77 - - 0 - Thompsons gGl ov Fittinag Corsets; up to theAminute styles ilkren's Trimmedots, and Readyto All Go;as at Reisonable riles Wear Hats. All Goods at Reasonabl Fnces Quality Shop Mrs. S. Kitzenberg, Proprietor Plenty wood - - Montan CITY BAKERY and CAFE F. A. DEM MING, - PROPRIETOR Save Ci dies; Shis SprnI ! THIS Talk about Saving is a good thing. But you want someone to get down to cases and show you exactly where you can save. WE CAN Show you in cAorhae. There's .just one way to do it; buy-odd ones. A fine all wpol aldosting $30. to $85 and, lasting three sea ons is far cheaper thao a suit that cots $18 or $20 and lasts one sea. son. We know it and we ptint itwbeesse'we want yoo to know it. irehitereted i.ln cI es, but we are -just as much iun terested tin lping you get value a ation._ .our - on clothes you c ie tt or your spimg at 2 - 444 4i B ~g~iq~j ! 4: ·;iC 4: 7 - nd ; of ." CaP me p i hundeg, istaitiall sodra a.l th met t exercised under all eltrau amiu 2h ipeh pay, o I eend A.!n dew..e. . r th Tea aol Pan e a pound I, -in 1rte af ofb8lIg water anm boil twh Anima reUll0. Re mo v4, # Samwa, ft two qu of cold water. Strain. The tea wil practically absorb all the hot water; aie cold water wil extt the tanni acid This soution rill m e about e fourth b h ae to w ' f which will be su defd atbotao for a horSe, t la o 'eS a-imal about the same tise which has been poison ed by eating strychnia. Drench the anhin -by paiuaf a f -tion in a laIe bottle and pourla g down the h6rses throat. Tie the head high. Keep the Ammal QUJEI'. Do not glow the animal todrink water, until the danger is passed. - Feed the horse onee handful of oil meal, or flax seed in gou to bhysiu the hor.. 3 Usae When nea Drug toe. If the horse has taken a large am oint of poiso, arech with. net fourth to oner haf of tafle aB# in one quart of water before admiais tetin a ie ahlorl hydrate or potas sium bromide. uaic acid treatment Should be followed, after danger has passed, with a dose of linseed oil or Glauber's salts, or Epson salts to ove] come the constipating seect. 4 Use when niml has secured only a little poeson. If a horse is found in the act of eating strychnined graln weise the tongue and clean out the month and diroat thoroly. Drench the horse as quickly as posablea with one ounce of Chloral hydrate, or of potssium bro nude, in one quart of water, and re pett with half of this dose after half an hour. Horses so treated become dopey and may lie down to sleep. Poisonied animals should ot be sud deniy alarmerd as this may bring on ionvulsions. -George F.7brke wholesale po tatoe man of Clouquet, Minnesota, has a car load of notbern Mimiesota grown potatoes on the adletwee in Plentywood which be is selling for S1.215 per boshel. These potatoes are exceptionally good for seed. etan P of "ns :Is -. Wa -n Fa- n Austin, Tex.-Sergt. H. Clyde Balm ley is thl first Texan to return from Frane pa a hero eof the flying rtvice of the Lafayette Escadrille, of which be It a member.. Young Balaley's home is in San Antonio, and he. is a former ttudent -of the University of Texas. He came to Austin a few days ago upon invitation from hisa old-time friends in the university to relate his experiences. He Is home on con valescent leave, having just recovered from wounds received when attacked by a ack Otf GOran airmen. He fell With ble maclne from a height of 12,000 feet to ad' altitude of 2,000 feet, whba be smanaged to rightI- is airplane ..ant ',land safely behind the French Mass. He speat three years in the fying service. Patriotism Must Be Aroused. "Wake up, America I" should be the slogan of the people of the United States, Sergeant Balsley said while here. "It is so terribly necessary and right' pow-that the whole country be filled with patriotism. It must feel that on it, and it alone, rests the outcome of this war. Until that time I do not believe America's best efforts can be put forth. For while no one. I think, would want to take one iota of cheerfulness or happiness away from our soldiers, still we who are at the front-the allies and the French . feel that Americans are too cocksure I -too full of braggadocio. Confidence is all right, but a man who does not measure the enemy's resistance and take into account that he is fighting to the death, may stand to lose vast odds fist because of his shortsighted ness." Balaley spoke of bombing Germany .with Ase riegn airplanes. "dOf cree, it will -take time. From 1 the French vibwpolnt It will be 1919 before Americans can really go in in great forces, because she must get her r planes built and transported, and it i, takes time, time, time. We really a think that in 1918 America will only be able to take charge of some see Stlons of the front, and that it will be two years before she can really make Sherself felt in the real struggle." Of German atrocities, Balsley would - not speak. "I feel as though I never want to qsake hands with one of them again." he declared. "In the whole world there is only one I regard highly, and be is in San Antonio; and because I felt he was so different I have hunted bim up. But only those who have actually known the meanness and cruelty of their methods 'over there' can understand what a terrible thing their disregard of every principle of right means." Baisley has many souvenirs of the war--several bayonets, a cap taken from a German prisoner, some shells, a German artillery belt, etc. In a worn bit of cloth he carries the shell which, bursting, shattered his thigh. "The nurse gave it to me after the operation," he explained. In enlarging upon the American at titude as viewed from the foreign standpoint Baleley went into details. Attitude Mieunderstood. "I speak of American braggadocio as I have seen it in France and in PFrts and as I have seen it from tht French angle. So many -of the boys who have gone over have more or lesfs -adopte...the .-ttitude of 'Well, -we're sorry for you Frenchies, but yo-, don't know hoT to fight . Now that we've come over well show you a thing or two.' Of course we that have been born and reared in Amer lea understand that attitude. W8v Is so new to -this great peaceful coun try that even after these years of thi struggle It is impossible for us tt, realise how big a thing and how ter rible a thing we are up against. W. are like a bl overgrown boy trust ing to his large'u masle and cheerful ness against a prise fighter whose methods -he -knows absolutely nothing abou±, and therefore he cannot know how strenuous an adversary be ha to underestimate &is strength and to patronize others who seek to caution him against 'the flghter, The French do not, u·n rstand this at all and art landlned to resent ,It, This, to my 1nmtina is one of the unfortunate facts so far of 'eur `ging' over', and I be t.~vas oar oBelale when they come to reaise, arilW tiry 1t Otcate the gafLr. a3 p mt as o more of ,a 'eomrade b -t thee who :bare I&swtre4 so mee& 0g4= whtom we have uile olt to lIp." 'm~ii-!~~iw sgl~"CiD.I~3 ~B1CSti~ir~L4 ~B-.C ~eel ·l~ra~~:~ l~i Rllr Gtwee HARNESS d DOUBLE Harness, sing.~ hares%, huggy harness, tigt rn;±s, p.er kind of `harn'es exiept expensive haroess. Our Low price atid high .qualit literally kill the 7ji tae peFaee in aity:harnei you buy fo..ls.. Robes, Blaskets, Whips, Combs, Brushes, R e&idles Colars (Fr We do all kinds of Repair dese Work and do it in. a hurry. citi Come on. Shoe Repairing and a Speciality. keing umbu Th4 PLENTYWOOD HARNESS Mont cally SHO hs a irg s_ nl .nt j War ui T 0 AC of the TOBACCO was a even b T ha's the Lea _That's Neve resenta OUr irofteo Businest togel .nesota If you think ya meet can't get a Goa sident Cigar in this cou c!us try come to the c and C " gar factory. V exp sell 40 brands, a speech prices, 10 for 5c, u aided to 25c each. truth r We sell 28 branc Be of cigaretts, v. brands ,of chewie The tobacco, and 30 brands of smoking tobacco. as f i ]T.OVer If we haven't got the kind of tobaco or t: you used in your old home town, we wl in it; get it for you, That's Our Busnmes and CIGARS, $1.50 for Box of 50 up to $8.0 Th which Largest exclusive stock CIGAR STORE ng, whom in Montana is no Special all the time, ai th Big 51-2 INCH CIGAR with , Manilla short filler, Con- the to necticut primed wrapper, lectic 7 for 25c, good as most 7e policy to Gc. cigars, better than many a pGo. 2 for 25c sold in our town. het ra Orvil E. Whitmarsh Cigar are wvould MAKERS of the EL-ZERO in gll of the popular so No,l Montana's Greatest cigar made in best equipped fackRE in our state. k IPLENTYWOOD, MONTAP It i _ r. is 18 nnl , unn, uu mnann n n,, u nmm u n ummuu • ,, n, nmA (,.r.eO TRICKS HUN OFFICERS -ritish Cobrier Gets Help From the Enemy. Handle Confidential British Dispatches, but They Do Not Know" It. Loandon.-Two German officers re cently handled more than a dozen cases of confidential British dispatches, but they did not know it. The story is one of the many adVen turous, Incidents which befall that se lect body of British public servants who wear a silver greyhound in their buttonhole and are known as king's messengerd. Many imagine that any one who carries dispatches for the BritJsh government is a king's messen ger. This is net correct. iThere are only fve.men who bold comemlalos Isi that service. The othera are merely admiralty couriers or war office con lets and have no right to the higher The partieular mnesesger who out witted the two Gerniain .efesr was bumrde.i with IT hbeg of :i Ptchet p 4ra " embhaus yan be had !a tbage tratin at niAgt at A,~ GtIeSts *bew seast ntr7. ABss 9 fbt te - !t, trhe sleet aw omw Ea a s: t k(et`` M Ia' eia a t Al ý . - He could not let tie five h~ens out him, nor could he leave so( dozen on the platform. At marti ment he caught sight of twen'tel cavalry officers. It was a riMany to them, but in his best Sout he dialect and with his face in C requested their help. Thi. '"' haughty than the averag~iore , fleer and each one lent a ha01 The last bag was buitdleracy, with the train already in V Mr.. the messenger waived his thlth locked the door and collaPl or nearest sentt. ga FIND SUBSTITUTE FOarote Johns Hopkins Unlversil'yt Makes New Drug pan Coal Tar. qu ---- eir New York.-Discovery 4e agent as a substitute for m _er rived from opium was an, - by Dr. David L Macht of .pd ktasm untrve.ty at the aunoitel of the, ociety for ExperiEo)ve ogy - ad. tledldne. ust The. substitute is a coal'R tive apd has been named - *olate. It has met with t'_ t~6 Doctor rown, head of d' clliwc "t d:#P " Hopkins in; Doctor facht said. - The . `mo..est, Dsectort gtla6e,.z0. t te miUe Ajteptatký 1lsage b1