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The Bozeman courier. (Bozeman, Mont.) 1919-1954, February 11, 1927, Image 4

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KOA'S PROGRAM
WEEK OF FEB. 13
Features of the program to be
broadcast during the week beginning
February 13 by KO A, Denver General
Electric station, are:
Christian Science Services— First
Church of Christ, Scientist, will broad-
cast morning and evening services
KQA, Sunday, February 13. An
recital from that
over
evening organ
church by Clarence C. Sharp, will be
heard at 6:30.
Band Concert—The Denver and Rio
Grande Western Railroad Shopmen's
association band, Arthur Walton, di
rector, will give Wednesday night's
program, beginning at 8:15. Marches,
overtures, and dance music will be
interpolated with vocal solos.
Women's Chorus—One o' the out
standing features of the Rocky
fountain News program, Friday eve
ning, February 18, is the splendid
chorus of Sigma Alpha Iota, musical
sorority. Quartets, duets, piano and
violin soloc are included and a Scotch
flavor is given the broadcast by Jligh
land ditties, sung by Dorothy Knox.
tt
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0
THREE FORKS
»
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u «:•: a «»»»:•: k « n n n
Clarence Buckey is confined to his
home by illness.
Mrs. Floyd Sterling of Deer Lodgs
has been visiting in town.
George Van Fleet of Bozeman was
a business visitor in town Monday.
A son was bom, at the Three Forks
hospital February 3, to Mr. and Mrs.
John Lane.
Mrs. W. E. Young returned Sunday
from a week's visit with friends in
Livingston.
Harry Smith, foreman of the stub
crew, was here for several days last
week.
The little son of Mr. and Mrs. Van
Meter is sick with cerebro-spinal men
ingitis.
Miss Mabel King of Bozeman spent
the week end here with Mr. and Mrs.
W. N. Porter.
Dr. W. E. Young went to Helena
Monday to attend the Commercial
Service convention.
Miss Donna Dunbar and Mrs. S.
Emmet Keyser motored to Bozeman
Friday and spent the day.
Mrs. J. A. Barnes, wife of the Rev.
J. A. Barnes, was taken to a hos
pital in Bozeman last week.
Jesse Cook, a conductor on the Mil
waukee, suffered a dislocated shoul
der while boarding a train at Butte
last week.
C. M. Young of Los Angeles ar
rived here last Friday morning to be
at the bedside of his mother, who is
still critically ill at the hospital.
Several of the Chicago, Milwaukee
and St. Paul railway officials stopped
in Three Forks, Monday, and motored
to Salesville, returning in the after
noon.
The Three Forks Woman's club will
meet at the home of Mrs. E. R. Avery
Friday, February 11, with Mrs.
George Sharp as hostess. Roll call
will be answered with quotations from
Lincoln.
The Chicago, Milwaukee and St.
Paul Railway Women's club met in
regular session Tuesday. After a de
licious luncheon at the Interstate
cafe, the women repaired to the club
house, where a most interesting pro
gram was given.
Three Forks high school boys who
attended the Boys' Vocational con
gress at Bozeman last week were
Hayden LeVesque, Clifford Town
sley, Stewart Sterling, Russel Dun
bar, Walter Smith, Buddy Torgrim
son, Leon Fauver, Arthur Scharf and
Allen Sackett.
Last Thursday three basketball
contests were staged on the local
floor, between the Three Forks high
school girls' and boys' teams and the
Belgrade girls' and boys' teams, and
the Three Forks and Belgrade city
teams. The local teams were vic
torious. On Friday night the Three
Forks high school teams defeated the
teams from the Pony high school.
A farm implement and tractor
school was held Saturday at the hard
ware building by representatives of
the International Harvester company,
the Extension service represented by
County A^ent Bodley, and the
Adams Realty company of Three
Forks. Gas engines and other farm
machinery were demonstrated, and
discussions relative to the care of
farm implements and of efficient
farm management were held. Motion
pictures at the Ruby theater showed
how modem farm implements are
manufactured. A number of farmers
of the community were . present.
Lunch was served at noon.
j
ZOWIE!
"I didn't see you iav church Sunday
morning.''
Quite likely—I took up the col
lection."
a
»
icago'sTribute
The mystic chords of
memory, stretching from
every battle field and
patriot's grave to every
loving heart and hearth
stone all over this broad
land, will yet swell the
chorus of the Union
when again touched, as
surely they will be, by
the better angels of our
nature.

44
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8T. GAUDEN8* STATUE OP LINCOLN. GRANT PARK, CHICAGO
Country's Needs
Ever First in
Lincoln's Mind
Chauncey M, Depew, former United
States senator, in an Installment of
"Leaves From My Autobiography,
Scribner's Magazine, a retrospection
of his childhood, youth and public
service covering a period of eighty
years, told some new anecdotes of Lin
coln, Grant, Andrew Johnson, Seward,
Chase, Commodore Vanderbilt and
other notable men of Civil war days.
"I had a long and memorable inter
view with President Lincoln," Mr. De
pew writes of a visit he paid to Wash
ington in 1863 when he was secretary
of state for New York, "As I stepped
from the crowd in his reception room
he said to me: 'What do you wantT
I answered: 'Nothing, Mr. President
I only came to pay my respects and
bid you goodby, as I am leaving Wash
ington.' Tt is such a luxury,' he then
remarked, 'to find a man who does not
want anything. I wish you would wait
until I get rid of this crowd.'
Some Lincoln Storlee.
When we were alone he threw him
self wearily on a lounge and was evi
dently greatly exhausted. Then he In
dulged, rocking backward and for
ward, in a reminiscent review of the
different crises In his administration
ft
I «
and how he had met them. In nearly
every Instance he had carried his
polnt and either captured or beaten
his adversaries by a story so apt, so
'on all fours,' and with such complete
answers that the controversy was
I remember eleven of the
over.
stories, each of which was a victory."
Lincoln was always on the lookout
for a good yarn, although be told De
pew he never ''Invented" one.
One night there was a reception in
the executive mansion. Rufus C. An
drews, surveyor of the port of New
York and a confidential adviser of the
President on New York affairs, at
tended the reception with Mr. Depew.
As the procession of handshakers
moved past, Lincoln stopped Andrews,
and, leaning over, spoke very confi
dentially to him, delaying the cere
monies for some time. Momentous Is
sues were impending. Lincoln was in
the midst of the campaign for renorni
nation, his cabinet was inharmonious,
the war was on and decisive battles
were about to be fought Newspaper
men and politicians buttonholed An
drews on his return to his hotel.
"Andrews made a great mystery of
his confidential conversation with Lin
coln and so did the press,'' Mr. Depew
writes.
were alone that during his visit to the
President the night before he told Mr.
Lincoln a new story. The President
delayed him at the reception, saying:
'Andrews, I forgot th© point of that
story you told me last night; repeat
It now.' "
He explained to me when we
«<
Appealed to "Plain People.** '
"T am accused of telling a great
many stories,' *' Mr. * Depew quotes
Lincoln. " They say that It lowers
the dignity of the Presidential'office,
but I have found that plain people
GREAT NATION'S TESTIMONIAL
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(repeating with emphasis plain peo
ple), take them as you find them, are
more easily influenced by a broad and
humorous illustration than in any oth
er way, and what the hypercritical
few may think, I don't care.' ,
"In speaking Mr. Lincoln had a pe
culiar cadence in his voice, caused by
laying emphasis on the key-word of
the sentence.
"In answer to the question bow he
knew so many anecdotes, ha an
swered :
H *I never invented a story, but I
have a good memory and, I think, tell
one tolerably well. My early life was
passed among pioneers who bad the
courage and enterprise to break away
from civilization and aettle In the
wilderness. The things which hap
pened to these original people and
among themselves in their primitive
conditions were far more dramatic'
than anything invented by the profes
sional story tellers.
For many years I traveled the
circuit as a lawyer and usually there
was only one hotel In the country
towns where court was held. The
judges, the grand and petit juries, the
lawyers, the clients and witnesses
would tass the night telling exciting
or amusing occurrences and these
were of infinite variety and interest* "
Inharmonious Cabinet
«« «
Referring to Lincoln's adroitness in
handling men and hit personal homil*..
Ity, Mr. Depew saya: . . .
"No President ever had a cabinet of
which the members were so tndepend
ent, had so large individual followings
and were so Inharmonious. The Presi
dent's sole ambition was te secure the
ablest men In the country for the de
partments which he assigned to them,
without regard to their loyalty to him
self. One of Mr. Seward's secretaries
would frequently report to me the acts
of disloyalty or personal hostility on
the part of Mr. Chase with the la
ment: 'The old man—meaning Lin
coln—knows all about it and will not
do a thing.
» »»
Lincoln on Agriculture ?
To speak entirely within due bounds,
It is known that 50 bushels of wheat
and 100 bushels of corn can be pro
duced from one acre.
Take 50 of wheat and 100 of corn
to be the possibility and compare It
with the crops of the country.
Unquestionably it will take more
labor to produce 50 bushels from an
acre than It will to produce 10 bushels
from the same acre; but will it take
more to produce 60 bushels from one
acre than from five?
More thorough cultivation will re
quire more labor to the acre, but will
It require more to the bushel T—Abra
ham Lincoln.
1

Public Sentiment First
Public sentiment is everything.
With public sentiment nothing can
fail; without it nothing can succeed.
Consequently he who molds public
sentiment goes deeper than he who
enacts statutes or pronounces deci
sions. He makes statutes and deci
sions possible or Impossible to be exe
cuted.—Abraham Lincoln.
s
A Man of Sorrows
la
12.
They thought him but a clown, a tact
less boor
Who filled his days and nights with
quips and jests;
His hours were heedless as bis purse
was poor:
Without ambition, blind to worthy
quests,
Ha dragged along tils days; a human
clod
Who scorned religion, mocked and
flouted God.
How far they erred! A man of sor
row* he.
Who bore jsrlthln hie heart a fatal
wound.
Bereft of thoee he loved, the sympathy
He craved and hungered for could
not be found;
The men with whom he walked from
day to day
Knew not he trod a dark and lanely
way.
A man of sorrows, born to pal* and
grief,
Tot would h* not inflict his woes on
men.
In jests and jokes he sought to find
relief;
Thus gaining strength, he walked
erect again.
Such was the man they called a wag
and clown.
The by wood—and the glory!—of Ait
town.
—Thomas Curtis Clark.
Lest We Forget
N
1», ISO.
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.
"Four score and seven years ago our
fathers brought forth on this continent
a new nation conceived in liberty and
dedicated to the proposition that all
men are created equal. Now we are
engaged in a great civil war. testing
whether that nation, so conceived and
so dedicated, can long endure. We
are met on a great battlefield of war.
We have come to dedicate a portion of
that field aa a final resting place for
these who gave their lives that that
nation might live. But, in a large
sense, we cannot dedicate—we can
not consecrate—we cannot hallow—
this ground. The brave men, living
and dead, who struggled here have
.consecrated it, far above onr power
to add or detract The world will
little note nor long remember what
we aay here, but it can never forget
what they did here. It is for ns, the
living, rather, to be dedicated here to
the unfinished work which they who
fought here have this far so nobly ad
vanced. It ia rather for ns to be here
dedicated to the great task remaining
before us that from these honored
dead we take increased devotion
that cause for which they gave the
last full measure of their devotion—
j that we here highly resolve that those
dead shall not have died in vain—that
—this nation—under God, shall have
new birth of freedom—and that gov
ernment of the people, by the people,
for the people, shall not perish from
the earth."
FAMOUS LINCOLN BUST
II
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Werte of Leon Hurwitz, Presented
to Congreaa by Eugene Myur, Jr., ef
New Yerk.
44 Lincoln*9 Beet Story 9
Conveys Good Leeton
Sometimes we think the study of sci
entific agriculture is a new thing and
only thought of within the last few
years. Giants of Intellect, like the
great and dearly beloved Lincoln, saw
far ahead of their times, even con
cerning auch homely matters as the
fertility of the soil. We give our
readers below what Is considered Lin
coln's best story. It was told to an
assembly of farmers at the end of an
address. We commend it, and the les
son it conveys, to every thoughtful
reader: \ f
1 "An eastern monarch once charged
his wise men to invent him a sentence
to be forever in view, and which
should be true and appropriate at all
times and situations. They presented
him the words, 'And this, too, shall
pass away.' And yet, let ns hope It
is not quite true. Let us hope, rather,
that by the best cultivation of the
physical world beneath and the moral
world within ns, we shall secure an
Individual, social and political pros
perity and happiness, whose course
shall be onward and upward, and
which, while the earth endures, shall
oot pass away."—Farmer and Breeder.
——■ » .1
$HimeHWH5HOHCHSOOCHOWO<HCH8HJH#SH|inWPOnOCHMWCHOH30CKHK30Cfl9®®WHCHCHWW!lO
At the

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By National Press Service
WASHINGTON, D. C.—One guess
apparently is as good as another as
to what will be made of the McNary
Haugen bill. There is no denying
that gossip is running strongly to
the effect that the measure is likely
of enactment at this session. A
combination effective in part, at
least, has been established between
the congressmen of the South and the
West which is the basis of the feel
ing of confidence that the measure
will pass both branches. At the cap
itol one curious reaction is to be
found, some of the people foremost in
pressing this measure are apparently
far from happy over the prospects of
success. In explanation it is whis
pered that their interest was political
rather than agricultural and from a
political standpoint their personal
preference was for a delay of its
enactment until the session which
opens next December. They felt it
would be a more effective political
club if enacted then rather tha^ now.
Their program, it is whispered, was
only to talk this session, and make it
effective next, but that it got out of
hand so their enthusiasm is' hardly
up to the mark of men who are ap-'
parently about tq achieve the great
goal for which they have bèén &itn
ing. ,
*
WASHINGTON, D, C.—The Mc
Adoo-Smith battle is on for fair.
McAdoo for his part has declared that
hi» dry speech made in Ohio had no
political significance, but the jSmith
men from past experience, have in
terpreted each and every line as an
attack upon their candidate. The sit
uation is tragic as well as humorous.
The country needs two positive func
tioning parties, with honest differ
ence» of opinions as to national pol
icies. The existence of two such par
ties is frankly one of the fundamental
principles of our government. Wash
ington, who himself was inclined to
think in a single national way, rec
ognized the necessity of party gov
ernment and sought in every way to
encourage a distinction between the
two opposing forces. By the- time
the Democrats are through, instead
of a party, they will simply have
ballyhoo organization. There is no
ignoring the fact that the great de
bate within the Democratic party to
day is not for party principles, not
for party beliefs, not for real party
issues, Sut as to whether their nom
inator shall be given to a Catholic
or a Protestant.
No great party has ever sunk
such depths before. The situation
a
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
Announcement
WE HAVE BEEN ABLE TO SECURE FOR THE PEOPLE
OF GALLATIN COUNTY, THE FAMOUS
India Tires
WHICH HAVE GIVEN SÜCH WONDERFUL MILEAGE,
SERVICE, AND SATISFACTION THROUGH
COUNTRY
We cordiaDy invite you to come in and inspect the India
Tires and Tubes, noting the heavier tread, and heavier
side-wall of the casings; the Blue Tubes, weighing approxi
v mately */ 2 lb. more than the same grade in other makes.
À 'Ir.i i' ! /
v V/' V.
i- On account of this Heavier Material, and Improved Con
struction, the India Tires and Tubes are especially adapted
to withstand mountain voads, and the rocks and ruts of
country roads.
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stifling. It will be well for the Re
publicans, however, to have
that they, do not rejoince unduly or
become careless in the handling ol
their own great organization. The
weakness of a foe has often resulted
in weakened defenses or in inconse
quential forays and attacks. Already
among
growing
1928 campaign as one which will be
in the nature of a walkover,
must be? stamped out.
crAs wish to wander through strange
by-paths, into strange pastures, let
them do it. The Republican party
owes to its supporters to continue
without deviation a straight and con
structive policy along the line. A
victory for the Republicans in 1923
is already written in the heavens. But
it must be real and not a walk-over.
A victory of the latter type simply
makes for a softening of the fibre
of the organization and possible dis
aster.
OTTAWA, Ontario*—Occording to
& recent official estimate there -Are
300,000 radio ..receiving sets in use in
Oanada, ^ind fully LOOO.OOO radio fans,
most of whom'.enjoy the nightly pro-
grams broadcast from radio stations
rn the United States and Canada. The
larger percentage of the radio sets is
in the rural districts
a care
the Republicans there is a
disposition to discuss the
This
If the Demo
RADIO IN CANADA.
I
A
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1 Special Dollar Values For 5
Friday and Saturday
12 lbs. Navy Beans ...
24 Cakes Fairy Soap,
Toilet Size _
$1.00
$1.00
6 lbs. 40-50 sweet Prunes $1.00
3 Pails 1 lb. Peanut Butter $1.00
4 Pkgs. good Matches
8 Cans Standard Corn
.$1.00
$1.00
7 Large Cans Tomatoes ....$1.00
12 Cans Van Camps
Tomato Soup_
6 large Cans Van Camps
Pork and Beans ..
$1.00
.....$1.00
3 Cans Grapefruit ....$1.00
5 Cans Egg Plums ....
11 lbs. Rice __
24 P. and G. Soap .
5 lb. Can Cane and
.$1.00
.$1.00
..$1.00
Maple Syrup
$1.00
3 Cans Sliced Pineapple ....$1.00
Rohrer's Grocery
V 2 Block South of Postoffice
W© Deliver at
[ 10 A. M. and 4 P. M.

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