Watson & Moore, The St. Anthony Druggists.
Circulation of
this issue - -
lOOO
The Teton Peak.
Official Paper
of Fremont
County - -
VOL. IV
ST. ANTHONY, FREMONT COUNTY, IDAHO, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1903.
NO. 48
A. K. Steuiienbei'K.
President.
(Î. E. Powerman,
Cashier.
First National Bank .
(Charter No. 57<>4. ) £
want your banking business and offer you every ^
facility consistent with good business methods. ^
Mom*} r to loan on approved security. Liberal advances (►
made to those wish to purchase cattle or sheep.
Office hours from 9 o clock to 4.
I®" THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN FREMONT COUNTY. L
Tlje St. flnlljopy Bat)kit)â Co.
g Accounts §
fi'anners, Stockmen and jVTercliant.s
I . ... -S®H Sffl ^ S0licitcd -
A General Banking and Collection business trans
acted. Interest paid on time deposits.
$ Every accommodation extended, consistent with
Xj Sound Banking business.
$ A portion of your business respectfully solicited,
a G. C. Baker, President.
Have you called on the
HUB
I F not, call in and see the new line of Dress
Goods, White Goods and New Novelties
inDress T rimmings and the Banner Shirt
Waist. It will surprise you to see the tremen
dous stock we are now receiving daily from
the Eastern markets. The HUB will display
an elegant line of Ladies' and Children Hats
which Mrs. Gesas is in New York City now
gathering up the latest styles and novelties,
whtch will arrive here for the spring trade.
Call and see them.
The HUB
HARRY GESAS.
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If you are in the market for anything in the
line of Painting, Paper Hanging,
Decorating, Varnishing or Wood
Finishing of Any kind it will pay you
to get our prices before letting the contract.
Our Work Speaks for itself. There
is Plenty of it in St. Anthony from
which you can judge.
Our place of business is
on Main Street.
OVERLAND
RYE
i?
A Whiskey of High
Character and Flaw
less Pedigree.....
AT
BURLANDS,.
HENRICHS & SON
HENRICHS & SON
Bills Approved by Governor
Forty-Six Important Measures
Get Executive Approval.
Governor Morrison's signature was >
affixed on March 11 to 45 bills passed by
the seventh legislature, including many
of the most important measures of the
session.
The governor's approval of the bill
making an appropriation for a bridge
across Snake river at American Falls
is a well deserved compliment to Rep
resentative Burke of Blaine county,
who has worked unceasingly for the
measure since the day of its introduc
tion, smoothing over obstacle after ob
stacle until the governor placed the
signed bili in his hands.
Representative McBride of Lemhi
county is also rewarded for his labors
by having the satisfaction of notifying
his constituents that the governor had
approved the bill allowing an appro
priation for a bridge over the Salmon
river near Salmon City.
Not the least important of the ap
proved bills is that paying a bounty
of 1 cent per pound on all sugar manu
factured in Idaho during 1905 and half
a ce»t per pound on the product of 1904.
It is doubted by some that any bounty
will be claimed but the measure is ex
pected to attract capital to the state
and encourage beet culture.
An important bill to farmers is the
bill prohibiting the importation, sale or
running at large of stock afflicted with
contagious or infectious diseases. It
provides that affected stock must be
20 yards distant from public highways
and prescribes heavy penalties for the
violation of the law. Indian ponies
afflicted with mange are marked for
slaughter and farmers will be compelled
to keep a close watch on their diseased
stock.
The taxation of live stock is also af
fected by two or more of the bills ap
proved yesterday and manner oi taking
np, advertising snd caring for estray
stock is materially changed by the bill
prepared by Representatives Burke and
Pyke.
A number of measures affecting
schools and school funds are included
in the list.
The following is a full list of the bills
approved March 11:
SENATE.
Senate bill No. G5 by Putrill To reg
ulate the manner of taking appeals from
probate courts.
No. 95 by Day—Making disposition
of certain moneys in the bond deficiency
fund of 1901 of the state treasury and
transferring the same to maintenance
fund of the Albion state normal school.
No. 70 by Pense— Allowing citizens of
Idaho a tax rebate for the time their
stock is grazed outside the state.
No. 85 by Dolman—Giving to married
women the management, control and
disposition of their separate property.
No. 90 by O'Neil For the protection
of hotel keepers.
No. lOOby Heath—For the distribu
tion of moneys arising from fines and
forfeitures.
No. 118 by O'Neil—New measure for
the relief of Captain Bledsoe.
No. 91 by Stevenson Giving in
creased powers to municipalities in the
matter of public improvements.
No. 90 by O'Neil and Putrill Requir
ing county recorders to number all
tlieir instruments.
No. 85 by O'Neil—Establishing a uni
form negotiable instrument law.
No. 99 by Heath—Appropriating one
half of all moneys collected for liquor
license to the school fund.
No. 113 by committee on corporations
—Extending the corporate limits of
Boise.
No. 94 by Clark Making it a misde
meanor to ent fences or leave gales
open.
No. 117 by Heath
the
of
the
Providing a bond
issue for the improvement of the state
penitentiary.
1
HOUSE. î
No. 87 b, Kerby of Boise -Providing j
for the construction ot a wagon road
into Thunder Mountain f;om the head |
of Long Valley.
No. 117 by Hunt of Bannock Provid
inga bounty of 1 cent per pound on 1
«*» «—<*••»*
1903 and half a cent per pound on the
product of 1904.
. . . ... !
No. 113 by the ,ioint committee on j
Irrigation -Relating to irrigation dis
tricts and providing for the organiza
tinn and oneration thereof
tion and operation tneieor.
No. 135 by White of Idaho—Enabling
villages to become organized as cities
of the second class.
No 59 by Preston of Oneida—Making
appropriation for a bridge across the
Snake river at American Falls.
No. 97 by the public health commit
tee- Regulating the manufacture and
sale of dairy, food and oil products.
No. 174 liy the committee on educa
tion -Amending the general school law
by providing for a Hag pole and flag for
every sehool ground.
No. 118 by Lowell—Permitting the
consolidation of the offices of city clerk
and police judge in cities of the second
class.
No. 78 by Eichelberger of Ada Au
thorizing the organization of mutual
co-operative insurance companies.
No. 100 by McBride of Lemhi Mak
ing appropriation for wagon bridge
across Salmon river near Salmon City.
No. 143 by the committee on educa
tion- Making the state superintendent
of public instruction ex officio member
of the boards of trustees of the state
normal schools.
No. 108 by the committee on educa
tion Compelling all state and county
officers who receive public moneys to
keep books with a careful record of the
same.
No. 171 by the committee on educa
tion Specifying the qualifications of
county superintendents of public in
struction.
No. 45 by Pyke of Fremont Com
pelling corporations to file their arti
cles of incorporation with the secretary
of state.
No. 138 by Burke of Blaine and Pyke
of Fremont Regulating the taking up,
advertisement and care of estray live
stock.
No. 175 by Willis of Elmore Provid
ing for tlie recording of all mining
claims and location notices.
No. 185 by the judiciary committee
Permitting bishops and stake presi
dents (Mormon) to incorporate religions
institutions.
No. 91 by Flint of Kootenai Provid
ing for tlie inspection and regulating
the measurement of logs, timber lum
ber, etc.
House Bill No. 98 by tlie judiciary
committee- Placiug a thresher's loin on
No. 187 by the committee on appro
priations -Making appropriations for
the payment of officers and employees
of the state and the general expense ot
the state government for the years 1908
and 1904.
No. 38 by Price of Latah To pro
hibit persous from stealing rides on
railway trains.
No. 104 by the committee on educa
tion- Creating a state library commis
sion and repealing the net creating the
free traveling library commission.
No. 180 by the appropriations com
mittee -Levying an ad valorem tax to
provide revenue for tlie state of Idaho
for the years 1908 and 1904.
No. 152 by Werner of Ada Regulat
ing the operation of insurance com
panies and defining the duties of the
insurance commissioner.
No. 188 by Thomas of Nez Perce To
annex a portion of southern Shoshone
county to Nez Perce.
No. 140 by the joint committee on
irrigation To regulate the appropria
tion and diversion of public waters and
establish rights to the use of the same
and the priority of such rights.
No. 154 by Ashley of Kootenai To
provide for the establishment of drain
age districts.
No. 119 by Dilatnsh of Lincoln
Amending the fish and game laws and
defining the duties of tlie state fish and
game warden.
No. 03 by McBride of Shoshone - Pro
viding for tlie reorganization of the
s^ate militia.
y, T 0 . I3;i by Owen of Brigham Allow
; n g county commissioners to designate
1 any date between April 1 and May 1 as
î Arbor day.
j °£te or" winning
at large o{ aniuia i s affected with eon
| tagions or infectious diseases,
Tragedy Averted
1 "Just in the nick of time our little
i
monia played sad havoc
and a terrible cough set
! Doctors treated him but he grew worse
j pverv (lav ,y t length we tried Dr.
King! , u ew Discovery tor Consumption
; and our darling was saved. He s now
sound, and well. Everybody ougnt to
j^ow, it s the only sureeureforOoughs,
t - ol( j 3 an d I.ung diseases. Guaranteed
by Watson & Moore, Druggists. Price
^ «•«>• Trial bottlert free '
it
with him
besides.
A Brief Sketch of Its
Origin and Prospects.
The plan of The American Society ot
Equity is a national society at Indiana
polis, Ind., called the Nation Union,
with one or more branches, called Local
Unions, at every postoffice in the coun
try. There are state organizers and
district organizers whose duty it is to
organize the local unions and to keep
them organized. They are paid a sal
ary and required to make the interests
of the society their principal business,
the same as the agents of insurance
companies have been dung
There are over (>.000,(190 fanners in
the United States, and the members of
this society will soon reich au immense
number. Each member will be a crop
reporter, through tlie secretary of his
union, on blanks furnished him There
is an official paper, Up-to-date Farming
and Gardening, that will bo issued four
times a month and will go to each mem
ber. It will contain a summary of all
the crop reports and a report on mar
kets with advice and recommendations
about marketing.
It will be the duty of the board of
directors to tix a minimum (lowest)
price on each crop when produced
based on the production and con
sumption. This price will be expected
to hold good until another crop is raised
It will not prevent any person from
holding their crops for higher prices, if
in their judgment they will be higher in
the future, also an advance will be al
lowed monthly of about lc a bushel oil
wheat, lc on corn. etc., to equal inter
est, shrinkage, etc
The system of crop reporting, when
the American Society of Equity is in
working order, will be the greatest ever
undertaken or accomplished, while the
bulletin or paper going to every mem
ber once a week will give them all the
same advice at the same time so they
can all act as one man in marketing.
This will be in great contrast when the
farmers in one state don't know what
the farmers in the other states are doing.
In fact tln> farmers on the east side of
town don't know when the farmers on
the west side are going to market.
REASONS FOR THE SOCIETY'S SUCCESS.
to
This is tlie age of combinations and
co-operation. Every other business of
any importance is co-operating. Cap
ital co-operates, so does labor. The
farmers are the only large class who are
each doing business independent of the
others, and each are working against
the other instead of holding his neigh
bors up. Farmers want to co-operate
now. There is a great sentiment all
over the country for co-operation, and
it lias been growing for years There
are many local co-operative societies
scattered in the various states now, but
at best they can accomplish but little,
because of the competition of people in
the same lines who are not working
with them. In a country such a ours
and a business such as farming, (cover
ing every branch of the business), co-op
eration must lie national to secure de
finite and maximum results and must
embrace every commodity they produce.
Such is the plan and scope of the Amer
ican Society of Equity.
Give close attention to this statement.
Farmers are first hands for nearly all
the commodities that make up the
wealth of the country and the world.
That is. they have the goods first they
produce them. Therefore, they are in
a position, if co-operating, to put any
price on them they choose. If they
would ask $3.00 a bushel for wheat.
$1.00 a bushel for corn, 50 cents a pound
for cotton. $1.00 a pound for wool and
all co-operate to secure these prices, the
balance of the people must pay them, or
starve or go without clothing. The far- I
mers' goods are absolutely necessary to
the business of the world, to the life
and comfort of people and animals.
Mr. Farmer, you may now realize tlie
position you occupy in the world's in
dustries. Goods as much desired as
yours should be sought after instead of
being thrust on the public as in the past.
Stop marketing for only a week and in
convenience will be experienced
throughout tlie world: another week and
distress would be widespread : a month
and you would bring every industry in
the country to the verge of ruin. Think
of these things. Think of the odium
that has been attached to your business
Think of the sentiment in the towns and
cities against you, when the bootblacks
sing.
When Rube comes to town
He is sure to be done brown.
Then consider trie power you hold to
make your own terms with the richest
I and most influental. even to presidents
' and kings Give ns i fair portion of
the farmers as members of the Aineri
can Society of Equity and we will guar
antee as definite result
in marketing
farm crops as in marketing plows, mow-j
ers, harvesters, etc, when the maim
facturer never makes up a lot of goods
expecting the purchaser to put his own
price on them.
K e public a n P ri ma r v.
. Votier is hereby a 'iron
///a/ a Republican Pri
mär y tv i /I hr held at (he
Opera- /fnase Tuesday eve
ning, , I lurch JJ/., between
the hoars of S p. in. and V
/>. n/., for the purpose of
placing in nomination ]ire
à ) Trustees for th e village
>f St . Anthony to he voted
for at the I 'it tage election
on Tuesday, April 7.
H. <!. FULLER,
I 'illage Committeeman.
Parker
Mr. George Young, one of the presi
dency of the Teton Stake, has been very
sick with the grip at Mr. Samuel ltigby s
for a week, but is getting better.
Messrs Frank 11. and Fred ii Mason
have gone to California with tlie Sait
Lake choir excursion. They will re
main in Utah until the latter part of
April.
Mr. Joseph Howell, ex county attor
uey of Cassia eouiity. is visiting with
his old friends C. H. Karlson and E It
Day ley of this place
Mr. Roy Palmer lias commenced his
new residence ou the sovtii side in the
J ed Earl addition
Master R. A Rudd is carrying his arm
in a sling the result of a kielt from a
vicious horse
Messrs K A Rice and J. M. Work
man have moved onto the W. V. Carbine
ranch which they purchased last fall.
Mr Daniel Carbine lias gone to visit
bis parents at La Grande, Oregon.
Mr F A. Miller is building a house
on the ranch he purchased from Will
Workman.
Mr Hans Sorensen lias a very sick
child, supposed to tie suffering with kill
uey trouble.
I logs are bringing a good price, $5
and $5.49 live weight, and hay $5and $0.
Mr. Eli Lee, the painter, is painting
the inside of the post office and the resi
deuce of the postmaster.
Everybody i-. on the hvstle getting
ready for the old folks eutertainment
which commences at twelve today.
SEVERE ATTACK OF GRIP
Cured by One Bottle of Chaiuhcr
Inin's Cough Remedy.
When I had an attack of the grip
last, winter, the second one, 1 actually
cured myself with one bottle of Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy,'' says Frank
W. Perry editor of the Enterprise.
Shortsvilfe, N. Y. "This is the honest
truth. 1 ut times kept from coughing
myself to pieces by taking a teaspoon
ful of this remedy, and when the cough
ing spell would come on at. night I
would take a dose and it seemed that in
the briefest interval the cough would
pass off and f would go to sleep perfect
ly free from cough and its accompany
ing pains. To say that the remedy acted
as a most agreeable surprise is putting
it very mildly. I had no idea that it
would or <'011111 knock out the grip,
simply because 1 had never tried it for
such a purpose, but it did, and it seemed
with the second attack of coughing the
remedy caused it to not only bo of less
duration, bill the pains were far less
severe, and 1 had not used the contents
of one bottle before Mr. Grip had bid
me adieu." For sale by all druggists.
Editors are Authority.
Tlie editor of the Malad Enterprise is
authority for the following:
■ Bggs which are oval and smooth at
tlie etui will produce pullets, but those
more nearly pointed and rougli at the
small end will hatch out roosters. This
looks like a humbug, but it will prove
true every time. Try it.
Roosevelt Coming.
Washington, I) C , March 17 (Spec
ial) President Roosevelt last evening
promised Senator Heyburn that, lie would
make seven stops in Idaho during his
coming western trip one of which will
bo in Pocatello. The president's visit
to Pocatello will be cm May 29th.
A careful investigati m lias been made
by the postoftieedepartment of the route
between St. Anthony and Victor, with a
view of including Leigh on the main line
route, ft was decided that ttiis was not
practicable
Marriage Licenses.
The county clerk issued marriage li
censes during tlie week to the following
March 14. to Thus. E. Ricks. Jr., age
21, of Rexburg, and Miss Maud E. Da
Belle, of < 1-rant, tig.; 19.
Mardi 13, G has. Campbell, age 30 and
Miss Belle Liston, age 17. both of Me
nan.
Catholic Concert
The program rendered at the opera
house Tuesday night by the Catholics of
St. Anthony, was a rare musical treat
Each number on the program received
a hearty applause Irom the large audi
enoe and a nice balance was left from
tlie proceeds after exepenses were de
ducted which art to go toward tlie erec
tion of a church in St. Anthony.
Miss Maud Parry, milliner, has now
on view the swellest line of pattern hats
ever shown in St. Anthony. They* art
ail of the lat"st eastern styles. Some of
these will be on view for one week only,
and if not sold then will be sent back.
You will also find tlie very newest styles
in walking hats and nntrimmed shapes
j with juices to suit everybody. Don't
forget t' look in the comer window of
Skah-t & Shell s, which has been rented
, by Mias Parry, and then go inside and
I see the rest whether you are prepared
1buy or not. ,