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Black Hills Daily Register from Lead, South Dakota • Page 2

Location:
Lead, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEW HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION tat jgM.pia aUrltgtst W. BKNFEK, Editor and Proprietor. Tuesday evening, and he died early Wednesday morning. He has been a resident here for, a number of years and is a brother of Jos. B.

Lessard." Labor Union Directory THE PEOPLES' WANT COLUJIN For Rent, Sale, Lost, Etc NOTICE. i AH union men and members Official Organ District Miners', Union No. 2, W. F. of M.

Official Organ of Black Hills Irades Assembly KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. On Year, by carrier (paid im advance) 6.oo One Year, by mail (in advance) 5.00 5c One Week ,...15. One A RADICAL Entered as lecond-claaa mail matter on April 17, 1905, at the Lead, S. postoffiee, under act of congress of March 3, 1879. Present Institution has Outgrown Its Limits Will be Enlarged.

I In the rooms of the Business Men's ub Friday afternoon there was formed the Rapid City Hospital asso ciation for the purpose of taking over Rapid City hospital, a orivate in stitution started last summer by Dr. I E. Robinson and Dr. II. F.

Ratte. The hospital has been -running since August 7. and has-met with -unusual support and success from the start. In practical workings the building has been found too small to accommodate the growing business and the only so lution of the situation was found in organizing under the state corpora- ion laws. the legal were aken care of by Attorney Y.

W. Soulc.and he was present at the meeting Friday afternoon and presided. He had with him the new charter for the association, which is a formal doc- mcnt. granting all the powers usual-v renuired bv institutions of this character. Rapid City Journal.

Kilby's Will is Admitted. The will of the late Mrs. Kilby of with the exception of one lause. was admitted to Drobate bv Countv Judge John R. Russell Sat urday and what promised to develop into a contest, terminated practicaJ in a settlement.

In her will Mrs. Kilbv attempted to beaueath the homestead in Lead, which had been deeded to her by her husband, to her daughter, a ten-year-old girl, making her sister. Mrs. O'Ncil of Rapid City, the guardian of both the person and estate of the child. The husband objected to the will oil the ground that his wife had no legal right to dispose of the homestead, as under the law it would revert to him for his use dur ing life, after his wife's death.

Other wise, he did not object to the provisions of the will, beiuir willine that Mrs. O'Ncil should act as guardian of his daughter. With this understanding the court decided to admit the will to probate, with the exception of the clause rela- ive to the homestead. The remainder of Mrs. Kilby's estate, which consists of an interest in some land in Iowa, goes to her daughter.

The husband will retain the Lead homestead during his life, after which it goes to the daughter. Pioneer-Times. Caught After Many Days. Hot Springs, S. Jan.

17. The grand jury which has been investigating the defunct Citizens' State Bank of Edgemont closed its doors three or four years ago, returned indictments yesterday against the president, James A. Stewart, and the cashier, C. A. Grippen.

There arc several counts, including falsifying of the records and receiving deposits when the bank was insolvent. Grippen is is now in business at Upton, Wyo. IVORY SOAP is as mild, as soothing, as cleansing as the finest unadulterated Castile soap. It should be used for every purpose for which pure Castile soap is used for baby's bath as well as for washing everything he wears; his underclothes, his frocks, his stockings, everything about Aim from the top of his little bald head to the tips of his pink and white toes Ivory Soap 994o Per Cent. Pure ANTON BERTOLBRO, Dealer In Groceries and Provisions Italian Goods a.

Speclajry Phona 2112 101 W. Main, Lea. Help Wanted, Wanted Neat appearing single man to travel and solicit. Previous experience unnecessary. References as to'character and honesty required.

Apply in person to W. W. Phelps, Hotel Franklin, Deadwood. For Sale. For Sale Two 3 1-4, 4 1-4 cameras, one Adalake magazine.

Will sell trade for gun, watch or field glass-. S. S. Kleete, S. Mill St.

ao-tf For Rent Far Rent Foffr ream cottage, furnished or unfurnished, at No. aft Addie street. Inquire ef 5. Smith. IS tf Miscellaneous.

Lost Shepard dog, short bushy tail. Return Chas. PeaHo and re ceive reward. 12-tf Lost Bunch ot four keys on a heart-shaped ring. Please leave at this office.

is-2t- Kulusich Da igubich 103 W. Main Stt msum MENS FURNISHERS Boots, Shoes, Hats and Cap An up-to-date line We wjll treat you right Our good are aM union made. OETTING SELLS COAL "Phone B2296 For Reliable Goods at Right Prices in Men's Furnishings, yon otn de pend on us, through thick and thin. SHANE'S Cor. Gold and Mam St.

Lead. 4 H. L. MONTANK Staple and Faaoy GROCERIES HARDWARE AND FEED Lawest Prices W. F.

of M. Orders Goad as Qpsh 'Phone A-305 Central City, 9. p. Joe Savage GROCERIES, COAL, WOOD and FEED. Sells as aheap as any stare ia tha W.

F. ef M. Orders 9sad aa ea4 Central City, S. D. Pbene F-305 MONTANA BAKERY BREAD, PIES AND CAKES Everything in the line.

Give me a call. CHRIST TIKLJA CO. No. it So Gold St. STANDARD TYPEWRITER $65.00 of the Western Federation are I requested to pay no attention to any statements printed in the Lead Daily Call.

The Register is the official organ of the Federation in the Black Hills, and statements to be given out by the executive committee or officials of the unions will be published in that paper. JAMES KIRWAN, Member Executive Board. IMPORTANT NOTICE. Owing to the stand taken kv the Homestake Mining company against organized la- bar, the. Executive Commit- tee sf the Lead Citv and Cen- tral City Miners' Unions has decided to request all mem- bers of the Western Federa- tion of Miners who are at present employed by said company as watchmen or in any other capacity, to quit woric at once.

Signed. EXECUTIVE COM. DON'T MOVE OUT Let us print you soma HAND BILLS ADVERTISE And Business Will Doorr Battista S. Ronchetto FINE GROCERIES, WOOD, COAL AND FEED. Telephone F-1130.

104 West Main St, Lead, S. D. Dealers In GROCERIES Men's and Women's Furnishings and Wood No. 7 Pine Lead, S. This is the Highest Store 16,424 feet above sea level) iri the state and also sells the Highest Grade of goods, prices and quality considered.

Portland Mercantile Co GROCERIM aad General Merchandise Gents' Furnishings, Boots, Shoes, Hosiery, Notions, Tinware, Imported Groceries, Chinaware, Flour, Grain, Hay, Wood and Coal. Telephene: Cedar-2249, 1 ring. PORTLAND. tOUTH DAKOTA TERRY AND LEAD HACKLINE Hack leaves Poatoffiee in Terry and to Dickinson Drug store in Lead. LEAVE TERR a.

m. p. m. 4xe p. m.

6:30 p. m. LEAVE LEAD 11:00 a. 'AS P- 3:00 p. m.

p. m. Messages and Parcels Promptly SUFFRAGE DISCORDS. Mrs. Belmont's Ascendency a Bans of Contention.

Unless all signs' fail there are going to be serlou ructions uf some sort in the woman KiitTrage camp. So many are tueli- wnett thnt it would take too much time to euumerate tbeui, but everything goes back to the national convention in Seattle last summer. wben the nntiounl association voted to move Its headquarters from the peaceful little towu of Wurreu. In Illinois, to New York. As soon as tbl decision was reached the bird of peuet spread Its wings and took its departure to parts unknowu.

Xhe western sisters murmured. The metropolis would swallow up the headquarters, they thought, and they would lie left out In the cold. The New York suit' racists also bad their misgivings. Xhe headqunrters, they prophesied, would swallow New York. From the point of view of the two classes of malcontents both these pre dictions have now happened.

C0111-pluluts that the 'national ntliee Is absorbed with local affairs 1111U oblivious to rbustitutionul amendments mid other issues pending in the west reach the east daily, and the local organizations on their part coinpluin of encroachments ou their preserves by the uii-tlonul offlif. while the stnte olllee Is declared to he an equal sinner. "There are upward of a score of counties In New York state that hnveu't even an organisation," a local suffragist remarked tartly, "nud yet the state oUicers spend the greater part of their time iu New York." The association of Mrs. U. 11.

1'. Belmont with these two organizations uitikes the situation acute. Wliou the two bodies acceded to her proposition to make their removal to New York financially possible her eupiicity ifor leadership was not reckoned with. Now, us her future has loomed larger and larger In the public eye, the query of Casslus, "Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed that be is growu so great?" has beeu repeated with suit able modifications. One of the specific complaints aneut the relations of the suffrage organizations with this partic ular patrou Is that her tinanciul coutri butious are ulwsys made fur specitli purpose lustead of being paid into the treasury to lie expended as the execu tlve sees fit.

The next meeting of the National Woman Suffrage association will be held In Washington in April, ami all these issues are likely to come to a head there. The association elects its president every yenr, and a well known western woman Is talked of as the probable nominee of the insurgent party. The preseut president, the Uev, Anna Howard Shaw, has held ottlee for eight years. London's Latest Craze. Last yeur roller skating iu London was the pastime of the moment.

This year a novel and exciting feature has been added tu It. At the Empress Skating rink at Earl's court a "skat ing switchback" has been set up. This device, which, by the way, is the first of its kind, is a sort of sloping platform (very like thnt on which the switchback cars ruu up and dowui. This stretches from end to end of the building, uml down it those who like new sensations gilde merrily on their roller skates. Mather terrifying, but nSSP.IT WW' 1 W52M SEATINO THH SWITCHBOARD.

full of thrills and with a fascination of Its own, is "skating the switch," as it is popularly called, and London has gone quite crazy over it. The rink at Earl's court is a fine one, having an area of IIO.OOO feet and accommodating 4.2UO skaters. Man on Dress. Let hlui alone. Don't a rem- with him.

His ideas are war)ed. You can't please him at all. If extravagant you are a fool. If economical you are surely dowdy. He will proudly assert that it's the woman, not the clothes.

You get yourself up to fit bis ideas, and It will he 11 case of "sweet bells jangled." He will point out nil the handsomely (tastefully, he calls it) dressed women and wonder I in a rasping tonei why you look dowdy. Use For Testing Tubes. A stock of cniuinou glnss test tubes Is a convoulence for women who bare table centerpieces or other low decorations to arrauge uow and then. An attractive dinner table In a small apartment utilized recently the fern dish with pink carnations mingled with tile ferns nod moss. Tbe flower stems were lininersed In the test tubes, which bud been sunk Into 1 hi-earth of the dish.

The candle shades of the table were, of course, tbp same shade as the flowers. Notice. Any person knowing or suspecting any Scandinavian of being a traitor to the working class by signing the Homestake scab list will please report the name to the Scandinavia mail meeting committee. 7:2 Ari iri ml Maitland int and Mill Men's Ufion No. 19, W.

F. of meets every Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. W. C. White, Financial Secretary.

Lead City Misers' Union No. 2, W. F. of meets in Mirers' Union hall every Monday evening, John Trahey, J. Ryan, sec; etary Local Un on No.

577, Internatioal Brothert jod of Electrical Workers, meets at Miners' Union hall, Lead, S. firs and third Tuesdays in each month, 7 30 p. m. T. O.

box No. 3. Dietr.ct hi ners' Union No. 2, W. F.

of at Lead, S. second Friday evening of each nrbnth. Dead' rood Mine ft Mill Men's Union No. 14, V. F.

of meets in Union ball, Dciawood, every Thursday evening 8 p. m. Terry Peak Miners' Union No. 5, W. F.

of meets at Miners' Union ope a house every Wednesday evening. J. 0. May, Secretary. Centril City Miners' Union No.

3, W. F. ol meets at Miners' Union hall ivery Saturday evening, at J. i. Hinton, secretary.

Lead Bar enders' Union No. 133, A. F. of L. Meets second Thursday at 3 p.

and fourth Thursday at 8 p. tr, at Red Mett's hall John Mcilride Secretary. Black Hill'! Lodge No. 338, Intrjfta tional Association of Machinists, meets tb first and third Friday evenings of each month at No. 1 Hose parors.

J. S. Young, secretary. Black Hilli Teamsters' Union No. 196 meets and third Wednesday nights it Eagle hall, Oeadwood, and secoid and fourth Wednesday nights at Miners' Union hall, Lead.

Mo. ris isken, Rec Sec'y. Black Hill 1 Trades Assembly (Central of all unions) meets at Miners Union hall, Lead, S. L), second Tuei day evening in eaih month Fred A. Downing, Secretary, Lead, S.

D. Local Unicn No. 1440, United Brotherhood Carpenters and Joiners of America, meets first and third Friday nighes in Lead; second and fourth F'iday nights in Deadwood. Working Girls' Union No. 13a meets Fourth I rid ay evening each month at Painters' hall, Lead, S.

D. Em ma Schu.ter, Secretary. Lead Typographical Union No. 408 meets in Lead, S. on the first Sunday each month, at 2 p.

m. C. F. Sruerbrunn, sec'y-treas. SOCIALIST LOCALS.

Lead Loci meet at Main St at 7 43-secretary Lead Finn party nv eveiy 1 of the Socialist Tarty Brettell hall, 316 West every Thursday evening Wayne Pratt, recording sh Local of the Socialist ets at No. I hose house inday evening, at 8:30 S. Maki, Secretary. o'clock. Terry Soc Monday reacing Visiting cordially Jacob Hotsle, I alist Local meets every evening at 7 oclock in 00m Miners Union halL socialists and others are invited to meet with us.

Recording Secretary. J. inanciiil Secretary. Priming Press lor Sale. The Reg ster has for sale a 10x13-inch Liber job press, foot power; rather old, jat does good work; large enough to print four-column newspaper.

Wb wants it at a bargain? Attention, Printers. Having ait in a larger machine, the Register has for sale a 2j-inea Leader paper cutter at a bargaia. Needs some slight repairs. PRISEMAN KNOWLES. Attorney OEADWOOD So Var Bur St Phona A -4a The areat thine in big game rifles Is aursness to work tit derail conditionc.

i'uwiia rifles are ilt with this idea foremost. Ttte mcc mntim li simple, strong, perfectly adjust d.quick and easy in operation. The 77ta in solid top and aide elector keep 1. prote Ins wuU ot metal between your head the cartrldsa, prevent powder and aeea blowing- back, throw the hella away you end allow trastaot. aecan ta, efft stive repeat ehou.

The Spufaf SreeT barrel, are herd an 1 ttrong, epeaially mult for hlsh power artrldgee and to raaist the wear nfjaek. ted They ere rifled, deep on the BalUrd ayaterrt for createe accurscv im1 killing power. Made In Model. 'S3 and' S5, calibre. JD to and fully deierlbed and Illustrated 'with all other Jlariui re-peaten) In our 136- for I sumse 42 Willow Stmt, i NEw HAVEN, CONN.

aniaaa. el NEWSPAPER Wheat Cakes" ter, and this admission of the truth by Mr. Gray was not needed to convince the unionists. However some people would rather believe the mine owners than the mini' workers and such can take Jack's word for, the truth if they care to. Yes, Jackie, it is a fine mess of cakes in two ways.

Mr. Grier has not treated the mine owners right and it is a fact that a socialist has accepted a job under the mine owners' card system, that socialist has not treated the working class right. The Register does not relish the thought that socialists have scabbed their brothers, but it is forced to admit that men who have posed as socialists have committed that offense a few of them. But the socialists will wash their hands of such members by expelling them and they may go back to the parties from which they came; nn r4fnk Kn t.ul tlnri regardless of their attitude toward unionism. of men who have been out of the state ever since the lockout appear on the Loyal Legion roster, it would perhaps, be interesting to know who is doing all this signing by proxy.

Woman's Day. January 12, igio. To the Members of the Socialist Party: Comrades: The national woman's committee, with the endorsement of the national executive committee, has set aside the '27th of February, the last Sunday of the month, as "Wo man's D'ay." The socialist party is pledged to work for equal suffrage for men and women, but at this stage of industrial unrest among the working women it is of especial importance to point out to the latter our true relationship to them. Let us then make ''Woman's Day" a rousing, national success. Let the ocialists make' it an occasion to point out to the working woman their view of her rights and privileges.

We must embrace this opportunity not only as a means of agitating for votes for women, but also as a tit time to awaken the class consciousness our toiling sisters and thus win their hearts and minds for socialism. Comrades, the day is near and it behooves us to urge you to proceed at once with the arrangements for meet ings and celebrations that you are going to hold on that day. Fraternally yours, For the National Woman's Com. DR. ANTOINETTE KON1KOW ETA L.

STERN. THERESA MALK1EL. MAY WOOD-SIMONS. Paid Amount Allowed by Law. The directors of the Lawrance County Fair association during the past week sent to the county com missioners a request (or $500 to be paid to that organization as an offset to the amount paid out in prem iiinis at the fair held at Spearfish last fall.

The commissioners allowed them all that they were entitled to under the law, whichwas found to be $156 and a warrant for this amount, payable to the Fair associa tion was ordered drawn. The law provides that the commissioners may pay to a county fair as sociation forty per cent of the total amount of the premiums awarded at the preceeding meeting, provided such forty per cent does not exceed $500. At the last Spearfish fair prem iums to the amount of $392 were awarded and as forty per cent of this is $156.80, that sum was turned over to the association. Lou Lessard is Dead. The following item, taken from last week's Hot Springs Herald, refers to a man who was for some years a resident of Terry, where he worked as a paper hanger and did various odd jobs about town.

He deserted his family at Terry some seven or eight years ago and it is understood his wife and children are now living near White Owl. this state: "In some sort of a delirious dream early Tuesday morning, Lou Lessard left his room at the Hot Springs hotel and wandered out into the frigid air with the ground covered with almost a foot of snow. He had on nothing but his underclothing and when found, about 7 o'clock in the morning, he was lying unconscious in the snow two or three blocks west Qf the hotel. He was taken to the Sisters' hospital and Dr. Jennings attended him, finding him severely chilled but thought not seriously frozen.

His condition became more serious "A Nice Mess of Jack Gray, the superintendent of the Wasp No. 2 mine, sometimes gets off a good one and the writer opeines that his latest, emitted at Terraville a few mornings since, is in the good class. Jack walked into a place in Terraville and exploded in this wise: "Now, isn't that a ety nice mess of wheat cakes?" Being asked what was gnawing at his vitals, he continued, "We started this trouble to clean out the socialists and here is Tom Gricr giving the best engineer's job he has to that ety old Mc the worst socialist in the county!" Do you catch that point, boys? "We started this trouble to clean out the socialists." Jack is a member of the mine owners' bunch and he admits that "we" the mine owners started this- trouble to clean out the socialists. Other mine owners are accusing the socialists and unionists of starting it. Of course, the members of the unions know bet "Labor ia prior to and inde- pendent of capital.

Capital it only the fruit of labor and could not have existed if labor had not 1 first existed. Labor is the auper- tor of capital and deserves much the higher consideration. I bid the laboring people beware of surrendering the power which they possess and which, if aur- rendered, will aurtly be used to hut the door of advancement fur such as they and fix new disabil- itiea and burdens upon them until all of liberty shaU be lost" Abraham Lincoln. The Register desires to call the attention of the local organ of the Mine Owners' association to the fact that those Denver pressmen are not members of the Western Federation of Miners. They struck and deprived the good people of Denver and Colorado of their Sunday morning papers, but they are just nice conservative members of the A.

F. of L. Had they been members of theW. F. of M.

they would probably have been deported by the business and church men of Denver. Logic has no place in the plans or methods of the local Homestake organ, and the folowing incident is related as a sort of confirmation of the fact. A few days ago that sheet published a communication from an alleged union man in British Columbia, the communication casting reflections on the integrity of the Western Federation. The communication was not signed, the editor stating that the publication of the name of the writer would subject him to tile persecution of the Federation. If that is true, the Federation is pretty strong in British Columbia, not? But only a few days ago the same paper stated that the Federation had no influence outside of Montana.

How, then, can it "persecute" a man in British Columbia? Get your bonnet on straight, sister. If all rumors of non-union men being imported are true, the Homestake company must be importing three or four men for every one it locked out. And that may be a good ide, if the same rate of production is to be maintained. The majority of the old employes grew up with the mine and. as Chris Christensen says, they fit the nooks and corners just as snugly as a worn boot fits the foot to which it has adjusted itself.

Rut these tried and true men are to be turned out to browse, if the company wins, because Mr. Grier wanted to get rid of the -socialists. Nothing of the sort. He got miffed, like a little boy, because he couldn't jrive the men out of the unions as fast as he and his tools drove them in. Those thirty-seven dissenters must have been getting more than $3.00 per day.

They should remember that there is nothing in the wage scale to prevent the company paying more than the minimum if they are worth more. Wonder if those merchants who signed up their sympathy with the company can pay dividends on the patronage the Brick store gets from the members of the Legion? In view of the fact that the names ROYAL Designed and built by the master minds of the typewriter wor lathes who have "grown up" with typewriter making aine tea bleep tion those who have studied the whys of every success, the reasons lor every failure and have PROFITED by their esperieae. That ia WHY the Royal Typewriter is meeting with suea henoia-enal success, that is WHY VOW CAN FAY MORE BUT YOU 8ANN9T BOT WMtB A demonstration will convinae you. Royal Typewriter Company Royal Typewriter Bids, 3644 Bcaadway, N. V.

41a Second Ave. Sv, Minneapolis A Craoaral Livery and Feed' Stable VEKM8 STRICTLY CASH. DUNN Phoae Aii4. Terry, S. D..

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About Black Hills Daily Register Archive

Pages Available:
2,472
Years Available:
1909-1911