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IQQC State Briefs 3QD Forsyth—Bert Hammond has left to be gin work as secretary of the Glendive chamber of commerce. He was appointed recently by the board of directors. Whitefish.—April 16 is the date set for the distrist meeting of the American Le gion to be held in Whitefish. At that time a 40-et-8 voture will be established by Roosevelt post. After seeing 459 days pass without the mercury slipping below the xero mark, April 1 brought Anaconda folks face to face with the coldest weather they had experienced since Dec. 27, 1924. Butt« —The proposition of a special five mill levy to rebuild the McKinley school, destroyed by fire six years ago, carried at the election of school district No 1, in cluding Butte, by a majority of889. Hamilton— The state convention of the Business and Professional Women's clubs will be held at Hamilton, May 28. 29 and 30. It ha» been announced by President Margaret McCulloch of the local club. Anaconda— What R. A. Kelly expects will go a long ways toward revolutionizing the fuel problem in Anaconda, is the ex periment started at his home. An ordinary coal heating plant has been converted into an oil burner. Miles City—With the receipt by the city Anacond Mining Supplies Station Pumps Sinking Pumps Electric Hoists Repauno Gelatine Powder Drills Compressors Sirocco Ventillating Fans Anything and Evervthing You May Need for Mining Mail Orders Solicited A. C. M. HARDWARE HOUSE Butte Montana GET RID OF YOUR FAT Thousands of others have gotten rid of theirs by my simple and efficient method of fat reduction without starvation diet or burdensome exercise, often at a very rapid rate and WITHOUT PAYMENT until reduction has taken place. I am a licensed practicing physician and have made s careful study of the physiological requirements of the h uma n body. This has enabled me to select such ingredients and in such proportion as in my opinion will produce not only a loss of weight without harm and an improvement in health, but with it an alleviation of all of the troublesome s ymptom s which frequently accompany and often are a direct result of overstoutness, such as shortness of breath on slight exertion, palpitation of the heart, etc., not to speak of the relief from the embarrassment of being too stout. Stout persons suffering from such diseases as Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Eczema, Asthma and high blood pressure are greatly relieved by a redaction of their superfluous fat. M y treatment will relieve that depressed, tired,sleepy feeling, giving you the renewed energy and vigor which corneas a result of the loss of superfluous (at. If you are overstoat do not postpone bat sit down right now and send for my FREE TRIAL TREATMENT and my plan whereby I am to be PAID ONLY AFTER REDUCTION HAS TAKEN PLACE if you ao desire. DR. R. NEWMAN, 286 Fifth Ave., New York — Desk P 73 * Time to PLANT / Trees, Shrubs and Perennials We Have Exceptional Stocks Farm and Garden Seeds Of THE VERY BEST OUR SWEET PEAS Cannot be Surpassed We Carry Pouhry and Dairy Remedies and Supplies • WRITE for CATALOG to— State Nursery and Seed Co. Helena of 2,000 gallons of fuel ol from the Cat Creek refineries, arrangement» have been made for substituting fuel oil for water in sprinklng the cty's streets nclnded in the sprinkling district. Great Falla—By taking a lease on a small tract of land on the west side of the city, some of the Indian» who have lived In the encampment across the Missouri river have taken effectual measures to defeat any effort of the city council to expel them. Helena—After spending two days in a dark room at a Spokane hospital following an operation on an eye, Edmond Q. Too mey, secretary and attrney of the state railway commission, has returned to his desk at the capitol. The operation was per formed by Dr. Veasey, a famed specialist. Poison— County Superintendent Mary E. Eckstein and Miss Margaret Thomas, state field nurse have arranged for a health con test for the boys and girls of Lake county during the spring field meet in May at which all the schools of the county com P BÎllings-The board of county commis sioners has allowed claims of $10.000 on the Billings-Hardln road project and $0. 780.10 on the resurfacing of federal all project 53-B to the state highway com mission as Yellowstone county's portion of the two contracts recently let by the " ÄTätt-w'" '"Woe of Billings ™ awarded the contract for the construction of the new steel three-span bridge 345 feet long, over the Powder river at Mlzpah, Ä «" Roscoe agrees to have the bridge com pietcd by December 1. 1026. Forsyth—Northern che y®"°® extensively ^nTog^g during the ifast winter. according to word received in Forsyth. Approximately 600.000 feet of timber has been cut down by the Indians to be used during the spring and summer for building homes and making other 1m .rovements. „ „ ,, . Ryegate — Mrs. Ruth Garfield, unter sheriff of Golden Valley county, has re signed her position and left for Florence, Ariz.. where she will engage in^ the ab St rat ting business with Mra. M.C. Peters. SSTliÆÎΫ .id ÂÎK.Î "S scribed the records for the new county of Petroleum. Jtouï fi P sh r and 1 °game commission to dant additional Lake Superior whitefish lin Flathead lake this spring. Superintend ent Mackzlek of the Somers fish hatchery 'ÄÄVh«" £,'.Hi cimraisslon is planning to plant 4 , 000,000 in the lake this spring. , cided W to n ^nake * arrangements to place p.rowning on the ballot next fall as candi date for the county scat of Glacier county. p?Sre °the way WS to W get certain Infîïma tion and to report back to the county seat organizatlon in a few days. The county scat 1» purchase oftlle hold ' and C. Helen imrs of Dr. O. M. Lanstrum Riefenrath, a group of Helena business men have taken over publication of the neTspape^lT^Ir^noun^^that the paper will be continued as a republican evening daily. Taylor B. Weir, a lawyer Hamilton—Several leases of gold mining e claims in the Hughes Creek district have recorded at the oiice or Aiunony Hoik clerk and recorder. Charles Malloy of Darby has leased seven claims to A. N. Weigensteln of Butte with an option to I;;;.,:;' «at «ÜoSS 'j T°H.Sh P SS leased ate clSmala the same locality to Mr. Weigenstein for a conslderaton of $20.000. The Montaua-Washington Mines Inc., leased 39 claims there to Frederick L. Minnick of Seattle. oi tt»° in) • jl. I QUlU IRiVer Jr ITOJJfîdL Dam to Bear Name (Tuf Falls 9 F oeinider iuhl jl ji. v. -o The Interior department of the United States has honored the memory of the late Paris Gibson, "Father of Great Falls," by an nouncing at Washington that the storage reservoir to be built at Beaver Creek for the Sun River Irrigation project will be named Gibson Dam." The structure will be approximately 200 feet high and 800 feet long. Governor J. E. Erickson, Senators B. K. Wheeler, T. J. Walsh and Congressmen Scott Leavitt and J. M. Evans un animously approved the proposal to thus honor the founder of the Electric City, according to a news dispatch from Washington. SUTHERLIN, DEAN OF EDITORS, DIES Robert N. SuthePlin, pioneer Montana newspaper publisher in Diamond City, White Sulphur Springs and Great Falls, died the other day at a Gerat Falls hospi tal after a serious illness extending n©piod of nearly a year, t " er f P® , About three weeks ago Mr. Snth Hn was removed to the hospital f" d dBring.hel».SttWO day, Olfhta life was unconscious. His wife and daughter, Kathryn, and Mrs. James Chamberlain, of White Sul phnr Springs, a nleve. were at the beside when death came, Funeral services drew scores of friends from all parts of the state, and the body was taken to White Sul p hur Springs for burial in the ceme tery there beside the graves of his . mother and two brothers father, mother and two Drotners. Relapse Follows Operation Mr, Sutherlin became ill about a vo „_ ... hut recovered sufficiently ago, DUC recovered suiucienuj* to be about until a month ago when his condition became worse. When be wag taken to the hospital it was de WAS PUBLISHER OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN HUSBANDMAN FOR FIFTY YEAHS Pioneer Montana Journalist Suc cumbs at Great Falls Hospital at Age of 81; Came to State In 1865; Started Farm Journal in 1875 elded that an operation, made hat ardous by Mr. Sutherlin's advanced aged, would be necessary. This op eration was performed and Mr. Suth erlin rallied for a time but soon be came WO rse and he died Thursday . Aüril i Mr. litherlln was 81 years of age, having been born in Booneville, Mo., October 23, 1844. He came to Mon tana in 1865 and, despite the fact that the great interest in Montana was centered on placer mining that time, he became firmly convinc ed that the state's future was de pendent upon agriculture and the velopment of agricultural resources. For a time, he engaged in the freight N ng an( j transportation business Diamond City, He was for a per iod interested in the lumber business, furnishing *timber for mine workings, of p or severa i months, with a partner, rate Gulch. His interests in the early o{ the atate we re almost wholly * . , centered in and City, which was then the metropolis one r i c h es t placer mining dalches that the world ever knew, On November 25. 1875, Mr. Suth er ji n and his brother, W. H. Suther around Diamond lin, established the Rocky Mountain Husbandman, Montana's oldest agri cultural weekly. The paper was first published at Diamond City, at that time just commencing Its de White Sulphur Springs after that city had bee established and became the SICKNESS GIVEN CAREFUL STUDY PROMINENT MONTANA PHARMA CIST MAKES STARTLING DIS COVERIES BENEFITTING HUMANITY Montana Druggist Well Known Makes a Study of Liver Ailments, and is Attracting Mach Attention By His Success, as Attested by Scores of Unsolicited, Compliment ary Testimonials from Users of His Remedy. Manufactures Simple Pill Which Replaces Large Doses of Bitter Tasting Liquid Medicines and Offers a Full Treatment Free Poisoned! Made sick by sheer neglect! This is what happens to countless numbers of men and women, here, perhaps in your own family, explains A. E. Jensen of Butte, pharmacist of state-wide reputation. Every drop of water used in large cities runs through a gigantic filter where poisonous waste matter is eliminated and the water made pure. People would soon protest if city officials al lowed this filter to become clogged. Water could no longer be purified ; imparities would seep through, and your family would be made sick by the very water that flows into your home. Upsets Whole System Tet, this is exactly what happens to you every time you allow your body's filter to become sluggish and clogged. This is why you wake up feeling dull and tired—tongue coat ed, bad taste in the mouth and of fensive breath! Why do many suffer from such afflictions as poor diges tion, sour stomach and formation of gas. Improper movement of the bow els, sick headaches and nervous, up set and over-taxed condition of the system? When Ton Feel Badly Your body's filter is yi § nt there by nature with o. About every fifteen minutes all of the blood In yonr body passes through your liver to te purified. But how can It be purified when your liver has become sluggish and your Intestines clogged up with waste? How can It secrete the jnloes that are essential to digestion? How it supply the secretions Nature uses to oil yonr intestines so that yonr bowels can move I our liver! It wa» definite work to can gently, every day? Or from these ail thoroughly and naturally uite naturally you suffer uients until your liver has been properly cleansed and toned, yonr »tomach put back in condition and your whole system has been braced up and made well and strong. Keep This Filter Clean. Great numbers have from these complaints Jen-Sen pills. This Jensen's the liver, wake op yonr appetite. Improve digestion and nourishment, tone the tired and overtaxed nerves, and send purer, healthier blood coursing through your veins. gained quick through the relief use of preparation of Mr. ps nature to cleanse and tone Mr. Jensen Is ee certain that his discov ery will prove hi» theory that he gives away thousands of pills to convince our readers of his sincerity, bold in the sta He wants every ho to try at hla expei virtue* of Jen-Sea Live? Pills. Yep may have a full month's treatment free. Bead and fid' this advertisement ana yo dress. Me postage—all »■ Le? them help you Address A. yon.— adv. county seat of Meagner county. It was published in the latter place up until about 22 years ago when the plant was moved to Great Palls where it has since been published. Once Was Largest Paper At one time the paper had the largest circulation in the state and from its inception has been a leader in the movement to develop the agri cultural resources of the state. Through the columns of the publica tion irrigation was advocated and Mr. Sutherlin lived to see many of his dreams of arid land converted into prosperous (arming centers fulfilled. In recent years, Mr. Sutherlin has been listed as editor of the Husband man and his daughter, has held the title of associate editor. The daugh ter, however, has been a member of the Chicago Civic Opera company, and has not taken an active part in supervising the publication for sev eral years. Much of the work in connection with the editorial supervision of the Husbandman has been cared for in ■ 1 .4 r-fj ? ; ■ A .?> ; ^ ; v m > -, - , w . ■ * ... •» : ' * A - J ->• . r * R. N. SUTHERLIN Pioneer Montana Newspaper Pub lisher, Iklitor of the State's Oldest Publication in years of Continuous Publication, Who Passed Away Re -1 cently at Great Falls. the last year by Allen Pierse, an old friend of the Sutherlin family. In the first issue of the Rocky Mountain Husbandman, Mr, Suther lin announced, that the paper "was designed to be; as the name indicated, a husbandman in every sense of the term, embracing in its columns every j department of agriculture, horticul ture, stock raising, social and domes tic economy" but from the time Mr. Sutherlin first became interested in Montana until his death he was a staunch advocate of irrigation and no issue went to press without some re ference to the success that awaited the settlers in the irrigated sections. In the 50th anniversary number of the Husbandman, published last No vember, Mr. Sutherlin wrote, "We claim but a little part in the bringing in of the 17,000 dry land farmers but we do feel that the Rocky Mountain Husbandman has been an important factor in the establishment of 20,000 staple Montana homes below the ditch. Irrigation is coming to the front. Mr. Suthrelin always contended that agriculture was a science and urged 50 years ago that a study of agriculture be a part of the school work and that colleges and academ ies have professorships devoted to agriculture. When Mr. Sutherlin came to Mon tana in 1865 Diamond City was the trading center for Confederate Gulch, ft ■■yarAvii.v^lr4 41 fi 3 We have available a limited 3 Ip amount of ttl Montana County , City and School Bonds. m ; «il R S U g Write or Col) for Ktt. t 8 DICKEY CO.® MINNEAPOLIS - GREAT FALLS ChJemgm te POULTRY i** We are te the i-, ___ Bee chicken*, turkeys, ducks and prlcM paid , 1 - WANTED to Co., Bnt&e, 1 Amazed at Way Karnak Restored Her to Health Suffered Agony from Neu ritis And Rheumatism— But Great Medicine Made Her So Well And Happy She Can Never Praise It Enough, Says Idado Woman . 1 I just knew Karnak was differ ent from ordinary medicine by the way people o nail sides were praising it, but it was simply amazing the way this medicine really rid me of my troubles and restored me to such grand health again," declares Mrs. Anna Gee, of Burley, Idaho. I suffered just awful from neu ritis and rheumatic pains which seemed to center in my hips and kept me in misery both day and night," continues Mrs. Gee. "For three years I had been in this con <( n one of the richest placer mining lo cations ever discovered in this or any other country, and several other min ing areas. Diamond City was then a "boom town" in every sense of the word. As the yellow metal failed to ap pear in the pans and in the sluice boxes, Diamond City's glory began to fade, and when the Husbandman was established in 1875, the little metrop olis of ten years previous was slowly disintegrating. On the other hand, the newspaper that had been there established began to grow to sizeable proportions. The equipment was in Let Guticura Soap Keep Your Skin Fresh and Youthful Sample Soap, Ointment, Talcum free. Address; Caticora Laboratories. Dept. E, Malden, Mast. I» n • • •M •Û* [ ■ Si! h • n c /ja > ' 3sE Romance in the Packing Business A world of it 1 Swift & Company has issued its 1926 Year Book reviewing the industry. Not only the story of one year —1925 — with its better prices for the livestock farmer, its advance in the science of preparing good foods andelim inating wastè, its expansion of service— But, fifty years of history 1 The west ern cattle trails and "cow towns" of the early '70s 1 The invention of réfrigéra- . tor cars I The war of East and West when the first dressed meats were shipped across the continent 1 And Realities of Today in the industry! The 1926 Year Book gives accounts of the growth of an industry that helps to feed and clothe the nation, and to fertilize its soiL Here are the facts and figures that will interest you greatly. A copy of the Year Book will be sent promptly (free) upon receipt of your address. Swift & Company Swift & Company, Union Stock Yard», Chicago Please tend a copy of tba 1926 Yi Book to: — dition, and I had severe headaches and felt weak and all • rundown. I was simply in a deplorable state of health. But since taking three bottles of this wonderful Karnak all those neuritis and rheumatic pains are gone; and I have been rid of those awful headaches and built up to where I just feel like a new person. I simply relish and enjoy my meals more than ever now, and I am so well and happy that I just can't praise Karnak half enough. < < » Insist Upon Karnak If your local druggist cannot yet supply you with Karnak, tell him to get it for you from his Wholesale Drug House. Or, order Karnak by mail from Broadway Pharmacy. Billings; Model Rexall Stores, Great Falls; Pärchen Drug Co., Helena; Smith Drug Stores, Missoula; or any druggist in Butte or Anaconda. The small price is only $1.10 a bottle. creased, and with the building of the new town and the removal of the countyseat to White Sulphur Springs, the plant was removed to the new town. The paper is the oldest news paper in Montana to be published continuously under the same name. It is also the only weekly farm jour nal in the Rocky Mountain states. W. H. Suthrelin was a silent part ner in the publication of the Hus bandman. He died at White Sulphur Springs in 1900. The Baby's Cold Continual " dosing ** with internal medicina upaete délicat a Hula Momacha. Traat colds externally with Vick*. 1 You Juat rub it on. ft % j* VICKS W VapoRui *