Newspaper Page Text
rr = 3ai L. .^e n mj * J ; A—'' Hailes I>. Vackey was dis • com r,d b ft for her home. . ,rl».ri Brown and baby were Monday from the Deaco ar 1 left for their home. ,.wn was a business call-: yesterday from his gi-r canyon. tar and son, John, of were shopping in Boze-1 hours yesterday. *V. Strachau, of Logan, .. hours .«• hopping in the, t .11 yesterday, tv meeting and a special ■ M la.-t Wednesday at Mist Episcopal church, t Baker, of Josephine, to sound a few weeks ♦■r. Mrs. Alex Swan the Deaconess hospital iV . KJ. . I 'i:.an . .'I'll nt V. s th. ! riuiTner has returned her son-in-law and . Mrs. Archie Swish er l^uaw, county sperin s nools. and her deputy Kichii, visited the Pine: he other day. . Ii.ctz, of Butte, is visiting , I î i granddaughter, Mrs. and Miss hei Katherine El-j *• Evergreen apartments. I 51 was a business visitor | Tuesday, making the trip vl cutter from his ranch ■ . K.irit Gallatin road. liir . Po\v . 1 1T1 i lew-berry has returned to ' Beigrade, after having il rare at the Dea ta! for the past two w'eeks. of measles are being i m Bozeman at the pre Noiie are considered dan hot « ■ - - he.' sur ■ul- : * cases [i anime sei K? iss Minnie Lee, teacher of the Mill school, was a visitor at the ' • county superintendent of l 1 ,i this city the first part of the I !V ijjl .1. Hines and J. P, Gary visited »[.Manhattan yesterday on business. . i;.h, from near Salesville, was Im n> > visitor in Bozeman far a a * time yesterday. 1rs, M. F. Schell, head of the ready 81 vear department of the C'hambers w.re, left Tuesday morning w York city, to make purchases for the spring • î m h» v department summei selling. ■ r. A. K. Kotterer returned home ■ aft» r an absence of six weeks in Wa<h., where she was jActl -n account of the serious ill neL <»i Her mother, who is now much ^^B)IWC<t. ^K)r. Kiesland, the eye sight special 1 ist well known here for years, for and experience in fitting eyes HH furnishing the best in all glasses wil be at Bozeman Hotel February —6 4 -t. i 14, I » and !♦> all dav. HH. Bender, district governor of Ro- f 1 ate of Montana, was - th- if honor and principal -Jftpi tb» regular weekly noon day 1 n and meeting of the Boze Ih tar y club, held Tuesday. lissionets met in re il y hall for the purpose of and tentatively passing gul Insat Thursday even session ■B l.the tm ! city appropriations ordi <>th»*r business of impor n of Mr. and Mrs. . who has been study special school was transacted. 1 B f '»VUl. SO Frown m ani'-s at a ( alif in hoi • da .. has returned « I to enter the junior Gallatin countv high school l('S t -erond semester. P^al .a. • Ortion. of Orton Brothers' Me iO'i sold his home on Church o, ih and he and Mrs. Or ax'i family are moving this week ißf e ( arl A. Spieth residence on allson avenue, south, which they phased from Mr, Spieth last week. »• R. Chambers of the Chambers onpany, departed Monday for an extensive trip to the style and manufacturing cen r w bcre he goes oaoh January to r b.i -■ r* r c« _ spring and summer mer for all the departments of tk* big store. Ka n an. published by the stu * ! the slate university at Mis ß* 1 gives the names of Esther Beck, ^ ' In nn and Miriam Woodard, of m. among those on the honor r the past quarter. All three graduates of Gallatin county high ■*)». the Uli for divorce brought by m Alfred Hamilton against 1 wifo > Daisy D. Hamilton, was dis this week I defendant being given the cus. ly of the two children and allow H' m of $35 monthly for their in district court, the pon KF rt Schlichtig, aged 24 years, Huldn A. Carr, aged 16 years, ►r granted a license lo wed by the * the court yesterday. The w'B r**akle in Harrison. The young iî, bring under age, had to have I consent of her father, G. L. Carr. ► *rnîTi«ge wgg infiBNNÜately p«r formed by Judjre Ben B. Law, was in chambers. who As the result of mistaken identity, T. F. Stevenson, a local poultry fan some exhibits at the poultry show, and who has been keep ing prize birds in the yard of Charles Vandenhook, and otherwise \ Til rou^nlj handled by Frank Neal, a collejre hoy, who is at tending to the furnace at the Vanden-'in hook residence and who mistook Mr. Stevevenson for a chicken thief. and M "' J ' KeIly > of Bccant, ito California to spend the remained, ,ot the winter, are visiting: for a few days m Bozeman with Mrs. Kelly's •brother, W. D. Bell, and fami.y, Mrs. -.elly was formerly Miss Janet Bellj and lived in Bozeman for several She also lived at Belgrade for cier who has years. a time, and has many friends in Gallatin valley. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dunn, of the Baltimore hotel, returned Tues day morning from Anaconda, where Mr. Dunn was called on account of he reached Mrs. Dunn went out Saur the critical illness of his mother, who died the same evening there. day to attend the funeral services. which were held Sunday in Anaconda, Mrs. Dunn went out Satur-1 had made their home for 30 | about four years «»<• The Housekeepers' club will meet there. years prior to their removing to Bozeman j tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 at the j 1 I ! home of Mrs. Ella Ennis, at 447 West Curtiss street, the assistant hostesses will he Mrs. Leroy Cozier, Mrs. N. L. Towne and Mrs. W. S. Ruzard. This' will be music day at the club, and an interesting program has been arrang cd under Mrs. J. F. Keown. In re sponse to roll call, the members are requested to giv T e "Songs My Mother Sang." interesting speaking contest is in process of prep aration at Gallatin county high school. From tryouts in w'hich all the pupils of the senior classes in English took ! part, 21 seniors were chosen to take part in the preliminary contest to be finished today. The winners in these An extemporaneous preliminary contests will then com pete with a team chosen in a similar way from the junior class, and from the final contest will be chosen a representative and alternate to com pete in the district tournament. William McGraw was placed in the amnty jail this afternoon, in custody of Constable Slaughter, awaiting the settlement of a judgment for $25 assessed against the musician yester day by Justice of the Peace Paul J. Davis, the same being a claim filed by Dave Kramer, for wdiom McGraw was formerly employed as a member of the cafe orchestra. McGraw had previously settled up for a check he ' had given Chester Roe» her in pay ment for rent of the American Legion hall, and for which it was alleged he had no money in the bank to meet. Bobcats Take Two From Mines Speed, roughness and good floor work featured the playing of both games last Friday and Saturday, when the Bobcat basketball team twice The first game resulted in a score downed the speedy team from the Montana* School of Mines at Butte. of 25 to 13. A personal was scored against every regular member of each team. - Return From Month's Trip Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nelson re turned Monday from a month's visit with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nelson, at their The couple ho»li i home i left 1 day; in Ogden, Utah. Bozeman before the They greatly enjoyed their visit in Ogden, where Lloyd is a mem Doc" is her of the city police force. connected with the Motor Inn garage in this city as an expert automobile mechanic, •• Use Honey as Auto "Anti-Freeze Henry Ford's international weekly, The Dearborn (Mich.) Independent, recommends that those wso use honey anti-freeze compound in their motor cars, should use it half and half It is claimed that the as an with water, honey mixture improves with steam ing while there is considerable loss from exaporation if alcoholic mix tures are used, dollar and a half's worth of dark honey, unfit for table uSe, should last an entire winter in the radiator of the It is claimed that a average car. Sheriff's Wife Wins Prizes Sheriff Jim Smith, who was interested spectator at the openinn day of the annual poultry exhibit yesterday in the gym of the nigh school "Y' building, says that tlv single comb Rhode Island whites, owned by his wife, but exhibited by and under the name of Mrs. J. C Holland on account of Mrs. Smith still being confined to the hospital, nearly all of the prizes that had been offered in that class. Mrs. Smith and Mrs- Holland won first and second cockerel ; first cock; first whole pan; fhwt old hen; second third and foarth hens, and first and *ecoad palWts Mrs. Holteid also ex an won hibited some fine pure-bred Plymouth I Rocks and White Leghorns. - A suit for $50,000 damages which Attorney Justin M. Smith, former Republican county attorney, threat- j 1 ened miKlinlv tr. KiM-ncr oo-oin 11 pubhcly to bring agamrt | l". ! ^' rk M a , Gall r n 7T\ i 1 ärmer , and the Montana Record-Her- j aid* of Helena, for the publication, î that paper, on January 17, of a (communication which Mr. Smith al Meged was libelous in nature, was ; quashed through the publication of torn Lïï M f- - n,,th announced that he had re "1°. ^crathT'wvt! w""^' nent ocal Democratic law\ers. W. S. i «artnian IV R C Stewart and WaU 'J_e Aitken. In his letter, Mr. Kirk ; charged Attorney Smith with pllmg lu P expenses against the taxpayers in the matter of his recent appeal to i the supreme court in the behalf of Seth Orrin Danner, cpnvicted of mur der. Yardman Gets Fine Promotion Charles Fosjter, formel assistant ' to Manager Richards of the Bozeman ! * vards of the Copeland Lumber com P an Y» ant ^ one ni ° s t popular men in the R lniter a ™l building sup P ! y business in southcentral Mon î ^ ana » received a splendid promotion I when he ' vas appointed by Mr. Cope I land to take charge of the company's 'big yard at Vancouver, Washington Mr. Foster departed for the coast j city last Friday, and took with him the best washes of his numerous Gai latin county friend^. His position with the Copeland Lumber company i in this city is being acceptably filled by C. M. Harmon, a lumberman an i building supply salesman with nearly a dozen years actual experiene-c in the field to his credit. Mr. Harmon who came to Bozeman from Miles City was employed for a number of years as traveling salesman for one of the big eastern Montana and West ern North Dakota lumber concerns, and is very well and favorably known throughout that entire section of the northwest. Livingston Marble Man Here Livingston Marble & Granite works, is a business visitor in Bozeman this week in the interests of his concern, revival of good business conditions j confidence in our national and state banking institutions. One of the na tural developments of the Ayres mar. ( ble works that has resulted in much favorable advertising for this section i of the state is the increase in its j wholesale trade, not only in nearby counties but throughout both east- J ern and western Montana, and in j Idaho, Washington, Wyoming and 1 D. E. Ayres, senior member of the Mr. Ayres expects to remain in Gal latin county for at least a week, visiting the towns of Belgrade, Man hattan, Logan and Three Forks dur ing his stay. Mr. Ayres reports business conditions improving gener ally throughout the southcentral sec tion of the state and looks for a this year, due in large measure to | good crop prospects and a revival of other sections« of the great north- J west. The Ayers concern uses only ! native granite taken from the big { granite quarries at Gardiner near the north entrance to the Yellowstone park, i 99 lack Johnson "Takes The Jack Johnson, not the dusky pug list and black W'hite-slaver who still fears to cross the Mason & Dixon line, but a well-known Gallatin coun ty Scandinavian farm hand who confined to the county jail awaiting trial in the district court in a charge of moonshining on the Maggard ranch, "took the count" of ten yes. terday when he was knocked down and out in the jail in a friendly scuffle with a fellow inmate, W. Hut chinson, who is doing time for trans posing moonshine liquor concealed in sacks of wheat. Johnson's head in several am i forehead were cut places and a total of seven stitches had to be taken in his scalp by a physician as the result of his injuries which were caused by the impact of his head with the hard iron bars in the bull pen. He and Hutchinson were engaged in a friendly wrest ling match for the purpose of keep ing themselves in good physical con dition when a lucky hold by Hutchin son and an unlucky slip by Johnson resulted in the accident. The men are as good friends as ever and shook hands over the occurrance, Johnson promising to practice up on his foot work ir. the future. POISON PLOT FAILS •• Probably for the sole purpose of intimidating one of the prisoners in the county jail who is being held for trial in connection with the whole sale burglaries of banks in Montana, and whom it is thought by the of ficials, will probably confess to his share in the crimes and therefore ex pose hie confederates and make their conviction more certain, a friend of one of tha men who hs still at liberty mailed last weeftc from Salt Lake CHy a letter addressed to Georgcv "One Eye''.Dyer, care of Sheriff Jim Smith at the county jail, composed of two pieces of writing paper glued together along all four edges, and in between which a letter found r • * * Quantity of strychnine suf i. .ent to kill a largo number of pec • The le,ter Contained • commonplace remarks and wqc ^ with the one letter 4i T " The criid aten.pt to frighten the nrisole^ whot ' it was the intentio, to fnehSn 7aT ed s" Jaîîy for t i isn't the kind of a man who fright- ! enS / aS 5' espetially umter SUCh » I crude attempt at poisoning, when the | k " W the c ° uld not help but fall, into the hands of i Sheriff J im Smith. --- j <jnri||)> IfCTTFl 1II I llr A|| VM I KAN UL/iU f L I LI till i p.. rn FILES HIS CLA M was ; j j SOI TH DAKOTA INDIAN LOCAT-j KI) AFTER BEING REPORTED j AS "KILLED IN ACTION" Arthur Frazier, also known as Ar thur Green Wittleswift, of South Da kota, soldier of Indian parentage, was cited among those killed October 6, 1918, gönne offense. This was confirmed in action in the Meuse-Ar-j > omplete Line of Poultry Feeds of All Kinds Manufactured Sold by and Montana Flour Mills Company See Cur Exhibit at Poultry Show Story's Poultry Grit Oat Groats Millet Seed Kaffir Corn Sunflower Seed Buckwheat Oyster Shell Ground Bone and Meat Scrap ( ERETANA Chick Starter CERETANA Chick Developer ( ERETANA Chick Feed CERETANA Scratch Feed ÜWBSÊ I * 9 POULTRY I n N I 1 4 \ v SPECIAL I * I ft It will pay you to attend the Poultry Show. A splendid display of birds, and the successful poultry raisers will glad ly give you their experience. To all who place their order for a poultry house at this show, same throughout as shown by our model, will make a special price of $250.00 complete. A real bargain. High grade material and built according to plans developed by Experiment Station. Take advantage of this offer and save money. Let's make it a successful show. Come and bring the » J « family. » » ♦ Copeland Lumber Co. I 501 EAST MAIN—PHONE, 15 I J k by a sergeant of Company B, 28th Infantry, who stated in a letter to Mr. Charles Frazier, Arthur's father, that he was an eye witness to the death of Arthur Frazier. In this letter he stated that Arthur Frazier was killed by shell fire on October «, 1918, about «■"» kilos out of Exermout. Prance, A intt l* l 4 , - fatb ^ Fraril^ T V M'r'i a A" , „ £ , LT- e ^ f " f 0 " rf c 1 ï Î '»eutenant September io„ 1921, a bldyVaV ship! ped to his family as that of Arthur Frazier, their son. This body was b "™ d at Niobrara, Nebraska, with full military honor«« and the Ameri (can Legion' Portât PA Chari^ So. Dak., was named in honor of this Indian hero. At the age of 18, he had enlisted in troop D of the 1st South Dakota cavalry, on April 4, 1917. On August 0, 1917, he was discharged from his organization to enter service in the United States army. He was on the Mexican border service on June 1918, as a member of Company D, 1130th Infantry, which was then sta tioned at Camp Cody, New Mexico. Letters written by him to his mother and now in her possession show that during July and August, 1918, he was with the A. E. F. Company B. 28th Infantry. Contradictory Reports The adjutnat general's office, Vt'asb ington, D. C., under date of Febra ary 0, 1019, informed Mrs, Frazier, his mother, that her son previoudy reported missing in action was the« reported seriously wounded in the left ' ho^tof N'o. «9. A. E. F„ October « ini 0 ^ i % * evera * ears then «lippe* hf T "'T ™ I Up the ^ f eports of th " ! case unt.I the fail of 192:!, when a 1 ta^A-h^brotfier *tad''been' ^eperUé missing in action, heard of fn it Elian service boy who was being cared i for by the American Legion at 'pïï. ' Citv Ok'ahcma | di^i^t down to see if this was : his brother and recognized this My [as the Frazier hov and notified H, foot and was being treated in Ba*a Mr. Lessert imrre parents. Photographs of Arthur wrt j then sent to his parents, who felt sut ! that it was their son, and immediate*} | went to Ponca City and identified mac j and returned with him to his home at Winner, South Dakota, November 2flu 11,(1923. Mr. Frazier is suffering frei® j what the medical profession calhr ! amnesia, or almost a complete loss of | memory, due to severe shock. He ha* also lost the use of his left arm. The unusualness cf this i ase is of inter j est to medical men. and also goes tc i show that ultimately the U. S. Ve er Ians Bureau finds all who are entitled to its as stance.