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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 03 Nov. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-11-03/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
i i g , #Si|jp Ssff® - t . '*S‘l .u ;.•, -ilw ? 9 --t __ tt_ BREEZES, _ m u t M n v i ~ y J ’ '\ ~ ' ; jo h i ? N.ARMSTRONG SVEBT rSEOAT. Entered at the Postofflcc at Jackson, Mon.t,, as second-class matter. Subscription Price, $ 2 . 70 . Publication of Anal proof, $.\) Name, and address should accompany all letters, which are otherwise lu dan ger of getting lost. • ■ „ •‘KEEPING COWS FOB PROFIT Treatise o» l'p-to-Oate retrying. “ Keeping lows For Profit” is tjie well cboseu title of the newest work on pi actual dairying to come under ouv notice. We understand that a large issue of this little puL lication ts being gratuitously ctrou iated with the compliments of The J)e Laval Separator Co., 7 4 Cort- landt 8 t., New York, which concern offers to lend a copt to every reader of the Bitnii/.tupon request. The book tuuts of datryiug as a manufacturing ousiness aud dis cusses its problems from the stand point '.bat every dairy farmer i- just gs much a bu-nie s man as though d guged io any other manufacturiug Or commercial undertaking. It is Compiled in term, practical mauuer, is easily l oadable, aud can hardly fail to he interesting aud instructive to ever) one in any way concerned in dairying. It is splendidly print ed, handsmuel) illustrated, and ul- together pleasing. The frout cover phows a lithographed milking scene, S lid the back cover a cut ef the Je isty cow, Ida Marigold, which received first pi me at the Chicago Exposition. I he book hri’itis wuli tt In it I re View of the history of duitying, chows the relative percentages of the v at ions component putts ol the different dairying products, takes Up the prod action and marketing of Bueh products iu one loitn alter all Other,'and closes with a pcitiucnt reference to private dairy mg iu an historical and statistical wuy It tells much thul is interesting. We leatn that dairying is ol most ancient beginning, going hack at, leuat 2,010 years before Christ, hut that in u commercial lot in it is most modern, being soareely moro than tlm devel opment of ibe last generation. \\ e learn that in 1B«8 the dairy products of the United States were |5< (>,- 000,000; that there are some IV,- f)00,000 miltob cows in the IJ. S,; ap annual consumption of l , V5U,- 000,000 gallons of milk; 1,600,- 000,0U0 lbs. of butter and ;ttiu,tJUO,• >000 lbs. of cheese; and that. JKUO prices of all dairying products, »>s pecially butter, have been consider ably higher than for several years past. We find that the average U. S. yield of milk per cow is less than 4,000 lbs. a year, and only about 100 lbs. of butter; while to lie profitable the milk yield should be front 6,000 to 0,000 lbs., ami tire butler production never under 200 lbs. In this connection it is an- tbotnatively stated that fully one half of tire butter produced in farm butter making, by the practice of the oliler dally ing methods, is made and marketed at an autual loss to the maktr. The book faitly teems wipi prac tical tacts and epigrammatacal ex pressions appealing to the dairy- farmer, as lor instance: “ It should not be assumed that dairying; is being overdone and soon likely to become unprofitable. The contrary is the case. The home consumption ol dairy products, particularly with greater industrial prosperity, is largely increasing from year to year. The European markets for these American prod ucts are only now being fairly opened up. Tbe exports, which are as yet small, will within a few years amount to oao-lhird of the total production, not only affording a sufficient market, but insuring the maintesace of- price.\ “ Farm dairying communities are everywhere among the most pros perous, intelligent, and progressive m the country.” “Modern dairy farming is just as much a baamess as any other com- mereial or muufactsriig undertak ing. It affords the came opportuni- within tlw p»A fifteen Id reyolutidubfWtaUyiog method! about every five years dur tag such period, that it ia necessary, iu order to be profitable, that dairy- iug keep apace with advanced con ditions. Dairying upon the Hues of fifteen years ago is now a losing occupatiou. Dairying apou the basis of five and ten years ago now does well to make ends meet. Profitable dairying of to day must be up-lodate and kept bo .” “ The selection of the practical dairy cow of to-day is uot so much a questiou of particular breed as of mdividuat productiveness. This will be fouud to vary tn every herd of every breed, lit breeding it is an established maxnu that ‘The bull js half the herd.’ The bull should always be pure bred and selected from a family from which the cows are of established dairy excellence.” “ Cheesc-iuakiug in the United Staten has not held its own iu dairy tug advancement, as compared with other ways of marketing dairy prod ucts. It is questionable it cheese-; factory patronage has been a prac tical form of dairying iu other than hut very few localities for several years. Iu nearly all sec,lions it has been relatively profitable but for a short season at most. It is seldom practical uuless there is some other means available of utilisiug the milk profitably duriog the aeasuus when such is* not the case u. its cheese factory »ale.’J “ The success of the creamery business like that of auv other, de pend on good management. 'The creamery patron must understand that this concerns him, since he is not going to receive more for his milk than the creamery management makes out of it in its conversion into butter and marketing.” “ It is undoubtedly a fad that any one practicing dairying to day, on however big or little scale, by the employment of one of the older gravity methods of meant ruiMtig without the help of ice or cold water, is doing so at so great a loss in skimming at all limes, and iu quality of product a good part of the time, that profit is simply im possible. Still, thousands are blindly pursuing such a system.” '“ Hardly any point is of greater importance iu successful dairy but ter making than marketing the prod net iu business-like manner. This naturally begins with the packing of it. Appearance counts for a grcaldcal in marketing butter, as in eveiy thing else,” One ol the most interesting cnap- lets is that devoted to skint milk, of which the use of the centrifugal cream separator lias made u new by product in dairying, with a much wider field of usefulness than was either thought of or possible in the practice of gravity setting. We liud many wavs in which skim milk is being used profitably, and that for some purposes it is as nutritive aud useful as the whole-milk ilstdl. 1 his is mainly due tc its freshness and Bweetness in centrifugal separa tion, since iu gravity setting the bacterial growth in skim milk de velops rapidly and the milk sugar, which is an extremely nutritious in. gradient ia its natural state, changes into an acid which is harmful rather than beneficial to both the animal aud human stomach. While the purpose of its distri bution is no doutil an advertising one, in a considerable degree, there is much that is commendable iu the little book, and we think it bears out the introductory statement that it is dedicated to every owner ol a cow in the hope that it may afford Borne beneficial hint or suggestion to all who may take the trouble to look over its pages. Money by the P*ck. Immediately'* Iptrited contest be- Field, of Chicago, finally bidding 1900. Then Colonel Slaughter, of Fort Worth, Tex., stepped into the ring, and throwing a silver dollar in the sawdust near where Bonnie Prince stood, called on those pres ent to “ throw in a dollar, as a little present for the brave little woman.” Dollars fairly rained and when they were later gathered up they filled a peck measure. Then Mrs, Pauliue Whitman, whose husband, C. N. Whitman, was one of the greatest Ilerefords breeders of the country, offered to add $200 to the highest price bid for Bonnie Pn/ffieT ft was anuonuced that Marshall Field’s 'representative had offered $910 for the calf, which, with Mrs, Whitman’s $200, made $1,110. It will not be a surprise to auy who are at all familiar with the good qualities of Chamberlain's Cough Kcracdy, to kuow that people everywhere tako pleasure iu relat iug their experience in the use of that splendid medicine and in tell ing ol the benefit they have re- ciived from it, et bad colds n lias cured, of threatened attacks of pneumonia it has averted aud of the children it has saved from attacks of croup and whooping cough, It is u grand, good medicine. For sale by J. P. Loasl, Wisdom aud Jack- son. MINISTER HANDED. ... pArfing; vrUh loved w e s t ! death- gan, the r e p « m i* tlv . olMarshaU Abou?To o’clock' t h a t u g b t ‘ be ' MALAY CHARACTER Diabolical Crime Punished In the Oood Old IVoy. St. Louis, Oct. 27.—A special to the Post-Dispatch from Dallas, Tex as, saystltev. (i. E. Morrison was hanged at noon to-day at Vernon lor wife murder. lie met his death resignedly. On the scaffold lie said to a select party of 20 witnctscs permuted at the execution: “ I am innocent. Circuinstaimea over which 1 have no control have placed me iu this position. I have taken my trouble in private to God. I admit tliat I have acted indiscreet ly. I have done no worse, howev er, than hundreds of men who stand high in religious, social, business aud official circles of your state. I have done nothing to confess. I am in the hands of my maker and he kuowB 1 am innocent.” Momsou’s neirk was bioken by the fall ami liis death appealed to be painless. The crime for winch Morrison paid the death penally was tlio pois oning of his wile in Ootobci, 18U7. The facts show that fir deliberate fiendishness they are almost without parallel iu the annals of criminal jurisprudence. The motive lor the poisoning was in order to rid him self of a pretty, amiable, loving wife, iu order to many a lady pos sessed of large means, $100,000 of which was in cash. Morrison married his deceased wife about 17 years ago. At one time they lived in California, then in Oklahoma territory, from which place they moved to Panhandle, Tex., where the mime was commit- ted. He was born and raised in Illinois aud went to school at Can bondale. There he bename ac quainted with Miss Anna Whittle1 called upon his neighbor* for assist ance, announcing the serious illness of his wife. She was found ia par> oxysms aud spasms. He delayed ssudiug f o r - a doctor, who arrived after the wife’s death In the menu time he kept up his correspondence with Miss Whittle sey, writing her a letter two days before the death of his wife and the day after her burial, asserting bis love in the most lavish terms. In the latter letter he announced the death of his brother’s wife and noti fied her of his early visit to Topeka. On his return from\ Topeka he was arrested, held a few days, was re leased on bond and fled. About three months thereafter he was ar rested iu Ban Francisco, returned to Texas, tried with Miss Whittlesey as the main pioscoutiug witness, aud giveti the death penalty. BABY DIED. The infant sou of Mr. and Mrs. .1 E llolliugsw on Si died last night, Nov. 2d, aged 6 months. The fa ther is absent in blahn A friend iu need is a friend iu deed That is exact I v what Cham- berlain’s Con.;li Remedy is. It is the mother's help when she is sud denly awakem d nniiimiis hu -k \ l>ioa1iii l u>, of in1 safe resort >>f 1 1 when be hi- tiiel e is con .>,i t n till1 mucous ■u- u t H11t\ I s lio- 0 l -l cold I'Vr . .!, > (lorn and ,!u.To-. I I lll- il; d, In' i t ' ili h. ISI'i- lit i l l ! Cup! kilim ll er ot 1 1 fiimiiiis of Xu I. I Hof.ii n in a Si : 111 Sllll'lilli' nil linn \.In n u l l C‘ 1 tin ' i.l i Cnli edt, trim 1ml ease it For sale Jacks n : i v i night by tbe . and labored i It is the mb or adult lit cold” and issitmion of nl ttie tli mat mid.cure- the ’ b.-sl. Wis . i \ A1-K1CA. n well as command- oil ined the 'inter d ite i Vi-vsbmg, > Hot ire npmen I imnberhiio's | i n n a I T h i - ■ -elf wlmll . Iuinl, mid i in eicry In- -lioiil.” Wisdom ; nd A W sxw M n tsU M s i Lasts H H l- , D | f b s t ts W ltk»t Fcua-. - T .. / . t datlo*. * „ ■ In character tbe Main; is impas sive. He exhibits a reserve, diffidence, and even bashfulness, which is in some degree attractive and leads the ob server to think that the ferocious, blood-thirsty character imputed to the race must be grossly exaggerated. He is not demonstrative. He is slow and deliberate in speech. Children in the company of men ore silent, and are generally quiet and obedient. When done the Malay neither talks nor sings, lie is cautious of giving offense. He does not quarrel easily about money matters, l'ractieal joking is utterly re pugnant to his nature. The Malays of the higher class arc exceedingly polite. They arc proud, and, if ill-treated, re- vengefuH but under generous treat ment are gentle, kind, humane, grate ful. docile aud faithful. They ate duti ful children uud kind parents. They treut their uged kinsmen with the grcutesl kiudness, uud feel it a duty to relieve the wants ot an indigent rela tion. Old nun and women are always regarded with respect, soys the En cyclopedia of India (1858). Dr. Oxley dcseriped the character of the unsophisticated Malay as remark able for its simplicity and houesty. They have a regard for truth, and may generally be. depended upon iu their statements. What has so .often been written oT their revengeful spirit, he says, is much exaggerated; polite in the extreme, according to their own ideas, they never indulge in abuse one to ward the other. BO YEAR8* EXPERIENCE w i i y ? Why isn’t a telegraph line an out line? Why aren't theatrical properties playthings? Why isn’t a. lawyer's offer of mar riage a legal tender? Why does u loafer always complain of being unable to get work? Why isn't n stiff lower jaw ns useful us a stiff upper lip? Why does a mans shoestring invari ably brenk when he is in a limey? Why do lute hours slip by ttie man who is engaged in keeping them? Why isn’t it the darkest hour when we lire unable to find the matches? Why are the men whosny women arc delusions utid snares nlwuys Minreil by ! delusions? -■-Chicago Daily .News, THE ENGLISH LIBRARIES. Kansas City, Oe, 20.—Dollars rained for three minutes in the sale ring at tbe Hereford show to day. It was the cuiminxtion of a scene that was entirely foreign to a stock sale. The money was for Mrs. Kate sey, who subsequently moved with her parents to Topeka, Kas. Iu August, previous to the poisoning of bis wife in October, 1897, Mor rison met Miss Whittlesey, bis seiiouMay sweetheart, ascertained her financial condition and made au off et to her of marriage. He pre tended that his w ife had been dead 11 years, that he bad quit preach ing, had been successfully engaged in the cattle business for eight years j aud owned a ranch near Higgins, Tex. On his return to Texas he began a correspondence with Miss Whittle sey, urging bis proposition of mar riage, stating that b* bad for a number of years intended to come to her when be could do so honora bly, aiui he believed be coaid now see the time. This statement was made one month before the death of Ins wife, lie procured strychnine In Canada.the public libraries con tain over l,5ll(),IHil) volumes. There are l,7j!>.(iuf> volumes in the library of the Itrilbli museum and more than .'hi miles of chi lling. In 18% the I'nited Slates, according ’ | to government rtatinics, possessed ' 4,1)211 public and school libraries, con taining 3,'l.051,872 volumes. There are H4 public libraries in Aus tralia, with 1.400.(100 volumes; 29\ with 5311.i;C0 volumes, in New Zeiihind; 100, with 300,000 volumes, in South Africa. There are now about 250 piiUle li braries in Great Britain, says t'eieree. These libraries contain over S.t.OO.qttO volumes aud issue about 27,(11111,1100 books each year. The nnnua! attend ance of readers is about f'.n.fltiO.OtHi. SHARPS AND FLATS. P atents I RADI MARKS D esigns COPVRIGHVS &C. Anyone Rending r Huoleh nnd description nmy qulokly MTortuin out’ opinion froo whether uu Invention la probably pntetilnMo. Oontnmnica- Ilona si.rtoll.vconUiitmiiid. Handbook on I’atouti 8ont f<roti. OtdOHl Huoncy tor nocuring patents. Patents taken through Munu A Lo. revolve tptdal notice, wit hout charge, in the Scientific Btncricati. A handsomely illustrated w wkly. largest cir culation of any salenllfio Journal. Terms, IS a year i four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &o C Nework Y Brauub Office, 626 F Bt„ Wssbiugtou, D C. A L L T H E n A L L ::WS! THE TIME! Till: .ACONDA M andakii Publishes more State, 'Telegraphic and General News tban any oilier newspaper in Montana or the North west. 'I WIVOVlJBS, Guns, Stoves, AntOnitioii, Powder, Crockery and glassware. Fish Bros. Farm and Spring Wagons. For prices c a ll or write JOHN W. MORTON, Dillon, Montana. MacCallum & Cloutier, B 2 1 & 5 2 3 P a r k A v e n u e A n a c o n d a , Mont -O ---- 1 1 Wholesale and retail dealers in groceries, men’s furnishing1 goods, hoots and shoes, hardware, wines, liquors and cigars. Our motto, best of goods at lowest prices. One order will convince you that we consider your interests. HORSE HOTEL. Meals at All Hours. HAILAltl) A NEWCOMER, 1’nonuE.oits. DAILY 10 P acks 70 C ummins l BUNDAY 1(1 P acks 112 C oi . cmns SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Daily and Sunday, one yeua ......... $10.01 “ “ “ 6 months,... 5.0C “ 11 “ !i mouths __ 3.0(1 “ “ “ 1 month ....... LOT Daily, only, one year..................... 8 OC Sunday, only, one year ............... 2.01 All postmasters and news agent* are authorized to receive snbserip. lions. ------------------- ----------------------- Wilder Cross, widow ot the bite Charles S, Cross, founder of the j ^yr ostensible purpose of pots Stnsnyslope (K*nsas) stock farm and I oa*nff “ w m iuts, ’ which he said one of the most noted breeder* in jwere ca*ckiug his chickens. On the the coai.try. i previous he had procured a box When Cross last fall found that!wf <I“ioiDe wilh enW «J»al«> XSMtafaetBring basmess. Tbe land, j be c'obM bo loBger kwp op Boder|Ofi Fridy night before her death ft* feed, and th» degree ol « r e j , he weight of flebt which wrecked j Mr8- Morrison went to the Swiss saed are tbe dairy farmer’s raw ma- ■cim f tll<j ,hc £ mpwjaNational Bank W l «®ger». leaving Morrison at Theeow, tbe cream sepa- jof vlich he ¥ IJ }* 8b0t borne, who eatd he had to prepare chats, better-worker, f*s*j j himself. Ilia widow promptly ki» Sunday sermon. The Best Btensil* are bis; tclE(,d (jVer t0 hi* creditors all that «*o««»g he took the stryebume hack she possessed. - Fjnatlj, one e a i f , ! » ^ « dfBfKist» him tktt he Tbe sale of j j i A f f l w t. er to tie r n the amrkectag of h» yrodaet The jaoeperity of hi* bastneM w iargaty of hie «wa making, joat as is that Pnaee, * - f f e ^ e r d of gM jsrattafraM to use it for fetr he.. Dr ^£ckacrj%t.what.d6jng».: lineage, reversed to..Mrs. Cross. Sheto-day pat ffe yaimal ttp for **W. * J W b s t Aartitmiee Colirwodi aiH d for W s, n oSer«d ttd h * aa w i » woedd poison Ms ceighbors’ chick U s package had bees S.ff lints cover n multitude of soft brains.—Chicago Doily News. Some good rerotuticr-s are like ulark cartridge!--—nothing comes out of them—Rain’s Horn. ; There is no word so universally abused in society as the word •’t-utcr- tsiued.”—Atchison Globe. Dishonest men have their uses also. They nre tutors in the school of ex perience. —IN’. V. I.ife. The great trouble with persons who trv to explain is that thu ,\-r. -. explain too roneh. — i ’hil.-.d. “ ':ia Times. | Adam and TN-e kept no rvar;? and j had io reiL'hbcrs. an! :o they ended | theiriccatitr Paradise.—D. A. Bulletin, j ta tty CrltlrlwS, ! One of ihe beat critieiains of Srott'e ' novels vas given by an frisk oobbV- ns related in the biography of “William I Stokes.” I Dr. Stokes had often loaned the cob-1 bier odd voltfmes of Scott to read.! iValfcirg Ie-tide Mm one day on the road, the doctor said: “Well, fi> rry. what did you think erf tfcf last book 1 Jest you?” ’ft’s great book in tire!;, docdterr ari SI- vValter Scott's a three his- forlin. \I’n ir.-’:-,ed ta wHh yew,” re- GST YOUR MONEY’S WORTHI ’ | I > O > <» BIGGEST, BRIGHTEST It BEST ] | per aiinujn, er < \ -out* n m pm * * yen r, or ?5c for $ monthi. i > SubH'.ribe throufh local ceeet er •end direct to-i> ' * THE HERALD OO. f 1 i Salt Lake Cttr. Otak , , DAII.Y-UO.tl, 85f. r^r month. C o n i f o r i n b l o S t a l l s f o r H o r s e s . H a y .and G r a i n . THE BIG HOLE MEAT CO., WISDOM AND JACKSON. ms/u.Kits in Beef, Pork, Multon, Saussage, and Fresh Oys ters and Qame in Season. Mail Orders Promptly Attended to. R. V. BLANTON, J. (’. ROMAIN, W. JL HAYS, JOHN HARBIT, GENERAL BLACKSMITH, IVIKDOM, MONTJ HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY. Repairing on machines or any old thing that needs fixing done with neatness and dispatch. THE BREEZES blows once a week for the good of the valley. Take it. Send it to your friends. Two Car Loads Bob Sleighs and Cutters. Four different makes, Six different sizes, Two different widths. Light bobs for chlldren to ride to school In. mean exactly ktreelSs- tOTim?\ ........ . ”1 mate, yoarlweei^lue’s B l i m W {oris* hceaa*<>>iit j ja W yeg'lwm yomg hiBd.”-Tout; Call oa or write