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Early-Oay State Coal Camps, Now Only Memories, Had Trouble With Miners O ver Weights, Measures By ELNO ALDRIDGE, Hor r, Cinnabar. They are little more today than names belonging to a past gen eration. Bat 40 years ago they stood for thriving communities, pulsing with pioneer life. On one oc casion they were scenes of marching, angered miners, more or less organized and determined to carry the day for their cause. But after a long march and a glimpse of a few soldiers and a posse of armed citizens, their ardor cooled. Aldridge, across the mountain ridges west and a little south of Corwin Springs in the upper Yellowstone valley, was a coal mining camp in the ’9o’s; it was an important community in the industrial life of its day. Today the name is associated only with a lake nearby. The coal qamp is gone, and no one resides there. Horr was the coke oven town on the Yellowstone just south of Corwin. The coal was brought from the mountains by tram and flume to feed, at its hey day, a hundred coke ovens. Horr today is known as Electric. The coke ovens lie in ruins, crumbling monuments to a one-time boom town. Cinnabar was the town at the or iginal end of the Yellowstone park, branch of the Northern Pacific, three miles below Gardiner at the park boundary. It has completely disap peared. Trouble in 189 G A stretch of country between the Yellowstone river and the mountain ridge, now a game refuge for the park, plus a few small ranches, was the line of march through Horr and Cinnabar when the Aldridge miners went on the warpath in March. 1896. It was one of those affairs which, while it lasted, provided plenty of thrills for those in volved; an affair where anything might have happened, and nothing much did. J. E. Str >ng. new mine superintend ent at Aldridge was visited at his cabin on a Sunday afternoon by a mob of 75 to 100 Austrian and Hungarian miners and told to leave the camp within four hours. There had been no grievances voiced by the men, he de clared later. He told the men if they had a grievance he would be glad to discuss it with them. They repeated their order that he leave. He suggested a compromise—that the men go about INSTALL MERIT SYSTEM Rolland D. Severy of Chicago, repre sentative of the American Public Wel fare association, has been retained by the state public welfare department to be temporary superintendent of exam inations for the committee appointed to examine applicants for positions with the state public welfare department. He will be in Montana several months set ing up the machinery for the depart ment's merit system. Members of the committee are Payne Templeton and Dr. H. H. Swain of Helena and Fred Martin of Great Falls. SCHOOLS ARE RATED The state board of education recently gave superior rating to 10 rural schools in Lewis and Clark county. Schools which are given a superior rating are exempt from state seventh and eighth grade examinations. A 9-year-old boy. C. E. J. Bishop, is the champion piano accordian player of Great Britain. He won the title in a London tournament, competing with more than 1.000 players. The southernmost point of the United States is at Cape Sable. Fla. Another Case of Kidney and Bladder Trouble Relieved Mrs. Ida Lay of Reed Point, Mon tana, tells the following of her exper ience with the wonders of Wong Sun’s Chinese Herbs: "For many years I suffered with kid ney and bladder trouble. I took all kinds of medicines and pills, but with no relief. I became so weak and tired I could not do my housework. A friend of mine suggested Wong Sun Company, ■ o I decided to give them a chance. Today I am surely thankful I did, as I took the herbs but a few weeks, and am feeling wonderful again, and gain ing weight I would recommend the Wong Sun Company’s Chinese Herb medicines very highly to anyone suf fering from these troubles." MRS. IDA LAY. Reed Point, Montana. Wong Sun Company Hillings. Mont. Missoula, Mont. Sheridan. Wyo. Great Falls, Mont. GRAZING TRACT 25.000 Acres at S 3 Per Acre AGRICULTURAL LANDS In the Clark', Fork valley, term, of 10 percent down, balance 10 yearly payments, bearing 6 percent inter est. For farther Information, write Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Lands Department Drawer 1243 Mlmoala, Mont. Cupyose YOU TRY / Old-Time Brand tor ( Kentucky M > Straight I Bourbon fagl UJhiskeyLX/ their affairs and return to see him in four hours. Phoned for Help When the crowd was gone he phoned Dr. Allen at Horr and asked that he send help to Aldridge. He could not tell the whole story, as others had ac cess to the party line. Dr. Allen inter preted the message correctly, however, for apparently there had been rumors of trouble in the air. Dr. Allen first called the officers in charge of troops at Yellowstone park, who refused to become involved. He then wired Sheriff George T. Young of Livingston for aid. As soon as possible Sheriff Young and a posse consisting of B. D. Shef field. William Mitchell, James Foster, W. B. Altimus, Ed Shaw, E. B. Whit tich. Ed Bennett. Deputy Sheriff Bell and Undershcriff Dwight N. Ely went by special train to Mulherin station, just below Horr. At Mulherin they were met by George Welcome, father of the present George Welcome of Gardiner, who informed them that i there had been no trouble to that time,) but their arrival at Aldridge might 1 prevent bloodshed. Rifles in the posse were left on the train in charge of Undersheriff Ely. and the posse went on foot, armed with revolvers, the four miles into the mountains to Aldridge, reaching there at 3 o'clock Monday morning. They found Strong, his assistant superin tendent. J. L. Barry, John Walker and Dr. Allen barricaded in the cabin. Much relieved by the presence of the posse, Strong told his story. After calling the officers Dr. Allen and Walker had gone to Horr to render what assistance they could. When the miners returned late in the evening they were met by four men with guns. They were told to select a committee of three to talk with Strong in the cabin. The committee told Strong the miners had extended the time for leav ing the camp to 6 a. m.. Monday, and that Barry must go with him. For the first time, said Strong, he learned what the grievance was. The miners were paid by the ton for digging coal, and they were charging short weights at the company scales. The miners fired a volley of shots when they left, to emphasize their determination to rid the camp of the superintendent and Barry. Superintendent Blamed Two months previously Strong had come from Birmingham. Ala., as super intendent. succeeding J. H. Conrad, who resented his summary dismissal. Conrad remained in the camp and made every opportunity to incite dis content. He even gave orders to the men contrary to Strong's. Strong had ordered Conrad to leave, and he be lieved Conrad had retaliated by sto ring up a riot. Outside reports were that the man agement of the mines had changed superintendents in an effort to get a profit from the current price of coke, and that the new superintendent and his weighmaster were consistently re cording short weights. The miners, it was said, had objected, and were told they could quit when they liked, that negroes from the south would take their places. Events recorded a year later indicated that the miners may have had a real grievance. Anyway, with the sheriff and his I posse in camp there was no further : trouble. Strong went to Gardiner and secured from Justice Culver warrants for Antone Webber. Charles Walters, j William Jones and the four Skubitz brothers. Joe. Martin, John and An tone, the apparent leaders of the dis- ; turbance. When Sheriff Young took the seven men to Gardiner it was cause for a new outbreak. A hurry up call was sent to Livingston for more arms and ammunition. County Attorney W. H. Poorman. later prominent in Helena, instructed deputies not to do anything without authority from Sheriff Young, who was in Gardiner. Young, when reached, ordered a limited supply of arms sent to Cinnabar. Tuesday morning the striking miners chased from the camp a dozen men who tried to enter the mines for the day shift. Then they organized a march on Gardiner to liberate their seven comrades, a hike of 10 miles. Sheriff Young at Gardiner was no tified of the march, and was kept in formed of its progress through Horr and Cinnabar. It was apparent the sheriff would soon have to deal with a mob. He held a consultation with Gardiner citizens, most of them old pioneers and Indian fighters, all cool, nervy men. Soldiers Lacked Authority to Act Officers at Fort Yellowstone were communicated with. They said they had no authority outside the park but would certainly preserve order within it. Gardiner’s main business street, then as now, laced the park boundary. The prisoners were placed in the McCart ney building just inside the park with a squad of soldiers on guard, with bayonets mounted. On the opposite side of the street Sheriff Young and the local citizens, all heavily armed, took their stations. The wait was short. About 90 men in a compact body, T.ith stragglers scattered far behind, soon appeared from the northwest. Sheriff Young had given orders for everyone to be ready, but not to fire , until he gave the word. He took An tone Webber, an intclllgest young [ Austrian and a prisoner, to the street. Webber’s chief offense seemed to have been the fact that, due to his intelli gence, he had been called upon at 1 Aldridge to act as spokesman for thei miners. The two went out to face the mob. Young had Webber address the mob in their own tongue, telling them the uselessness of their mission. Soon the leaders promised there would be no violence. The mob was marched up Front street and searched. About a i dozen guns were found in the whole crowd. Clubs were thrown aside. Sheriff Young, who had closed the saloons earlier, allowed them to open and the miners were permitted to enter. After an hour the saloons were closed again at Young's order. Many of the miners were persuaded to re turn home. Serious trouble had been averted by Sheriff Young’s cool, ef ficient management of the affair. The prisoners were taken to Living ston for trial In district court* All but the Skubitz brothers were discharged from custody, and the Skubitz boys re ceived only light punishment. Conrad soon left Aldridge, and the camp settled down to work, to continue for a year, when trouble again arose over weights and low wages, resulting In the mines beings cloeed for a time. The estimated income from the five centa-a-gallon tax on gasoline for thki year is **oo,ooo, according to a state mwfisrvs si. "SSnuLisrs GLACIER COUNTY CHIEF BUSINESS COLLEGE NEARS BIRTHDAY BUTTE SCHOOL IS OLDEST INSTI TUTION OF ITS KIND IN MONTANA Institution Founded in Beaverhead County in 1890 by A. F. Rice When He Formed Small Class to Teach Fenmanship to Gold Camp Miners. Fast approaching its 50th anni versary, and its growth developed during all these years under the continuous guidance of its founder, Alonzo F. Rice, the Butte Business college is one of the oldest insti tutions of its kind in Montana, and ranks not only the largest in the state, but one of the largest in the entire country. In Glendale, Beaverhead county, that is today a ghost city but in the ’Bo’s, as headquarters for the Hecla Mining Co., was one of the busiest mining camps in the state, the small beginning of the school was made. To that min ing camp in 1889 came A. F. Rice, from I Sedalia, Mo., equipped with his busi- A. F. RICE Founder and present-day partner of the Butte Business college. ness school diploma, and ready to take his first position, in the office of the smelter there. His older brother, Henry Rice, following the urge of many of the young men of that day to explore the west, had preceded him there by a year or two, and was driving stage out of Glendale. Hardly had the newcomer got his sleeves rolled up for his new job before a group of young miners began urging ; him to teach them penmanship. Soon i a class was formed, and that class proved to be the inspiration for the Butte Business college, founded the next year. Another young Missourian, E. L. Kern, who had been teaching school in his native state, came out to the mining country and joined forces with Mr. Rice. Before school started in the fall of 1890, Mr. Rice obtained from Henry Nippenberg, one of his sponsors at Glendale, a letter to Mrs. J. C. C. Thorton of Butte, and through the in fluence of this prominent Butte matron, a room was provided in the old Butte Central high school, then the only building in the block where the Butte public library now stands, where these two young men could hold, their commercial classes. More than a score of young people enrolled for the regular classes, and it soon became ap parent that to take care of all appli cants, many of whom were working at the mines, classes would have to be arranged to accommodate the three shifts. Morning, afternoon, and even ing classes followed, with attendance increasing by such bounds that larger quarters had to be found. The two generation of the House of Seagram haa and be aurc. y ’ *** S<M,Bram B - 4 **r Sale a* State Llqaor Stores ■traiqnt Bourbon W m inc In c'^dT^yeiuE 6 V* ar » »0 Proof. Bkaoram'i Pedigree VCaoww Blended Wmiskrv-.40% Etraiaht whl.klei 60% A ° ov f rn " l « ,t - »00 Proof (Rye or Bourbon). Beaqram'b young pedagogs, Rice and Kern, ac cordingly found space on Quartz street. There too, they shortly found them selves again cramped for room, and so in January of 1891, before the build- J. L. SCOTT Who has served as secretary-treasurer of the Butte Business college nearly a decade. ing was entirely completed, they es tablished themselves in a wing on the top floor of the Owsley block, the lo cation that has been the school’s home ever since, except that gradually the school spread from one wing to occupy the entire floor. Typewriters a Novelty These were the beginnings of the school. While typewriters were in use , at the time, though still something of a novelty, classes in typing were a part of the regular curriculum, with pen manship. bookkeeping and stenography the other subjects taught. A contrast as sharp as the two-story shack Butte of the early ’9o’s, with that "greatest mining camp on earth” , today, is the contrast of the Butte Business college’s working equipment of that day and this. Adding machines and now fill table after table in one entire room, representing an investment of tens of thousands of dollars in ultra modern office machinery. In the spa cious typing room, typewriters are placed row on row to supply the needs of the almost constant daily attendance of 500 pupils. As in the earliest days of the school, classes are maintained day and night, for the convenience of the working and non-working students. As steadily as the intricate processes of accountancy have developed from simple bookkeeping, and mechanical computations and entries have sup planted the bulk of penwork, has the Butte Business college kept abreast of the times, in the expansion of its courses to embrace and cultivate every new trend. In addition to its commercial and secretarial courses, it has maintained a four-year lully accredited high school department for the past 30 years. The newest department to be insti tuted Is the course in higher account ing, which equips the student with an expert’s knowledge and prepares him for taking his examinations for a C. P. A. degree. Civil service prepara tion and public speaking are other de partments. Mr. Rice Still With School Since Mr. Rice, with Mr. Kern, launched the project in 1890, half of the partnership has occasionally, changed, but Mr. Rice’s connection with the school has remained constant. C. V. Fulton. E. W. Gold, L. A. May, and later J. Lee Rice, a brother, were suc cessive partners, over a period of many | years. In 1929 J. Lee Rice sold his in terest in the school to J. L. Scott, who had been principal of the commercial department for seven years, prior. Mr. Scott has now served as secretary and treasurer of the school for close to a decade. Mr. Scott, too, is a Missourian, born at Newtown, Mo., and a graduate of the Kirksville State Normal and of the Chlllicothe Business college, and is a 1 WINNING ‘WAGER’ STARTED CHURCH BUTTE PASTOR ACCEPTED DARE OP SPORTSMAN FIFTY YEARS AGO Was Offered SSOO In Gold Dust if He Would Read Passage From Bible aa Designated by Donor; Was Start of Fund Toward Building New Edifice. Dr. E. J. Groeneveld of Butte recently completed his 50th year or continuous service in the pulpit of the Presbyterian church of that city. On May 2, 1888, Dr. Groene veld, then a young minister just ordained in Chicago, preached his Df 8 * . *errm>n in a ramshackle church. Not more than a half dozen persons now members of the church were in the congregation. Experiences of Dr. Groeneveld in Butte, which 50 years ago was a lusty young mining town, have been varied. One of the young minister’s first enterprises was that of building a church. He set about to obtain funds. A sportsman offered a poke containing SSOO worth of gold dust if young Groeneveld would read any passage from the Bible he designated. The minister accepted the dare. The spectacle of a minister of the gospel accepting a “wager” was widely ad vertised. A tremendous crowd assembled to hear the reading of the scriptures. An old newspaper account says of the event that “painted ladies, gamblers, bar-keepers, livery stable owners, elite member of the National Association of Cost Accountants of New York. He spent 14 months in serviee during the World war. Since its founding the oldest of Montana business colleges has gradu ated more than 15,000 students, and has enrolled more than 38,000. It is fundamentally an institution for Mon tana. It encourages its students and graduates to remain in Montana, where opportunities are greater and rewards are higher. In this endeavor it has the co-operation of business men all over the state, many of whom themselves, now in important positions and posts, are alumni of the school. Butte’s Business College Keeps Montana High School Graduates Profitably in Their Own State 1 A fully accredited school recognized as one of the leading Northwest business training schools and fortunately lo- l cated in a business center which offers unmatched cm- (Kb2en») i ployment opportunities. Highest wage town in the wBJBw ' Northwest. Write or call for complete information. | Oar Average Est. 1890 Owsley Block Phone 2-2391 RICE Sc SCOTT, Props. Butte, Montana RANCH FOR SALE Liquidation of Farm Property owned by the late Governor Frank Cooney in the Bitter Root Valley offers EXCEPTIONAL BUY The farm property owned by the Into Governor Cooney in the Bitter Root Valley is being liquidated nnd comprises 320 acres of highly Improved land with ample water rights. Improvements include modern bungalow with wiring nnd plumbing, a large modern barn, chicken house, granary, cook house, bunk house. Inrge cellar, and machine shed. New fences Equipped with modern machinery including a new tractor and is stocked nt present with cattle and pigs. This property is surrounded by un limited grazing Innd which can be leased very reasonably This deal will Involve ap proximately 130.000 and can be handled on any kind of reasonable terms. For Further Particulars Write JOHN P. COONEY BOX 30 BUTTE — — Montana of the city and common drunks were present in large numbers.” Dr. Groeneveld read the designated verses, collected the SSOO in gold dust, and passed the collection plate among the throng. From that nest egg sprang the present imposing edifice which is the First Presbyterian church in Butte Explaining that he did not believe in mixing commercialism and religion Dr. Groeneveld recently revealed he has never accepted a cent since he was ordained as a minister for preaching funeral sermons. “I figure I have passed up $30,000, figuring funerals at the rate of sio each,” said Dr. Groeneveld. Working by the side of her husband, Mrs. Groeneveld has been with the minister throughout their 50 years in Butte. They celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary about a year ago. Both are in their eighties. Dr. Groeneveld was bom in Germany and emigrated to the United States as a boy. Receiving his education as a minister in Chicago, he first was as signed to a pastorate at Deer Lodge, Mont., from there he came to Butte. Affable and kindly. Dr. Groeneveld is widely known in Montana. He re cently was named moderator of the Butte Presbytery after having served as secretary for many years. Dr. and Mrs. Groeneveld reared a family of two, a son and a daughter. The son died three years ago. STATE HEALTH BOARD Dr. E. M. Porter of Great Falls was elected president of the state board of health at the annual meeting of that body. Dr. W. F. Cogswell was re-elected secretary and executive officer. He has held that post for more than 25 years. Dr. B. K. Kilbournc, epidemiologist for the bohrd, reported that an increase in smallpox, tuberculosis, measles and whooping cough had been noted In the state for the six months period ending April 1. When Whittier wrote, “ 'Tis spring time on the hills.” he was probably in Montana, not in Los Angeles. MODERN WOMEN Need NotSeHer monthly pain ami delay dua to ootda, nervuuaatTiiiu, exposure or oimiiar causae Cln-iLee-tera Diamond hi and Ihllaara effect! ve* reliable and give Quick belief. Bold by •II 'lruqgistaforovcrsUyeAra. Aik for “THR DIAMOND IRAN D“