Inter Lake, The (Newspaper) - May 3, 1907, Kalispell, Montana HOW SHE MET HIM INFORMAL INTRODUCTION OF MINISTER AND Couple Had Been Fellow Workers in More Ways Than for the Moment Sent to the A few years ago a New England minister of much repute accepted a call to preach hi a sedate New An official of the local factory entertained and in showing him about the town on Sun Say morning dropped into just as the organist was getting ready for the morning The factory official stopped at the loor for a moments and Siis guest wandered up toward Ihe or The organist was in despera The hour was rapidly and the instrument re fused to She labored in excited to fix the obstinate but o no Then the stranger of his The organist had seen him some in with the factory suppos ing him to be a quickly di him what to For a quar ter uf an hour the stranger and the worked in the dust under the until at length the notes sound ed clear and Tin organists thanks were for she noticed the con and exclaimed as she noted HAS AN ACTRESS A RIGHT TO HER OWN HEAD Stage Beauties Will Demand of Englands Might Courts Right to Dictate What Use Shalt Be Made of i variety o j shown on u re Englands highest courts must soon deckle a raging controversy and toll an actress lias a right o her own ho Lower courts have decided that she has no control of is after hav ing permitted it to be Once she faces the the result becomes public property anil other artists and photographers can make whatever use they please of her feat The result is sure to lie a notable and to attract ihe attention of noted beauties the world for with one voice the women of dramatic profession have agreed that the decision does them a great In the appeal to the upper courts soon to he made they will demand a right lo control ihe printing of their Justice Darling has the credit of starting the which he did In a suit brought by Miller against Dunn it publishers of pictorial post This firm manufactures millions of the cards that are now such a rage all over the but particularly in They found that the demand for ihe photographs of exceed ed thai for any other of illustra Thenceforth heir printing presses turned out actresses in enormous He could nee nothing to complain in the and the mi jury promptly for the a verdict desire to protect themselves against being pictured in all sorts of doubtful May belonged to this Her beautiful face had been attached y of In one she was rock by the pulling off her shoes and It was her head that had been hut another woman had ent her body for the slock ings part of the Miss May says that this was tin and would cause disrespect ful comment to be passed on her by those who thought the picture a faith ful representation of a posture she had HAPPY CULMINATION OF A LIFELONG ROMANCE Prince Arthur of King Edwards May Bring Lady Marjorie Manners to Throne of MABEL Liltle did the judge known what a storm he was bringing down on his u Other actresses took sides with Un defeated and began talk I Am the hor dirty hands and disarranged con dition Ill be in pretty shape to meet the minister Wont be very the stranger as he slowly crawled from under the I am the minister Why Rockwell Francis Rock of one of the most congenial men prac before the Berkshire and his friends tell many stories to illus trate his magnanimous A few years ago a little newsboy in Pittsfield found it impossible to collect IS cents duo from a and as a hoax he was sent to Lawyer Rockwell by some friends of the he said in a straightforward owes me IS cents for papers and he wont pay I guess Ill have to get a lawyer and 1 want to retain you Will you try to get my money Smilingly Rockwell said he and a day or two later the boy received his IS In telling of the a little Rockwell said I wrote a letter to man and just shamed him into paying the lad You I couldnt let that boy grow up believing that lawyers were jus for rich men and as he surety would have if f hadnt agreed 1o be his helped So thats why IN MIDDLE Head dress of a lady during the mid die It was extremely high an was covered by a thin Natures Freaks When is in a freakish mood na furo seems to revel in making In man beings who are a constant mys tery to their Such man is Herr the plated who is such a puzzle t the doctors of Schwarz has for some year been undergoing an ossification of th whole of his and is rapidly de into the hardness and imm of a His back has no become he ing out hard and immovable in fac he seems to be enveloped in a kind o armor consisting of as hard as Tie is no pi able to move his and is con lo take food in a liquid forn through a some of his teeth hav ing been removed for the purpose And yet this osseous man enjoys exce Jcot Other actresses looked at the wholo from u financial ami Queen of This may soon the lille of u young girl who is now only an beamy of most moderate and no nearer royally by birth than are thousands of British girls of aristocrat j ic Only two essentials luck to carry her lo the j She must wed the Prince j of nephew of the i lins of and ihc troubled statesmen of Servia must put into ope j ration their plan to remove Peter from the throne and replace him with some who would lend of thai nation to a sorely j t ried j of these contingencies are very far The dynasty came to the throne of Servia after as had stricken down Alexander and his Queen has be come almost as unpopular as the lino i it The people Servia j have never trusted who is and lacks the essentials of forceful magnetic i The thrones of have wilii hold from him their support and coun 1 of the belief that he match for a kings Hence the stern refusal TO sanction In this case the villain is not to pre esty has never liked the girta now the duchess of but bet ter known as marchioness of the princes the duke of is not rich as roy alty and at a period when the lawmakers of England are scanning more closely all the time the yearly budget King Edward felt it an indis pensable condition that Arthur should get money in exchange fur his King hoping to end the chance of a 5ove match while the ro mance was still lu the told Prince Arthur that he would grant consent to his marriage providing the Rutlands fell their grievance from loss rather than the danger of improperly i She its money connived l1 lne death oE Alexander i and and hence dare not take steps to punish their In whose hands wore steeped who was i in n but who lately married an an iu look up the cudgel vigorously with the argument that if an actress or any wo for that possessed beamy that was remarkable in post fhe herself bad a right to the accruing Sin was agains the faking of the because it gave lo some one money which she thought was rightfully This point oi view was heartily endorsed by Miss Marie Miss Xena Miss Miss Billie Miss Rowlands and many other noted favorites before the London foot Certainly as she is still known despite her has a right to complain being i out of the profits that are being made from sale of her marriage has noi lessened the demand j for her pretty features and aristocratic rather in fact ii has increased j shops of London are one con panorama of Clifford photo i i Miss Clifford was besought by a i number of photographers to sit es for but this fine chance I of a remunerative monopoly is com I broken up if merely by having j i a few beads of Miss Miss Clifford that I can be attached to bodies posed by 1 other tho post card people can j keep up a never ending supply of new j Clifford most of far more interesting than any the lady her j self would choose to pose This is he and it is full ot LATEST PICTURE OF LADY MAJORIE No matter what it may cost him in royal Arthur his his intention to renounce all rights 10 the throne of and to wed ihe girl of bis and the court of James is now gossiping over what is Tho commerce of the country has prostrated by this and be party in opposition to he king has reached a point where it is so powerful that his may come at any Servia looks very on Prince ami the soldier nephew wedding against the wishes ot the the of of King and it is said that perhaps the first lime that a man would guarantee an income of four I housand pounds a he fixed on this thousand dollars in our money Ed ward knew that he had stipulated far more than could ever come from the GERTIE but all they could prim of the decision higher up in quickly and the demand of hope of gelling a for new faces still In this juncture it occurred to one of the designers that a picture of Ger ie scantily clad in a night and shown creeping from an might be a Unfortunately no one could lind an eggshell big enough to accommodate lie proportions of Miss nor would she have been willing to pose in such n liberal even bad one been In this dilemma Dunn found a girl who was less sensitive than Miss and had her to do the night obe Then a head of Miss Miller fitted to ihe creeping and he result looked for all the world os though the actress had posed for the the enterprising photographer had a chance reap the profits of his good a storm broke Miss Miller was taking violent ex ception o tho manufactured and demanded j Her plea was that the average per son unacquainted with the I ricks of would not know but what she bad really posed for the and that such a belief spread broad cast really did actual damage to her Miss Millers husband is a musical composer of high and was aroused to intense Miss Miller went into court for re She based her complaint on i charge of and counsel represent ed the picture as doing her grave in Justice Darling heard ihe case with out managing to share the plaintiffs In fact ho took quite the other view of the and instructed Ihe jury that he could find no sign of This is a very was the substance of the judges charge a when everybody from queens down arc shown in evening and frequently in costumes not even so IH cf those were IK motive that Miss Miller Mongoose Now a i Poisonous ami sugar rats caused the importation od i I ii mongoose from India into years This very little animal j killed off the and thinned the but it especially enjoyed the Now it is a All the island poultry ept within wire netting and usually above the ground and the price of eggs is GAYNOR of ihe royal of Victoria lias in on bis right to make a love Krom the first it lias been a romance with Hie young and it would bc no more surprising than some of the other developments if eventually fate j when Queen wife of the no il King visited she corred to Connaught be ance that he had only to express his willingness to see himself chosen io succeed If only Prince Arthur were lo be is a certainty that j carried the a who accompanies him to rule over ihe When Ihe marriage was first sag would be Lady Marjorie to the it seemed entirely the beautiful and fascina ting daughter of the duke and duchess of to whom he is passionately and has remained loyal for years in spite of obstacles that would have broken the courage of any less determined But unfortunately there is a villain j in his no less a one than the i generally good King Edward i of He has other plans for j his a royal in j As is the practice of diplomacy he to use the son of his brother to make n match that will further bind to Britain some nation with whom the crown has intimate More there is a possibility that Prince ought to be called o the of lint a possi The Rutland family is fairly but not of the blood and no iin there t j but be bad not taken into In stead if being dazed by the Lady immediately proposed a plan by which more than twenty thou sand a year could be This was nothing less than the lishmont of a lingerie shop hi Bond King Edward turned purple at die bought of any of bis kin going into ami promptly put his absolute veto on the The match then suffered another set but could not be completely brok en The fact is that the prince and Lady Marjorie had been in love front he first time they ever before hey so far as he was and even the displeasure of a king seemed a small matter as compared to a Prince Arthur fell in love with apic ture of his sweetheart when she was only a child at When Uie young girl was presented some years sbo found herself j confronted by the respectful gaze a j young man from his appearance and he deference with which was evidently ranked high at lie managed to get an introduction to his and found her all that the picture had led him to King wise all but espe keen in questions relating 10 of the quickly noticed the partiality of his nephew for the Lady and he at once planned to break up the attachment be fore it had gone too Prince Arthur was sent on a trii around the When he returned he was promptly dispatched to the Boer Ho went away without re but absence failed io have any effect on that loyal Humor says that in case the 111 rone of is offered lie will make it a condition of bis acceptance that Lady Marjorie Manners be accepted by be king as his If this is re PRINCE ARTHUR OF His Most Recent lie will In such a case it is almost certain that love will in fad he marriage come Prince Arthur says it impossible of His come under any i BELVOIR SEAT OR DUKEDOM OF RUTLAND And Home of Lady Marjorie Accident in Steam During the twelve months ending June persons were killed and forty injured from British steam plant accidents in the United States 383 persons were killed and fSf The number of steam boilers in the United Stales docs not exceed by more than 50 cent cent those in Great so in com the actual percentage is ten times nfi great In the United States as lo Its Maiden Look demanded the drum who had just descended from the train at What is that hotel you are calling 1 never heard ot it before replied the colored dis am de new name lor de old neo Oc yo sah You cant square yourself with God unless you pay what you owe to your fellow Examples of Among to questions flt n recent school examination were he following interesting examples of youthful misinformation Cross ig is 114 limns as as just ordinary tin hermit sort of a fellow who has anchored hisself to one Th cliver is an infernal or Vacuum is nothing with the air sucked out of it put up in a pickle In very bard to MUTINY RARE IN BRITAIN Recent Outbreak at Portsmouth Not the I ally flic mens wages raised and were all English as Spoken in Proprietors of a have distributed handbills containing Ihi following notice The news of j wo tell the Wril in The British army and navy being i as This perfectly style and most DC beat and the most content the famous mutiny of the bay j a murder we hear of and in Uie mutinies among our i the nf which foil Do a mighty chief wo pub may be judged from the fact that sev enteen of be mutineers were con to deith and all Iho rest sen to receive 200 lashes In those days very stern measures were forces have happily been very nu London Previous to the recent outbreak nt Portsmouth the last British mutiny of not occur red on July when the Second Grenadier then at Wellington refused to turn out on pa only about six men of the whole battalion answering the bugle Eventually they were induced to as many instead of appear ing in full marching order paraded in tunics nnd fatigue For this in subordination the whole battalion was exiled to for one Leaving the mercantile out of he last British naval mutiny of of to the recent as far adopted to quell insubordination in the Portsmouth lias been the scone of a serious mutiny In 1707 the whole fleet stationed there struck for an advance in The ad appeased he men by n prom not quickly whereupon a second mutiny broke Admiral Colpoys and his caplain ordered ho marines o and as some of the men were killed those two officers wore arrested for using unjustified lisli it and in of Staff lias each one and like the Kipling and Hie Wo circle every town nnd extortionate not for Bnv Road Toll each of you its for Heady on number Crows Stopped a A train was brought to a stand near in by the presence on the lino of thousands of crows en gaged in picking up the refuse thrown out of the restaurant cnr of the burg birds were crushed in such numbers that tho en gine wheels skidded find the train was temporarily