Newspaper Page Text
A DOLLAR SHOW FOR A DIME FAMILY Theater COMMENCING MONDAY THE 1 CENT BIG .L.J SHOW Presents "A FATAL SCAR." New Specialties. Prices: Lower floor, .150; bal cony, 10O. Matinee Saturday at 2:30. Next Attraction: "EAST LYNNE." The Grand Cor. Higgins Ave. and Main Street MISSOULA'S NEW AMUSEMENT CENTER. High-Class Vaudeville Entire change of people every Monday and Thursday. Program HEROLD, THE GERMAN SANDOW BERT WIGGIN, Comedian, Juggler. Cartoonist l'tTt)ERICK A1.Al)lIIA AND 1AfllY IlfTAKE In Their Driginni Conietlietla "A Jack anti a Queen" Miss Bllke, winner of $1,000 Bennty Pil1es. MISS MAXWELL, Illustrated Songs MOTION PICTURES. Entire change of performers Mon days and Thursdays. Entire change of pictures Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays. Continuous Performance - First performance, 7:30 p. m.; admission 15 t and 25 t. MATINEE-Monday, Wednesday r and Saturday at 3 p. m. Admission: J Ladies, 15¢; children, 10. LYRIC Theater High-class Motion Pictures and Illustrated Songs. $10 REWARD For information leading to the lease of a building, residence, or room suit able for Hat Shop, and Cleaning Works. Wanted to occupy rot later than August 1. Call or address L. WV. Austin, 129 East hain street. HAT SHOP. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MISSOULA United States Depositary Capital ................. $200,000 Surplus ........................................... 560,000 interest Paid on Deposits in the Savings Department at 3 Per Cent Per Annum Officers and Directors A. B. HAMMOND......................President J. M. KEITH......................Vice President EDGAR A. NEWLON..................Cashier C. H. McLeod T. L. Greenough eanneth Ross O. G. England H. C. Kelth WESTERN MONTANA NATIONAL BANK Missoula, Mont. UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY PAID UP CAPITAL.............$100,000 SURLPLUS AND PROFIT........... 50,000 0. A. W OLF................................President JNO. C. LEHSOU............Vice President J. H. T. RYMAN...........................Cashier Directors Ferdinand Kennett, M. A. Fish, G. A Wolf, John C. Lehenu. J. II. T. Ryman. A General Banking Business Transacted ,Reserve next Tuesday evening for the printers' dance. McCormick's Addition, No.2 Located on West Cedar Street I am offering for sale all of rMcCormick's addition No. 2 wi Ih the exception of a few lots, at away down bargain prices, on easy terms of one third cash, balance one and two years. These lots are close in, desirably located; all have city water in alley; many of them have large bearingg fruit frees; every lot is a bargain. (all in early before the best lots are taken. -o Jas. M. Rhoades REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE DEALER. 115 Higgins Avenue. Phone 572 HAMMOND BLOCK. SERIOUS DAMAGE DONE 10 STEAMfER EALANl South Amplon, June 21. - It will take two or three weeks to repair the damage to the Iced Stan line steamer Zealand that was iI collision Saturday night, east of Dover, with an unknown vessel. All the ualoon passengers and most of the secQnd and third class passen gers will be transferred to the Oceanic, sailing June 23; the re mainder will lime on the i-it. Paul on June 2ii. No news of the vessel with which the Zealand collided has been oh tained, but the crew ofi one of the hoatsitl lowered by the Zealand declare they saw her vanishing In the fog hid it is prisoned that she was not iadly damag d, Everyone would be beneflied by taking Foley's Orino Laxative for con stipation, stomach and liver trouble, as it sweetens the stomach and breath, gently stimulates the liver and regulates the bowels and is much superior to pills and ordinary laxa tives. Why not try s oley's Orino Laxative today? Oa den City Drug Co, Geo. Freisheimer, Prop. WILL GRANT HEARING. Washington, D.. June 21.-Presi dent Taft today decided to grant a hearing here on June 28 to the various interests in the controversy as to what is whisky under the pure food law, Foley's Honey and Tar is especially recommended for chronic throat and Sung troubles and tnany sufferers from bronchitis, asthma and consump tion have found comfort and relief, by using Foley's Honey and Tar. Gar den City Drug Co., Geo. Freisheimer, Prop. The Eye Of Every School Child Should Be Examined Carefully by an 9xpert. We try to impress the importance of this (n everybody. We are stat ing facts, and are not moved by a deslte for gain alone. We know the importance of such, and take enough human interest to insist and, insist. Have this attetulld to dturing va 1-ulithn tiiie. Newton Hi. Schweiker OPTICAL SPECIALIST. 318 Higgins Avenue. THE 010 'ARVMENI NOI MAHE INFANT INDUSTRY HAS NOT BEEN MENTIONED IN PRES ENT TARIFF DEBATE. Washington, June 21.-Menlt in was made recently of III( fact that tih present tariff debate is the lirst one within the memory of the oldest corre sponileli1tan oembhi of congress in which the infant industry argument has not figured. In this connection somehody made the remark that the day of the iniant industry had passed and that, while some kinds of busThess are growing more rapidly than others. American imaniifectures as a whole have reacled a elttled basis where few new lines of industrial activity are ih tynililced :iiid progress is confined iiletly to ixptansioi in established in terprises. This view seems to be widely held, but a very little delving into the re turns collected by the bureau of maanu factures show thlit the people of the United States are spending at least $1,00t,0Q0,000 overy year on the products of industries that have had almost their entire growth since the time when the schedules of the Dingley bill were under discussion, aid that the progress of the lust 10 years in the evolution of new activities has been greater than in any similar period of the country's historyi measured either by the amount of capital invested or by the widespread use of the new products. It so happens that most of these industries are the result of in vention or of new developments in popular taste, so that they are not so greatly affected by the tariff, althusugh in the shaping of the Aldrich-Payne bill a large number of new schedules haid to be inserted to provide for arti cles that were either unknown or of no commercial imnuortance at the list previotis revision of the tariff. Head of List. At the heai of this list of industries that has grown to vast proportions within the past 10 or 12 years must he placed the manufacture of automo tiles. This is a genuine infant indus try, for its development hardly runs back before the beginning of the twentieth century. How Iusty an in fant it is may he gathered from the fact that more than $1t0,000,000 is in vested, in automobile factories in the United States, and that an expert esti mate of the value of their products for the current year places it at up ward of. $250,000,000. These figures alone do not iaeisure the actual pro portionls of the industry that have revolutionizod tinffic conditions in the large cities and is largely revolution izing them ill every part of the coun try. The autonuobile has given rise to yuveral new occupations. There are betwoen 20,000 and ,25,000 chauffeours in Necw' York alone. In the various branches' of TaoInag, selling and op crating the motor cars not less than 200,000 persons are employed, receiving some $200,000,000 a year in wages. Add this to the expenditures for cars and nutomotlile supplies and it. will be seen that the American ILople are expend ing half a. billion dollars or more each year in connection with an industry so yiung that those who are still school huys can remember its iogin nling. Moving Pictures. Next to the automobile, gauged by the expenditure which it draws from the great American pocket, must be ranked, curiously enough, the moving picture industry. The making and ex hibiting of moving pictures is pri marily an amusement enterprise, al though these views are utilized in in dustrial lines, in educational work and in a thousand ways that the inventors of the various systems never dreamed of. Motion pictures were exhibited in conootious performance theaters as long ago as ithe middldI nineties merely is a novelty. buit the exhibition of these views as an independent busi ness, which has far outstripped all 'other forms of theatrical entertain Ient, has been almost wholly a growth of the past four or five years. According to the latest statistics there are at present over 7,000 theaters de voted to the display of motion pictures in United States territory, including some in Alaska, the Philippines, Ha wuai and the Panama canal zone. The making of views to be displayed in these establishments is a world-wide industry, giving employment to thou sands of persons, and has even given rise to a trust; at least, that ,is the term applied to the association of lead ing manufacturers of picture films known ts the Motion Picture Patents company. by those dealers who are outside the association. The organi'aa tionl includes all the American manu - flcturers of films and the mlorelim portatnt ones of Europe. A million dollurs is paid annually in admission fees to motion picture establishments by the American public, and the total volume of the moving picture business is not less than $350,000,000 yearly. The bu1iness has assumed such proportions that it has been made the subject of special regulations in many cities and a board of censors representing var ious civic organizations has recently been organized in order to eliminate those depicting drunkenness, crime and other improper or demoralizing subjects. Musical Apparatus. Another business that has had its principal growth within the past de cade is the manufacture and sale oi automatic musical appliances, partict larly mechanical piano players and phonographs. It is only since 1900 that the government bureau has kept the statistics of this indlustry separate I from the tjroduetion of other musical instruments, but in that time the capi tal invested and the annual sales have multiplied several times. Tens of F thousands of workm11en, musical artists and salesmen have been given employ ment by tile demand that has grownr up for the various inventions which make it possible for those without sliecina training to enjoy music in their homes. Probably $70,000,000 will be expended during the present year upon the viri tat forns of antomnatti tousle, while tie spretd in popularity of the automatic piano platyer is re sponsihle also foi a great increase il the sales of phinos. The tnuindufct me of 'c imnt is not n new indudiry, Mtrietly speaking, but fhe growth iii utierete 'mustrtetini has a'dvanree by Sn0'l leaps aitid hounds within itl,, past fi'w Wea4rs that it Is entitled to be incled within this iitegiriy. hie uien f 01' tolre tO in the building if lif1tori's, bridges tetd dwellings is responsible for ita large share of the growth whitih doubled the eoitsmnptiin oti cement between 19t11 and 19011 and again between 10901 and 190t,. W hile tilii p nii of 19117 and the consequent depressionl ii the building trade caused it teimporary halt iii this rpit aolvantenwent the inmotes value of the tproduct amounts tI1 over $60.000,000 a year and the expenditure represented by the building operations in which it is employed is twi it three times this sum. With the perfection of the method devised by 100' .41n for pouring houses of conirete into molts so that complete structtires can be erected in a. single day the growttth Cittls in dnstry bids fair to be still more rapid. Among other tumore prosaic lines of manufacture which have experienced the most rematrkable growth within the past decade are the beet sugar in dusttry and the manufacture of attifi cial ice. The capital invested ini both these industries tuts advanced from $1,t00.000 in 1l8S to more than $12, 000.000 at the present time, while the anntutl value of their product has grown In the same period from $710.000 annually to nearly $7,000,000 at the present time. An industry that tins 'O/t 4'et ad vanced even to the infanfteYtage, but which, from its present embryonic condition, promises to duplicate Within the next 10 years the tremendous Ilrogress of the automobile duringi ttie past decade, is the production of ma chines for aerial flight. Already se' eral companies have been organized for the building of aeroplanes and dirigible balloons, and an aerial trans portation line recently chartered in Massnchusetts promises to begin oper ations between Boston and New York in 1910.. Even in the present undevel oped ittate of aerial navigation hun dreds of thiisands of dollars have been investet by governments and in dividult experimenters. -'He would be a bold prophet who should predict that by 1919 ait quarter of a billion dol lars wquld be devoted every year to the navigation of the air, yet this would be ~to more remarkable than the showing that has alreatly been made in other new fields of activity. At any rate the fact that half A dozen infant industries involving it yearly outlay of $1,000,000;00t or upwards have arisen practically 'within the past 10 years is suffiotent 'indication that the possi bilities of ±fog[ress in, manufacture and industry 'htave by no means inen exhausted. This Will Interest .:lothers. ltother sqay's gweetp Powdcrs for Childeen, 'ertain roller for feverish ness, hqadjah, bad storitaeh, teething disorders 0I0 and regulate the bow els and .dOstroy worms. They break up cols.-J. ..2A hours. ..h.ey are so. pleasant 'ot'i' taste aind harmless as milk. Children like them. Over 10, 000 testimonials of cures. They never fail. Sold by all druggists, 25c. Ask today. Don't accept any substitute. TOWN LOT SALE At Alberton, Mont., Tuesday, June 29, 1909. An excellent opportunity to secure choice business lots In a new town will be offered business men, mer chants and investors at the, auction sale of town lots at Al ertoni, Mont., Tuesday, June 29. Alberton is situated in Missoula county, Montana, on the new' ghicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sopnd ratiway, In a district adapted to versified farming. No irrigation required. Lands sell at reasonable prices. Alberton now offers an opening for a hank, general store and druggist. Cne and one-third fare riind trip. Tiickets will be on sale at stations oni the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway, betweeia Miles City and Alherton, June 26, 27, 29 and 29. lteturn limit July 1. Joe Fitzgerald's Toggery 4"' Y5CA JUST FOURTEEN DAYS That is your distance to the Fourth. And it's about the time you'll be getting riady for your vacation. Of course you'll want a cool suit to take along with you. I want your order for that suit and I want it right now. I want to make you the coolest, neatest summer suit you ever hald on y' ur back, and I want you to let me take your measure tumor ;Ty styles are right, my prices are right and there's no better tailoring In town. 'or $15 to $25 I'll make you a two- iieei suit, and for $20 to $lO a blue serge suit, either of which would cost you $5 to $10 mori at any other tailor's. ion't wait until the laIst minuie and he compelled to resort to a hand-moc-down that will look like a two-slot after the first rain (riher your vacation suit of trio. tommmrc' , and have it in plenty of time fer the Fourth. Yours truly, JOE. 223 Higgins Avenue. NILL ASK CODNRESS TO ACT ISSUE OF GOLD BONDS FOR IR RIGATION PURPOSES WILL BE REQUESTED. tStokaue, June' sI.--Arlhur 11 "ler, ts t-tarry of the board of clI)titr il if the Nattntal IrrigatIt) eongress, will present a resolution for approval by that otganizsatiot at its seventleenol session in Spokane, August 9 to 14, memorializing congress to issue 3 per cent gold bonds, running 100 years, to the amount of $9,000,000,000, or as i muntl thereof us may be necessary, for thte following specific pirposes: One billion dollitrs for drainage of overflowed and swauup lands, thus re climing aI a trea equal to 000,000 sqpuare miles. Ote billion dollars for the reeltmtt tion by irrigation of 40,000,000 acres of trid and semi-artid lnds, now part ly or wholly waste. One billion dollars to construct and improve deep wlaterways, to develop thousands of miles of territory now without adenuate transportation facil ities. one billion dollars for good roads and national highways, for the lack of which the loss to the farm area of the Ltnited States is approximately $500,000,000 ann ailly. One -illion dollars for forest protee tion, reforestation and conservation of the forest resources, thus assuring timber and lumber supplies for gent turies to come. "Five billions of dollars is an enorm ous stum, but it is no 1001' thatn is etiutlly reivired to carry out the gi gantic scheme in developing millions of acres Of Illads iht Valirilos ptts of the Un1Titedl States now absolutely worthless,"' sid Mr. Hooker in ex p11lning the plan. "Congress will not he asked to appropriate a penny The returns f)rm the improvements would pity off the bonds. The government would simply aet as a. hanker, as it does now for the various irrigation projects. The bond issue would pin vide ample funds is required to carry out the work in the several divisions, at the same time giving the best pos sible collateral to those investing in these securities. "Government figures bear out the statement that there Is enough good land overflowed in Minnesota, Wis consin, Kansas, Nebraska, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Mississippi to make an area as large as the state of Missouri, or more tttitn 44,000,000 acras, while in the eastern, central anti. western states is more than as much m 11e, or about 100,000,000 a1res in all. At a lonservatlive estimate of $29 an acre, the sle of this reeilimed land would justify the expentdittre of $2, ;5,0,0000,00, or 19,0 per cent more than is required to drain it. This land11 would support from 2,000,000 to 3,000,- f 000 population. "Approximately 40,000,000 acres of lands in western and southwestern states are adapted to irrigation, which, if reclaimed at an average cost of $25 an acre, would be worth not less than $200 an acre, or a total of $8,000,000,000. and would provide homes for more than 8,000,000 persons. The econbmic value of Irrigation cannot be measured in dollars and cents, but crops of from $500 to $1,000 an acre are not rare in the irrigated districts. There are al ready 14,000,000 acres under irrigation, and' the reclamation service estimates it will have reclaimed 2,000,000 acres, at i cost not exceeding $70,000,000, be fore the close of 1921. "The ccnctruction and improvemrnt of deep waterways required to pro vide better and cheaper transportation facilities is, _I believe, a 10$ per cent investment, tfrom the tact that two thirds of tile holky freight. could be shiipled by water routes, at a cost to the shipper of not more than one sixth of the present rail rates. The importance of this becomes apparent when it is remembered that the food question is becoming a world problem. "The state of New York is expend ing $100,000,000 to enlarge the Srie canal, and $1000,000,000 is the amount required to improve the Missouri river from a point about 40 miles west of Yellowstone park to where it meets the Mississippi river, 2,547 miles. Then there is the projected waterway from Lake Michigan to the Gulf of Mex dlo, and scores of others necessary to cheap and better transportation faecll ities. Millions of dollars will he saved annually to the people of the United States by the coilaietion of these works. "The maintenance of the greatest waterway in the world, composedt of the great lakes, on which the govern ment of the United States has ex pinded more than $00,000,00 for har bors and connecting channels, presents an argument in favor of the scheme to develop thousands of miles of ter ritory in the ilissouri and other val leys. The other projects outlined in the foregoing are of equal if not greater i mpnrtonce anl with proper lacking they call be carried ut1 site cessfully. "No one questions the statement that good roads have a high money value to the farmers of the nation, and it may he said that this alone is suf ficient to justify the cost of their con strIetion as rapidly as practicable tIn (iell an efficient, economical and eniuit-' 1le system (1m highway improvement. iThe big points in favor of this ex penditore is the economIy of time and force in transportation between farm and liIurket. enabling the growers to take advantage of fluetuations in buy ing and selling, as well as e'lllancing the vaine of real estate. 'Il is estimated that the average (Innual Ilss from poor roads is 76 (ents all lcre, while the estimated average increase resultiag fromi improving all the public roads is $0. The losses in live years would aggregate $2,427 for every csetion (l(f land, or more than en1ou11gi to improve t 00 miles of pi1l1 li' highway. The necessity of good Is is obvious. as it would enhance the vaile of each section of land about $7,70f. or more than double the esti mated cast of two miles of lmprovcd 4th of July Millinery Sale The Home of Stylish Hats Don't Miss This Big Sale All Our $5 and $4 Hats $3.00 $7 and $6 Hats $4.50 $12 and $10 Hats $7.50 Tuesday and Wednesday SCHLOSSBERC'S CORNER HIGGINS AVENUE AND PINE STREET. lhighway, twhic~h constitutes t1l .', (luntu foil 640 acres bf land. "The value of out forests was never better. appreciated than today. Within the arid and sesti-arid portions of the western states nearly 124,000,000 aes are covered with woodland of value for fuel, fence posts and other t ur poses essential to the success of the farmers. There are also 97,000,000 ares Covered with heavy forests hav ing commerial value for timber and logs for saw mills, atnl hundreds if thousands of acres of limber lands in other parts of the United States. i1e forestation and conservation of the vsst testources tte ntecesry to pro Vitie futttr' generttions with timter and lumbttt supplies.? Tthe gxvernment is expending large aitounts of money every year to protect- its .forests from fires, yet expert lumbersne't say that more standing timber is destroyed by flamles annually than is ttonverted into merchanttablc lumber by'the sawmills." Mr. flooker said it is liltoc that his resohliu ;o will be presented to the various initereisis of the irrig;Ition colt gress for disttssion mlt will after w'trds be incorporated in a mlenmrial to the United States congress. It is also proposed to Jiave a large delega tion, composeit of representatives of every state and territory in the ltnion. push the measure for adoption. The work of enlisting the support of the people interested in the various projects will be taken up immediately after the close of the irrigation cton 8,000 ACRES OF THE DALY FARM The oost, t igli y developed, nost thoroughly irrigated, most c(arefully cultivated land in THE BITTER ROOT VALLEY The Mlarcns 1)aly (stale offers for sale 5, 10 and 20 are tracts, ideal lo ations, never failing water upply, stti ndidly adapted for raising Irnits, vegetalh's and dairy. ing. Prices, $75 to $500 per acre. Some of the tracts have sulstait ial ittprovtetents. EASY TERMS 25 PER CENT lOAVYN, BALAIN.E IN 10 ANNUAL IN STALLM ENTS, WITH I NTEIRln:T AT ( PER CENT i'ElR ANNUM. flandsomely illusted al hooklet free for the asking. BITTER lOOT SST(K FAlu;HM.I!AMILUPON, MONT. WELCH & HARRINGTON, Agents 115 Ili giins Avenue, 11 issoula. ESTABLISHED 1880. WILLIAM A. PAINE THOHAS. S. DEE HERBERT L FOSTNR LEONAID D. THAPER. Paine. Webber & Company BANKERS' and BROKERS. Boston, Mass. Members New York and Boston Stock Exchanges, Chiogo $eard of Trade. Branch Office, 47 East Broadway Butte. Private Wires to All Exchanges. H. B. BYRNE, M nager. gmess with the view to conceite4 ad tiori Men Past Fifty in Danger. Men past middle life bayare oon comfort and relief in Foley's Kidney Itemedy, especially for enlarged , tate'gland, which is very commona among elderly men. L. E. Morris,; Dexter, Ky., wrltes:"Up to a year ago my father suffered from kipdey and bladder trouble and several physicians pronounced it enlarge ment of the prostate gland and ad vised an operation. On account of his age we were afraid he could not stand it and I r ommended F oeyea Kidney Remedy, Mad the first bttle. relieved him, and after taking the second bottie he was no longer troubled with this complaint." Qar den1' City Drug Co., Geo Freisbagher. I 'r oll. GOING SOME. Los Angeles. June 20.-Eddie Lingen fTlder, lolinerly of Chicago, made two .1 orells renords for seven horse-power lutor cycles It Fiesta park this aft ernoon. 1 It mode 10 miles In 8; 06 3-5 4111 15 miles in 21:24. Many of our citizens are drifting to-. wards Bright's disease by neglecting symptoms of kidney and bladder trouble which Foley's Kidney Remedy lviii (luickly cure. Garden City Drug Co., (0eo. Freisheimer. Prop