Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • 4

Location:
Helena, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

U- September 25, 19U. DAILY INDEPENDENT TIIE HELENA Ilia bettarmant cf the children." Jh motto of thoo cluba la. Mak tha Indifferent Different." Mebemrahlp limited to males 11 year of ag or over. 1 Each month tha "fiitheri- cldb" debate puch questions as Are our Dm is in IE cm and of guatainlng th price of th h-uf. lulk too much and I IJWely to1 He drnan.nl from hi home at nlht hungry on account of that Impoat.

hut life Iniuranc I ao very much In th public Interval, it aervea ao uae- (6c Helena 3Jaf pendent I 4. and flogged- Three men near Hop-kinntllh' talked too much; that la. they denounced itlaht rldin. though Ml Plni HM'i'ai Inalata thnt he to inno- rn of litem General Hardware House Furnishing Goods Cutlery Silverware and Builders Supplies ut of the Iinrae. The night riders a Inst rcaort tarried them off and dogged them with straps.

Thia practice waa Interrupted four ago. and the state! senate commute re- of Kentuckv must now llnd a means upon the question of direct of prote.tma us dtiaena. Ml.VIt tklMUTIONH. Th bl sugar lndutr In 4 A. M.

Holter US-U7 K0ETH Hardware Co. KAIN STREET turn miiuvntt i nvwrpw-, believe the chunge would. books, woman on In the moat flourishing be injurious rather than beneficial." l(B w.hooi board, the kchoolhouao as plan Influence of newspapers, children trained for, or away from, the age In which live? flow many chtidien out of 1,000 reach high school lij our town? What about the rest? t)r-thy I scum topic! Ilka the following; i Comparative public expenditures In fkrlous states: juvenile courts, achoitlhouo Instruction, compulsory education. opon-olr schools; playgrounds, medical inapectloa; tha ae question'; buolnoaa oducallon. the cultural mass- I community center.

tiue.t. representing various com rrv are Invited to the fhr from matricta: clerg men: physicians 0f neighborhood, mombera of tho board of oducatlon; ipayor nd cit counrll. atid the bar association. Th clubs wer addressed at different times during th yr by a Judg af the United Htatea circuit court, unl-v crslty professors, senator, school superintendents, a Judg of th superior court, a member of th slats beard of education, as well as other Interested citizens. It is planned In the near future to form th existing club Into a federation, with a uniform program for all the clubo every month.

oiintr) I. condition In Ua hlstorj The price gar I higher than an) time Since IS higher man an, the civil wur I Only one smnll plf.nt dei iiled uj I lose on account of the last tnriff loll Tho umount of sugar beet naed for It last year and the amount of augur put out by It would not bill, agalnat th Alaska rall-atveeten the coffee for one American ft. aRalnst parcel post, against iTeakfast the repeal of the Panama canal tolls The prhe of augur la up becauae the great heel augur producing fields Dillinghum I "I yeur old. a r- Oil Possibilities Should any of the wells bow drilling, strike oil, (and the chances are declared to be excellent that they will,) the Sweetgrass fields of northern Montana will be the hub of record activity. Invest now, before the rush starts! IilontanaCanadian Oil Co.

r. M. Ben Fiscal Agents, Butte, Mont, (Lewishon Block.) In Belgium and France re uncultivated. The rapid rise to date is speculative No crop ha been lost Those who had the ugur when the torm broke hav been anticipating They pushed up the price upon the theory of a long wur But the price la already go high ft to tart reaction. Demand la declining.

It would 1 fine If the present purt could compel cotton planter to go to beet raising. It might, but that n. groea are not natural gardeners They do not like to ivecd" any better than corn and wheat growers do. When ull this is said, however. It still remains th.it the ordinary 1 box of cundv foiiltl be sold profitably at 50 cents Published every day In th year by I Independent Publishing Lumpiiii), Independent Building, Helena, Tt Th Montana.

VJuTa. CAHPRKt-I Editor and Mr Entered at the pootofflc at Helena. Montana, for tranomla.lon through th inalla ond-rlaa tnattr. En otern llepreaentatlvee Htrven A Kin. Ilea ml Jtulldin.

Chicago, til. 5tt Fifth Avenue, New tork LU, N. Y. Sl'IWCRIPTION RATE. Jtll and 8uida.

one year Unlit and tuiidi. ala month 1 tally and Hundat, three month. tally and tunda. carrier, per month lit Helena oo 3 I ml, THURSDAY. SKPTEMIlKIt .1.

114 DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET Heyrraeahilhea la Ceagreaa TOM STOUT. JOHN M. EVANS, Missoula. Assert te Jaatlre Sapreme Cart JAMES M. Cl -KM ENTS, Helena.

Hall rand ('MiaWtWMf J. k. McOOllMICK, Boulder. COUNTY Far Meaahera tl the tae of Hegre. aett4- ff.

C. BARDON JAME8 BOMPAHT EDWARD DAY MARTIN TROUSER OKOHGU RAMSEY Coaaty CatlMlwee r. B. McKOWKN. Cesatr Clerk aad Reewrdee A Dl NVA.Y Sheriff ED.

J. MAJORS Treasurer em a nv fi. risenr. Asaeaaa CHARI.FR h. MARTIUN Coaaty Attorney ANDREW 11 McCOSNEI.lt.

Aodlter AI.RERT C. "BAY' CT.ARKE. l-ablle Agavlalstratoe WM. TAYIXIU Coroaer EIX.IS A. JOHNSTON.

Soperlateadeat of Schools EVA HARRINGTON. Coaaty Purveyor P. OEORC.n1 POORE. TOWNSHIP OFFM ER. Junttre of the Peace (Vote for two! J.

OI.EARV C.nonon KAIN GEOHOr. T. WOOD The second Bed in turned out to lie sei end Jen i The siege of Paris mav not he abandoned. bill It is certainlv postponed The Federal league Insists upon violating thi neutrality of organized haseh.ill. PROFESSION l.

WAH MAKERS. The naval slratsgy bourd Is urging -thjt President Wilson mobilise the American navy at once In order to keep of the warring powers August 2. US-, congress pusaed, over the president's veto, the largest rivers and harbors bill ever passed $18,743,875. It goes, without saying, St.itietlcally an army always re-jthllt November elections of that trouts before 20 per rent of its wer, fvorahle to the democrats, are disabled A loss of 10 per rent dei hies most battles Wilson liaa. apparently, democratic party again, by opposing ON THE JOB.

We have had presidents who regarded the duties of the chief magistracy as an easy routine. There hav been others who used their position to exploit themselves by extensive travel, public shows and Incessant apeech-raaklng. Asked to appear on th stump In behalf of democratic candidate this fall. Mr. Wilson places his responsibilities a president above those that attach to party leadership and says with reference to- the atate of war in Europe: Every patriotic man ought now to atay on his Job' until the crisis Is past, and ought to stay where his Job can best be done.

Staying on the job in thin case means more than an appreciation of duty and more than a willingness to forego pleasure It reveals an unshaken confidence In the Intelligence and Justice of the people. The president haa made hie record and is willing to abide by it. His party has made Its record and he can Bee no reason why much talk should be necessary to convince his countrymen that with so many achievements to its credit it. should not be cordially indorsed Jit theo This Is an assumption that the people of the United States as well as their representatives at Washington are on the Job.To stay on the Job Is at all times, but in the present crisis it is a policy which in private life has been forced upon millions of anxious, business men. who are in no niood for distracting sensations or diversions.

In the grim compulsion that is upon them they will find encouragement in the knowledge that the administrators of their government are at their posts, alert, laborious and true. Woodrow Wilson lias been on the Job for peace, on the Job for fair taxation. on Hie Job for honest business, iifo AordTurrency ndorrn he kept saying out loud. I. try i.b JrfT shame! If.

a shame! If. shame! for jusOwk4lM(. women now have the full franchise within the tribe. The tost tlm marched my banner said. Catching up with but it would com nearer home to say Catching with the Chippewa Other Mill Be Sorry.

II th women ol Montana who not going to march tomorrow night realised how sorry they would be a few years, after they have th right of franchise, they would get right line before its too tote. Its the parade that's the hardest to march but later on its good to feel that were one of the pioneers' Dr. Shaw has been all over eastern part of the state, speaking three and four times a day. In Billings when she addressed the Commercial club there were not enough seats to accommodate the crowds thronged the hall to hear her. straw ballot was taken in regurd suffrage before she began to showing that 66 of the 77 mejaUiattJ, were in favor of enfranchising women this fall.

Alter her talk, several men approached her and told that if the straw vote were taken over again they would certainly in favor of the su ft rage cauoe. The day that Dr. Shaw spoke Forsyth, arose at 4 o'clock in morning to. leave Glendive. In Glendive there were a great many men busy about the station, not a woman in sight, said Shaw.

'Among the men there was sheriff who had with him a cuffed criminal whom he was taking to the penitentiary, and a state officer who had an insane man in straight Jacket whom he as taking to the insane asylum. And it denty came over me that there were only two persons in mat entire group of men who were my peers, from political standpoint. I think the man saw the Irony of tha situation, and Dr. Shaws eyes twinkled merrily, "for as he paced the is now denied that General Elior-man ever said "Wur is hell" If he 1 joint he overlooked the obvious There Is real purpose bade of the German attack on Uheims (pro- The most vigorous English verse nounied Rems with ft long el. It is that the present war has culled forth manufacturing city of first tmport-is the production of a railroad porter once in France, being famous for Ks at Hath whose style suggests that he wooien goods, biscuits aml charn- a great admirer of Kipling.

It Is! pagne It has been a strategic poln the German toast, "Thejin history making struggles since the is needless to say that dnv, of the Roman and Frankish based on Duv." and it ful a purpooegbi relieving communl-llea of the public or private support of fu ml I lea whoae breadwinners hava i died, HmT It should l- taxed only at priniarfes for United Stales senators, there waa a minority report which said among thins In opposition to the of of this minority (r, wui Wtmm PuTJl Dillingham. report wu. w.man. i nited Plate senator from Urm nt Dillingham toted ugulnal the dlret of aenatora; voted for I.ori un even roll cull; voted agalnat every labor law; agalnat every con- mont stundput republican politician of the old school, who hn served a governor of Vermont and ha been so tdntiiu-d with th railroad rln of New England that actually haa come to believe railroad domination of the government Is not only necessary but la right and patriotic All of these things go quite a way In explaining why the and progressive of Vermont huve subordinated all minor Issues and Joined hands to defeat William P. Dillingham.

Political revolt Is strong In New England, where political boss-ism has been so corrupt and Insolent the hlg rivers and harbors hill this eu r. conquerors OI.I GENERALS METHODS. The new commander of the second (Saxon German army is 68 years old. One Impressed with the fact that all of the generals on both sides who have taken Important parts in this war up date have been men over f0. It is probably due to this fact that thus far the fighting has lacked that brilliancy and dash and strategic surprises thut mark the tactics of younger commanders.

For this reason the war will probably last longer. No commander will hazard everything on one plan: the fighting along lines tactics; coups, then demoralized campaign war conducted goes greatest QUESTION. against the upon upon polities, prospect of The republican party's record on IegttluUon precludes a uarrc, parUgan issue for campaign v. individual congress- I. or h.t fh uture, is less N.

The idea that all Moslems would stand together was os absurd as the idea that alf ChTuMans would, ahd the. belief that all MoSlems recognize the sultan of Turkey as the- Caliph had no more foundation than the proposition that all the Christians of the world recognize the authority of the pope. The Indian Moslems were vgfy prompt to' assure the Turks of thtir loyalty to King George, -and of their hope would remain friendly with England, ana now the head of' the Moslems of Russia expresses the' concurrence of himself and his co-rellgionists under the czar's rule with the Moslems of India. 7 FATHERS CLVBS." What sort1 of a father you? This question is found on every program of what is claimed to be the first father' club In the United States, organised a tr Bluffs. Iowa, a little or at year ago, according to information received at th horn education divlalon of the United State bureau jOf education.

en dubs, with average membership pt 50 have been formed dur-jLng th vear for th purpose of bringing the fathersjnto doer touch with the children, the teachers, and board of education. In an endeavor to bring wbout the very best results for The First National Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY ESTABLISHED 1863. CHARTER NO. 203.

OFFICERS, LOUIS W. HILL, Chairman of Board E. H. BAILEY. Preident O.

M. NELSON, Cashier CYRUS P. BROWN, Vice Presl- EDWIN MOTT, Asst. Cashier dent H. B.

HOUSE, Auditor E. O. RICE, Vice-President CHARLES E. GAEL, Assistant C. H.

BUCKLEY, Asst. Cashier Cashier DIRECTORS. JAMES J. HILL WILLIAM B. DEAN Great Northern Railway Co.

Nicols, Dean Gregg LOUIS yf. HILL ALBERT N. ROBE Chatrman Gt. Northern Ry. Co.

j0s. Ullmann EDWARD N. SAUNDERS, JR. ALBERT L. ORDEAN President Northwestern Fuel president First National Bank, Co- Duluth, Minn.

CHARLES W. AMES ptcharti a JACKSON President West Publishing Co. president Great Northern f.AET Railway CYRUS P. BROWN THEODORE L. SCHURMEIER Vico President President C.

Gotxian ft Co. THEO. 'A. SCHULTZE DAVID C. SHEPARD n.

President Foot, Schultze ft Co. Finch, Van Slyck McConville CHARLES W. GORDON JOHN J. TOOMEY President Gordon ft Ferguson Vice President Northwestern HAYDN 8. COLE Trust Co.

President Northwestern Trust GEORGE T- SLADE WATSON P. DAVIDSON P' M'W' WADtoTtoTUIR vu President St. M. A O. Butler Brothers, Contractors Railway Co.

REPORT OF CONDITION OF BANK AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS SEPTEMBER 12, 1811. RESOURCES LIABILITIES Loans and discounts. $20,825,220.42 Capital Stock 3, 008, 009.00 U. S. Bonds 600,000.00 Surplus 2,000,000.00 Other Bonds 10,186,779.10 profit 615,806.61 Bank Building.

314.990.00 96,700.00 Du from Banks and V. S. Treasurer 6,866,374.85 Deposits 29,829,889.66 Clearing House Loan Clearing House Loan Certifict's on hand 1.107.000.00 Certificates eon'nnn no Cash 4,402,032.30 Bonds Borrowed 6,690,000.00 42.942,396.17 42, 942, 396.17 We solicit business of Montana banks and bankers. THE OLDEST BANK IN MINNESOTA WILL hFEAK AT THE FAIR THI8 AFTERNOON AND AT TIIE AUDITORIUM TONIGHT. THE SIMCISTS WILL, fill Boy Seoul to Take Part In the First Equal Suffrage Pageant Free Held In tin NurUmeut Hundreds ol Men Bad Women to March.

"The suffrage parade tonight will be th last suffrage parade ever held in Montana," declared Dr. Anna Howard Bhaw, president of th National Woman Suffrage association, who arrived In Helena laet night on her tour through the elate in the Interest of vote for women. I'm quite certain that the suffrage amendrtient will pass in this state with sn overwhelming majority this fall. "I should like to carry a bannei; in the parade with the inscription Catching up with the Chippewa for you know the Chippewa Indians Just recently extended all the rights of the tribe to their squaws, and the Indian I up are in in first In, you ths that A to talk, the her vote at the but Dr. I a Hand- a sud-' insane plat- Dr.

Shaw made four talks that day, and when she arrived in Forsyth, where she was to speak from the platform of her car, there were mobs of people at the station to greet her. The doctor is a tiny little woman of dignity and determination. This energetic woman Is to speak ut the fair "grounds this afternoon, and tonight she will speak in the auditorium, together with Judge Chea-dle, of Dewi8town. Before the lecture, however, the big suffrage pageant will take place on Main street. The pageant.

which will be the first of the kind ever held by women in the Pacific northwest, has been carefully planned, and hundreds of men and women from all over the state of Montana are booked to march In the spectacular procession. Big Parade Tonight. With' colors flying and slogans displayed on huge banners, the suffragists will march down Main street, to the music of the Anaconda band, to express in concrete demonstration the will of the thousands whom they represent in the votes-for-womeji campaign. Of the hundreds who have registered to march in the parade, not the least among them are the Helena women who desire to help further this effort on the part of the suffragists the greatest success ever accomplished in the northwest. The formation of the pare will be as follows: Music.

National and State Officers. Suffrage Nations. Enfranchised States. Campaign States 1914. Campaign States 115.

Partial Suffrage States. States Without Suffrage. Federal Amendment. Montana- Count' Montana Cities. Separate Organisations.

Boy Scouts. Mens League. Labors Unions. Music, Women Riders. Floats.

Automobiles. AH those who are- interested In making thi? the biggest suffrage parade ever seen in the United States should report at the upper end of Main street between 7 oclock and 7:30 tonight. tllllML UST KIT FQTUBEBF TIEFIIB A Jolly good natured crowi of state fair visitors, who thronged the streets cntil midnight. stagfh carnival last sight along Main street, which' proved one of th interesting features of the week. The usual carnival stunts were pulled off.

Th best of order prevailed. I TW'mSn skin deep lived before fac. waa Invented. pewder Sly that the muse has been so silent In Great Britain When the censor bars all thrilling tales It must be as irom being tempted to violate ourih(r(, t( wrjt) B0d poetry on war ns neutrality even as Germany violated make a good readable dispatch that of Belgium, nnd Japan, that of wj(1 ttJ being done, vhina. They profess to believe that yf any nation gets an idea our navy is not efficient the Panama canal will be seized ly that nation.

To I 2.r going on would be crazy enough knows, the allies, or nither the v. mt to force the Fn.ted Suites Into ish. se, ured long start mr against it? Certainly not Oer- out the official corresponden of li. many and Austria, that already have foreign affair, office. Gradal a)l they can do to take care of them- other powers have come to realize cirri l-" peoples and the document In Hie, case are coming forth until is reasonable to expect that before thej hearing Is concluded, practically alii of the evidence will have been inoor- nndiporateil In the record Thv.

significance ol the undisguised English people dependent upon this nation for food Such talk is nonsense. But It Is also dangerous. It comes from the naval strategy board. Such boards responsible for many war friction. War Is itlons will be conservative and long established In European if no armies are executing none Is being annihilated, or even routed.

Such a of smash and verve and a along such lines usually to the side which has the NOT A PARTISAN It is because the fight pork barrel" has been based business sense, rather than thut there Is some securing results. he summons the kaiser to an awful reckoning The poet laurente has been mule bo far. but Thomas Hardy has Jumped, into the ring with an alleged poem that must make his friends weep. Possibly It Is because h)ck 'o( jBtun from the front AlPEIbS TO rCBI.IC OPINION. It is interesting to ooserve all the of Europe seeking to effort to appease the public "of however r.

i ognltion that lx lief In cause is to be a controlling factor, not only In the conduct of the war hut in the settlements that must come later. In other days It was might makes right and we'll talk ZTJSZ ZZ we are done fighting, but touay re nZr and emperors prefer not to Incur. Former Vice Jresi ent Fairbanks announces the' result in Maine indl-. cates great republican victories this fall and the election of a republican president hi two years. Fairbanks can detect more warm enthusiasm in a cold plunge than any-human known.

It was only 188212 years after the Franoo-Prussian war that aU royal princes were dismissed from the French army. Now. all whose houses were founded in the Napoleonic era seem to be back in the ranks, fighting ns they 6id 100 years ago. The proposed tax on bfe insurance policies Is not very heavy, but needs of. the government are not pressing enough to Justify any tax hich falls upon the widow and orphan.

The states tax life Insurance. The income tax life insurance, tjfough not hdavllv as It woufiS nave if the original draft of the bill had not been considerably modified. The Wlil proposition reached life insurance at fur points. tws (neurones policies 80 cents pet $1,000. 1he families of will 'not go on the Job WetSe-tieve that a great people are also on the Job will take care of him and of every member of congress, no matter what his party label may be, who has supported him.

New York World. UKU UUKB SAtS. We never think of erecting a monument to a man until he is dead and There are 453 wajs to break a leg, and a man will accept your explanation as to how it happened and never doubt' you. There are also 534 ways to get a black ee, but if you do not admit -that some guy handed you a wallop ou are always a Liar. A reader objects to Luke paragraph which referred to the mother of nine or ten children as a White Slava Well, take the average mother of nine or ten children as an example.

She is first up in the morning. She fixes breakfast. She washes faces and combs heads. She dresses the children. She gets part of the family off to school and worries all day with the smallest tads.

She scrubs, washes, cooks, dusts, purses, -worrlea. quarrels and cries all day long. She prepares three and sometimes four meals a dgy. She is always cooking or washing dishes. And, when night combs, and the tads are tucked away, she stays up and Irons little' waists and clean underwear for school time the next morning and dampens and starches clothes so she will have more to do the next day.

And one of the tads is certain to have something wrong about the time she closes her ees and she has to stay up -and soothe the pain. This is her daily round. If she isn a. White Slave, what is she? KALISFEIL KILLED -BY ns Special to The Independent Kali spell. Sept.

24. Through the ae-ctdental discharge of tho rifle with which he was hunting, Peter Pearson, a tie maker residing at Batavia, six miles west of this city, wis killed some time during the day. yesterday. Pearson left hi horn early In the morning, taking 'his rifle with him, tut intending to go 'to work In tji afternoon. As he did not report for duty as expected, a search was made end bis lifeless body was found toward1 evening.

He had apparently eat down on la log to rent and id eom way accidentally discharged th rifle, the bullet passing through the stomach and lungs. Death wa evidently instantaneous Pearson was yeers of age and unmarried. He Is survived by his parents end tw Maters. The funeral was held this afternoon. Newspaper Ses Here Ed Gall 0t' th '31i111ngsGetTrnVr ltor much Itnernatlonal their profession and they are always nnding excuses to practice at it De- siroy factories that make guns and ammunUlon.

and disband the anous military and navAl strategy Laird of the world and much of the provocation for war wpuld be eliminated. These are the institutions that are headquarters of militarism. These are the boards that are always insisting upon larger armies and bigger guns and more i-ives, as means of defense." Get ting them, they are new toy; they want to try them out, to see if they will work. It 4a- now generally-conceded that war is-a matter of general education. The way to' prevent it Is to educate people not that.they are in danger of being attacked and should go armed, but that they are at peace with the world.

There is just as much sense In mobilizing the fleet now In order to preserve- our' neutrality as. there would-be for a peaceful citizen, during a neighborhood riot, to get out and walk up and flown In front of his house flourishing a couple of revol-ertCu8t to show that he. too. could fight. If his neutrality were molested.

And it would he Just as foolish. If 1, a pleasant picture that comes 4ut of I Washington that of Senator sterling sitting fast asleep dt his desk, supporting Burton 'and Kenton In their great fight against the rivers sqd harbor bill. They also serve who only stand and wait. Anybody In the tobacco section of Kentucky who expresses an unfavor -able oplulun 11 oFtA; liilght riding a a means of; preventing the overproduction qf 4 tobacco SKIN TROUBLE IH It Large and Redi On Arms Extended to. Body and Legs.

Clothes Scratched. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Healed. Mocflp; Viuh. "My trouble flrat Marled oo my arm and aoou tt extended to my body and leg. The Hist I noticed of it-wo red poU.

itching apot some larger Mian a pin head. My clothing irritated them and. I acratcbed. My deep was disturbed by the doth scratch log, It jhad bothered toe about tea day aad I began to me tha Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I only purchased onoeakp of Cuticura Soap and on boa of CuUcura Ointment and they effected a complete cure.

(Signed) Sid Straws) May l. 1914. HANDS WOULD CRACK OPEN Mo. Every winter I had a braakbM out oo my hands. They Ont got rough aad then would crack open to ptacea ai if there had been kttl gashes cut.

They hurt and were sora I ooad CuUcura Soap and Ointment aad my hands are well. jMy toco would break out to rod phnptoa and akin aoemed thick and feverish. I naed CmUcora Soap and Ointment and war cured." (Signed) Mr. B. A.

Milkman, Mar. 0, 1914. Samples Free by Mall The National Bank of Montana Helen. Montnma. Designated Depository of Ik United States.

Capital $250,000.00 Surplus $100,000.06 THOMAS JL- Jraidn9 ALBERT SMITH. Vlc-Preldnt w. H. DICKINSON Caahien w. PROSSER An latent Cashteff DIRECTORS: Chan N.

Klr CJ. McNamara H. W. Child A M. Holtor John Murphy TV.

tt Diekinaom Albert I Smith Thoma A Marlow H. O. Hclnttrm general Baakto Baeiaena Traa Aeeeaoto haak vldaala aeltrlted. Montana Livestock Casualty Insurance Company Vaot Sixth BUENA. MOOTAXA Aaeeta.

Joa. 31. WH, $128,000. 00 Sarpiam 19.00000 DtptikUc LivtiUck Insurant at Reasonable Rates CORRESPONDENCE INVITED Although Cudrare Soap (Be) and Cutt-cm Ointment (50c.) are aold by drugghte aad dtalera throughout the world, a liberal of encb.vitA JEMv Bkl Book jrfflU be met free upon request. Addrem pool card Cuttcura.Dept.

T.Botoon.I 1 Joseph Smith, editor of th DeJAdg Silver State nr attending th fair..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Independent-Record Archive

Pages Available:
1,158,225
Years Available:
1874-2024