine he had built at his France," said ho, "the gowns of women it will j-.ake you happier, we'll try It's a from tin lark mlt a cover." were not nearly so low. so given to mid no doubt worry, a long, long time but Invented, among other things, a glue factory, and proved to the man• again.' "A tin lark! With a cover!" Miss falling away as Is considered good before it became fairly started. It la process for flour making, which al• agers of the Haltlmore and Ohio rail• "As for their goodness to each Bailey exclaimed, "Are you sure, dear, "orni in society to-day." not to lie wondered at that men in most revolutionized that manufacture, road that an engine could be success• other, '.t is beyond all praise. The that you know what you are talking utcr times who seek to Introduce and mado him a little money, which he fully run over the crooked thirteen Now. if the morals of the French nights spent In watching sick neigh• about?" Revolution are the goal of womankind •omethlng new and strange must also spent at once In developing his other miles of their track. And he had been bors, though no rest can be looked "Teacher, yiss, ma'am, I know." Mor• at present, it would be a great relief lor on the day that follows—the meals wait and worry before it gets a start. Inventions. He also made the first under ground a quarter of a century ris began deliberately. "My papa, he to know If they are to be pre- or post- shared—'the nameless unremembered Skipping the hundreds of inventions high pressure engine, a long step in before his dream of a road between has a lark It's a from tin lark mlt a -evolutionary morals. In fashion, these acts of kindness and of love'—one has nf the last thousand years, we come advance of the Newcoiwn and the New York and Philadelphia came true. cover. Und It's got a handle, too. two varieties were quite as different to live among th"m to realize these." to MM automobile, which In some re• Watt engine. In 178C the legislature of Maryland t'nd my papa he takes It all times on as the clothes with which they were ject; Is the latest of the really great At eighteen that Is, In 1769. Cug- granted him the right of way over the store for buy a lark a beer." vorn. The Real "Pina" Gauze. "Lager beer! O. shade of Shelley!" The fashions of the first period were "Pina" gauze, made by the women groaned Miss Bailey's spirit, but aloud elegant, elaborate and ma

roads in that state tor his horseless wagon, but it was cot until .804 that the actual horseless wagon was demonstrated. In that year the Philadelphia board of health wanted the water cleaned about the docks, and Evans was given a commission to build a machine for he purpose. He put his ideas into « iron and turned out his "Oraktcr Amphibolos." of "Digger." a horseless carriage on the road and a sallless v ssel on the water. He had become so poor that his wife was compelled to spin tow cloth and sell It for the family sustenance, and now, when his wagon was made, it was too heavy, and to reconstruct It the workmen offered their services Mai! UM de Pompa'lo'ir, one is inclined tree to help him out. At last the wagon, to think not and to suspect that that the first automobile In America, was IStHte person had MM other reason. completed, and it was put on exhibi• The extraordinary frankness ot the tion at Central Square, where the Directofy fashions is too well known city hall now stands. Here it was to re d des.-ripilon. but it Is doubtful run around the square dally and the if the low cut of the shortwalsted cluck when a litter public was Invited to pay a shilling a bodir-es was by any means their worst round the old hen. head to look at It, one-half the money feature. They at least had a small And her mid-winter cackle, how to go to the workmen, the other half wiring for the upper part of the arm. ry, above the new nest she has to the inventor, not for his support, out the V shaped eorsage'of the '80s made; it .lotifies hearts all aweary, but to be expended In further Improve, .ind not the vestige of a sleeve and was another fresh egg hrs been lael; and ments. very low in the neck besides. when the old bird waxes heavy and After the "Digger" had proved that In fact, for sheer silnglne.-.s of cover- spikes alone, is as delicate as chiffon aged and lazy and fat. well cooked, It could go by its own power on land. leg those V-shaped bodices were and far more durable. They use only with good stuffing and Kravy, there's It was run down to the, Schuylkill, unique, r.nd yet the days of the '80s the best kavus and these, tied into great consolation In that.—London where a wheel was rigged at its stern are. on the whole, held to be extreme• bundles, are placed unuer heavy Answers. and it took to the water, soing down ly res;" r-table ones. stones in the bed of a running stream. to the Delaware river and to Its des• What ftfcmMthn t reign of the low Alter two or three days of this treat• Would Profit by His Death. tination, sixteen miles, passing all sail• 77Erszpsr JJIZ&SC&V jyaesizsfJ „ aecked frock In the early half of the ment they are exposed for a time to One of the newest of Sunator De- ing vessels on the ay. nineteenth century, that peri id when tne action of sun and air. Each piece pew's stories is that of a man who The "Digger" answered the purpose respectability was inthrnned and ex• is closely inspected to make sure that resides at Peekskill and who is known innovations, the latest of the epoch I not's year—he went to Philadelphia as for which It was built, but it did not cessive refinement, not to say squeam- the process of decomisisition was thereabout for his sporting proclivi• makers, so to speak, Iweausc it does la wheelwright's apprentice. Phila- open the pocket books of the capital• ishnei-s and prudery, was the order thorough, and if it was not the leaves ties. mark an epoch in road transportation. I delphla was no more rapid in those ists, and Evans still struggled on. id" the du> ? During that period gowns are subjected a second time to the He was recently invited by a friend. We call it a new thing, but it li not. \ days than its is reputed to be now. Spectacled and gray at forty, he wa? were norn low morning, noon and operation. The fibrous threads are at A« early as 17»i9. oue hundred and | and Evans did not get on very fast. wrinkled and old now. but the spirit last wholly si parate from the cellu• 'hirty-four years ago, Joseph Cugnot. ! In some mysterious manner he man- was strong within him. and he kept lose and lignose particles and cleaned a French artillery officer, had a road | aged to eke out an existence, and on. By some means he secured a I mm the ; ap and gummy substan.e. v.agon In operation transisirtlng artil• even to marry, but he could not get hla shop, where he did engine repairing The whole is then beaten with a wood• lery. It was not a success, but it set horseless carriage on the road, nor when he was not busy with his en mallet, grooved on the faces like a ku example which its successors of «<>- could he prevail upon capitalists to as• dreams, and he made a comfortable fluting machine. The threads are kept I'.ay are still prone to follow, to wit, It sist him in building a railroad from living for his family. Hut this was too moists while this beating Is in prog• ran away, and. butting Into a stone Philadelphia to New York, ono of the good luck, and on April. 11. 1819, his ress and the separate threads are thu:i fence, wrecked Itself. / Rude road great dreams of his life. siiop was burned to the ground, de• blended Into one mass. In color the wngons were also devls* by Engl'sh- Blind as the world was. this strug• stroying all his papers uud his pat fillers vary from cream and light gray tii< :i a few years later. rnd one made gling Inventor and visionary saw the terns. It was a fatal stroke to this - lo pure while. After Ihe "pineapple Uy Matthew lioulton, ' «irtnei of James true light ahead and of It lie wrote to man of sorrows, but he met it bravely 1 cloth" is finished figures are stamped Watt, frightened horn. and people Just a newspaper: and went at once to New York to sc on it witli blocks und afterward work• tis others do in this day uud genoru- "The time will come when people cure means for re-establishing himself ed or embroidered by hand. •lon. will travel in stages moved by steam There the reaction came, and the Com In the year 1751. eighteen years be• ! at fifteen to twenty mile* an ho"ir. merclal Advertiser of April Hi, 18H». fore Cugnot's wagon hud appeared. I A carriage will leave Washington in contained, under the head of "Deaths." She Was Grateful. Oliver Evans was born at or near the the morning, breakfast in Baltimore. this notice: Mr Browns bii>iu< ss kept him so little town of Newport, in the little ! dine in Philadelphia and sup in New "Y'esterday. nt the house of Elijah occupied during tiie daytime that he Mali'of Delaware. Oliver's father and | York the same day. Hallways will Ward. Oliver Lvsus. Esq . of Phlladel hail little opportunity to enjoy the so• •uother w« re thrifty people ot the plain be laid on iron or wood, or on smooth phla. In his sixty-fourth year." ciety of his ow n children. When some »ort, who wanted their boy to bocoru • national holiday gave him a day of ! paths of broken stone or gravel, to That was the end. The body was • farmer, and so hi' was apprenticed, leisure his young son was usually his ] travel as well by night as by day. Poa- burled at the old Zlon burying ground, but Oliver's mind was on mechanics, cho; en companion. One day, however. I terlty will not be able to discover why whence many years later It was re especially on engines that conl I take Mr. Drown, reproached by the wistful the legislature or congress did not moved lo Cypress Hills. Long Island llM place of horses in drawing wagons. eyes of his 7 year-old daughter, re• That Falling Away Effect. grant the inventor such protection as where it rests now in an unmarked and he left the far.u and went 1> might have enabled him to put th< KC versed the order of things, and invited grave. Oliver Evans is forgotten, but the owner of a tine sloop, to go sailing to potter about a blacksmith shop Just great Improvements in operation soon- the Utile girl to gu with him for a long his works live utter hlin. and the auto The Modern Decolletage. on the Hudson A squall came up. around the corner from his house. 1 er. he having asked neither BMW | nor walk. tnoblllsts of America should find his night, and in full dress had that falling and during the excitement that M In time, by the aid of the blacksmith i a monopoly of any existing thing." She was a shy. silent, small person, last resting place nnd erect ov r it a. away effect, wh'eh UM clerical critic sued the owner of the sloop was lie had constructed an engine model • F.vaus -An* right. Posterity ha- not and during the two hours' stroll not a MMJMMt wiithv of the man Wiil quoted so much deplores, to an extent pitched Into the water. While the ilu.t worked. Hut he had no money. I been able to discover the why or single word could Mr. Drown Induce lam J. Lamptm in New York Herald which surely || not equaled tivday. mau iivei t-oard was struggling for his the little maid to speak, but her shin• As a final bit of evidence, contem• life, the friend, who could tot swim, ing eves attested that she appreciated and who therefore made no attempt to Wrote* Ceod Luck. plate the costume of those refined and Strength of Paper Money. Had Pride in Her Town. tils efforts to amuse IIIT; Indeed, she artistic peoples with no morals worth go to the rescue of his companion, "Kn-.no wo! lev." said the Chestnut 'I'll i the pupcr money of tin- United fairly glowed with suppressed happl "A young North Carolina girl gave spcallng ot. the ancient Greeks uud peered nnx'.ously over the nude of the Street rt'Kcrve. .ire so supers! Ulcus .-'i Hi " endures a vast amount of rough nor.s. me a center shot the other day n* s the Italians ot the Middle Ages. V "SHel. Ibfl the;. *•. ,ii to think It s bad luck aid careless handling Is a fact that Just before Ihcv reached home how• token of that pride of locality which Tin bosom Is covered, Ihe throat " Aby! Ahy!" he called out MJaM • •> pas* a pl:t without picking it up. must have been Impressed upon any ever. Ihe child managed, but only Is more pronounced in the South than only modestly exposed and the body edly. when his frli nd's head ipfMaWMl Wl eii t r i KJ are crowded with one who has ever observed th- man after | tremendous struggle with her elsewhere ' rald Mr. ||f.lT O Con cVithcd with voLimlnou.i am! statc'v above the water for an Instant, "if • Lo; p< : - vc ii vwmld think they would in r In which the av< rage cashier pulls Inherent timidity, to find word» to ex• tiers of Haltlmore. at the Kbblft i'ra perles. you don't conic up for the third time n't Have nine'' time to bother with and Jirk* the hills he counts before press her uralilude. Tiling-' are rot always what thev i an I have the !«>al?" •iieh tt.'ii-c tun that's where you are pushing tin in ihiourh the window to "II was quite a small place, hut It "Papa, what flower do inn like sei m lo In In till - world An authority •front Tliero was a perfect bio. ksde the waiting pat i o:i, says the Suturduy boasted one very fine hotel, ai which best ? she asked. on the pr-yi bology M modesty and | Whet Capers Are. :it ti!> e> r: e this morn lug ml < itised Evening Post 1 slopped all Rlgfct After n g,Mlil "Why. I dent know, my dear sun• ekrtblni bcHeves thai the genesis of The caper of commerce Is ihn liy an etJirl. I BMM who hnd MMgM A single treasury note measures :i<» break fait I pal I my Mil to Ihe grown flowers. I guesi'" modesty is to lie fi Hi la 'he activity pickled flower bud of a shrub thut i if iit i f s pin lying o.i the pavement. Inches in width by 7'« Inches In daughter ..r the lady who ran the "Then." cried the Utile girl, beam- l i Ihe midst o.' which it appears and grows In vvustr plaei I of southern M once s' e flopped down without nny length It will MI. tain, without break• tavern und who was quite up In the ing with gratitude, that's what I'll Mini it has primarily no contu ct ion Europe. Marseille* alotc exports ie ir l for the ether people who were ing, lengthwise, a weight of 41 duties of a cashier. plant on your gra\ e Woman * Home with clothing whatever."—New York about $."i.*lo worth per year to the Mnlk'.nr 'long. MMl tried lo pick It up. l«.undt.; crosswise a weight of !•! "'You have a nice little t„wn j,er(. Cotnpntilon. Sun I'riltid Stales. The business if rais I »"t* glovis. uud the pin eluded IMinnd?. The notes run four to a miss.' said I. trying lo make friends ing nnd preparing capers itil^ht well Per grabs' Ag.tin and again she at shcel II sheet being 8>4 inches wide with the good-hKiklng clerk, •but 1 The Affectionate Poor. His Tin Lark. J he tahen up In California. Ike arid I mpt.d to eikytui-e It, but It always by 13'fr inclnM long. One of the a hurls must suy ma' I never knew there was The pour have exceedingly warm One day M1*s Halley brought her lasds of the cOtlthwc t und feme of managed to scrape her. of course, lengthwise will suspend 108 pounds, such a town on the mafi till the South• affections, an dare easily guided by Shelh r down ami n-ad his "Od< • to Ihe southern Life in .til tlii« rail) tuok a few moment*, but and cims wise 177 pounds ern Hailr-osd laaded tie- here rest , state Com try them. On one oceaslon." says a tfce skylark." \inerlcn n'.. iftij titer* Wa unite s block, and It will !»• noteit tliat a single note Is day ' womsn philanthropist. In Everybody's "Now, diHi't ynu think that's a pretty people wi rr walking lu the street to • ipaMl "f sustaining, crosswise, a "Kylnr nie coolly and looking tm Msgairiiie lor .Innuarv. "when I had thing?'' she asked. "Did you Ie n Row •aw His Finish act nrou'id liei Kinsi - what did she wilght of »l pounds, which Is twice squarely In the eye. the Tarheel mnid argued for an heur with a quarreling the lark went singing, bright and clear, Ther' wn-. an old man who said "tee' do led id bin i ale!) remove the glove Ihe amount, be nine pounds, of the en said: 'Wlmre l.e >ou from, mis husband and wife without bringing up and up and up into the blue sky?" My life's been on • long Jamboree. iron, hi i rL;ht hand, pick up the pin weight ihe note can sustain * ngth I er?' I owned up to Haltlmore. and reconciliation any nearer. 1 said: The children were carefully at'ra I've hit such a gait with her 1 • ,t• itMgi rs sud stock it Into wise; while In the case of the sheet, this Is what she handell me Well. 1 'Well, you must go your own way, but live, as ever, but responsive. Morris That I feel. I may state, the lipid of her coal. And. having the crosswise sheet lacks 39 pounds n ri.on there's lots of folks In Haiti- >ou are simply breaking my heart Mogilewsky felt that he alone under• There's a hot finish coming to me.'* Nfljjslled herself, irafiic was once more of double the sustaining power of the more that are Just as ignorant as with your foolishness.' 1 bullevo ' . stood the nature of this story. It —Princeton Tiger. resumed."- Philadelphia Record. lengthwise sheet. you.'"- Washington Post. rs Till: MONTANA NEWS. reading in all public schools and months ago, from the pen of AI. colleges, legislative bodies as well, Sellers of this county.

ISSUED WEEKLY. and in fact all places of a public na• The Miners Magazine headed it ture to which Catholics and Protest• as above suggested, "Anarchy From J. H. WALSH ants share alike in the expense of Montana." But a brief review will Editor and Proprietor. maintaining, and confine bible read• throw a side light that will fully ex• Printing ing within the home or church. plain that Mr. Sellers was not far Entered at tli>- Post Office for transmission from the right proceeding, when the through tho mail at second class rates. A Vtvn For Montana military is to trample over all free

SUBSCRIPTION, tt.50 PER YEAH. There is no doubt in the mind of American constitutional rights. His the editor but that the teaching of import of the article was for the Advertii-i'iif RaicR made Known upon applica• Socialism must be carried to the ex• union men to arm themselves with tion at thin office. ploited farmer, before we shall carry Mausers and about 500 rounds of Judith News 4W Office in the Prank Pick building.rear of our banner to victory, and many amunition, and which act would be MOII'..I;.I Hardware Co. of the comrades appear to think that absolutely constitutional, as the the cheapest and most effectual way constitution guaran• would be through the Van wagon tees to every citizen the right to » Any subscriber not receiv- The farmer is not different from bear arms in his home, except in 1 ing the News regularly should the laborer, except that he is ex• "Russiado," where union men vote • notify this office at once. It ploited in a slightly different manner. all tickets but the Socialist, scab at » only takes a one cent postal President Gompers of the grand the ballot box and starve in the bull ' card. Our mailing list is prac• Me sees quicker and realizes the true annex to Parry's citizens aliianoe conditon of the working class, than pen. He then made plain that the tically perfect, and many errors circus, says as follows regarding are carlessly made at certain does the laborer. In fact he reads militia usually called out on these Gov. Peabody of Russiado: WILL MO VE postoffices, and our readers the papers and studies the horrors of occasions was composed of ruffians, can assist us greatly in prompt• The violation of the fundamental the bull pen, the black list and the cheap clerks, rounders and thugs of On or about May 1st I will move my stock of ly notifying this office of the principles of our country has made same. bayonet, and sees clearly the condi• all sorts, and who were all cowardly Colorado the laughing stock of the drugs ro the Allen -Robinson building one door tion, but knows not the remedy, un• if they were forced up against a country, as well as the rest of the til he makes a study of Socialism proposition that "an equal break" civilized world. Besides, it robs east of Chas. Lehman's J* and becomes a class conscious revo• would be experienced. This class men of the actual rights and protec• Change in Name tion guaranteed them by the consti• *A L C. WILSON, Chemist and Druggist lutionary Socialist. of debautched criminals then, know• tution. It appears that if civil law Successor to D. B. Morris In accordance with an announce• How about the union man? An ing that if they forced trouble and continues to be overriden as it has ment, in a former issue, this week incident might be cited from this persisted in a reign of l'eabody in the past the fight will soon devel• the News makes a slight change in county. With a union candidate in anarchy, would get into a fight op from a technical legal conflict to its name, from The Judith Basin where no odds would be in their a physical one. That would be the the field for election, a certain num• most deplorable thing we could have LEND US YOVH EAR SI!J News to The Montana News. This favor, and in place of bayoneting It ban occare* to •• that many people bare a mlacoacepliaa af the .u H ami de- ber of union (?) men of Whiskey in a state or country with a republi• ; change is made on account of the KM < * of a Uankiait institution : an.l our aim is to aaafce it clearer tv ywc huw we aaadle Gulch scabbed at the ballot box on men into the bull pen and shooting can form of government. buniaea* catrastea to aa. fact that the paper is growing from In the tirat place we wi«h it anderstovd that all aalroaa reeeire eiiual trcatuacat al election day and then immediately down defenseless humanity, their oar hands, aarf the oaiaJI depositor receive* the be Beit of hi* accoaat equally with the a local paper to a state paper, and Gov. Peabody is not half as ridic• larger one. left for greener fields. Where did they own bodies would be forced to the It yoa caanot o|>ea a large ehc_* accoaat here, what yoa may be carr) iag araaad because it is expected to force it to ulous as (Jompers was when he dined la yoar i>oclict will he safe*-d< i>osi<.oa itnau Call and M aa. vent into that teritory have served Does it not look about true when that a "scab is a hero." Gompers should still retain a name that gives time in the bull pen. Now have they you think of the following told in is a traitor to organized labor and JUDITH BASIN BANK it a local appearance or significance learned anything about the class the associated press dispatch from his criticism of Peabody is entirely Main .Street and Fifth Avenue Lewistown, Montana and realizing this to be the case, struggle? Not a particle, probably; , Russiado? out of order. He stands for trades and not expecting to reach any fur• in fact are possibly looking for an autonomy and solely for a system of ther than the borders of Montana Defying the attachment of cav- opportunity to scab at the ballot box olry which brought Charles H. organization that will perpetuate the for soi:>e time, it has been decided again at the rate of $2 per piece. Moyer of Telluride to appear before present anarchistic system, and men that the slight change will be ap• the supreme court, W. D. Haywood And again as an election approaches like Peabody stand on the rulers proved of by all the Socialists, and we find members of the Western Fed• secretary treasurer of the federation PURITAN CAFE side—the side of capital—to fight possibly add to its force in the out• attempted to hold a conversation eration of Miners attending a Jeffer- that kind of an organization on its side field. with the prisoner while he was be• sonian banquet given in Lewistown, ing taken from the train at theunion own dung hill. Let (•ompers and «*T E. i CHRISTIE, Proprietor J» Mr. Henry Lynch will remain on whose leaders are citizens alliance depot this morning. Ordered to other leaders spend their time in the road as traveling solicitor and stand back by Captain Bulkley members, and they proclaiming vo• educating the laborering men to Hot "T^malies" if his efforts meet with the results Wells, commanding the guard, he ciferously thit the democrat ticket unite at the ballot box, and soon that they have so far, there is no will be elected from head to foot this struck the officer in the face. In a Always on hand. Rates made to parties second he w as surrounded by a cor• this anarchistic system that prevails telling as to what great improve fall that the prospects are good, don of angry troopers who struck at the present will be wiped out and or Societies for a quantity ments in the paper may l>e made. when a man with horse sense knows at him w ith the butts of their car• the cooperative commonwealth es• He is an unqualified hustler and the bines and beat him with six shooters. that they haven't a possible show of tablished. Peabody is true to the Best of Meals 35c Si? great number of subscriptions re• That he was not killed by the ex• electing but one or two in the coun• interest of the class he represents, ceived is evidence of his ability in ty. Why are they not howling for cited soldiers is due to the action of Bert (livens, the orderly of Captain while < .ompers is a fakir to the class NONE JUT UNION HELP EMPLOYED this field of labor. union men? Because they are not Wells, who struck up the muzzle of from which he draws a good salary. Every effort will be made to the union men, their records are shady. a gun aimed at Haywood and res• full limit of the treasury of the News' Considering these facts and realizing cued him from his position between The says: bank account, to make an Ai paper that the above is a true condition of two cars where the guardsmen had him cornered. out of the News, and to devote its a certain number of union men who It is estimated that during each SHAULES HOTEL year 120,000 residents of t s United columns to Socialism, and especially can never be won through education, Placed under arrest he was put in the middle of a hollow square of States go abroad and that each of it behooves us to look for our ma• to this state, and the more assistance militiamen, and marched to the Ox• them spends on an average $700. KENDALL MONTANA loaned us in the subscription line jority to be among a class of people ford hotel near the depot. Here he That would make a grand total of the better paper will we be able to who will read and study the economic 184,000,000. Considering that it is again showed fight and was beaten ( The Best Hotel in Fergus County 3 publish. question, laying all prejudice aside, into submission. His injuries con• mostly wealthy people who make sist of a deep cut on the left side of these trips, the estimate for individ• Loan us your help on the sub• and finally voting for their own class Rates from $2 per day up l . would shoot any one who attempted tian a temperament that they con• been slighted so long; the field that ('lark, the multimillionaire senator to take him. But, nevertheless, un• sider war utterly abhorrent- It is rumored that another repub• The matter of reading the bible will return results; the class that der orders from Gov. Peabody, who bought his seat in the august lican paper is to be established in in the public schools of Idaho was produces the necessities of the world Haywood was surrendered to Sheriff body, and the article is written by After a stormy session the New Lewistown io the near future. recently brought before the state's and receive the least for their toil— Armstrong and placed in the countv one of his wage slaves. At the pres• jail this afternoon. York convention instructed their •NMM) there for final adjudication. the farmer. Populism won its great ent Mr. Clark is basking in the sun• delegation to support Judge l'arker Hearst doesu't appear to be the Thatotmial decided that the law strength with the farmer, and many Mr. Haywood made a mistake, ny clime of the pictuesque Mediter- as candidate for President His only pebble on the beach in New forbids any sectarian teaching in of the old populists of those days are even though the army officer had no reanan, while the laboring mule, is platform is "any old thing" the SL York. the public schools, and therefore in the Socialist ranks now. Thev can absolute right there in Denver under either digging in the bowels of the Louis convention adopts. This the bible is barred. Commenting go nowhere else. Although all of the existing circumstances, he made earth for three dollars per day, or must be considered as a decided on the same the Creat 1'alls Tribune their doctrines were not scientifically the mistake of not being ready for possibly getting five per day to pen THE victory for the opponents of Hearst. under date of April Xth says that, grounded, they did serve to create the trouble if he expected to precip• hog-wash of the above sort. Why However the latter is making some "F.very now and then somebody the idea of the class interest, and the itate the same. The army officer not wake up wage slaves and take a progress and will develop a support whose bigotry is stronger than his movement grew to a wonderful had no military authority in that trip yourselves? Remember labor NORTH-WESTERN that will surprise the conservative brain power protests against the strength. let the Socialists go into county, but when struck by Mr. creates all wealth, gets 1 7 per cent of LINE Haywood, the lickspittles in the wing of the democrat party. But bible being read in the public the same field, for it is ripe for the the same and gives 83 per cent to soldier garb several in number his chance of capturing the nomina• C. SL P. M. & O. RY schools.'' The editor concludes change, the advancement, the accep• the class of parasites who do nothing sprang to the man to beat or possi• tion is very slim. that the interpretation of the law is tance of the educational work. The but live in luxury and take foreign a narrow one and that there can be farmer of today is scarcely as well bly kill him. But had he had a few The Best People pleasure trips. Wright Hros., had a large ad in no harm in the reading of the bible off as the average wage slave, for he fighters with him on the ground where the Democrat last week, and simul• Demand the "Hest of Kverything" in schools, f ortunately, others aside is not sure of much of anything, man to man was an equal break the There is little danger of America taneously the paper had a lengthy which will always be found on from the editor have ideas and for while the laborer is sure of his wages damnable curs who beat him up becoming embroiled in the eastern editorial roasting the Argus for op• the famous this reason the bible is excluded if once he gets a job. with guns would have gone so fast war, because the rulers of America, posing Kd. Wright for a third term. from the schools in Idaho. Assum• that you could not have seen the our Morgans, Rockefellers, Clarks The Van proposition should be Things are in a great mix-up in the ing the editor to be of some protest- cowards for dust behind them. and Heinzes are in favor of peace, taken up, and above all things the demorepublican camp. NORTH-WESTERN ant sect it is dollars to doughnuts farmer must be reached with speak• Always be right, but once right so they can sell the stolen product that he would object to the reading of labor to the combatants. Our ers and literature. go ahead, stop for nothing. Had "He is worth a hundred millions Limited of the Catholic bible in the public capitalists only favor war when it is the above trouble occurred in San the most of which he stole." "Gra• schools. A considerable number of "Anarchy From Montana." to their advantage, that is when war All I ha com (dns of the club will lie found in Miguel county an entirely different cious! and he belongs to the the Injurious lluff.t Library Car the privacy persons discover in Bishop Ouigley Since the scene that happened in aspect would have been cast upon pays big profits, just now peace is of a home In thr Compartment Cars, the Ifaaajl church." of Standard l'ullman Sleeping Cars, and Kree of Chicago a very narrow mind• the part of Mr. Haywood. the best paying policy for American 1 )enver, Russia (formerly Colorado) 'Oh! no the church belongs to Kecllnlua Chair Cara. comprise "the train for comfort." Three ..ili.-r line fast ed man- and perhaps he is, on the 21st when Chas. H. Moyer, But why continue this kind of a capitalists. All Kurope may join in trains daily him." Puck. from the but these individuals evince the president of the Western Federation farce fight. Let us drop all this and the fight for foreign markets much same bigotrv when it comes to their of Miners was escorted before the get down to business. Let us pro• to the advantage of our industrial It appears that Hryan is not for TWIN CITIES TO CHICAGO turn. What a wail would have went kings. During the war they will em• supreme court of that place by a ceed to educate the laboring people, l'arker for the presidency, and if MA. up had it been Catholic clergymen military coterie of hirling dispicable or possibly more properly put, the ploy a portion of the wage workers the l'arker strength should develop instead of protestants who initiated thugs and members of the citizens exploited class, and realize that the manufacturing goods to sell to the to be the majority power of the con• THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE the Sunday closing crusade in Chi present condition must exist until combatants. The producer will re• Kor Hales. Sleeping car rcscrvatioaa, mm alliance, the thought it called to vention W. J.,may bolt. tables. . tc. a.liln •»« cago during the Worlds Fair. As mind about an article that appeared we can capture the government ceive, in wages a very small portion C A. GRAY, <;»ner*t A rent WeV-ry Vonf. through the ballot box of the wealth produced. »»•«• v-,i-.„rr. for the News we say eliminate bible in the Miners Magazine some few ire r. w. TV i- CAUL* ...... ii Aa|| si Paul Dakota flour at Lehman's. SHEEP SHEARERS UNION Come to the handerchief sale next V Millinery V (Continued from first page) Wednesday given by the Ladies Aid &/>e ART MUSIC STOR.E Our Line of Millinery l« now Complete with all the latest styles of Hats and Trimmings as well as a large stock trim• Society. Ice cream will be served. cents per head straight and board; AO ENTS FOR ORTON BROS. med Hats ranging In price from $1.00 up 9 9 9) Remember the handerchief sale or nine cents per head straight with fS— Bucks to l>e two strings for each; PIANOS AND ORGANS We have refitted up our fruit and confectionery depart• It is the duty of every union man Shearers to pay nothing for tying ment and will handle everything in this line 9 and sympathizer to attend the dance wool; / V Murray & Murray V to be held in Cook's Hall, Kendall F. B. PETER50N & CO., Proprietors May 1 2th. The dance is given by Shearers at all times to have the privilege of boarding themselves; the North Moccasin Miners Union Employers to have the privilege OF A LOCAL NATIRL See Mrs. Culver for spring mil• in aid of the men who are on strike of furnishing machines and repairs; linery. in Colorado. but where shearers furnish machines ^» Pviritan CeJe Buffet J» It is the Montana News, how do Kendall notes of last week ar• The best 5 cent cigar in town at and repairs, all prices shall be cent you like it? rived too late for publication and Edgecombe's. per head higher than given above. BURKE & BUTLER Proprietors Vermont maple syrup at Leh• there being no name signed do not The best and cheapest pipe in WASHIM.TON AM) MMMM man's. know who to refer to. Correspond town at Kdjjccombe's. Minimum prices for the season of «A Finest of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ^ ents please send name and send Watch the bargain counter at the (let prices at the (lilt Kdge Mer• 1904 in the states of Washington and in items before Wednesday, the da\ cantile Co's., store before buying. tlilt Kdtfe Mercantile Store. Oregon shall be as follows: of publication. Your Patronnge Solicited Main Street, Lewistow The local thirst parlors are dis• Fine job printing at the News Seven cents per head straight and Barney Hedigan and Francis office cheaper than any other place playing Milwaukee beer signs. board; or eight cents per head Biglen were tried before police judge in this city. straight without board, for yearlings Pianos and < )rgans at the "Art" McFarland on the charge of killing Co west and wear diamonds is ewes and Iwo-vear-old wethers; Music Store on easy payments. horses, the property of Jim Anderson Lewistown Carriage Works changed, go to shackleville and Eight rents per head straight and Miss Josie Hum has returned of Gilt Kdge. The horses are sup wear irons. board; or nine cents per head MOSE SHULL. Poprietor home from her extended trip east. posed to have lieen stolen from sev- Sheet music, instruction books straight without board, for wethers Music, will be 0 prominent feature dal parties around Kendall and and musical Mdse., sold at the three years and older; Blacksmithing 2cent per head higher than T. C McHugh, the Castle Butte days. the stocks and the redemocan bar• given above. rancher, proved up on his home• barians of Lewistown have shackled Retail Meats. Rock candy syrup at Lehman's. stead Saturday. a man to an iron ball and placed You know you love to dance, so Thomas McDonough was discov• EGCS * 3 5 HSH 9 * i VEGETABLES i!5 (;,\.M him at the fire tower to break rock. Dr. F. F. Attix, Hours 10 to 12, ered dead in his cabin about a mile why not take advantage of three The prisoner is James Blake a lab• 2 to 4, 7 to 8 Telephone 132. Of• below (iilt Fdge on last Saturday. hours of entrancing music. On Fri• orer who came to Lewistown lately fice, Main St. and 6 Ave. day evening next. from Great Falls. He was charged It is presumed that the diseased died v C. M. KELLY v Alex Moran has returned to Lew• from heart disease. McDonough Try that ice cream at Edge• with being drunk and was fined sev• istown from an extended trip east; was well known in the Baker dis• combe's. en dollars and fifty cents; he did not he also stopped in Butte. pay the fine so is shackled on the trict, he came to this section about The Ladies Aid Society of the M. Abstracter and The Orchestra will (five a dance street to work it out. Possibly 11 years ago. As McDonough was a E. church will hold a handkerchief Friday night from 9 to 12 at the Blake is guilty of drunkeness, but veteran of the civil war, the funeral sale in the church, Wednesay, May opera house. this does not justify "fools dressed was conducted by the old soldiers 4th, afternoon and evening. loe 3f Conveyancer in brief authority" overiding the of Fergus county. Services were held Buy your spring millinery of Mrs. cream will be served. tt rights of the citizen and introducing Culver where you will find correct at tne Presbyterian church at 2 The Japanese have at least got the in the twentieth century practices ELECTRIC BUILDING, LEWISTOWN styles and prices. p. m. Russians thinking. common in the days of the imjuisi Rock candy syrup at Lehman's. A man who missed his vocation, I tion. If the city administration de• The report is false that the chain Shackleville otherwise Lewistown Bebb, should be Lord high execu• sire to permanently adopt this bar- and ball was put on Blake because has an unenviable reputation among tioner to the king of Dahomie. barons custom, let them send and he would not consent to join the the people of Montana as a scab Monday two wagons crowded with get about one hundred shackle*;; so Montana Railroad Company citizens alliance. loving bttrg. Now to cap the cli• men left Lewistown for the N-Ban- they can place on the rock pile, the TIME CARD EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 23, 1903 For Sale. Good residence lots max Blake is shackled to a ball for ranch on Flatwillow. rounders, tinhorns, secretaries and close in; also dwelling houses. The the petty offense of drunkeness, certain worthy members of the citi• MIXED PASSENG'R Passenger For abstracts of ranch or city easiest terms ever known. Payments while well dressed criminals strut Mixed zens alliance who gcX drunk and all Mondays Tuesdays Mondays Tuesdays property see C. M. Kelly, Lewis- on the installment plan. Anything OUT streets. Every niemtier of the such spawn of a rotten system that Wednesdays Thursdays Wednesdays Thursdays town. council is guilty of this outrage, taken in trade for first payment.— infests Lewistown. Many of the Fridays Saturdays Fridays Saturdays The Art Music Store is now lo• (J. S. Creed, l^ewistown. j but for enthusiastic ferocity marshall preceeding named people, not alone Lve K:00 a. m LNM a. m Lombard Arr 3:45 p. m. Arr 4:<«i p. m. cated across the street from the j Bebb easily leads; the sulphurous Arr. 12:01 p. m. Arr 12:10 p. m. Dor soy Lvrl:20 " L\v 1 :i« Tennessee sorgum at Lehman's. break simple ordinances governing Lve 12:55 Lvo 12:40 " DorMy Arr I2:5S " Arr 12:35 " Acme cafe. I vaporing of this man on all who 2:05 1:1* FrMmini 12:20 11.50 a. m. drunkeness, but are criminals who 3:05 2:55 MArtlnsdal* 11:45 a.m. 11:00 The new crime in shackleville I showed kindness to the prisoner is 3:45 2:25 T w odot F. F. McGowan, attorney at law, violate the state law. Our fusionists 11:15 lO;20 " giving papers to prisoners. Bebb i ridiculous. Workingmen you have 4:25 2:55 Harlcwton I0:9t '1:45 will practice in all courts; collec• will uot act on our suggestion it 5:30 3:45 Ubot •<:55 *:35 in place of the judge and jury will voted for this, as you have *otcdfor 6:35 4:30 Moore '•:!* 7:45 tions promptly attended to.— would be simple justice, as it is the Arr *:00 Arr 5:30 Leu Istown Lve M:30 Lve c:45 sentence all offenders to the rock- bull pens, bayonets and lockouts by Office in Telephone Building. votes of this criminal class gives ! voting the democrat and republican pile. E. H. HOAR, Supt. ROBERT RANTOL L Gen. Manager. Heard on the street: "Frank them the majority and enables them Tom Stout the Argus reporter • tickets composed of capitalists or Wright and Dave Hilger are holding .0 retain power. Lombard, Montana Helena, Montana was on the sick list during the last 'the satelites of that favored class. Blake to vote the fusinn ticket this fall." days of the week, but is around hustling for locals again. For Rent- Good room for office in front, or can store goods securely Vermont maple syrup at I,ch- in rear of the bvildiag. Kent cheap. man's.

Call at the News office. We have heard of men living For railroad tickets call on or ahead of their time; it remained for <*T SAVE MONEY Jm write W. C. Doherty, ticket agent Bebb to live fiye hundred years too for the Creat Northern and Mon late; he should have been first as• tana Central railroad. Lewistown. sistant to Gorqucmada. Mont. Tennessee sorgum at Lehman's. Some bold bad outlaw gave the How would the leading member N£ By Taking Advantage of the Eliminator of Unnecessary Expenses man with the ball and chain a bottle of the citi/.ens alliance who was 00 and Bebb, took it from him. If the a drunk lately look in irons? Or guilty wretch who gave that bottle the other leading member whose to Blake is found he will be hung normal condition is drunk? or suffer such other punishment as Dakota flour at Lehman's. Bebb decides. Don't think that because sub• From Wholesaler; Oscar Stephens took several of the scriptions are coming in so fast that idle men out to his ranches north of we might get too many. Not so; town. At this season of the year we need more, and more until every there is always a rush for men to debt is paid off, the best of machin• •To Consumer work during lambing on the sheep es enstalled, the leading talent on ranches. The job lasts about one the editorial staff employed, and the month, yet there is little difficulty in best Socialist paper in the north Method of Selling Groceries Enables securing the hundreds of men need• west. ed. A practical demonstration of It is impossible for us this week the fact that there is always a vast to insert all of the names of new army of unemployed. subscribers and those who have J. H. Walsh, editor of the Mon• paid since our last issue. In fact tana News, left this morning via., they have never come so fast since Ft. Benton Stage route w here he will the establishment of the News. Mr. CRAGG & HARVEY take the train for Chicago to be in Lynch, the traveling solicitor, left attendance at the national Socialist here Friday of last week loaded convention. 1 luring his absence with subscription cards good for a Arthur T. Harvey will look after the yearly subscription to the News, editing of the paper, and if the typo• and already the cards are beginning graphical force does net go on a to arrive, and it looks as if with To give better goods for [_^QSS ft! OflCy strik- or summer vacation, the read• the hustle of this aggressive indefati• ers will receive their paper regularly gable worker that the News would and even though such should happen soon spring into a large state circu• it would not be half as serious as to lation. Evidently the campaiga is miss attending the great national con- opening up and from now on will Samples at T5he News LEWISTOWN

v-•lor,. >4R, WaJftft will Jw! »rone lie a continual round of energetic

• M •. . n't! I .. :i'. iOI 1 »< r!-'. like me to go to bed; so good night, Come over In tha morning and I'll pull ALL DUNK OUT. you a bunch of tulips to take over Vateran Joshua LINKS TO TIIF. LIVER. home. Well, good night." lfaner of 7M 8. Let poets rave, as poets will, "Good night," I said, and left him. Walnut itrtet. TTr- Aliout the henrt Hnd soul. bana. III., aaya: An<1 In MM high tOMd "minct stilt • • • • • Tholr lofty worth extol. "In tha fall of It waa a cold, bitter morning in win• !. whn must walk In humble ways 111* aftar takla. And modest muses woo, ter. I paused at the gate on my way I write this simple song; to pralso D o a n'a KMna? to the office and looked across tho T he liver Rood and true. Pills I tola tha street at the froat starred windows of readers of this What's heart or soul to mortal nun, the old man's house and at the smoke• WIIHI'H anything, alack! papar that they less chimney. He was in the habit of To us poor billons creatures when had relieved ma Tile liver's out of whaek? rising early, and I stopped over to see \Vhil« sentiment. 1 tnke It. I* of kidney trouble, if anything was the matter. There All well enough and Mo*, dlapoaad of a Yi t whin we come rl«ht down to "his," was no response to my rap, BO I turned There was a card on tho business the Tolferlno. It's pretty handy foi The liver cuts the lee. lame back with the knob and pushed open the door. A man's desk. On It was printed in you. Rut the prlcea are steep. What pain across my Ho. don't you to the spooney bards' pervasive feeling of cold waa in the large black type: do you think our check waa? Wa loins and beneath Soft sentiment Hiiceumh. air. A pile of pine shavings lay In had julienne soup and chops—Just Kor ho who highest truth regards tha shoulder readiness on the hearth. TIME IS MONEY plain lamb chops—nothing fancy Will keep his liver plumb. blades. During tha interval which He knows that heart Mki soul may blesa ;DON'T TAKE MINE UNLESS YOU: about 'em—and " A mortal. In a way. I went over to the bed, atandlng In has elapsed I have had occaalon ta : CAN GIVE VALUE RECEIVED. : "What was this business you want• Kilt, oh! they're both "N. a." unless the corner by the stove, and there, resort to Dean's Kidney pills when I Your liver's all "O K." V . . .• ed to see me about, Keppler?" with one big hand thrown out over noticed warulnga of an attack. Oa "Well. 1 was Just going to tell you. the thick, red comforter, and tho blue The business man propped this up each and every occaalon tha result* To begin with I'll tell you. may• lips slightly parted, lay the old man. ronspiciiously against a bill file and obtained were juat aa aatlafactory as He had gone to wait for Kitty—to then saltl wearily to the office boy: be I'd better look In some other time. when the pill wera ftrat brought to meet her. perhaps—who knows? 'Show him in." It Isn't really a matter of any great my notlca. I ju t aa emphatically en• That day 1 visited the undertaker A largo, florid man entered. importance and you may be too busy dorse the preparation today aa I did to listen " and searched th» city greenhouses for "How are you. Simpson?" he said, over two years ago." his favorite flowers. At last I found "Go ahead. I'm busy, but If there'a cordially. "Are you busy?" Foster MUburn Co., Buffalo. N. T* some white ones, and the next after• anything I can do for you " "Husy pretty much all the time." proprietors. For aale by all drugglita, noon we laid him away to rest, with 'That's Juat what I told Tom. Wa "I calculated you would be, but pries 50 cents per box. a tulip on his breast. were talking about one thing and an• there was a little matter I wanted to other over our cigars. Do you smoke, *eo you about. I don't suppose I'd More Private. HE SORTED THEM OUT. Simpson?" have thought of it hardly but Tom "I suppose," aald the rural postmla- "No. What did >ou want to ask me Pcmpsey By the way, did you tress' friend, "you get lots of enjoy Minister Waa 8atiafied the Knots about?" know Tom was married? Yes; he tuent out of reading the postal curds." Were Saiely Tied. "Will. Ill tell you. Honestly, I married some southern girl—a Miss "Oh," replied the postmistress, "not TULIP A clergyman who has just returned think you're busy uow and I'd like to Avery. I got a bid to the wedding but aear so much as I get out of the letters llr MIM'.KVA M. I.IMU N. from a trip to England tells a story he talk this over at leisure with you I didn't go. l.ampson went and he 1 steam."—Catholic Standard and heard there of the marriages made or MM time. No, 1 won't bother about |r The Autkori Puktithinj Company •ays she's about as pretty a girl as he Times. certain feast days, when no fee li It now." ever met. Comes of one of those charged and the young couples com* The business man sighed. "Well, if high toned old families, you know. is) great numbers a long distance tt you won't," M said, turning to his Deafness Cannot Be Cured He was a tall. EtMt, white haired mile. So I walked. I say walked, but take advantage of the custom. They only got back from their honey bf 1'ical •ppllosllnni, iber rsss.it rescb the dtt- desk. •••sd portluo nf lbs ear. TSers U noljr use war IS >ld man of seventy r»i •*< bjr as Inflamed ioaulll< n ut ihs being manned to certain rural placet tor. mucuua llulag uf Iba Ku*tai-b!aa Tube. Whes ttilt >lil fashioned frame building, covered looked down, thinking I might see her : well." tuba ta Iaflaiua4 you bava a ruiubtlug nnuii.l vr ln> n the vicinity of Manchester and Old " Say, you'll have to excuse me now," pirf«rt baarlatf. sod wben It la aatlretjr rlaard, Peat- ivith vines and creepers. In front was outside, somewhere — fcedirg the ham. "I'pon one of those occasions.' "What was this little matter h» re n. •»- la Iba raault, and unless the lnflaintiiatli>n can be said the business man, looking at his taken out asd this tube Featured to lu normal r .udl i little plot — a r.arrow Btrip of chickens, maybe, or sitting on the minded you of?" tells the clergyman, with a chuckle, "a watch. I've got some work here to tl.io, hearing »: I be dentrufed forever: nine raaae ground—where lilies of the valley stoop. Hut I saw nothing of her. oat ut tan are mates' by t atsjrrb, sblt-b lamithlaa delegation of fifty young people from "Bless your heart, he didn't remind finish in a hurry. Good-by. Call but aa Inflamed cuiidttlnn of tba nun ..u. aurfarea. crew in summer lichind was a long "To the left in the barnyard an old Oldhnin and the surrounding country me of it: That's a pretty good Joke. again." We will give One Hundred Dollar* for any cans ot carden filled in sprirg with rows an 1 man was milking a little black cow. I journeyed to Manchester, making a Peaftieia ii-auaed by vaiarrbi tbat cannot lie cured Ha ha! No. I was going to say that "Oh. good-by." said the visitor, bjr Hall'lCatarrb Cure. Kern! f..r circulars, free. rows of Mazlir; tulips. passed on up the path to the front picturesque grouping at the Old Kiic Tom l)emp8ey and 1 had been to lunch rather stiffly. "I didn't mean to tako r. J. cm ski a co., Toud?. a door. I knocked; but everything was llsh church of St Mark's. Each one Sntd by Proggtat,, 7^ I saw him tlrM workintr with a Mttle together at the Tolferlno and aa it your valuable time." lioe among the bulbs with their luns, quiet. The place where the tulips oi the men carried a Ion?; staff or stick lass Uali'e Family I Ilia for eoaatloaUaa. was so close by I thought I'd come up He walked out of the office with an .•roen leaves. After that I saw him grew was a wilderness of weeds. as the people there call a cane, and Poker Helped Him. ind see you. I had it on my mind air of offended dignity and as soon as aften. 1 would stop for a few moments • "Kitty: Kitty:- I called; 'Kitty, my Mass of the young women brandished Hewitt—Thero Is no royal road ta some time." he had j,one tic business man took on my way home in the evening and girl, wi.ere are you?' I opened the an umbrella, the use of which will be "What did you have on your mind?" Mtri the : i'-'ti that he had propped up wealth. watrh him while he went up and down door anfl went in. It was only a bare, presently seen. Jewett—Oh, I don't know. I got my "This matter I'm talking about. I KlMl the bill file nnd threw It Into the long rows. smoke scented rcsnn, with a table in start with a royal flush.—New York "After the ceremony of marrylnt thotlght possible I might Ma you at the waste basket. He asl;ed mo to come in, one even• the center, covered with dirty dishes the lot was concluded, and the crowd Timea. ing, an 1 look at his tulips. I \vvnt; he and newspapers. was going down the chinch aisle, one showed me the different varieties, "The old man came up the path young woman hurried Mck and inter In Emmons Cn.. Dftkotn. stepping tuning them with inlinite with a pail of milk in his hand. It Mpted the rector as he was going to We can si 11 you 100 acres fine Isnd. Tou can break 100 acres this spring, care. Then we s;;t down on a little tho vestry. sow It to 8alzer*s Flnx and reap bench outside of Hi" hack door, wheie Road to the Alines "'I theenk, meortst< r.' she panted, enough to pay for your land, etc., hav• hop vines climbed up t:ic side of the that you have morried me to the ing a fine farm free the first year. Have ten such plecee for BSda, house, and he began the story of his wr. ng felly." [ Long since Hit v hastened t>n atblrst for JOHN A. BALZKn BKKD CO., life. What prompted him to tell it This was the : vid between the silver "Don't let that worry you." aald the m I nes gold: (W. N. U.) La Crosse. Wla. was my asking if he never tried to rector, wno was In a hurry, "aort your• And the eld !»melt*r. twenty years aao; In far-off mines and streets they toll i fading pttli bent nth the slender pliien urow any rowers except tulips. selves as you go out, "you're all mar• ar.d pb'il. And the far Hurnmlts of rtei nal snow. While here unchimned the guardian for• Humans. "Try, my man," he said, absently, ried fast enough." and acting on his Here, where the Inm-roofed xheds have ests hold Dyer—Why don't they limit tha diopped to rust. |Msl rlchts from the stores of Ood. (hen was silent fjr a while. A far• advice, they sorted out the right pairs. The quest of treHKure rlalmtd man's speed of automobiles in this town* away look came into the faded eye?. "On their way back to Oldham they bra at a nnd aarva; Silver nid paM the mountain rives no Deddun—Because they think It ta He took his pipe from his mouth aud bought the things necessary to light The tesmster's whiplash cracked throiiKh more; better to kill a man than to malm him. clouds of tlust. Such M It has. It gives, unasked, un- knocked the MaMt to the ground. housekeeping, stinging tha lighter And the lona mule team swung the I ouirht. plunging curve. "You've neve.- heard then? I thought utensils: on the sticks and umbrellas, Infinite wealth passt d bv of men tiefore. Aa We Find Him. M.-ul for ill.- pttty ha lit log which they n-cry body knew about my Kitty — poised on their shoulders."—Chicago K score of rears have passed since grat• tough!. We came upon the college man la Kitty and her tulips Record Herald. ing* wheels Slid down these rocks, held by the Nor band* of -freed shall clutch the treas- uri s stored. the KTeen sweater. "It happon.d ago—ah. ire. so strident hrnke. .'iiw-vil the tin utiow - lark tils anthem Nor foot el initle come near to wreak "Ktinlying much*" we asked. long ago; hut It's as tre.-h to me as Like the Dog's. innus will peals "Studying?" he echoed, his eyes di• ever—my Kitty's simple white face Mrs. Frederic!, IV Mat the presl- To-day where yonder silvery aspens i.n thine, the treasure chambers of the Lord. lating with astonishment. "Well, I and dark, pansy eyes." His coat I!I nt of the National Congress of shnkr The vnderhrush grows thick as sum- 1 .ii- l.i it in the 11. u ii. - of sky anJ guess not. I finished up football In tdeeve went across his cyaa as if wip• Mi thers, dwtdt forcibly !n a recent mers pnss; Ma the fall, now I'm playing hockey, soon ing away a tear. address iv.cn the evil of loquacity. The mis gram fainter with each win• ter snow; Tie pure In MM shall see them. Those It will be polo, then lacrosse, and later ' Wl'cn I think of that morning "Loquacity — talking overmuch,'' who lift \nd eraaptlsB ferns and flowers and on baseball." v ten I left hi r to go away out west. I aM said, "that is a fault Inht rent In mountain a~rs«s Data the hills their eyes shall nnd too many mothers, and In tix> many Hint eut the load men traveled years MM "When do yon expect to open your ••an always see the tullpr. too. They it^'". Healing far saw! and body, gracious shrift books?" ivoie soil)" hill).' like Ihese. only ah! tathers, too. if you come to that. Si• I'rotn the eld burdens of life's soil and lence is a bfessed kMMf and we should N'o more the rumbling. Jsnina wagons stain. "Well, during next vacation, if I gat such blood red ones and such white lit ar In'itiile wtalth of l»e«iity. boundless store "There she sat at the supper table." a chance."—Chicago Newa. •nes, so pure and delicate. Kitty, cultivate It when we have nothing to Their freight "f wealth. Abandoned tit ft:.giant gUM outreachtd ftoni tree mid Hud. was old Hen. He had worked on the say. Silence'is always better, to my lie the mlne«. with her white apron and white linen \'o more the fe ered tlliongs MM go BIMII the fading niiidway be our« »un bonnet, always reminded me of place as long as I could remember. I irlnd. than a buzz of empty and iniwdlng there more Toa Much, Indeed. meaningless talk. I lined to know an Henenth the itnow-pesks and the pur• A raM »>' Maaatire, leading up to (ML 'he white ones. met him now on the threshold. Youth's <'om-Mtilon. "Wbat'a the trouble. Harker?" old lady who talked overmuch. She ple pi"' '"She Hfti out In the country. The "'Hello, Jim, hello,' says he; "hack "Too much raialng." was out walking one August alter liOUEe stood hack from the road and at last —why, hello, hello. A welcome "How's that?" noon when a man parsed her with a you had to go down a long lane past to ye.' dog. The dog's tongue hung out a "Why. I ralaed the ear window for the sheep pu-iiit-e Ms] the apple or- "Welcome? Welcome with no Kit• little and the old lady stopped and a very pretty young lady, and than i hard to And It. I went to see her ty; no sweetheart to claim my own; said: 'That dog is not safe. It should 2\ Triumph of Nerve she raised her eyes." every day. She was all the world to no traco of the old times, nothing, not b> at lirge. Its tongue hanging "Thst wss nice." me. 1 loved her -loved her with all nothing—only an old man? out of its mouth la u sure sign of "Then I raised my hat, and her my h< art. and we were to he married "U'- sat down on the doorstep and "When I was a young man In the grocer mat... 1 "S. O.' in big, black rabies.' father came in and raised cane"— whin I came line'. luck from the he told me all almut it —about Kitty, business." said Mr. O. 8. Whltson. letters. west, with my isicketw full of money her troubles with Joe Morgans and Chicago Newa. "The old man, who knew the med• vice president of the National City "The grocer knew dimly that his I hem no v. n and kissed her and said, how she llnally had to marry him. dlesome old lady well, retorted: 'It'a check hadn't MM pub!, and he waited bank, "I knew a chap who wan a sort Well, good bye, Kiiy good live, my "Her father and mother were both only a sign that the dog's tongu- ta for the promoter. I'inally he cam* A Boston Couple. af a promoter-before-his-tlme. That is. girl. Keep a light heart till I come dead. too big for Its mouth, the same as strutting along, a few days lat-i Joklln—When I'm away from home If he had lived to-day he would have back. Gisid b> e ' "Only Kitty left- only Hen tc take some old folks'.'"—I AIM Angeles "'Here, you!' shouted the grocer, 'I I get a letter from my wife every day been exploiting Indnt-trial combum ' Hut she \.w\ her head on my shoul• t are of the place No wonder my head Times. want to si • you. The bank sent back Mllmak— But you're not obliged ts der and cried. 'Oli, don't go, Jim— went around. I couldn't listen. I had Hons. As It was he did the best he resd them Art Incorrigible Dog. that check I cashed for you." don't go,' .-he kep! -»WUK over and to i;o away. I was nearly crazy— could In the small way his opportunl Joklln—Yon don't know my wlfa The intelligence of the dog suffered "Tin' grocer produced the checic. over to the lust. That was on the crary to see^Kltty. ties i fTered. and hail plenty of money She catechises me about them when I stunt what by an Athens narrative in The promoter looked It over careful inortilng beiiire | went awny, out sometimes and none at all at others. get home and I have to be letter per "I struck off over the green field;;; which it Is matle to appear that an old V\. lie observed the big black "N. (1/ tuning the tulips, ull b) ourselves feet Is every una of them.— Boatoa went over tho rail fence at a leap, dog owned by K. Holcomb recently " lie was a great fellow to talk im• I had scrawled on It. Traaacrlpt. pushed through the milk-weed and ciga^ed with a rattler on the low pressively of his resources and his • 'Why. my dear sir." he said,

wild gooseberry hushes There stood - grtni"ds near the town, and waa aa- standing at the bank my l»auk, H' reaching down In hi pocket, pulling th<- house: A wintlow was open and 1 WORRY verely bitten. Mr. Holcoiub wis fa• Hi have an account there, and I wa> up M big roll of bills and handing |G0 could look through it into the kitchen miliar with the formula for anakt. very careful to see tt was not over• in cash to the grocer, 'allow rue to I leniieil against a big cherry tree and A Sure Starter for III Health. bites. He hail some of the medicine supply the deficiency. I sec the dlffl- looked There she sat at the supper drawn. One day he went lo a simple Useless worrying (a form of nar on hand consisting of whisky and mlnilert fellow who kept a grocery ] cnlty. All my checks are payable in ti.ble ibe same while face the same vouaneas) is Indirectly the result quinine mixed In quantities to suit. store and got him to cash a check for ! gold. It is evident the bank had no dark «•;. M the MUM Kilt , I had (through the nerves) of lmpropai Opening the tlog's jaws he turned a jr (fold M hand when you pr •sented tha mm weri ed and grubbed for through four >0 r feeding A furniture man of Mem liberal dose down him. Two or three "The grocer sent hln rheck to the i cheek, fjr they marked It "N. O.." long yearn. phis ssys: •lay*: elapsed during which the animal bank. The chap who made tt dld .'t | which means "No (told." Pleasant "Ahont a yesr ago I waa afflicted Mot .Morgans sal at the head of the was unable to walk straight. y»t he have a dollar to his credit, an I I w«ather we're having. Isn't It Hood with nervous apells, would worry so fable. Hut 1 didn't look at hi in my I erred no' to have any pain, and In promptly sent the check back to the | MIssV*' New York World. eyes were on Kitty. fact appeared to enjoy himself. Hut over trlvlsl things. "Well, I couldn't stay there there at last he was sober again. One would "I went to consult one of the beat was no use. Kitty looker contented; naturally think that having been bit physicians In Memphis and he naked inuyhc sle was. I wslteil till I SAW It h once M would have fought shy among many questions If I drank cof- her gt t up from the table and brush of the swamp afterward, but the mo- [ Story Got the Money few. iIn- crumbs from her lap. then 1 cr« pi ini ut he was able lo navigate he was "Hie advice was: 'Oo to some pro> away ai d wulked all night. back among the boys again wnteking vision store and get a box of Postum. ' Afler lhal my money went I tor more snakes. This Is why he Ho apt was Ihe story told by the 1 money this way in one corner, and drink It In place of coffee, and as yon spent it; I gave it away -wasted it. n-etns unintelligent. Hctroit (Mleh.l dev. Hubert S. MacArthur in the pill- i some so in another, and so on with are confined to your deak to a >;reat W>iv. I had lots of It Why not? Hut Tribune. 0 laat Sunday that It resulted In one the four corners. And llrm. hard knots extent try and get. out In the open air I lived longer than I e\pe> ted. and ihe • I the largest collections of the year I he mnde at them before handing tha as much as possible.' I followed bla Condemned Murderer'a Last Wish. more} art tit sooner than I expected. I pftjra the New York Times. He spi.i • hnndkerehlef over to Its owner. instructions regarding the Postum. drilled lure ami there, hut when I "I MMM like mv relatives to have n warm terms of the charactei of "It t hane.-d thai KHot on ii. x :y "At that time my weight was 141 (MM* to this spot I settled down, and :• | hotojjraph of me as they ronton- lotMi KHot. ihe missionary to tho In- home ft 1! In with a worthy woman and I was taking all kinds of druga I've made up my inin 1 to die hoe li'-r irie four years sgo; a picture of Itans tuie of whoso most lovable i whose niipeiirance told of dire |Kiverty and medicines to brace me up, but all I siw him first working with ,i little wlih my tulips. They make me think ' mc not In the garb of a felon, nor raits was an unbounded generosity. and distress, lie stopped to speak to failed; today I weigh 1«6 and all ol hoe .lmong toe bulbs of her Kitty In ihe old days, before wilb in> prison number pinned on my Mf aid piettj soon, his heart luing my old troubles' are gone, and all the anything, happened, you know- Kilty MM) but one that will l.esr upon It "Out of hln salary of fifty pounds a 1 luii. of bar Hlways I -A rote touched, pulled out the bainlk. rchlef. credit la due to having followed this with Mf white apron and white sun Bo association with my terrible plight ti nr lie gave large sums to churlty." I r some lime he tugged and »lrained coffee and using Postum In Its plara. Hewers, or leaning her llitle head on tienined to die for the murder of l)ep •don the tt en tATJ Of IM Society of the i 'here had ionic no Hiisv,cr| to m\ let at Ihe knots, but, try us he might, the "I now consider my health perfect my big shouider, saying she'd never nty Hharlff William J tVnrd of Han Propagation of the dispel, when pay- | ie,-s for a Msf lotist tisM eiearly a corners refused to come untied. Then, I am willing to go before a notary pub- like anybody but nie." DMJO, made the above iMqMat of |M RIM his quarterly stipend, sought .year. 1 thought torn* aUaf had hap. calmly rolHng the handkerchief up Into lie and testify that It waa all tM Warden Tompkins. It Is ihe Hrst lo CM him ii "crelie. He hit upon a l;ened to luy letters >hnt the) never The old man's chin sank os Ml a ball, the missionary placed it In tha tr» my having used Postum In placa Mate In the annuls of Han Qtn-ntin plan of safeguarding the missionary's readied her It war sued an out of breast and he was silent for some astonished woman's hands, saying: of eoffee," Name given by Postum prison that • condemned man has money, knowing IMt In all likelihood | in u gj soft of ;Q> • ahere I wan. Hew The shadows of night had fall• Mv good woman, I think the l^ird Co.. Battle Creek, Mfch. mailt such a request II was granted KHot otherwise would give away every Hut there was BsOBW] He re If I would en Lights were twinkling In the mennt. you to have It all.' There's a reson for quitting tha by the warden, and | idiot, m-a ph of penny of It before hit reached his wily stick to it, and I did for two window s. drug-drink coffee, and there'a a reason the murderer. In cltl/eii's attire, was home." (Here Dr. MacArthur slopped "The ushers," Dr. MacArthur added, v«>ara longer, and the* I went home "It Is a tad story." I said. for drinking Postum. Trial to daya taken In the prison gallery, and OOpH I forward to the side of the pulpit and "now will pass the basket for collec• mine to my Kitty that I knew was 'Sad? Oh. yes. I suppose,' he re• proves them all. will bo given fo llows' relatives auer drew out his pocket handkerchief.) tion, nnd you osn Imitate John Kllot'a waiting for me. plied, running himself "Hut I'm keep• Iiook In each package for a copy his death, In accordance with hfa laat "The wily secretary look Idiot's hand t-Mimple if \ mi are so minded " ' The little station was only a short ing you here listening, my man. It's of the famoua little book, "Tha fload wish. —Ban Jfrfiaclsxo Evamtner. kerchief and tied up some of the Anil Ihe congregation dug doep »a/ from the house-about half a growing lata—time for an old man to Wallvllle." MRS A PERVERTED XMAS PRESENT. Plain talk. Tuker—My wife has the most annoy• iKSNia Was Given Up fiSS. Business Instinct Highly Developed In ing habit of calling a spade a spade. Little Freddie. Baker -You don't really mean she's It was Christmas Rve. Freddie was to outspoken us— Pe=ru=na Saved Her Life. on his way homo from the Sunday Tuker--Oh, no; you mf"> inderstand school, where he had been a regular me. I mean she Insists upon calling* C It wis ostsrrh of 1h# lungt to common In tht winter months, i abundant for several weeks. His an• the jack of spades a spade when clubs nual conversion had been rewanl< fl hi are trumps.—Philadelphia Press. a substantial way, for he bad not only feasted upon the good things of this Mr*. Window'* Soothing «vrnp. world, but he bore under his arm a **T rht.Ur.a VrlBlra, tufKu tha iruma, redurna b> beautiful blue and gold book that laUoa.allarapatn.i um wind i -.H.. iU-abolUa. showed him how to get to the $ther Hio Model. world. He was well pleased, for ever Critic—I must congratulate you on and anon he would look at the book tfie villain of your play. He leave* the and fairly gloat over It. As he passed Impression of having been drawn from the house of an old maid, whose life life." he had often made miserable, the old Author—He was I may say to you lady noticed how he regarded his Bun- that he is an exact portrait of myself day school present and rejoiced ex- aa my wife depic ts me In our hoors of eedlngly. ease."--Town and Country. "I always said he wasn't a bad boy at heart," she remarked to herself. nft at i asaamSS mm*. *» a**** *l I # *r«t tar's nm oi I'r I.an*a Or.nl Narva H#.'or- 'Oh, if his father and mother could '. **afl fur If HICK tit. OO Iria, la.ttl. aad traa.i.*. only see him this blessed moment as a. k- at kuj,*, H'., Hi Arck atraat, 1'ki^Oa.aaia, Pa he thinks of the home above and re• solves to live just as the little boys In the Swim. ind girls in the book." Uncle -Well, Bobbie, I hear you're Hut listen. Freddie is also remark• learnin- to swim. ing to himself. Bobbie Yes. So are you, ain't you, uncle? "This is a pretty good book, by gee! Uncle No, my lad. Why? It must have stood the Sunday school Bobble oh, I hear

The Demon of the Pit. Trj* Foresight of the Anclenta. A din of rate*S shouting hoarse, Aerf.'uiuplus had invented the art of ' N5S.JWfflDRI5CQLL A whirl of outstretched arm*; medicine. A llttl.- truth, u muss of lie*, A arore of false alarms "Thiiiri what a boon it will be to Mlaa Jural* Drlscoll, 870 I'm nam And standing In the BtldaS of It auffenu^ humanity!" he cried- We »ee the liemon of the I'll! Miss Rose Henncssy, well known as AT*., Brooklyn. N. Y., Writes: "Yes," they exclaimed, "and what a j A hundred faces, white and stniiixd. stepping stone to the command of the "If people knew how efficient Are peering to b.*hold a poetess and elocutionist, of Lexington, The man whose name throughout the land army!" Peruam was In the cure of ca• Is hailed th- Ira iftT bold: Dimly he realized how great a tarrh, they would not hesitate to And standing In the midst of It Ky., tells how she was cured of uterine We apy the DaStkStl at the PH. blessing he had instituted.- New York try It. I bare all the faith la the Sun. Another cent' Another eatttl inflammation and ovaritis by the use of world In It aa It cured me, and A madding, fearful away-- I have never known of a case The Kin*: of yesterday got-* down. DR. J. H. RINDLAUO (Specialist), Another rules to-day. Lydia E. Pinldum's Vegetable Compound. when the person wan not cured Hut monarch over all of It Eye, Ear, Noae and Throat, In a abort time." Jennie Drie. We hall the Demon of the l»lt. Fargo. N. D. " DFAR MRS PiWKnAkt | — I hive l>een so blessedly helped through the use of Lytliit K. Pinkliam's Ve^etalile Compound that I feel it but just to coll. A crash of wasted blighted hope*, A plstul shot —a scream! Hard to Collect. acauo-.vledge it, hoping that it may !i<>'.p some other woman buffering as I did. Another life is yielded up " i'or .years I enjoyed the l>est of health and tho-.iglit that I would always To Join the awful stream: "The world owes me a living." said do so. I attended parties and receptions th'.il/ clad, and would be suddenly Mrs. Col. E. J. Gretham, Treasurer Daughters of the Confederacy and Presi• And grinning in the midst of It the young man. We see the Ifcmon of the Pit. chilled, but I did not think of the results. I caught a bad cold eighte«u dent Hrrndnn Village Improvement Society, writes the following letter "I suppose so.' said the old one; months ago while menstruating, and this caused inflammation of the womb from Hernden, Fairfax Co., Vs.: A ruined mill, with crumbling walls. "but you are not so fortunate an to be and congested ovaries. 1 suffered excruciating pains arid kept getting worse. Ten thousand starving men: My attention was called to vmr Ve;jctal»lo Compound and the wonderful HBBSDBX, VS.. "How long. U iAird? Mow long?" they a preferred creditor."—Judge. Tha reruns Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio: cry— cures it ha«l performed, and I made up my mind to trv it for two months aud Then cotton Jumps again. see what it would do for me. Within one montii 1 felt much better, and Gentlemen— <•/ cannot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. And vll| this story in the commis• pai'i.s across the abdomen, was very nervous and initaMe and thia stick wid a knob on the ind av It. an sioner s ..mo at Ellis island: trouble KStW worse t icfa month. The physician .prescribed tor me, but yes put the white ball on a little liap< Two Irish immigrants, just arrived, I soon discovered that he was unable to help m<\ and 1 :iien decided to the unfortunate ones. Little or no risk ttond one morning on the government A PLAIN TALK need be run if Peruna is kept in the av sand. Thin the game Is to h.iul uff try Lydia K. Pinkliam's Wiretuble footpound, ami soon found that hoimo and st the first appearance of any an' knock the ball so far fee. kin ulvcr landing watching a dredger at work a it was doing Hat food. My appetite was returning, tbsj pains fllasjpprnr On a Plain Subject in Plain Nvmptom of catarrh taken as directed oa find ut agin." few yard.* away Presently a diver, ing, and the general benefits wen* well maikt tl. Language. the bottle. "An' did yez hit the ball whin ye* full rigged, crawled painfully from the " You tannot n alize how pleased I was, and after taking,the medi• Peruna is a safeguard, is a preventa• rhannel stime up a ladder to the deck tive, a specific, is a cure for all case* of tried?" asked Casey. cine for only three months. I found that I was completely cured of my The coming winter will cause at least catarrh, acute and chronic, coughs, colds, "Did Oi?" said Pat. Thofs the fun of the dredgd. One of the Irishmen, trouble,and i.ave been well and hearty ever sniec, and no more fear the one-half of the women to have catarrh, consumption, etc. ny thing about golluf. Shttre. the first very much surprised, turned to his monthly period, as it now passes without pain to me. Yours very truly. colds, conghs, pneumonia or consump• companion and said: tion. Thousands of women will lose If you do not receive prompt and natut- tolmo Oi hit ut, Oi nlver touched ut!" Miss I'CARI. ACKERS, 327 I\orth Summer Bt*, Nashville, Tenn." their lives and tens of thousands will factory results from the use of Peruna, "I»ok at that moo! Look at him. acquire some chronic ail• write at once to Dr. Hart man. giving a Begorra, If I'd known the way over I d When a medicine has heen successful in restoring to health full Matemeat of your esse, and he will Sympathy Misplaced. more than a million women, you cannot well sav without trying It ment from which they will walked, too."—New York Tribune. KEEP never recover. he pleased to give you his valuable ad• Kdward 1* Adams, representing the "I do not Irclleve it #ill help me." If you are ill, do not hesitate* RERUN* Unless yoa take the nec• vice gratis. United States as consul general at to set a hot in- of Lydia I.. Pinkliam's 'Vegetable Compound and IN THE essary preeantions, the Address Dr. Hartman. President of Stockholm. Sweden, was for several He Found Fault. write Sirs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for special advice. Her ad• MOUSE. chances are that you (who The Hartaaaa Sanitarium. Columbus, years editor of the Rochester Demo• "He criticised me for almost noth vice la free and helpful. Write t4»-day. Delay may be fatal. read this) will be one of Ohio. crat and Chronicle. While occupying log!" moaned the wife. FORFEIT >' «e <-*nnnt forthwith prodnre the oriflnal letter* and tiguttar** ( that poaitlon he wrote an obituary no The friends sought to comfort her. abvva laalnauaiala, vutck «U1 prove their abanlutcj nulneSSaa~ . Too Particular. Saving Time. L.Uia 1.. i' tice of a neighbor's child, whost but she was not to fee soothed. Be• S5000 U«d. Co., I win. First Freak (to his neighbor)—I hear She (bored to death by visitor, who trousers had caught Are during a tween her sobs she told of how her they're going to discharge the glass has called unexpectedly)—Well, I'm tot our Stal KttoU Htf Fourth of July celebration, burning husband had expressed very unfavor• it free to any address eater. He's getting too particul'. f awfully glad you called. I really didn't the little fellow so badly that be died able opinions of her new ball gown. deacnptlon* of MO Vie Second Freak—How'a that? expect you. you know 500 VIRGINIA FARMS MKarm t of from 10 to loot in consequence. Mr. Adams ended acres euch, at from •» per arr* upward*, with bullilliijs, fruit*, tlr.iber. water, etc.; beat ci• First Freak—Well, he won't eat any• Visitor—Well. I was calling on dear "But you said he criticised you for his article with the statement that ts* tela t'.S : good market* (treat variety of STOPS, vetfetalilesaod fruit.; noted f, r hf neaa thing but cut glass now.—Cassell's Mrs. Smith opposite, and I thought 1 almost nothing," argued the sympa• tutor* rruaracu brutal. Aduraa* V\ I I a UallAVEN. K» al Eatate ' . . •. FetartburB. Va. the sympathies of friends would no London Journal. might as well kill two birds with one thisers. out to the bereaved parents. Mis stone.—lx)ndon Judy. "Fo he did " Here she gave way to Tighter, Please. In the Soup. shock the n-xt f the father of the Injures! Uiy. No one who knows Dr. Williamson Lewis, Minneapolis, Minn., cigar box 14 tons of rich Million Dol. Orass Hsy. "Did the little fellow stand the op• will doubt for a moment the complete scheme e\er devised for educating filler; Nela Nelson, Crookaton, Minn., W.000 lbs. Victoria Hspe for sheep—acre. eration well?" aaked the reporter. truth of his fearless declaration, but parents. pneumatic atraw atacker, 1K0.OOO lbs. Teoslnte, the fodder wonder. "I.Ike a major- came through It all 64.onn lbs. Salter's Superior Fodder to cornplotoly clinch the matter in (he Lathraa * Johnson, patent lawyers. Ill Corn—rich, Juicy fodder, per A. right." minds of those who may not have the Largest growers c( and til Pioneer l*reaa Bide. St. Paul Now such yields you can have. Mr. "Did he have to take anything? pleasure of a perrona) acquaintance ONION Farmer. In 1904, If you will plant Sal• continued the reporter. with this celebrated physician, Dt. Didn't Have to Find It tern seeds. (ofc's ^rboHsalve V^tttitli Seids It tta "Not a gol darn thing but chloro Williamson has appeared before Mr. So you were in Ixindon, eh? How JCST BSWD TBI* NOTICB AND 10o laataaUi atoaa laa pal a *f WaW form," was the proud reply of the al- II. B. Greene. J P for Montgomery did you And the weather there?" In stsmps to /ohn A. Raiser Seed Co.. Bams end Scald*. La Cress* wis., and receive their miring parent. county, and made a sworn statement "I didn't have to find it. It came and alwara haal. without ccaia. Our great catalog and lota of farm seed *t aaJ QOr by Iruaal*'*. ar ut. la<1 «>a raeaipt of hunted me up and surrounded ma In In this sworn statement the doctor *» *a« Nr br f. '"«*i«f Prices samples. (W. N U.) Cure for Inaemnia. arte br J.W.OalaaCo . Black Hlwr lI «...w i. chunks."—Philadelphia Press. has cited a number of cases which aaaaaaaaana aa*a a BOX HANDY (_;risg« tnm Family Diplomacy. One o f the best and aimplest cures have been completely cured by Dodd's 0 cents le "I turn all my bills ovr to my wife." for into mnla Is said to be the odor Kidney Pills Here Is case No. 1: $1.50 ptr pcu.id, md "Does she have the money?" of raw onions. They should be "Henry Hall. Sr , ace 48. an Ameri• Looking for a Homo? crushed to s pulp In order to free CAPSICUM VASELINE no bttttr "No; the nerve." can, attacked with Malaria Hsema t rTT VP IK VOM.il'fl KM Ti nn) toed It Than why not kaep In vlaw the all the juice. Smell (his substance fsct that the farming landa of turia. or Swamp Fever; temperature A *vi I'M it ut»" f<>! and MMI i< i 10 in. • tatt tl or nn* found on minutes after retiring. It is •th.tr pla-'tct. ami will not bluter th* nrut PBRKIN'S riLF! BFKCirMI. for ten ranged from IM to 105. highly coated earth. quiet the most nervous per- delicate ikin. The p*jival.ay.»if and curative The Internal Remedy that will cur* r.aid to tongue, conttlpaled bowels, hemor• qualiwet of thift articU are *<>ndeif'il. U will relax the most overwrought •lop the nrothat he at onca, and relieve^ h«ad* absolutely any case of Piles. Insiat •M and rhage or passage of blood from Kid- Dow to grow Western It Is hardly pleasant, but is a- lie and M tatu a. \\ • recumiuend it an the bent on getting It 'rom your DrugglsL nerves, neye; used febrifuge and DotM*! Kid• and safest external counter irritant LIMWU, also 1,200 buthclj said to be efficacious. at an cxteinal leincdy for paina in the t liet Onioni per sen ney Pills to relieve the Inflimmntion and stomach and all iheumattc. natiraUic and Be pleasant until 10 o'clock In tha and congeated condition of Kidneys giMitv complaints. Atrulwill prova what s\e 1UO. with each otux* crdcr. « 1 to for it, and it will be found to be invalu- Canada morning, and the reBt of the day will Took Eight Turkeys, Left $200. Ot., and to render the urine bland and non- aMa in the hmisehold Many people aay "it \% ioe. CataJ^ *«, far BJtBBBl ar* tafllclaat la inppart • popalatioa of 90.000.SOt take care of Itself. John Krider, a farmer near libation. Irltatlng. Recovery complete after tha best ef all your preparation*." Price *A or over? Tha Immuration for la* sail tit >•»'• (fm«. at all diufciate or other dealers, or by til boon ph.iomanaL Pa., discovered that his flock of eight two months' treatment of the Pills." srm.inc tnis amount to us in postacestainpswe John A. Salzer Seed Co., " Men who are great on little thing* turkeys had been stolen one night last will send you a tuba by mail. No article should be eriepted by tha public unless the tamo FREE Hsmssttsi' Lands are apt to be little on great things. week. Farmer Krider, however, Is not When Answering Advertisement* Fashionable society is usually noth carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. mourning, for the robber dropped u CHESf.RROt'OH MM, CO., Kindly Mention This Paper. ••ally *ee*MlMa, whil* *th*r land* mar b* Bar Ing but canned life. Look out for ex• cb*a*d from Railway and I and t ompaniea. Tha JUNE TINT BUTTER COI.OR wallet containing ten twentydollar 17 Stste Street. Nsw YOBB CITT. plosions. N. U. —NO. 1904. train and t rarlnt landa of Wr-iam Canada ar* tha makeB top of the market butter. bills. It is supposed (he thief obtained boat on th* continant, produrias lh* boat train, the money while ransacking some tOai and catlla (fad an araa* aluna) lead? for mat aat. )esseseesssssasaesssssei Market*, Behoof*. Railway* and all other Remember the week day and keep dence In (he neighborhood. -George aeeejae«jsesssaeQBsasseea<»i isseseseasjse< ootKllllon* anaka Woatern Canada an aurl- it holy town (Ky.) News. abla spot for tha ••ttl*r. Thousamla have been cured of Write to Sua>«flrH*ndent immlf ration. Otlaw*.C*n- Plac'a Cura cannot b* too hlfbly a poke* of as Chrittmss Bex. every lorm o( pain and chiefly •da, pat a ,1 .<,> npttva Alia*, and other information, ST. Scout* aura.—J. W. O'llaiss. ttt Third A>», Pain's Master or to tha auihoriiad Canadian G*v*rnat*nt At*Bl— The familiar (erm Chrlslmas box C. Pilling, i.laud Poika. N, U. M„ talaaaepoua, Mlaa.. Jan. «, 190U comes from the old time custom of Every iiook and corner placing alms boxes In the churches t of this and other coun• Rheumatism Those things are not worth aeekmg JACOBS Christmas morning to receive dona tries has seen embla- that ire not worth keeping. and Neuralgia (ions from (he congregation for the toned the word* Price 25c. avnd SOc. benefit of (he poor. As (he alms were OIL BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH m>( given oul until the next day, Dec. 5YKUP cures coughs and colds. 26 came to be known as "Boxing day." Gilt Edge-Whisky Gulch Robt. Lillard and family have moved to their new ranch just above STAGE LINE BY A. T. HARVEY the old Shay place. He has a splen• did location as he has located under Sou"I user) Caacaratr - amStomaci f«t>| like a new man. 1 haveh. 4 15he Cla^ss Fight & •MB i inS.'mr from dyapfpftta ami tour •torn act* the new ditch that the Fergus Cattle for the iant two yearn. 1 have been taking meal- elm- an I other driffa, but could Mini no relief Co., have taken out of Armells. mj frle wU an tha only thing for Indigestion and Quite, a number of boats are going Ttaey are very nice to vat. MARSHAL JACKSON. Proprietor Harry Biuckler. Mauch Chunk, Pa. by bound for the Worlds Fair at St. Man has changed his methods the stock market is held up, when men of their own class, laborers to Louis. •*« a*« M \M Th«5owels ^ since the prehistoric time when the naturally the conditions indicate a congress, and make the laws instead Mr. Davis crossed the' river here cannibalistic giant who could wield falling market. The brothers are of begging for them. and is going to work around Malta leave Ciilt E<1g<- 7 a • Ar LFVIXOI D 10:.m a m l<» LewiMimn 1:30 p m Ar Gilt lular 5:X>|> m the heaviest clubs became chief of holding the prices of stock high with for the summer. CANDY CATHARTIC the motly tribes of cave dwellers. the hope that the suckers can be The cattle wintered here in good These ancient chieftains to glut their convinced this is the time to buy. Movements of Socialists DENTISTRY, shape without any loss; the grass pride and proclaim their powers to No gambler can take even chances National Headquarters, Plea.en». Palatable Potent, Tutt Oood. Do Good. on the range is green now and stock Merer tltokan, Weaken or (Iripe. Me, Me, Ma. ferer admiring followers decorated their with his victim, he must have the Socialist Party. >ld In bulk. Tha fanalne tablet •tamped COO. DR. M. M. H EDa bS. is picking up. Saeranteed to cure nr your money baek. caves with the skulls of their van majority of chances in his favor. William Mailly, Nat'l Secretary, Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. sap The ice went out of the river heie Crown and Itridge Work. Telephone ijuished opponents. To the com Consequently the legal stock gam• Omaha, Nebr., Apr. 25, 1904. ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Office oeer Jadith Hardware Co. the 6th. Mr. Frost went down the W Local Anaeetbettc for Painless Extrac- mon people of those days the chief bler manipulates the market to en• Contributions have been made to river two days later with his ferry. tHMi. was the ideal man, and was treated able him to rob his victim, just as the National Organizing Fund since Mr. King accompanied him from C. 0. Woodworth with reverence, respected for his the illegal gambler who runs rou• last report to the amount of $ 13.50; Benton. Ben Johnson mighty deeds, he had ability as the lette wheels or pharo tables has a previously reported, $ 3,167.96; A number of bob cats in the bot• EXPRESSING & polished skulls of a hundred men variety of chances and devices total, £3,181.46. Delivery toms and they are playing havoc Xxpr*3SS testified. Our captains of industry which enables him to win. There and The bulletin is short this week be• with tne rabbit industry and it is are the modern cannibal chiefs. is no real difference between the ? ^ DRAY1NO) Scavenger Work Given cause of making preparations for almost impossible for the ranchers f*rompt Attention The primal instinct of man remains two, both are scheming to rob removal of the office furniture to to get fresh meat. -«Va> Job and Scavenger Wagon the same, a veneer of civilization suckers and use slightly different the seat of new headquars. Address l.F.WKSTOWN, MONTANA There is a large mountain lion thinly covers the cruelty, but the methods; and of the two the illegal mail as usual until official anounce- All Iluaim-a* (liven Prompt Atniillnii. around these parts; he has been seen greed is much greater in its scope. gambler is by far the better man, as ment of the new address is given. frequently but is so shy it is almost Instead of the swift blow with a he does not make hypocritical claim The New England Passenger As• GEO. VAN CLEAVE Lewistown impossible to get a shot at him and club which at most could but kill to respectability, nor hide his rob• sociation has also given rate of one quite a few large wolves which get one victim at a time, our modern bery under a cloak called high fare and one third on certificate plan ^Express and Draying^ Bakery, cannibals use the scientific weapon, finance. away with the calves. under same conditions as other pas *•« private ownership of the" machinery * * senger associations previously re• Mr. Carney is busy putting in a Kelly & Dougherty Proprietor * of production, and instead of a sin• ported. All who come to the national crop and every one around here is ALL ORDERS GIVEN The destruction and sinking in gle victim murder thousands yearly, convention should remember they making garden or seeding. Most of PROMPT ATTENTION! Only Particular Union bakery less than three minutes of one of to glut their greed for profit. The must get delegates certificate from the ranchers along the river intend Russia's greatest battleships demon• vast majority of their victims do not railroad agent at time of purchasing to raise their own grain and vegeta• Tonsorial J» Parlors,, I.EWISTOWN'S LEADING BAKERV. strates that the modern battleship is cutter the quick death, but struggle ticket if they want reduced fare bles this year and Lewistown can nothing but a death trap. And in• ALU! K l JOHNSON. Prop. BREAD, CAKES AND PIES though life enduring the pangs of home from Chicago. expect to get her tropical fruit from hunger, living in foul dens, the air stead of a tremendous engine of de• this section in time as this is the FRESH EVERY DAY. State Secretary Jas. S. Smith of Call and get a Clean Shave or a of which reeks with disease, no struction, almost invulnerable, as Illinois has issued a circular of in• banana !>e!t of Montan.t and when Nobby Hair Cut. WEDDING AND FANCY CAKES prospect but dull, soul destroying is popularly believed is in fact we get tired ranching we can rest formation concerning hotel accom• KINE NEW MATH ROOMS A SPECIALTY. toil. Our modern system is much one of the easiest destroyed of by going down to the river and modations at the conventions. Those WITH rOKCEI.AlN l:\TH TUBS better for the chiefs than the pre• all the types of warships. The catching the festive catfish. »«,. TELEPHONE 56. writing for this information should nra.. Bertram! ft Faux Building. historic method; then the chief had weight of armour plate or turrets enclose stamp for reply. Lewistown ^* Mont to work killing victims to live on, and water line renders the ship so SOCIALISTS ARE FOR PEACE The Illinois State Committee re• now the victims kill themselves pro• unstable that a comparatively small ports the endorsement of Comrades (Continued from first page) ^zTwo Coaches^ D J KANE ducing luxuries for the chief who do injury on, or below water line will Sam Block and M. W. Speare for not have to labor. The people slave cause the ship to turn turtle. The EACH WAY DAILY BETWEENI the reserve list. Unless objections laborers. The logic of the facts is because necessity drives them to it reason governments build these are raised and a direct vote called stronger than the logic of the words. and no other taskmaster is needed. monstrosities is because of the ex• Kendall and Lewistown CONTRACTOR for the names will be placed on the The Socialists recogni/e that the To obtain the means to sustain life traordinary opportunity for graft AND list in three weeks from date. The class struggle between the capitalist Comfortable Accommodat ions we labor, produce abundance to by their construction. One battle State Committee of New York has and the working class, now" that it is for Passengers Oreat Northern 3KBU1LDER. gratify every want and desire of ship will cost the government as there by force of circumstances, withdrawn the endorsement of L. D. and Northern Pacific Express giv• man, but the employing class takes much as several cruisers and of the Mayes as speaker for reserve list, cannot be ended by economic means. all, and in return for our labor dole additional cost a very large percent The mere economic organization of en Prompt and Careful attention. because of a protest from Local Office aad Shop Work a Specialty out in wages just sufficient to sustain age is profit. Our patriotic capital• the working class can never end in Rochester. y* TIME CARD <*• life. And, as there are many men ists will sacrifice everything, but any other solution but violence. The Lv. Ar. Morris Hillquit has been re-elect Lrt'WiHlnwn Krndall for every job, it is only the more profit, for the country. They are omly way to meet the problem suc• ed National Committeeman for New 9:o<> a. 11 ...12 m Window Frames, Doors and energetic and capable men who can very willing to construct ships that cessfully, and without bloodshed, is Kt-iKlall J.HWlHtOWH York; and Chas. H. Towner, Cov• obtain employment at callings which they know are defective and are al• to supplement the economic class 3 p. m ...Op. m. Store Fronts of Anv Kind Fur- ington, has been elected to fill the ensure a small degree of comfort. most sure to cause the loss of human struggle by the political class strug• Judith Inland Transportation Co. vacancy caused by resignation of nished on Short Notice. Hut as each of the preceeding sys• life. There is profit in battleships, gle at the ballot box. Kconomic or• Chas. Dobbs, as National Com• J. L. Mr.AKN. Proprietor tems of producing the necessities of ar.u it a few hundred workingmen ganisation as a class and political mitteeman for Kentucky. life have disappeared from the eirth. are drowned what matter, capitalism organization as a class, that is the No report has been made to the When no longer capable of feeding must have profits. only way to solve the riddle of how D. J. KANE, National Committee conceraing the the majority of its slaves, so the * to abolish classes and class struggles. actions of the Ouorum because of aLewistown, Montana capitalist system will change to the The bosses are opposing eight-hour the National Secretary's absence, The capitalist themselves, if they cooperative commonwealth when the legislation in congress and claim it but in view of the fact that no re• read the signs of the times correctly permanent army of unemployed is tyrannical. They also oppose em• r port will be made next vteek and should do everything in their power D E. H. reaches a few million more in num• ployers liability acts or any legisla• probably not the next. I will report to hasten the political organization LEWISTOWN. MONT. bers. tion favoring the majority of the that the Ouorum has approved of of the working class in the Socialist people. lor twenty years a lobby party. Pat in the further course of Then in the victory of the work• the following proportions sa-bmitted of earnest union men have been trust development, a commercial ing class, the struggle between peo• under dates given: SHORT ROUTE FAST TIMI PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. ple of different classes, based on striving to have congress pass laws crisis through overproduction, and to benefit labor, but have accom• March 1, Temporary suspension TO THI: PACIFIC ( OAST TELEPHONE 65. their economic condition, will cease therefore, a gigantic unemployed plished nothing. It is time for the of "Foreign Bulletin," "Annual and n.»n assured of the necessities problem, is looming up in the hori• MINNEAPOLIS AN l> ST. PAUL Report;" withholding names of J. of comfortable life, will be able to people to realize that the congress zon of the near future. When that H. Osborne from reserve list pending CorvrMWllna EVER Y DAY Judith Steam practice the golden rule and become and senate of these United States time comes, there are only Imp ways are composed of men of the capi• further instructions from state com• a truly civilized being. of meeting the situation: One is to mittee of Colorado because of pro• At Hi. Paal and Mum.«awlta with all Lim• LAUNDRY. talist class, consequently it is folly slaughter the gungry masses, to stifle * test from State Committeeman R. A. ited aa4 Fa*1 Mail Trunin lor CliiMuo. New to expect them to pass laws favor• the class sf "ggle in blood, and to York and tba K.iM ami >i BajtlM I-T Pacific Guarantees Satisfaction at The Irish landlord Scully who Southworth. (Wrote Slate Secretary coaat t>"iula. able to labor; because if shorter travel the same weary road all over some years ago became notorious Martin, April rjth for reply to hours are granted to workers there again, through the same gruesome C GREAT FALLS PRICES. ^ for the evictions carried on by his letter of March nth relative to pro• is less profit for the employer. strife and murder, to again come to E It Trains lv (it Falls 3:05 a m orders in the west of Ireland, owns test. ) Sometimes the employers strive the same dilemma. The other is the VV B Tr'ns lv 4:40 a m 3:15 p m 47,000 acres of good land in Logan March 29th, -Temporary post• county, III., where he has estab• to drive men harder for the shorter presence of a Socialist organization NORTHERN ponement of sending organizer to All nn-aldJlaiMi . ».-.l,i la arm. Eor lished the Irish system of landlord• time and thus make op the loss, but strong enough to guide the working fall information r>'»'»rdui< ra'e- and aloep- Wisconsin at expense of National imrrar. n rit ' eall MINM W. C. iMIierly. ism. The farms are let in Xoor 160 the condition cannot long prevail class, and also the capitalist class, Id « Uatutrn, Slain- nMei . or PACIFIC } RAILWAY office. acre tracts at the rate of $4.50 per and the result is eventually increas• by the bridle of reason, to yield to April Xr - Submitting nominations L. H. YOUNG. <;r, a. I'alla. acre but the tenant must make all ed cost of production except where the Socialist majority in conformity for delegates to National Conven necessary improvements and before the adoption of improved machinery w;th the democratic spirit of this Vestibuled Trains tion from (Georgia after regular time any part of the crop raised on the eliminates men thus reducing cost. country, and to reorganize society because of claim that call for nomi• land can be sold, Scully must be It is only to be expected that our on the basis of collectivism. There Send Yo\ir Dining Cars nations had not been received. paid the cash by these "independ• law makers refuse to sanction such will then be only one class, the work• The vote on location of National ent American farmers." measures, and if they do pass one ing class, who will buihl the society headquarters has resulted in the se• of the future with brain and brawn, SUBSCRIPTION W Scully bought the land from the to make political capital: the su• TIME CARD-LOMBARD lection of (Chicago as you will see a society without class antagonisms TO THE government several years ago for preme court can be depended on to naUT BOUND DF.I'AKT declare the law unconstitutional. by enclosed report. The office furn• and without class hatred. In one •*«•.«. Atlantic KIP 4 1« • m 11.25 per acre, the increase in pop• And even when adopted by the iture is being moved at once so that word, to abolish class hatred we *Xu 12. Loral paancngrr 2 (Oa ni ulation, has made the property val• we may, if possible, get settled in must abolish the economic condi• aa-earr BOUND NNM uable, so without any work or further people as a constitutional amend• News! Ra X I'acilic I'lprrea H Ml • new office rooms before the conven• s ment, as in Colorado; the bosses tions that create classes and class •Wo. 11. Loral paMaen»er 4 I expense he yearly receives four dol• refuse to be bound by its tion. hatred. ^Coanecl" at Logan and Carrinon with Nm Hi lars and fifty cents per acre from it. BO YEARS' a luaal Limited...... An attempt was made to prevent provisions. They work men long EXPERIENCE him holding the land lyecause he hours for paltry wage, women slave Delos Items was an Irish lord ami alien. He re• for a pittance often not snfricient to Mr. Fisk has gone to Helena with moved to New York and became supply the commonest necesoties of C.E. RICHARDS his family. LEWISTOWN, • naturalized and so held his land, life, and in the cotton mills of the I lion. . : ' MONT. There if little use in blaming Scullv ! south, the mines, stores and sweat Mi. Hanson has gone to work for TRADE MARKS Day Of Night. DcsicjNa sh s of ,he east ,ittle thilore oii Mr. Fisk. if he did not nan ,t IOSM other ex-! "«' » < COPYRIGHT* AC. Anyone .ending a naatrh and dtncrlntloti may , .. ,. ,, • . I from ten to twelve hours a day, but Mr. Bush went out to Lamhisky quickly aarartaln our opinion free whether an Ounty and CUv UCIWI *. .7. plotter would. I he troub e is the L. invention la probably peti ntniiin. Commanlaa tloiianirictlyeoiifldontlal. HANDBOOK on I'aieula UNDERTAKER. jthis is not tyranny, oh. no, just List week. aent. free. • 1 • 1 • menu Ihrouvli Mmiti S. i n. reoelft EMBALMER. AND ptosis rote ta aoattWM the system : business. When the working class Mr. Phillips has gone to Alder tpecint noflcs, without < hargo, In the FUNERAL DIRECTOR which enables the few to ask the 1 learn the lesson of the struggle maiiv through private ownership of which is raging within our society, CulCB Jp! the summer. M deck of Scientific American, public necessities. they will cease p) ask the capitalistic nniiiMiNos, cor- 1 Mr. Howard had the bad lo< I to imMtliUi "1 Mif annni in-' (ouriiftti. ivi n>a, %A a HNS and CASKETS. congress to b*etter their condition. Old Ilat-htup, hi op. ItoUeutl Deal ytw : four niotitha, $L Huld byall rnwatliialara 140. l>.y or Nigfet. Inspired by the understanding of lose a horse while hauling hay you know that Is the panic that kilU?- The New York Herald tiyi that our economic system they will elect from Smith A: l.arraway'a. Clitcugo American. Co36iBr„.„*.v.NRW York 3>c.o. tft V St, Wablilugiun. O. C. i /