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UNDERTAKING • f E. W. Harland ; ' { Embalm er and Funeral Director » Lady Attendant i BETTER SERVICE Phone 692-R1 • 219 West Main H. F. WEST BMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Lady Assistant MODERN PARLOR AND AUTO EQUIPMENT Ambulance Service Phone 797 -R 2 125 West Main St, LESLIE £. GAGE Optometrist Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Manfg. Optician Glasses repaired and broken lenses repaired the r*mc day. Phone 425 10 E. Main DR. W DAWES . f Osteopathic Physician and Obstetrician Graduate American School of Osteopathy, Kirk «ville, Mo. 37 West Main St. Marti* Block Phon« 371. DRS. DEAN AND GRIFFITH Osteopathic Physicians Office Phone 132-W. Dr. Grififth Phone Rea,676 Dr. Dean Phone Res 132-J Commercial National Bank Building. JAMES E. ELLIOTT Physiciaa and Surge« Commercial National Bank Block Phone 195-W Residence Evergreen Apartments Phone 195-J rnone Gallatin Veterinary Hospital Bozeman, Montana. O L. DEVORE Corner Black and Lamme Streets Phone 235. 4 Ew F. BUNKER Attorney-at-Law—Notary Public Commercial Bank Building Bozeman, Mont. F. W. Hancock WATCH, CLOCK AND JEWELRY REPAIRING Clocks called for and delivered. ROECHER'S DRUG STORE. f* 'RAILWAY TIME-CARD. NORTHERN PACIFIC. Going West. No. 1—North Coast Ltd....4:31 A. M. No. 3— N. P. Express. No 41—Local .... No. 219—Local . Nos- l, 41 and 219 run via Butte; No, 1 carries paying passengers from and topoints scheduled to stop. No 1 and No. 3 will stop at Manhattan mid Belgrade to let off passengers Wsm points east of Billings. Going Heat. No. 2—North Coast Ltd.. .2:60 P- M. S*' ÎT N n P  1 L Xp r 88 -- î ; Si No. 42—B. & M. R.1:30 A. M No. 22 #—Local .10:60 A. M Noa 2, 42 and 220 run via Butte No. 2 carries paying passengers from and to points scheduled to stop, 4:30 P. M. 2:10 A. M. 1:53 P. M. iL MENARD TRAINS—SATURDAY ONLY ... 7:00 A. M, At Menard.. .$0:45 A. M. Lv- Menard ... .—- P- ML A». Menard . . •'-30 P- M. La. Menard.. • a Lv. Baseman.... At. Boezman .. Lv. Bozeman. Ar. Bozeman. V 8:45 A. M. 9:00 A. M. ... «K» P. M .... 6:9« P. M I in *u » a:*:»K«»öö»Kö3«»oK n CHURCH NOTES. a » a FIRST METHODIST CHURCH. Dr, ß -P. Srath, Pastor. Olive and Willson Avenue. 9:46 a- m.—Sunday schooL 11:00 a. m.—Morning worship ami sermon. 6:30 p. m—Evening song ami practice service. 7:30 p. m.—Wednesday mid-week prayer service. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Rev- F. R. Curry, Minister. Olive and Grand Avenue. 9:45 a. m,—Bible school for all ages. 11:00 a. m—Public worship. 6K10 p. m.— B. Y. P. U. meeting. 7:30 p. m—Public worship. 7:30 p. m—Wednesday mid-week service. A people's church with a warm wel come for all. ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH O. K, Davidson, Pastor. Corner of Grand and Olive. Sunday school at 9:45. Service 11:00 a. m. Mid-week service on Wednesday, 7:80 p. m. PAYNE MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH A. L. Chapman, Pastor; residence, 112 South Grand Avenue. Comer Grand Avenue and Babcock street. Sunday services— Bible Study— 10:00 a. m. Sermon and communion-—11 a. m. C. E. Meetings—6:30 p. m. Evening Worship—7:30. Prayer Meeting—Wednesday even ing, 7:30. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST. 16 West Olive street • Sunday Services—11:00 a. n. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening ' testimonial meeting at 8 o'clock. Reading room in the Golden Rule block, open daily except Sunday, from 1:30 to 5:00 p. m. LATTER-DAY SAINTS, REORGAN IZED. 10:00 a. m.---Sun4av school. I 11:00 a. m.—Preaching service • Wednesday, 7:30 p. m-—Prayer service. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. H. G. Klemme, Pastor. Sunday school—9:45. Regular morning service at 11:00 o'clock. Evening service at 7:30. I MORTON MEMORIAL METHODIST CHÜRCH j Milton F. Hill, Pastor. Comer Church and Lamme. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Morning preaching service at 11:00 Epworth League at 6:30 p. m Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7 :30 o'clock at th e church. ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Byrie J. Osborn, Rector 8:00 a m.—Holy communion. 10:00 a. m.—Sunday school. 11:00 a. m.—Morning prayer and sermon. 4:30 p. m.—Evensong • j ! ; I I . G. W. HENKE Cigar Mfg. Factory 318 N. Wallace Bozeman. Montana é WHO'S YOUR SHOE DOCTOR? Don't throw until you give Uk a chance to exam in« them. A little fixing here and there may double their days of wear. away your old shoes Morton's Shoe Shop 12 South Central MILWAUKEE TIME-CARD leaves Bozeman for Three Forks— No- 11« ....9:00 A. M. (»la Belgrade Mondays, Wednesdays* and Saturdays only). Arrive Bozeman— No. 11 « .....4;30 p. M. (Does not go via Belgrade on return trip from Three Fortes). West Bound-—Departs. No. 32—Daily No. 33—Daily East Bound_Arrive, No. 32—Daily No. 34 _Daily GALLATIN VALLEY ELECTRIC 6:30 A. M 4:00 P. M. _8:06 A- M. .6:00 P. M. 33 YEARS AGO I VUVWS I Taken from the files of the Avant Courier foi February 27, 1890. Î Elijah Fowler, of Yellowstone coun ty, is in the city. The many friends of Miss Mabel Archambault were pleased to greet her upon her return home last Thurs day. The Montana legislature ha? come and gone, and citizens of the state are neither wiser, better or richer by their meeting or adjourning. Mayor Bogert made a successful stand-off with the grip, but the re cent cold spell caused his office to be j closed for three days, but he is again at his post of duty. We are pleased to see our old-time friend, C. P. Blakely, again with us. He has been sojourning in Helena for about 90 days. E. Blakely, Cooney and the "Silver Cup" remain in Hel ena. Mr- Charles Anceney, the most ex tensive and successful stockgrower in Gallatin county, recently sold 500 head of beef steers to Helena parties and is now engaged in delivering them as they are needed, making two shipments each week. F. F. Fridley came over the range from his Yellowstone ranch home on Sunday. He stated there is no snow at hit place, and less on top of the divide than in the valley. Frank Veo and "Shorty" Parker, made a trip to Red Bluffs last week, ^returning Saturday morning. They report work on the Madison bridge nroeressine raoidlv as is also Col c" 3 Mr Veo SUM thel mines on the fcladison in which he is nte rested are showing up well. Bohart Bros, have leased the North ern Pacific Hotel and purchased the new equipment recently added to the building by Mr. Fitzgerald. As the young gentlemen intend giving the business their personal attention, it will be safe to say they will make a success. They propose to furnish their table with the best the market af _ . . . . _ , Charles L Aneeney was in the e.ty the first part of the week, the first visit for many months We are in-j formed he purchased a handsome present for hie "best girl," who lives at present in the vicinity of Moreland, - McTagg«rt Bros., our popular bak ers, will install a city delivery next week. fords. THE HOME RADIO How to Make and U«e It «fc> B > A hyatt verriu. I. RADIO AN OUTGROWTH OF THE WAR We usually think of the great war as a disaster and as having done an Incalculable amount of harm to the world and its people, but It is very doubt ful if the war did as much barm as good. Within the few years It lasted it resulted in immense benefits to mankind in the tremendous discoveries. Im provements and advancement of medicine, surgery, chemistry, aeronautics., mechanics, engineering, metallurgy and wireless communication, and while the toll of life, the destruction of property, the devastation of lands, the loss ; of art and the bankruptcy of nations are all temporary and will soon be replaced and forgotten, the scientific progress and discoveries, which were a direct result of the war, will endure forever and will continue to benefit mankind. Of all ,the arts and sciences which received an unprecedented impetus by the war. none is of greater interest or has a more far-reaching effect to the average person than radio telephony. Before the war wireless telegraphy was well established, universally used and a fairly exact and well-understood science; hut wireless telephony was scarcely more than a dream—a visionary, uncertain thing; complicated, little understood and literally In it« Infancy. But today, so Incredibly rapid have been the strides made in the develop ment of this science, that wireless telephony is an every-day affair; a simple, easily understood thing—far simpler than telegraphy—and in constant use, not only commercially, but by countless thousands of amateurs. In « way, however, the war merely launched practical radio telephony on its career and far greater progress has been made In commercializing, simplifying and cheap ening it within the past four months—October to February, 1921-22—than within the previous six years. Indeed, so rapid has been Its advancement, that it seems to have come upon us almost overnight, and within a few abort weeks It has leaped from an obscure, scientific curiosity to an almost univer sally used means of entertainment and profit. Today thousands of mere boys are using wireless telephones—many of the instruments made by the boys themselves—and in department stores, electrical supply stores and elsewhere sets for receiving may be purchased forap few dollars. From various stations, music, crop reports, market reports, weffther reports, speeches, songs, operas, plays, stories, official time, racing and baseball returns; shipping news and countless other Interesting matters are sent broadcast through the air. free to anyone who possesses a wireless telephone receiving set. Thus, the farmer, miles from the nearest town, the sailor at sea, passengers on ships, guests in hotels, crowds about bulletin boards and people in their own homes can listen to the voices of famous men. the music of bands and orchestras, the singing of famous operatic stars, the dialogues of plays and coantless other things, from far-distant pointa and as clearly and plainly aa thongb no apace Intervened. Truly, radio telephony la the great modem miracle; a dream more fan tastic and fairy-like than the Arabian Nights; a more marvelous actuality than the fabulous lamp of Aladdin or the flying carpet, and, best of all, it 1« within the reach of everyone, while tbe "music in the air" 1« free to all wbo care to listen in. It is certainly a strange, almost incredible, thing to think that the air about ua, even within our dwellings, is constantly filled with sounds, voices, music, messages and songs which are as inaudible as they are Invisible, but which may be caught and delivered to our ears by means of a few wires and batteries and s few appliances so simple that even a child may use them. And the limit is far from being reached. Within a few years or ever months, the range of wireless telephony will be increased by hundreds or eves tbo and the instruments far sending and receiving will he «0 Improved, simplified and reduced that one may carry them in one's pocket, for while radio tel ephony has already tient, yet It ta still hardly eut af tto infancy sud ne man may prophesy what tto future nds of miles, antennae or aerials will be entirely done away with highly perfected, widely used absolutely prae 7 ** • Ur ' : ' * 1 ' ; i Representative W. D. Upshaw has done a public service in his recent in dictment of public officials whose per sons! conduct tends to destroy and dur-! credit the prohibition law. 1 Senator Curtis stated that a boot legger had been discovered in the vi cinity of the Senate floor; that he had aparently been invited there by a United States. Senator; that while j there he served other Senators, and that these Senators had promised no' ; again to be guilty of such miacon-i I • Senator Curtis' own conduct is an! might well be! glad for the people of the United ' States to read- The conduct of the PROHIBITION LAWS UPHELD BY SENATOR It is an unwritten law in Washing-1 ton that public men shall not be em-j barrassed by a discussion of their pri-j vate lives» land j;tich discussion as takes place is usually'based upon un- l derground rumor. But In view of trie recent open discussion in the United States Senate - of what constitutes nothing less- than public misconduct, it is proper to suggest that perhaps the time is coming when the peole of the United States will haave the right to know just what the private behav ior of the public men is. open book which he vas ^ majority of the Senators and Congressmen is beyond criticism. Why ought this self-respecting ma J orlt y to suffer in reputation because of the conduct o, a few7 It is o„r belief that Senator CurtL should have stated on the floor the name of the Senator who invited this bootlegger into th e capitol and the names of the Senators who patronized him. These men can not be guilty of such conduct without directly attacking the stabil ity of the United States government, and in so doing hey are guilty of act ual if not technical disloyalty to the i peole they are supposed to represent, It must not be thought that because! nothin* has been said in regard toi _... , . ... . , these things hat noth.ng , s known. They day .a rapidly approaching ! when the man who patronizes the boot-legger must be conddered in the same class w.th the boot-legger him self, and it he is a public servant he should in justice be considerea like wis e a public enemy. Only one thing it needed to correct these condition«, and that is full, free and exact pub licity. LEGISLATIVE NOTES Four bills designed to cut salaries state employes appeared in the house last week. Reductions will aver age 10 per cent, it was said, and en sctment of the bills into law will save the state a sum estimated at $300,£00 annually. One of the bills will reduce salaries of state elective officers, an other relates to salaries of state depu ties and employes of boards and com missions, a third concerns pay of em ployer at state institutions and the fourth redlatrlct« the state's judicial districts, eliminating six district judge* *j ^ stenographers, House bill No. 9 by D. C. Kenyon, of B lslne county, which will allow schools to create endowment funds, bouse bin No> 10 , hy Walter Pope, of Missoula county, will bold public offi cers personally liable for failure to provide sinking funds for bend tenues, and house bill No. 11, By L K Brand jo rd. of Missoula county, providing tor amortization of school bonds, were signed by the president of the senate and the speaker of the hoone Monday and sent to the governor. Favorable report on the administra tioo measure to put a three per cent tax on crude oil produced 1m Montana was made hy the house committee on oil and gas. The hill had been amende ed to eliminate from taxation erode oil ,n *he in •Deration of ma ob in *"*7 *<> r development and prodac tion am * permit»«« for failure to c * <>in P 1 y th* proposed law chanced Mlgtotiy. ^ k >w * r ****** Tncadny three ***** **** which would cut the salary ef the chairman of the industriel accident board froir. $5,000 to $3,000 yearly, would abolish the office of county auditor, and would make the Merk of the state consolidated hoards ex-officio parole commissioner, Senator Leu!hold of Stillwater cotna Included io th* 15 bitte introduced in , .. was named by **)« • enate to w,tts Representative« .ft Own* of Mi,... .nd Mk. "• ™ n 3Î ^ wf ~Lh!L *ton and the Kohrs Bleb nberg ranchea, ®«" r t *V*J* U **** *1,!^ for the use of * ^ „ . _ _ . _ _ . ° | . h f® s nR * at rw , L _, H h _ K - ^ i ]!.. . . _____ ^ logical data that 1« n»w unavailable. "£ onse ^ Mt. MDtat whl , h , eonMHation.l ^ ^ ^ M , (ntana , WB , „ ,h, hons. In Œltto , of ^ whol . gntiirdny, after b ard fought hottte <m the part of it» that would radically supporters. Appropriation •# $15,000 for eo»r etroction of a tannery at tt»e state penitentiary at Deer Lodge will be pro vided for in a bill introduced by ttep resen ta '»ve« I. O. Denny, Lowode«. : Charles R. Swift and Mrs. Florence | Kerr Farcy of Phlllpa. The bill to regulate dancing and J dance halls, which has been revamped by the committee on public morals, charities and reform«, ha» »gala made It would prohibit 8tep a. Effort, to .««ro definite p«**«,; ( ment of eonrtdnrat o <f 1 mine, tax MB, which wonld pot .Jr , een« tar ofl per rent on grow »rw dnctlon at rtt. ' T T •* IT-wl.! an, To cut the number of judicial ms a_._a . a», a * ,_a h _ tricts in the state from 20 to 18 *nd tne Its appearance, cheek-to-cheek dancing and «imiter _ «omber of judges from 80 to 24, Hanot BID 288 has been introduced by Carlson Gallatin, Pope of Mis«<niia and Scharnlkow of Powell. Minority report of the committee on judiciary on Senator Slegfriedt'« bill, senate bill No. 4«, exclude aliens Including Japanese, from owning tend In Montana, was adv*pted by the senate by a roll call 84 to 18. The house ways and means commit tee Introduced a hill to abolish the of fice of county auditor. It would make no provision for any other cmmty of fice to do the work now performed by the auditors. A senate bill to five all receipts from automobile license tax back to counties Instead of dividing H between counties and the «täte highway cotnrnlsalon, ha* been recommended foe pannage. Tbe Inheritance tax bBl. recommend ed by Gov. Dixon in hi« legislature, came out of committee and up In committee of tbe whole «f Ike bonne Wednesday. The house without a diese« ting vwte approved Brandjord's measure to es tablish the amortization plan for pay ment of installments cm state ten ds. After a lively skirmish th« to permit women to won in the committee rf th« th« house. Up to tbe end of the to the on jnrien , * than 325 bHU have been !n <re«ueed to mtatarihi fact with the house when It reached a are carrying an a p pr e p r tettea indus tria! accident beard. Aa ment offered by Cartoon mt and Duffy mt Hill, euttteg the prtatton mt the boerd from #».#•# to $25,000. was adapted. Representative Maury's hill to the state presidential preferential primary has bee*» brought out of mitte» on privilege» and ateattona. hav-1 Beofton? waa H tog been » hr to «am. PUBLIC FORUM I Editor Bozeman Courier: I just received a clipping jfom my friend, Judge Law, at the state capitol at Helena, from Sunday's In dependent (Interlocking Press) of Tom Stout's tirade about our r-over nor's tax commissioners. Many thanks, Ben. To start with, to Hades with Tom Stout and the Interlocking Pres» They never, at any time or place, gave Joe Dixon any good word or praise for anything he ever did- The more they rant and howl about the men ha selected for tax commissioners, £«• much the better for us. Mark my words—there will be tears the eyes of Tom Stout and the Big Interests in the next two years. Theae commissioners are going to do just what the people in the state backed Governor Dixon for last fall—to giva the farmers and small taxpayers a square deal with the Big Interests. Joe Dixon is the first governor we have ever had that had the sand to tackle the big interests of the stabe in the interests of the farmers, and if the men he appointed make good, which I know they will, it will be a "walk-over" two years from now. All the money the Southern Pacific railroad could put up could not defeat Johnson in California. All the money the Big (Interests could put-up could not defeat LaFollette in Wisconsin. All the money the Big Interests can scrape up here cannot defeat Dixon in Montana. THE TAX COMMISSION. To the Editor of th* Courier, Boze man Montana: Just to let you know that wc do not all have the same opinion of the new tax commissioner? as our honor able lieutenant governor. We, or most of us, think that Governor Dixon has picked out the very best men that he can get for the work. This is on« of his (Governor Dixon's) pet measures, and he surely would select the best men that he could get for this pur pose—men that would give us farm ers and small taxpayers a 50-50 deal with the Big Interests; no more, no less, and if they do make good Gov ernor Dixon can get anything be asks for from the people of the state. — T. S. K. THE PEOPLE'S FORUM* Dell, Mont., Feb. 8, 1923. To th t . Bozeman Courier, Bozeman, Mont: Gentlemen—Please find check for $2 to pay subscription for Courier- I see you are still behind Joe Dixon; but what is the matter with Nelsoa Story- I say that boy ought to be chastised if he is going against Gov ernor Dixon. I have been boiling since I read that in the 0 ver ever Record-Herald, Here's to Joe Dixon and his tax commission. I say, bully for Joe. JAS. McKNEGHT, SR., Dell, Mont NEVER SAW A COW OR A PIG* Que. tions asked of 5,376 St. Loui* school children show that 40 per cent of them never saw a sheep, that 17 er cent never saw a pig, that 14 per mt never saw a mule> and that lt per cent never saw a cow. And hero jfc somethin „ that ^ make eve r, fam boj and ^ laogh _ they ate ?0 _ ing to put a cow and a pig in the St Louis zee with other rare and some ... a . , • times wild animals, that St- Louis * _ , children may know what a cow and a. pig look like. Pretty soon one SL Louis child will say to another, "I saw a cow at the zoo la-t Sundas'.'* And the other will speak up and say, Yes, but did you see that funny looking animal they call the pig"' OUGHT TO BE IN WALL STREET. ....They are tmiling in Washington over the way a Pennsylvania farmer solved the fuel problem. Unab e ta buy any coal, although he saw lor 5 trainloads of coal pass his home daily, a big idea struck him- Down bv the railroad track he put np a large ?i n reading; "Hurrah lor Voiler» i, Down With the Union J" Every time a train went by the trainmen wou.i hurl chunks of coal at the sign, 1 > date he has collected eight and a r.a.f tons, an entire winters supply. SHERIFFS SALE. Gallatin County Fanners' Ailian- e a corporation, plaintiff, versus I'etrf J. Vandyken, défendai t. Drake-Ballard Company, a c* uo ration, plaintiff, verso» Peter J. an dyken, Frank F- Kremer, Montana Sash and Door Company, a corpora tion, and Gallatin County Far 'cr«* Allime. a corporation, defend a* 1 » - Alias execution. To be sold at sheriffs sale os Thursday, the 1st day of March, A. D. 1923, at two o'clock p. m., at the front door of the Court House in th e City of Bozeman, County «f Ca - latin, State of Montana, all of *-^e right, title and interest of the above named defendants, or either of them, in and to tbe follow*eg desci ib<-4 property, via; All of Section EK x " " Two (2) Sont' f East, Onmtin GonrD Montana. JAMBS SMITH, Sheriff By Orville Job«*, IhdW Sheriff ; Pirat jA&äa&on Jaaawry 24, ) 5 v j Last publication Febmary 21, 1923* . *ît- .