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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 10 Aug. 1911, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1911-08-10/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• MI • OP • 41.• tap • dB • AD • 4111•11.•111111• 111111•411.•111,•41110•40•111 We Sell Land At Wholesale and Retail 40 Acres' or4,000 411L We are selling Judith Basin Lands cheaper than the same grade of land can be_sold by anyone else in the Basin. Drop off at Geyser and see us. 111•11111MININIIMIlil• LIST YOUR PROPERTY • WITH US 111111101NIMMIMIIIIIIMI Judith Basin Grain Lands Co. Geyser, Montana 4111441/441P • OP* GIP. 111111 • II* 410•11111•11111•01•111.• MR • 111N-411, Geyser Hotel ANDREW HEDMAN, Prop. Board by the Day Week or the Month - _ • : • '.1.; Nr.s.--e,,e-ereretes . \ ,•••••••• • :1 - el\ • t -•,*• Special Attention Given to C • ommercial Travelers • GEYSER . MONTANA • • • • • Feed and Sale Stable Trade of Commercial Travelers • GEYSER LIVERY Given Personal Attention • •1•he best of horses and rigs with careful _drivers furnished. Leave Orders at Hotel or Barn. Draying and Hauling in Connection P. 11: . McAllister, Prop. _ Geyser, Montana Job printing (I , We are now prepared to do all kinds of Job Printing right here in Geyser. Business Stationery. Cards, Posters, 'AUction Bills, etc. promptly executed. Our material is all new' and first-class work is guaranteed. zrije ximeo • p• M. E. PARR11111, Editor and Publisher A Weekly Newspaper Publlsh4 Every Thursday at Geyser, Montana Entered as second-class matter March 2!IT, 1911, at the postoffice at Geyser, Montana, under the sect of March 3, 1879. Subscription $2.90 per Year, in Advance Advertising Rate* Made Known on Application All communications intended for publication should he addressed to THE TIMES, to avoid delay, and should be in this office by Wednesday preceding day of publication. , 1 THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1911 Additional Local Chas. Olson was a Fort Benton visitor Wednesday. W. D. Higgins returned today from a business trip to the east. Harney & Adams Hdwe Co. have been busy this week nnloading two cars of farm machinery. Belt Valley Times: J. P. Bain and W. H. Delaney of Knetville were business visitors in Belt last 1••riday. Mr. Bain, besides having large stock interests, is troing considerable farm- ing. He has several hundred acres of winter wheat to harvest which prom- ises an exceptionally heavy yield. Mike Byrnes made a trip to his son Gerald's ranch in the vicinity of Denton the latter part of last week, returning Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Byrnes, Miss Nora Byrnes and Miss Sadie NVitsiers. Mr. Byrnes re- ports a fine country with all govern- ment land filed on and rapidly devel- oping into a fine farming section. Fields of good looking wheat and flax are nu- merous. At present the people of this section have no railroad, but the Mil- waukee and Great Northern both have s irveys throtgh there. \BEAT THE WORLD\ Under the guidance of the slogan, \Beat the World,\ the directors of the agricultural exhibits at the Montana state fair are preparing for displays in this department which will turn the eyes of the farming world toward the treasure state. Never in the history of the grain raising industry has any locality been more favored by all the elements con- ducive of record -breaking crops than the vast cereal producing areas of Mon- tana during the present season. Authentic crop records compiled by the railroad companies, whose lines traverse the acknowledged grain belts, place Montana in the lead, and at this early date the officials of all roads en- tering the stats are preparing to handle the bumper crops. At the state fair office and permanent exhibit maintained in the Khors block, Helena, many samples are being receiv- ed from various farming communities which substantiate the most sanguine , predictions of tGe crop experts. The interest already manifested in the farm exhibits assures for the 1911 state fair an agricultural exposition of vastly greater importance than ever be- fore attempted, and the representative samples from the banner harvests promise a spirited rivalry and close technical work on the part of the awarding judges when it comes time to give out the trophies for the displays. In a highly instructive pamphlet re- cently compiled by Prof. Alfred Atkin- son, of the Montana Agricultural Col- lege at Bozetnan. and other experienced observers, and issued by the state fair board of directors, exhaustive explana- tions on how to prepare farm exhibits are given for the information of intend- ing exhibitors with a view of attaining the highest point or perfection in var- ious .displays and showing the differ- ent grains and grasses up to the best advantage. Bigger and better displays are being provided for and more of the farming districts will be represented than at any state exposition of the past. The re- arrangeMent of the buildings, which work is now under way, gives 'a great- er allotment of space to the agricultur- al exhibits which will be featured so as to attract not only the state wide at- tention, but command a firmer apprec- iation of Montana's agricultural Possi- bilities from the country at large. A Sour Critic. Miss Vallmore—I was told to take lemon Juice for my singing. Mr. Sour- ly—Haven't you got will power enough to stop singing without the aid of lemon juice?—Chlengo News. It is usually not so much the great- ness of our trouble as the littleness of our spirit that makes ns complain. _ DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. The name of Elsie Janis of stage fame is Elsie Bierbower. Maude Adams, the actress, adopted Adams as a stage name. She was born Kiskaddeu. Annie Resent, the theosophical lead- er. married an EpIscoptillun clergyman. from whom she separated in 1873. Carrie Chapman Oat, suffragist lead- er, has twice been widowed. Her first husband was Chapman, the second one Cult. Clara Louise Kellogg, the first Amer- ican prima donna to win success abroad. has for more than twenty years been Mrs. Carl Strakosch. Mrs. Irene C. Buell is the thirty-sixth woman who has been admitted to prac lice in the supreme court of the Unit- ed States. Mrs. Buell's home is in St. Paul, Nlinn. Mrs. Mary Eldora Gage of Washing- ton, president of the National Society of Colonial Daughters, is a lineal de- scendant of Charlemagne, Alfred the Great. William the Conqueror and sev- eral other minor celebrities. Pen, Chisel and Brush. W. S. Gilbert is In his seventy-fiftt year and still producing plays. Forbes Robertson, the actor, is an artist and has painted many credita- ble landscapes. Frederick Harrison; almost the last of the distinguished, circle of which George Eliot and Herbert Spencer were shining lights, has just finished his memoirs, which may. however, not appear durigg his lifetime. Adolph Alexander Weinman. whose strength and originality as a sculptor have placed him among the foremost artists of the times, received prac- tically all hls education in this coun- try. He was horn in Karlsruhe. Ba- den. Dec. 11. 1870, and came to Amer- ica when ten years of age. English Etchings. There are now employed in London 1.100 cab drivers over sixty years of age. 190 between seventy and eighty and 0 over eighty. At the beginning of this year the number of lunatics In the county of London was 20.845. being an increase of 469 during the last year. After live years' work the deepest coal pit shaft in the world -320 fathoms—has just been completed at Wearmouth colliery, Sunderland. Lord Milton, the festivities in honor of whose christening were recently attended by 50.000 people, is the first direct heir to the Fitzwilliam estates in seventy-one years. Sporting Notes. Sam Langford Is twenty-five years old Tufts is the latest college to drop basketball. New York city high schools have a lacrosse league. Alfred Shrubb intends to tour tht world nest summer. Athletes who cote in Stockholm Olympic games must be at least seven- teen years of age. The Corinthians association football eleven of England will tour this coun try and Canada next summer. College and School. The average in Cleveland high schools is one teacher to each twenty- five pupils. Chicago has 207 public schools, with 6.220 teachers and 296.427 pupils. The sum expended annually for public In- struction, salaries of teachers alone, is $6.538,239. The alumnae of Vassar college have just completed the fund of $300.000 which they undertook to collect some years ago. When they raised $150.000 toward the fund Johnop. Rockefeller duplicated that amount. Animal Oddities. Without food an eagle can live for twenty-eight days. The two swiftest runners of the ani- mal creation are the kangaroo and the Ostrich. - _ , The loon has a hide as tough as an CM. and Its feathers cannot be plucked without first scalding the bird as you would a hug. The West Indian crab - is a remark- able creature. Although born iii the sea. it matures In fresh water and passes its adult life vu laud. Located It Exactly. With his Jaw swollen so mis to nearly close his: eye, a sailor rushed into a dentist's office and told the deutist to extract an aching tooth as soon as pos- sible. After getting the iliStu sente , 1 in the chair the doctor asked which tooth he wished pulled, and the sailor, nearly crated by pain, lost no time in saying. \Upper deck, second one from aft, port side.\—Cinetnnati Commercial Tribune - O• • **** +4-* • • -.4 - .4 • +40 • DR. NILES DENTIST Guaranteed Dental Work at Mod- erate l'riees • • Rocms 1, 2, 3, 4 Vaughn 111k. DR. KYLE, Assicant .0 ••• •-•-• • 4e..-•-•-• •-• 0=l0=1 011:10C - 01:20Y IOCIOr 0 S I El 0 II E WANT to extend a hearty invitation to everybody from Geyser and vicinity to visit our stores when in Great Falls. We want to meet you, and no o matter whether you want'ally furniture or ranges a or not we want you to come and see.us. We want to • get acqnainted with you and we assure you the peo- ple who read the Geyser Times will get the best we have to offer. II 0 Metropolitan Furniture Go. First Avenue South Great Falls II 0 II II 01=01 (01:30) t01:301=10=lint It Is Easier Cileat tails, Mont. to keep lies out than to chase them out. GET SCREEN DOORS AND WINDOWS NOW. ILI : We handle the celebrated Sackett Plaster Board, Galvanite •triple Asphalt Coated :\ Lea Plated Roofing, Tarred Felts, Building Papers. Our Prices Are Right. Mc Caull-Webster Elevator Co GEYSER, MONT. 11 1111•=111EMII111191111 GENERAL BLACKSMITH HORSESIMEING WAGON! AND CARRIAGE REP.kIRING ALL WORK Cl IARANTFI:1) Agent for J. I. Case Machinery JOHN A. SANDERS GE) SFR, MONT. 01=0=01=1.)1 -- 101:30) OE3OT OEZIOr 0 ° Murphy-Maclay 1 Idw.Co. Chelf and 17- k3 Heavy iardware Fajta s, Oils and Varnish GREAT FALLS N1()Nel'ANA U -10=o 10=10 OCIO) 10E30 01=0 Montana Needs Your Friends MONTA • Ti. * Slati Send this Book East Free 111You have sticceedod in . Montana—this yell- more than ever. Induce your friends back east to ...nit , and share with you the succe: of future ) eal,;. Montana needs them and will make them indepeodent. Give us a list of your e.i..1.ern ftienvL and relative, and we w ill mail them free a copy of our ltand , oniely illii,.- trated 40 rage booklet, tells w h er e the opportunities arc. laSixty per cent of the pcopir ohs c,..rie to the Great Northwest, do so on the advice -of their fricnd , , who have pr. - ce.i..1 th—n Write out a 1;st 01 113111ei to-d.ty n;,•1 them tine interest tug h.., il,f E. C. LEEDY, Gen'l Immigration Agt. Ogg:. • ST. PAUL MINN. -wow I • I. 1 4