Newspaper Page Text
FORWARD WITH WILSON, OR BACK TO THE GOOD-OLD-DAY? The issue of this election is to!3f ir the picture of the "Shady Lane" of Wall Street and the "Shadow Lawn" ot the Nation's Summer Capital. With Wilson in the White House you know where you get off— with Hughes in the White House you wouldn't know when you'd be thrown off. The Republicans promised the workingman a full dinner pail— Wilson gave them three square meals a day, eight hours' work, and the highest wages known to history! Wilson gave the farmer more than the G. O. P. ever had imagina tion enough to promise. Why gc on? You know what Wilson gave you. You know whether you are working or whether you are fighting. You know what kind of a job you've got. You know whether you are getting more wages now than you did four years ago. You know that we haven't had a panic in four years. You know what has been done to the old Payne-Aldrich tariff. Don't you feel the change? Don't you realize that we were headed toward the Tenantry system of Europe? And don't you realize that now the land is going back into the hands of owners? You know that Wilson won't make war on Mexico to please Hearst and others who are similarly interested in that country. You j know that he won't make war on Germany just to please Roosevelt, j Root, Lodge, and Morgan. You know that this Administration has done more for American business, big and little, high and low, every kind of business but crooked, than has been done in any forty years of American history. Do you want the impossible? Wilson has achieved it again and again. When the Great War broke out, American public opinion almost unanimously said: "Wilson can't possibly keep us out of it. Europe j won't let us stay out of it. They can't afford to let us wear good clothes and a straight nose, and keep both eyes and both legs and all ten fingers and a house over our heads. They'll drag us in whether we want in or not. Misery loves company and they'll see to it that we get in." Wasn't that the argument that was passed from mouth to mouth in July and August of 1914? Well, we're still over here, where we belong, minding our own business, sawing wood, working over-time, better paid than ever before; and little old Mexico is quieting down and her children will soon be in school and we'll have a neighbor we can be proud of and do business with, and look back with pleasure to the days when we big-brothered it! And we're keeping our heads clear and our pockets and our stomachs full, and we'll be ready to lend a hand to battered, bruised, bleeding Europe when she tires of the fruitless, bootless game of cut ting each other's throats. There is just one line in which Europe today surpasses us: she has more noise, more hospitals, more cripples, and more fresh graves! j If you don't know Wilson and what he stands for, it's 1 because you have been too busy with your own personal pros* perity. If you don't realize hew safe you are in his hands for four years more, it is because you have felt so secure dur ing his present Administration that you haven't felt the need of bothering about your safety. Yes. You know Wilson. You can see him. You can feel him in your business. You can sense him in your homes. Do you want to go on with him, or—go Back? Make no mistake. That's what it means. That is what Hughes stands for. Go back—to the Good-Old-Days. That's the issue of this campaign, the only issue. It has been variously labelled. It has been called Promises vs. Achievements, but hang it all! Mr. Hughes doesn't even make a specific promise! He has wasted some twenty thousand miles of perfectly good railway travel trying to find an issue and he hasn't got one yet. And the reason he can't find it? He's like the man that can't see the woods for the trees! You sec, when the G. O. P. lost that old full-dinner-pail argu ment, it received an awful jolt. That was the sure vote-getter in the Good-Old-Days; that was their idea of prosperity—a laborer with a tin can with two thin ham sandwiches in it. And they fooled the larmer by sending him packages of seed, and pamphlets telling him, as old David Lubin puts it, how to blow his nose and not to plant watermelon seed in the dark of the moon in January. Since the farmer's paid off his mortgage, and the laboring man owns his own house, the old battered dinner-pail issue is canned. It isn't an Issue that is at stake, it's a matter of DIRECTION. The voters in the United States on November 7th are to decide which way they are to go—ON or BACK. You know what "on" means. Where it leads to, and that at the end of it is more prosperity, more decency, more victories without war. And "BACK"? Where does this Hughes trail to the Good-Old-Days lead ? What do they mean, these Re publican spell-binders, by the Good-Old-Days of Republican Progress? For thirty years the G. O. P. has been the party of reaction, the leader of retrogression. And they fed us with "high moral ideas." So they were, in the Good-Old-Days when public lands were fed by corporation-owned Con gresses to the railroads they represented; when these same corporation directors would drown their stocks with water, and juggle freight and passenger tariffs to make the water sell; when they wrecked their own railroads one day and bought them in at their own price the next, owning both judges and prosecuting attorneys; when they named boards of aldermen for cities, legislatures for states, and elected their own corporation lawyers to the Senate; when corrupt Bosses and secret conferences picked State Governors; when legislatures handed out subsidies as department stores today give cut green trading stamps! In the Good-Old-Days when every county seat and every state capitol had its lobby and every corporation its "efficient" representative in tile nation's congress; when every important contract was conceived ingraft and born in corruption; when panics were rigged up with as little trouble as a foursome at golf; when the mortgage writers worked their fingers off every day in the year; when big business wrote its own tariff schedule; when the rich side stepped taxation and corporations were immtine; when there was one rat* of irteivst for the poor man and another for the rich; when no depositor's money was secure in any bank; when the railroads rebated and damned the public— THOSE were the Good-Old-Days, those good old daysl Money talked. Wall Street ruled. When the telephone line was busy between Wall Street and the Treasury; and Mr. Morgan's Checkbook-Perkins had the pass-key to the White House. Who wants the Good-Old-Pays? Same-OldiCrowd—the Crowd s that used to put up the money; the Crowd that is backing Mr. Hughes 1 Is there .any doubt about it? The Democratic Congress some time ago smoked out the contribu tors to Mr. Taft's campaign. You can make your bit in advance that the big contributors of the Taft campaign are not writing any checks to help re-eject President Wilson! If you have mouths to water, prepare to water them now. For this is a tale of glue. There were nine contributions to tjiat Taft campaign from directors or presidents of life insurance companies. Mr. Drydcn of the Prudential alone turned in ordr $68,000. , The Morgttn interests seem to have been especially interested frf Mr. Taft. Thus, in the list of contributors appears Mr. Stoterfbury of the firm of J. P. 1 Morgan & Company wh? contributed jioo.000. The firm itself subscribed $150,000; and our friend, Mr. Perkins— the original George W. of the firm of Morgan, director in the National City the International Harvester Company, the International Mercantile Marine Company and the United States Steel Corporation—Perkins, the Pro contributed $30,000. Imagine a man wanting to contribute $30,000 to the'.election of Mr. Taft being a Progressive 1 Or,, what is more difficult, imagine such a man working to keep Woodrow Wilson in the White House! The impression prevails that the Rock Island Railroad went Into the hands of a receiver not tong ago. Did the fact that its then PlreilMent. Robert Mather, contributed $25,000 to Mr. Taft's election have anything to do with that receivership? Here arc a few other Friends of Progress 'touched" for Mr. Taft's «—»■ paign fund and the amounts of their subscriptions: American Can Company, Makes dinner-pails..............$ IftObO C. N. Bliss. Penn. R. R.................................. £$00 M. C. D Borden, Dir. Lincoln Ntl. Bank.................. 10000 Andrew Carnegie. Librarian .............................. 10|OOU T. Coleman dn Pont, Powder Manufacturer ............... 5000 John F. Dry den, U. S. Steel Director...................... 2S!(X)0 50,000 50.000 10,000 L50.000 * 20.000 K 50,000 f 20.000 Sf 50.000 10.000 r* 5.000 10.000 25.000 20,000 10,000 25,000 H. C. Frick, Dir. U. S. Steel Co..,.-........*....... M. Guggenheim, Copper Magnate............a*...... A. D. Juilliard, Textile Tariff Beneficiary.....-....... G. J. Gould, R. R. Director........................... E. H. Harriman, Railway Magnate........................ 150.000 R. F. Howes. Dir. Int. Harvester Co.................. C. S. Mellon, Pres. N. Y.. N. H. & H. R. R............ Roswell Miller. Pres C. M. ft St. P. R. R............. Penna. Railroad (By C. N. Bliss). .................. H. H. Rogers, V. P. Standard Oil Co................. W. Etnlen Roosevelt, Bank Director................... I. N. Seligman, Wall Street Banker........................ 10.000 James Speyer, Wall Street Banker.............4........... 25.000 James Stillman. Pres. Ntl. City Bank...................— ■ 20,000 H. McK. Tivombley, Railway Director............... Cornelius Vanderbilt, Railway Director............... Oil Sugar, Steel. Life Insurance, Tobaoco, Binder Twine, Dollars, Cop per, Silver. Gold. Millions, Wall Street. Bosses. T. R.. Money, Powder— face, gun and, bug—Banks, Magnates, Railways. Subsidies. Rebates. Wool, More Money. Billions, Steal Common, Gas. StToet Railways, Franchise, Interlocking Directorates, Invisible Governments. G. O. P.. Money Trust. Big Interests. Trusts, "Crooked Alliances of Crooked Politicians for Crooked 1 Business." Shake 'em all up in a hat. Draw out any frve names and it's a hundred to one that all five "supported" Mr. Roosevelt for President, "supported" Mr. Taft for President; "supported" Mr. Hughes for Gov- t ernor; and are "supporting" Mr. Hughes for President. I When that Crowd "supports" a man they know what they support and where to get it I That Crowd is a Friend of the Workingman I That Crowd talks about High Moral Ideas! That Crowd "protects" the Farmer I To that Crowd add: Boss Penrose. Boss Gallinger, Bnr*. Cannon. Bos- I McKinley, Boss Evans. Boss Calhoun, Boss Crane. Boss SrnSff. Boss Lotlea, * Boss Root, Boss Barnes. Boss Taft. Boss Perkins, and Ananias Roosevet* I I Now. add them all up. and we have—Hughes's BACKri*. the G. O. P, the BACK to the Good-Old-Davs. By the way—the same E. H. Harriman who subscribed $150,000 to 1 help elect Taft, "raised" a quarter of a million dollars to elrfct T. Roosevelt, in 1904. Mr. Harriman himself, in a letter to Mr Sidney Webster, de clared that as a result of this $250,000 "at least 50.000 vot<i* were turned 1 in the State of New York alone, making a difference of 100.000 votes in , the general result!" Oh I What a difference a few raisins make! One man's "raise" makes j a difference of 100,000 votes in one state! ' His name was Harriman! News item: "New York, October 2.—The treasurer of Women's Hughes | Alliance Committee is Mrs. Marv Harriman Rtimsev." ' Will her billion dollar special train of fuss, feathers and femininity lately in the West on a round-up he able to make a difference of 100,000 votes? Not so's you'd notice it. The West has growed up! Also on that Committee are Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, and Mrs. Cor nelius Vanderbilt, and Mrs. Harry Pavne Whitney, daughter of the late Cornelius. The Vanderbilt family, by the way. invented that noble sentiment— 1 "The Public be Damned!" Also on that Committee is Mrs. E. T. Stoteshnry. Mr. F-. T. only gav 1 $100,000 to elect Taft. Wonder what he is putting up for Hughes I Stotesbury is the Philadelphia partner of Morgan. Munitions & Co. Also on that Committee is "Mrs. O. H. P Belmont, who has under- 1 taken to raise half a million dollars to defeat Wilson"! , Also on that Woman's Committee are Mrs. Vincent Ashor, Mrs. John J D. Archhold of Standard Oil, Mrs. T. Ogden Armour of the Beef Trust, j Mrs. George B. Cortclynu of the N. Y. City Gas Trust, Mrs. IT. P. David son of J. P. Morgan ft Company, Mrs. Herbert Satterlee. daughter of 1 the late J. P. Morgan: the treasurer of the Train Committee is Miss Belle Greene, secretary of the late J. P. Morgan, and the Chairman of the Mem bership Committee is Miss Anne Morgan, daughter of the late J. P. Morgan. That makes it unanimous. Morgan ft Company is for Mr. Hughes 1 and Mr. Morgan will probably be able to vote all his butlers for Hughes. Mr. Morgan gave $20,000 to elect Hughes Governor of New York. Suffering Shades of Wall Street! Is the issue plain now? Can MONEY defeat Wilton?—That it the one queation you and I have got to decide. $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ On that Committee is also Mrs. rhoebe Hearst. owner of untold ; millions in Mexico—and Mother of Willie. If we were in Mexico we would finance Wilson's campaign ourselves! $15,000,000,000.00 ..............ad infinitum! Fifteen Billion Dollars! Did you know there was that much money in the world? Come closer. That—that fifteen billion bucks—represents tile combined hold ings—capital stock, surplus and deposits—of just ten of the Committee , of One Hundred that "arranged" the Kiss, Make-up, arid Eai-Your YVords meeting between Roosevelt and Hughes at the New York Union League Club in October. Ever hear of George F. Baker? Mr. Baker alone in that list is director of corporations and hanks whose aggregate capital stock and deposits exceed FOUR AND ONE HALF BILLIONS of Dollars! $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$< Can all the money in the world defeat Woodrow Wilson? If it can, [ then civilization is bankrupt and it's time to go to war, turn all Hell ! loose, move the White House to the Union League Club, New York, and transfer the U. S. Treasury to Morgan's vaults in Wall Street! ! When that Good-Old-Days comes back. Terrible Teddy will he Secretary i of War, Root will be Secretary of State. dnPont will be Secretary of : Munitions, Guggenheim will be Secretary of the Interior. Choate will j be Attorney General. Perkins will be Secretary of the Commerce, Lodge will be Secretary of the Navy, Taft will be Chief Caddy, J. Picrpont Morgan will be Secretary of the Treasury, and John D. Rockefeller will j be Secretary of Laborl And Mrs. Mary Harriman Rutnsey. Mrs. Robert Bacon, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth. Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, Mrs. Phoebe Hearst, Mrs. Bernard H. Ridder, and I Mrs. Reed Smoot will "receive"—as the F'irst Ladies in the Land I f On with the campaign, let the money be uneonfined! "Nothing but money!" Have you a moth-eaten gold brick that looks like Anything-to-Beat-Wilson? Then quick, men! You can cash it ini at the Republican National Headouarters! . "Nothing but moneyl" Got a few thousand feet of impossible film— I of Mexican horrors, for example? You can collect big money for it * over in the camp of YVillcox, Bacon, Chcate, Bliss. Parsons, Perkins, * Penrose ft Co. Anything that bears a shadow of a resemblance to Any- I thing-to-Beat-Wilson is worth money to the gang that has no issue, no national exigency, no slogan, no war-cry, no appeal, no promise, no < nothing, hut MONEY, with which to buy Anytning-to-Beat-Wilson! 1 Back up! Let us be fair. That gang has one thing more—words— i words of mud—worlds of mud. Or rather—all there is left. You aee, l a lot of mud was used up four years ago when those Kilkenny Cat* fell out and started calling each other kettles and teapots. But all the mud left over from T. R. is bombardment of Bill Taft and Us Bosses, Mr. Hughes and his minions hare hurled at Wilson. And they never touched j him! * But the cats came back—as per Union League Political Exigency ! program. And T. R. is again on the stump shouting, blazing away My- j Policies. Tf-I-had-been-Presidents, Liars, Mollycoddles, at the rata of 400 squirts a second. _ J And Mr. Hughes trails along in the rear p'atitudirig about 'iw~- ,rP* 4fibS3fl"3r"-----------■%' v Nation! f ' —'"luT L. lastieef 8 * " * T "* ~T~ j Liberty! * ' * 1 Patriotism! " / Shade* of-Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Garfield! Was thefs * ever- such; a spectacle in American Political History? t Ghosts of Captain Kidd and all the Jolly Rovers! Did the worid ever see such an alignment of Free Booters, Pirates. Plunderers, Bosses Big and Bosses Little, "Thieves, Corrupt Politicians, Pickpockets, and 1 Second Story Men," Bondholders, Big Interests, and Public Utility Looters as are lined up and are now trying to find Anything-to-BaaU 1 Wilson 1 1 And thank God for ill It had to come. It's been a long time on ! j the. way. Since Lincoln reunited these states into one indissoluble 1 Union, there has been one burning, biasing istue: j Is this • Government of the people, hr the people, hy f ' the people: or H j Hove we, os Roosevelt said Taft Believae, "s special darn * of persons wiser than the people, who cannot bo reached by ~ , the people, but who govern them, and who protect varieno cUmm of tho pooplo from fko wholo pofcplo"? 4 , That b the amstion. Is this great Iknd of ours to ba ruled by the 1 business*?" croo * te<1 alliances of crooked politicians fog crooked j ReSlTTSSSeS the iMOe; 0ur p,r ' ona ' ,!berty •**•* •», . Y ot *r. * nd vote right! Vote for your own opportunity , oinrv y Ti! fe * ha P? ,nes *— 1 for your children's honor—for your nation's glory-for the world s peace. Vote for your Ytry life itselfl __ W .'j s< ? n ahonld be elected by every vote in the Electoral college. It should be unanimous. .. ___________________________ GEORGE AMOS POMIg. jjj SPECIAL ENAMELWARE VALUES FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, AT 1 P. M. Beautiful Brown "VINTON" Acid-Proof Ware Sqt In • lUll ■12-qt. 2-qt. ;:-dt. 4 qt. tqt. ti-qt. Sqt. -•qt. ltl-qt. ■I qt. ti-qt. Sqt. ltl-qt. «-qt. 14 qt. 17 qt. teakettle rt water pail water pail coffee put coffee pot eolfee pot Berlin sauce pan Berlin sance pan Berlin same pan cereal cooker lipped preserve kettle Berlin kettle Berlin kettle Berlin kettle Berlin kettle stock kettle it. It. dish pan It. It. dish pan 95c 2-qt. 2 l-qt. Berlin sauce pan preserve kettle wash basin 2- qt. sauce pan 3- qt. pudding pan I ea. plate, cup and saucer 2- qt. Berlin kettle 3- qt. shallow stewpan 2- qt. milk pan 3- qt. milk pan 3-qt. mixing bowl 2-qt. pudding pan 10c Now on Display in Our Window JUDITH HARDWARE COMPANY ALIAS SUMMONS. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OK THE TENTH rUDIClAI, DISTRICT OK THE STATE OK Ml INT \ N A, IN AND KOH THE COUNTY OK KER UUS. • S «| Ivan Stoyuilliefr I'eneff, plaintiff, vs. Mary I'eneff, defendant. Summons. The state of Montana sends greet ings to the above named defendant. You are hereby minunoned to an HWer tilt- complaint in this action, which is tiled in the office of the clerk of this court, a copy of which is here with served upon you, anil to tile your answer and serve u copy thereof upon the plaintiff' attorney within twenty days after the service of this sum mons, exclusive of the day of service; and In case of your failure to appear and answer, judgment will be taken against you bv default for the relief demanded in the complaint. This action is brought by the plain tiff against the defendant for the pur nose of obtaining a divorce, (lie plain tiff alleging ns grounds for divorce j that the defendant has refused and I still refuses for more Uiun two years ! last past to make her home with him, i although he has provided a suitable I home for her, and that defendant has abandoned the plaintiff and all inten tion of living with him, without suffi cient cause or reason, all of which ! Is fully set forth in plaintiff's com j plaint on (He herein to which refer ence Is hereby made. Witness my hand and tho seal of this court, this thirtieth day of Octo ber, 1 BIB. ' (Court Beal.l JAMES I., MARTIN. Clerk. 10-Z-41. SHERIFF'S SALE. 1 Stanford Mercantile Company, a cor poration, plaintiff, vs. Gilbert O. Eckcr, defendant. To he sold at Sheriff'll Sale on Kri day. November 24, 1916, at 2 o'clock p. ni„ at the front iloor of tho Court House in Lowistown. Fergus County. | Montana, to the highest and host, bid I dor for cash in hand, all of the do 1 fendant's interest in and to the I'o! lowing described real estate, situated, lying and being in Fergus County, | Montana: I West 1 lajf of the Northwest Qnar ! ter, northwest quarter of the south i west quarter of section 24, and the east { half of the east half of section 22 and | the north half or the nort lilialf, the ' southweslquarlcr iff the northwest, ' quarter of section 26, all in township 1S north of range II east, Montana i I'rineipal Meridian. Also east half iff i the east half, northwest quarter of the southeast, quarter of section X. and the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast I Quarter of Meet inn 17. and South Half .of tin- Southwest Quarter of Section 9, and the East Half of the Northwea* Quarter of Section 9, Township 10 j North of Range 12 East, Montana I'rincipal Meridian in Montana. I Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appur ■ tenam-es thereunto belonging or In anywise appertaining. FIRM IN TUI.DOCK. Sheriff. By P. SLATER, Under Sheriff. J Dated at Lowistown. Montana Thursday. November 2, 1916. 1 BKDDE.V ft DICK AI B. Attorneys for Plaintiff. 11 2 21 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF TIME APPOINTED FOR PROVING WILL, ETC. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OK THE TENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OK THE STATE OF MONTANA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OK I-Kit , til IS. Ill Ihe matter of the estate of Charles Anderson, deceased. Pursuant to an order of said court, made on the thirty-first day of Onto her. 1916, notice is hereby given that Saturday, the eighteenth day of No vomber, 1916, at J0:00 o'clock a. til.. of said day, at the court i-onm of said court, at the court house, in the city of Lowistown, County of Fergus, lias been appointed as the time and place for proving the will of said Charles Anderson, deceased, and for hearing the application of S. J. Salle, for • lie issuance to him of letters testamen tary, when and whore any person in terested may appear and contest the same. Dated the thirty-first day of Qcto her, 1916. i (Court Seal, i JAMES MARTIN, Clerk.! Hy ALVIN MARTIN, Deputy Clerk n-a-at. SUMMONS. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OK THE TENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OK THE STATE OK MONTANA. IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OK KER tills Alice Motile, plaintiff, vs. Kred Davis, Kate D. Davis and Walter A. Stark, defendants. Summons The stale of Montana sends greet ings to the above named defendants: You are hereby summoned to an swer the enni|ilniut In this aetlon. which Is filed in Ihe office of the clerk of this court, a copy of which Is here with served upon you, and to tile your answer and serve a copy thereof upon the plaintiff's attorneys within twenty days after the service of Ibis sum mons, exclusive of the day of service; and in ease of your failure to appear and answer, judgment will he taken against, you hy default for the relief demanded in tile complaint. fluid action Is lirouglit to obtain a judgment and decree of this court for the foreclosure of a certain inert guge dated the fifteenth day of March A. I). 1910, and recorded in the office of the county dork and recorder of Kergus county, Montana, on the twenty-first, day of March. 1910, In hook IX of mortgages, at page 1X7, thereof, and set forth In the complaint, made and executed hy the defendants Kred Davis and Kate L. DiivIh, above named, to W. .1. Johnson, to securo the payment of a certain promissory note made and delivered by them to said W. I. Johnson, hearing even date with said mortgage, for the principal sum of three thousand dollars, pay able three yours after date with in terest from Kel.ruary I, 1910, at the rate of III per emit per annum, inter est payable annually, the payment of said note and mortgage being for a valuable eonsideralIon on tho twenty first day of January, 1913, extended to the first day of February, 1916, at same rate of interest, payable an mially; said complaint alleging that no part of the principal sum of said note has been paid, and that no part of the interest on said note has been paid since the first day of February, I It I "i, except the sum of $200 paid on account of Interest payable February I. 1916; that said mortgaged premises described in said mortgage may lie isold and Ihe proceeds thereof applied Rock Island Heider Tractor Burns Kerosene or Gasoline Why Does a Wagon?, have four wheels—-We leave that to you to answer and wc Push Our Pencil to tell you that the Heider Tractor has 4 Wheels, 4 Cylinders, Waueesha Motor, 7 Speeds Forward and 7 Speeds in P.everse. It is the Original so called Small Tractor. It does the work of Eight or Ten Horses in the field and Never Gets Tired. It has Auto mobile Steering Gear. There are no complicated parts to a Heider. We have a sample machine at 4th Ave. North and Erie St. Come and see this Best of all Tractors. Basin Lumber Company to the payment ol mild note, with lu terest thereon from Ihe first day of Kcbnmry. 191.2, al Ihe rate of 10 per cent per annum, less the. sum of $200, paid as aforesaid, and costs of sail, including a reasonable attorney fee allowed by the court, reference being hereby made te the complaint on file in Ihe office of the clerk of said court for further particulars, and lu ease Niteh proceeds are not sufficient to pay the same, then to obtain a Judg ment lor the deficiency, and that said defendants, and all persons claiming I y, through, or under them, or cillicr or any of tle-m, may lie Imrred and foreclosed of till right, title, claim, lien, equity of redemption and Interest In and to said mortgaged premises, and for general relief. Witness my hand and the seal of said court, this twenty-seventh day of October, 1916. (Court Heal,) JAMEB L. MARTIN, Clerk. By Herbert I. Linn. Deputy Clerk. BLACKFORD ft IIUNTOON, Attorneys for DhilntllT. 1I-2-4L J. W. Downes arrived in the city yesterday from Winifred. He leaven today for Illinois for a short visit. Choice Young Holstein-Friesian BULLS \V«* olTci* a l'«*u kthihInoii-* ol' king Damn mv <I»mtihIhI Irom <o\VM with official itoohIh ol' iiion* than thilly pounds hutti*!' in -<*vi'ii days. Ml an* cousins to tin* $r»0,tMIO hull and to tin* world's f'huiiiploii 11.12-pound row. Mahoney Farms Ross Forks, Montana