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LOCAL PPENEVa\ Wylie Davis, of Jeffers, was business caller in town yesterday. a Mrs. Clara Morgan is ill at ^her home on Bozeman avenue, north. Horace Cleveland, of Norris, a business caller in the county seat the first part of the week. was Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vandermeer, of Anceny, were shopping in town the latter part of last week. Wallace Keown departed Sunday for Chicago, where he will visit his sister, Miss Kathryn Keown, for sev eral weeks. Oscar Francis, of the Yellowstone Trail garage in Livingston, was a business visitor in Bozeman yester day and Monday, O. E. Keyes, of Wilsall, a well krtown former resident of this city, was a business caller here the latter part of last week. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Emery, 518 Third avenue, south, Monday, De cember 10, a daughter. Mr. Emery is an ex-service man. Mrs. Charles Moffett and little daughter, Bettie Jane, left the South Side hospital Sunday and have gone to their home on Black avenue, south. Mrs. Sarah Concerse, of Anaconda, who has been spending sereval weeks in Bozeman visiting Mrs. J. R. Cham bers, departed Monday for her home. Mrs. Charles Gray, who has been assisting at the South Side hospital, left the institution Sunday for her home at 215 West Mendenhall street. Larry W. Watson was the guest of honor at a surprise birthday party given Tuesday evening by Mrs. Wat son at their home, 207 Black avenue, north. Mrs. George Walker and son Wayne were discharged from the South Side hospital Sunday and left for the home of her mother, Mrs. G. W, Granger, on Lindley Place. Miss Lucile Quaw, county super intendent of schools, attended a meet ing held last Friday at Manhattan under the auspices of the County Af fairs committee. Miss Edith Ackerman, superinten dent of the Deaconess hospital, de parted Tuesday for Helena, "where she is attending an area conference of the Methodist church. The literature section of the wom an's club met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. R. E. Brown. Mrs. Raymond Beck read a paper on Ameri can Pottery and China. Charles Gallagher of the Gallagher firm of Butte, spent a few grocery days in Bozeman visiting his sister, Mrs. Torpey, of the Montana hotel. He returned home Sunday evening. Miss Minnie Amundsen has resumed her duties as principal and teacher of the Longfellow school. She was ab sent about two weeks, recuperating from the effects of a minor operation in Butte. The last of a series of very pleasant bridge-luncheons was given last Thursday afternoon by Stuart Lovelace, at her home Sixth avenue, south, were present. Mrs. on Sixteen guests City Manager Mendenhall has is sued a request that householders pay more snow from their sidewalks, as pro vided in a city ordinance designed in the interests of property owners, renters, and pedestrians alike. attention to the cleaning of C. A. Nelson expects to depart Sun day for Sumner, Wash., where he will join Mrs. Nelson, who has been in that city for some time on a visit with here relatives. The Nelsons expect to remain in Sumner at least during the remainder of the winter. The Housekeepers' club will meet tomorrow afternoon, Thursday, at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. San ford Moore, 411 West Koch street. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. J. E. Lang, Mrs. H. Malsor and Mrs. A. B. Morgan. Mrs. Charles Fridley and son Charles, who have been visiting rela tives and friends in Bozeman since they returned from Reed Point, de parted Monday for Butte, where they will spend a few days before going to Los Angeles, Calif,, to spend the winter with Mrs. Fridley's broth Karl Krueger, and his wife. on er. The Rev. Alexander Muirden, of Helena, formerly of Scoby but now representing the Intermountain Union college at Helena, returned home Tuesday after a week's visit in this city securing support for the new consolidated college. Sunday morning at the Presbyterian church and in the evening at the Methodist church, was the guest of Rev. R. P. Smith, of the latter chuTch. He preached While here he Edwatrd Grabow, assistant to B. F. Holcomb, public accountant, is suffering from a severe bronchial affection, the re sult of having been wounded and gassed in the fierce fighting at Cha teau Thierry in France during the World War. He is confined to his home on West Lamme Street, where he is being given every attention by Mrs. Grabow, his wife, who is a trained nurse of many years exper ience. Bozeman ■ certified High School Day Friday The next regular monthly high school day, on which boys and girls from the seventh and eighth grades of the city schools are invited to visit the high school, will be held Fri day, Dec. 14. A splendid program has been arranged. Planning Poultry Show In order that plans may be per fected for holding of a poultry show in this city at an early date, a call for a meeting of all poultry raisers at the courthouse, Friday, Dec. 14, at 2 o'clock, has been issued by A. M. Brandenburg, secretary-treasurer of the Gallatin County Poultry associa tion. Poultry Show in Livingston The first annual poultry show of the Park County Poultry association will be held in Livingston December 20 and 21, according to plans an nounced last week by officers of the association. No entrance fee is to be charged, they state, the premium money coming from a reasonable charge for admission which will be made. Entries are now open for all kinds of poultry, including chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese. Visitors from Chico Springs Dr. G. A. Townsend, resident phy sician and surgeon of Chico Hot Springs hospital, was driven over to Bozeman the latter part of the week by Frank Perry, Mgr, of the plunge at the popular Park county health resort. Dr. Townsend came over to look over a lot of choice Gallatin coun ty livestock for his big Upper Yellow stone valley stock ranch above Emi grant. Frank Perry stayed over the week-end to visit with Bozeman friends. Choir Enjoys Unusual Meal After the regular rehearsal of the Christian church choir last Thursday evening, Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Dawes surprised the members by serving a three-course luncheon, which was a sample meal of some of the "unfired" j foods Dr. Dawes has been experiment- i ing for more than two and a half years. Assorted nuts, cereals, honey, vegetables and fruits were used in the menu. Eighteen were present and all greatly enjoyed the unusual meal. Jackaways Makes Elk Survey C. A. Jackaways, state game war den, left Helena last night for Cor win Springs in the upper Yellowstone valley of Park county, to make a of the condition of elk in the survey territory of Crevasse mountain which he will report to the members of the Montana State Sportsmen's associ ation when it meets in Helena next Monday and Tuesday. The open season on Elk in Park county does not close until Dec. 20 unless the commission anticipates an elk slaugh ter in the event heavy snows and severe winter weather drives the animals out of the park boundary down into the valley, when an early closing of the season may be ordered. Sympathy for Andy Gump Sympathy for Andy Gump, the comic supplement character who re cently failed in the combined mirror and hair brush industry through the perfidious double-crossing tactics of J. Ambrose Hepwing upon whom the great inventor was relping for a sup ply of bristles, without which the hap less Andy found it was just as hard to produce hair brushes as it would be to produce Hamlet without the intro duction of the Melancholy Dane, was the piece de resistance at the regular weekly noonday luncheon of the Ro tary club held Tuesday. The proposed resolutions of sympathy for Mr. Gump prepared and read by John Fab P. C. Waite gave a splendid were rick. talk on insurance problems. Rev. Alex. Muirden, of Helena, also spoke. Attractive Display Signs Two of the most attractive street display signs anywhere in the entire state of Montana have been erected the lot at the corner of Main and Willson by August H. Lake, Bozeman painter and sign artist. Both boards on are full circus poster size and are set at an angle so that they are in full view of perestrians or auto drivers approaching that corner from any di rection. One of the signs was painted in oil colors for the Story Motor Sup ply, whose place of business is at the northeast corner of Main and Grand. The other is being used for publicity purposes by Mr. Lake, who offers it for sale to the first comer who realizes the advantage of out-door publicity in its most attractive form. The signs are really works of mural art, being framed in white, with top cor nice bearing the name of the maker in white wood lettering and the bot tom bordered with an attractive green lattice. The plot in front of the signs will be seeded to grass in the spring. The signs conform to the most modern display signs now in use in the most progressive communities, and are the same as required by law in California and other up-to-date commonwealths, the cities and counties of which re quire, by law, signs of a certain given artistic standard and structural strength. Mr., Lake recently com pleted several dominated pedistal signs for the Ketterer filling station which have created a large measure of favorable comment. BOZEMAN CITY MANAGER FRED M. BROWN IS TO BE (Continued from Page One.) has been acting as deputy in the of fices of the county treasurer and county assessor, and that Mr. Davis has signified his intention of accept ing the proffered position. Mr. Brown, who is a native of the city of Bozeman, and who served Gal latin county as surveyor for 12 years, before engaging in business for him self three years ago, is said to have more friends and fewer enemies than any man who could possibly have been 1 selected for the responsible office of city manager. That he will make a good, square, impartial, efficient and progressive city official is the un qualified opinion of all those who know him here and who have followed his public career with interest and satis faction. LIVINGSTON LAWYER UP FOR DISBARMENT E. M. NILES IS CHARGED WITH MALPRACTICE AND CRIMES OF MORAL TURPITUDE Charged with deceit, malpractice and crimes involving moral turpitude, E. M. Niles, a prominent Livingston attorney, former Park county attorney and an unsuccessful candidate for republican nomination in the primary election of last year for the judgeship of the Sixth Judicial district in which Judge Albert P. Stark, now associate justice of the supreme court was nomi nated and elected, will have to face the supreme court in Helena on December 24. the day before Christmas, to show why he should not be forever cause disbarred from the practice of law in the state of Montana. Attorney Niles came to Montana about twelve years ago from Minne sota where he is said to have borne an excellent reputation, membered that his former law part p. W. Inskeep, also from Minne It will be re ner, sot a, committed suicide over a year by taking a dose of sodium cya ago nide in the kitchen of his home in Livingston when he learned that the officers were after him, armed with a warrant for his arrest on a charge of his appropriating funds entrusted It was said at the time to his care, that Mr. Niles was himself a heavy loser as the result of the defalcations of his former partner. Charges against Niles have been filed by Judge John A. Matthews, of Townsend, former associate justice of the supreme court, who had been ap pointed by the court to investigate the charge against him. Chief Justice Lew L. Callaway signed the order requiring Niles to ap before the court on December pear 24 to show cause why his certificate to practice law should not be revoked, his name stricken from the roll of at torneys of the state and why he should not be forever disbarred from the practice of law in Montana. The complaint, which consists of nine specifications, charges that Niles has been guilty of violation of his oath, of his duties and obligations as attorney and counsellor at law, and of deceit, malpractice and crimes in volving moral turpitude. There are also several specific charges that Niles obtained funds through deceit and wrongfully converted money of his clients to his own use. The specific charges against Niles the period of sixteen years. cover from 1906 to 1922, both inclusive. Ic is specifically charged that he wrong fully appropriated to his own moneys obtained from clients and es tates ranging in suras from $50, al leged to have been obtained by de ceit from a Chinese, to $2,673.68, al leged to have been unlawfully obtain use FARMERS MAY COPY A. C. M. PROTEST BY PAYING TAXES ON "NET" BASIS \ Helena Paper Says the Lates Effort of the Big Mining and Power Interests in Montana to Fix Their Own Assessment Figures Be • fore Their Taxes Are Paid May Be Followed in the Future by the Farmers to Hold Down Their Taxes. - The Montana Record Herald, of i Helena, in its issue of last Friday, I says: From its Butte Hill metals mine property in Butte the Anaconda Cop per Mining company produced 2,280, 661 tons of ore for the year beginning June 1, 1922, and ended May 31, 1923, and also 1,289,040 tons of tailings, all of which had a total valuation of $29, 931,122.83, according to the report of the company on its net proceeds of this one mine submitted to the state In arriving at the amount of net proceeds on which the Anaconda com-1 pany was to pay a metals mine license tax the state board permitted the company to deduct a total of 26,994, 380.15 for costs of upkeep of the mine board of equalization. and reduction works in Anaconda, and also costs of producing this amount of ore, but because the board refused j to permit the company to deduct $70, 622.61 paid for insurance and also j $150,685.86 paid for taxes on the re- j duction works, the company started 1 a suit in court a few days ago, pro- j testing the payment of all of the an- ! nual metals mine license tax. ! Farmers May Copy Plan Since the Anaconda Copper Mining company has taken this attitude re port has been current that farmers to some extent in Montana will take the same attitude and will protest the for taxes they are required to pay stored grain, because they have not on been permitted to deduct items presenting cost of production and also items paid for taxes and in before the assessed valuation The farmers claim re surance is arrived at. that the example set by the big min ing company is an idea that never had occurred to them, but aver that it is a practice that might as ^well ed from Public Administrator J . F. Leighton, a Livingston flour and feed dealer. The specifications drawn by the special counsel for the supreme court allege that Niles forged a pro misory note for $500 and variously guilty of sharp practices in the handling of monies confided to him was in trust, mismanaged estates which he was attorney and by false representations secured possession of which he refused to restore money to the rightful owners. 5 Your Christmas Piano, Player Piano or Victrola Is Here . > r/A i ■ te I JlM l Si SU Ill: i . lv i ■ y Monday or Tuesday if you wish to be sure to obtain Come in the model and finish you prefer. The demand for Victrola instruments this year is unusually heavy. We have a large stock on hand now but nobody knows how long it will last. To avoid disappointment come and make your selection early. r OUR TERMS ARE RIGHT AND ANYONE CAN AFFORD MUSIC IN THE HOME. MUSIC IS A GIFT SUPREME TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE FAMILY WHICH ALL WILL ENJOY. » A It's Easy To Pay the Orton Way . ORTON BROS. 5 PHONE 395 34 W. MAIN be followed generally, contending there should be no favorites when it comes time to shoulder the Mon In refusing to permit the deduction of $70,622.61 for taxes and $150, 685.86 paid for insurance on the re duction works plant from the net proceeds, on the claim that those tana tax burden. items represented cost of producing ore taken from the mine in Butte, the slate board fixed $2,978,742.68 as the total amount of net proceeds, making the annual license tax $44, 682.14. The Anaconda company took the same attitude regarding its net proceeds on the Emma mine, another property in Butte. The State's Figures The farmers now are taking the at fcitude that if the Anaconda Copper Mining company and the Montana Power company is to continue to fix its own assessment figures before its taxes are paid, they will follow the example set by those big corpora tiens and propose to deduct costs for production of stored grain, including items for insurance, before they settle their annual tax bills in *ull. - SHERIFF JIM SMITH FINDS SECURITIES (Continued from Page One.) say they are the most expensive and most highly tempered tools they had ever seen. The outfit consisted of gauges, torch, faucetts and piping of one of the latest model acetylene out-1 fits, the tank having been left in Salt Lake: a number of chisels and case hardened punches; wire clippers and ropes; cartridges and dynamite fuse caps and short and long pieces of fuse; medicated tape used to tape up the cracks in safe doors for the reception of the nitro-glycerine, or "soup;" au tomatic torch lighters, and other tools and apparatus the exact use of which are known only to the men that handled them and to officers familiar with the method and mode of opera tion of bank robbers. Before leaving Salt Lake, Sheriff Smith had to handle one of the prison ers, "One-Eye Dyer" rather roughly. as the fellow showed a disposition to give the officer trouble if his pug nacious attitude had not been prompt-1 ly curbed. When examination and finger printed at the county jail by Under sheriff Orvill Jones, assisted by Dep ty Patterson, the men gave their de scriptions as follows; George Dyer, aged 51 years. Born in Washington state. His left eye is gone, it haying been learned that he sometimes uses a glass eye to make his identification more difficult. He gave his occupation as bricklayer. He said he had been a convict in the hit ;•' t 4* < ' Montana State penitentiary, but was behavior some time j paroled for good | ago. He had also served terms in the i state prisons of Colorado and Ore gon. In Salt Lake he went under the j alias of George Palmer, until he was i kidded out of the misrepresentation -1 by Sheriff Smith, i ; born at Provo, Wash. He is a boiler Vf p ' maker by trade, and is married. His ; hair is gray and he is partly bald. He ; * s ^ ve six anc * three-quarter* j mrii in height. i Tom Martin, the youngest of the 1 four, gave his occupation as miner He said he frequented pool halls and S soft drink parlors. He was bom in I Springville, Utah, and is six feet, Frank Warren ,aged 45 years, was , three-quarters of an inch in height, i An examination of his body disclosed several gun shot wounds, a five feet, Married, bur. said in Salt Lake but had left for the Adolph Mechler, aged 35 years, is native of Philadelphia, Pa, He ia seven inches in height, nis wife bad lived east, where he did not know. He said he was a lace peddler, and it is thought by the officers that it was he who found the "marks" as bancs that are thought easy to rob are called, on his trips through the country. When searched at Salt Lake Dyer had 8150 in cash and a brand new sport model automobile. Warren had $5. which the other prisoners at the county jail "kangarooed" him out of <>n his first day's visit at Smith. Mechler had $40 on his per was in Bozeman working with W. S, Gordon on the case for the Bankers' association. Other arrests, especially of one of the ringleaders of the gang I who made his getaway when heard of the arrest of his companions, j i es will be brought here against the f our men, and also against Coffron Hotel son, while the biggest bank roll cf all was held by Martin, the yoimg est of the four men. Detective Henry, from the Chicago office of the Bums Detective agency. are expected almost any day. at which time formal and specific charg from Havre, where the first arrests and Loranger, who were brought back to Bozeman by Sheriff Smith - in the case were made.