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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 16 May 1912, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1912-05-16/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Juliet Wanted Limelight and Got Mere Than She Expected, At a small seaport town in England a lady star actress of the third mag- nitude appeared as Juliet. \I cannot do justice to myself.' she said to the manager, who combined theatrical en- terprise with the conduct of a row of bathing maehinee. \If 1 do not have a lime (limelight) thrown on me when I appear on the balcony.\ \We ain't got no limelight, miss, but I think we could get you a ship's bjue light,\ replied the obliging manager, and to this the lady agreed. The lad WOO metre to the shop to buy the blue Romeo—He jests at scars who never (ett wound. (Juliet appears. a r tch) Prompter lights the m tt ei wi l n it ert eo b ft ra< i al W ,r. het nm e through yonder IThlf witli the match lighting the fuse-) I asi h t.i e , e, fair sew -or r.1! T rise with a hiss to... er in a theater then it does in the epee air. Juliet was knocked off the bal- cony, the fly borders were set on tire and the theater was filled with sul- phurous smoke, while the audience, which was fortunately a small one, made a stampede to the doors.—Ex- change. Hibernation of Mosquitoes. That cosmopolitan pest. the mosqui- to, does not necessarily perish with the coming of winter. On the contrary, mosquitoes have been observed to hi- bernate, adult specimens living from November until the succeeding April or Stay with all their powers of tor- ment unimpaired, although their nett).- ity Is gut:minded in whiter. 'rite mos- quito needs but little food. and It. is the Inutile that thirsts for blood, the male.; contenting theineelyea Wiib wri- ter and vegetable flulde. feet that ronequitoel are often found upon dry prairies ninny miles from water is as- cribed to the longevity of the adults of certain species which etinbles them to survive seasons of drought. Railroads have been responsible for the transtuis• sion of mosquitoes into regions where they were prerlonely rare.—Ilarper's. Keeping Out the Wind. Willie was is smart boy and ambl- iious. Ills first job was a post in a local •• Well, Willie,\ asked his uncle one day. \how are you getting on Iii 131141- nesg? I suppose you will goon be man- ager?\ \Yea uncle,\ Willie replied. \I'm already a draft clerk.\ \A draft clerk! Good boy! And what are your duties?\ 'I open aud Flmt the windows ac- enrdin' to orders,\ said Willie, \and close the doors after people that leave 'ens open.\—London Ideas. Three Manifestations. \You may give three Important il- lustrations of the power of the press.\ says the teacher to the class. The pupil who had not hitherto par- ticularly distinguished himself was the first to reply: \Cider. courtship and polities.\— Judge's Library. Wasted Effort, \1 don't like the way they reported my speech.\ complained the new con - merman. \Why they sprinkled In plenty of laughter and applause.\ \Yes but how about all them gee- turea?\—Pittsburgh Post. Bunkoed. \Hans said Gottlieb as they reach- ed a pause in the conversation. \dit you efer pity a gnIt brick?\ \Nein. nein!\ replied Gottlieb. \I nefer puyed mu eon brick. but once I pnyed vat I Fought rag one.\—Erery- body's. If WP did but know how little some e njoy the great things that they t'°' - there would not be much envy In the world. a • g . 4r.•10•MOdbiah ailh.°M.\\.\1\6\'\*\\-' GEYSER JUDITH BASIN TIMES Published every Thursday at Geyser, Mont., land from other appropriation. It is the land office record which . is in effect an executory contract betweet the entryman and the government. that it will convey the land to him when he • rmed the acts and done M. B. Parrish, Editor and Publisher Entered as second-clau matter March 25, 1911, at the postofhce at Geyser, Montana, under the act of March 3, 1879. TRUISDAY, MAY 16, 1912 tive right to a portion of the u 44 PPro- priated soil of the country by fib g his claim in the land office. It is q12 record in the land office which reser r es Digest of Decisions Rendered During j 'ide Month of April, Pertaining to Cov,\ 11 \ ment Land Cases HOMESTEADS It is the established practice of the department to issue patent to the heirs generally of a deceased entryman if there be no widow or minor children entitled to claim under section 2292 R. S. Or if it be shown in the record prior to issue of patent that the entry - man has made a will purporting to de- vise his interest in the entry, then the patent is issued to the heirs or the de- visees of the deceased entryman when there is no widow or minor children to claim under section 2292 R. S. It is left to the local courts to determine in such cases who the heirs are and what their individual interests may be. Upon the death of an entryman leaving no widow, his heirs have the tight to make additional homestead DESERT LA N Ds entry under the provisions of section 3 The allowance of amendments rests shall lime perf o the things that the law requires in that particular mode of entry. It is then at an end, existing only until, and no longer than, the concep- tive right becomes consummate and a patent issues or other evidence of pass- ing title. The entry merges into a patent or other evidence of title, By a final decree of cancellation of patent, land once patented becomes 4s at( of the tnthinl &main, subject to LIU unsurvesed or surveye1 1 public lands, if tinappfM,ifiated, but settlement, does not become subject to entry until opened to entry by the General Land Office. i PRACTICE Where there is a dispute as to prior settlement, it is the well -settled prac- tice of the General Land office not to order a hearing as to conflicting settle- ment claims until the township plat is filed. The allowance of amendment duns not depend upon any particular condi- dition but ordinarily it will not be permitted where failure to include land in the Original entry was due to lack of information that could have been ob- tained by the exercise of ordinary pru- dence and proper investigation. of the enlarged homestead act. I largely in the discretion of the land The term entry means that act by department and may be allowed for 1 ) iere is manifest good faith and the reasons for not embracing the land in the original entry was because of ignor- ance or misinformation of existing con- ditions that no prudent man could have forseen. The rule is especially applicable to entries or desert lands where the pur- pose is to increase the duty of water in she reclamation of lands. The federal statute does not provide .or the succession to the rights of a desert land entryman in the event of his death. Such succession is, there- fore, controlled by the laws of the state in which the land embraced in the entry is situated and the land de- partment will dispose of the case ac- cordingly. Tlw provisions of the act of Febru- ary 18th, 1911 (36 stat. 917), relating to relinquishment of entries and subse- __ (tont settlement and entry, has refer- ence solely to lands withdrawn as lands susceptible of irrigation and subject to homestead entry at the time the appli- I cation to make entry and not to lands that have been withdrawn by the Got- ernment for approption so long as that withdrawal remains in force. Enlarged Homesteads (Continued from page 1) \Prior to the designation of land as subject to entry under the enlarged homestead act, a settlement right may be acquired to not more the' approx- imately 160 acres of unsurveyed land, and should such settlement claim be extended, after all the land involved which an individual acquires an incep- I land not originally applied for where has been designated as subiect to entry light brought hack a signal rocket oetentethlusly slapped on more yellow under the act, to embrace additional which was give') him by mistake. The in the high light on the nose. land with a view to entry under the prompter wee her own man, and in his - DM You hear what I said?\ qmiea- d • tl mit , be acquired to the ignorance tnok the rocket in good faith. \ , \ \Te l se ti rd nd, i la1?; responded the student wretlifully, turning mid glaring at his modest aboutiest10: k T t. yi, g anyway?' do you k t'l ought to know eoniething aleml it,\ was the smiling response. \It Was I who painted the picture.\—New York Press. JOGGED HIS MEMORY. k Bit of Humor That Brought Phil May to Hiz Sulam ;h e most refractory among dumb ib eas ig may sometimes be won by per- kistent kindness. It is also evident that the obstinate of the human spe- cies may be influenced by an assault Of humor. „Phil May. the English artiet \of most clear memory.\ bad promised to do a colored design for the Christmas num- ber of en illustrated weekly publica- ti on . The date fixed on for its deliv- ery passed by, and no design had been. fort hcoruing. Letters and telegrams were unan- swered. and when a messenger was sent to May's house it appeared that he Mid gone to Paris without leaving any address. This. Ileum-ding to Lon- don M. A. P.. Is what happened next: The publishers were af their wits' en d, toil one of them. paying a day's visit to Margate. was overjoyed to see May basking in the 'outshine by the water. The publisher did not make himself known, but cannily ascertain- ed where May was staying. Then be plied six sandwiell men to parade up and down before the artist's window w ith hoards bearing different legends. This was their tenor: \What about our Christruea corer?\ 'We are waiting for thnt corer.\ It woe a delightful reminder. and in a few days the publishers received one Of the most brilliant designs Stay had aver executed, 5-4 ENLIVENED THE PLAY. PERILOUS POSING. Getting \Human Interest\ In the Cam. era Man's Pictures. A. W.., Dirnock In Outing tells of hi.; engagement ass professional dIsturbet of snakes, lynx, alligators, tarpon, etc.. for his camera Wall and of a partial drowning necessary to supply the \hu• OUR interest.\ To quote him: \When • coiled rattlesnake needed stirring up I shook a ehort stick in his face. • If we caught a big 'gator or eroeodlie on a bank I was the one to keep between It and Its home. In river or bay, •nd dIsconrege with a club its -advance. When our captive lynx was let out of his eage to pose It was my business to keep him busy with fish or otherwise lest be eat the camera man. I was expected to hypnotize any bird. from a tern to a turkey buzzard, while the camera 113811 got In his work. \Even tarpon fishing was made ad- venturous, nod half a dozen times a day I heard the shout: \'Can't you pull your canoe nearer the fish? I must have human inter- est.' \Then I dragged on the line till the canoe was over a fish that was bigger than I. which often shot ten feet over my head, sometimes crashing Into the canoe. when Instead of being prompt - Pr rescued I was likely to hear the sail: \'Swint farther out, *here the light is better!'\ RILED THE ART STUDENT. Hotel Ge 1 Geyser, Montana American Plan $2.00 per Day Special Rates by Week or Month First -Class Service Special Attention to Commercial Travelers ANDREW REDMAN, Pror. 1 M. E. PARRISH U. S. Commissioner GEYSER, MONTANA Land Filings and Proofs. All land office papers correctly prepared. OD • Ea* Ela • 41111 • 41111• 41110 • Eli • Ma • ID • Mb • Mla • IMP • IM • 1M • CD • 411. • 1111, ! LIQUORS CIGARS The I Silver Dollar A Saloon George Kneer, Prop. American and Budweiser Beers GEYSER, MONTANA ....e....•••••••40•411•• CIO *-101•41111N11. • igo • op • ma • eir.s.. • •-•-•-•-•-•-••-•-•() The Great Falls 1 -- Totel European Plan A First -Class Cafe an Connection • • Fitzgerald & Foster, Probrietors .6 enlarged area only by continued resi- • ' Aence and cultivation as required by \'the act, for Ott (411 Pluirld section 4 ot • '-- , stion and eh - after the date of des., tension of settlement.\ Notice for Publication (Non -coal.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Office at Great Falls, Mont., May 6, 1912. Notice is hereby given that Lila G Donnell). (formerly Calvert) of Kner- vine. Mont., who, on Oct. 27, 1908, made homestead entry No. 01679, for se t ne t , ne t se t section 23, n.t:.; swS section 24, township 19 north. range 11 east, Montana meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final commutation proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before R. H. Bemis, U. S. Commissioner, at his office, at Belt, Mont., on the 24th day of June, 1912. Claimant names as witnesses: Neil M. Silve, Joie .E. Siive, James Mans- field, Howard Rickards, all of Kner- ville, Mont. 5-16 E. L. BARNES, Register. Notice for Publication (Non -coal.) Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Great Falls, Mont., May 6, 1912. Notice is hereby given that Lila G. Donnelly (formerly Calvert) of Kner- ville, Mont., who. on Oct. 8, 1908, made desert land entry No. 01238, for it;•:! se.Its section 24, township 19 N., range 11 L. Montana Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before R. H. Bemis, U S. Commissioner, at his office, at Belt. Mont., on the 24th day of June, 1912. Claimant names as witnesses: Neil M. Silve, Joie E. Silve, James Mans- field, Howard Rickards, all of Kner- ville, Mont. 5-16 E. I,. BARNES, Register. Notice for Publication (Non -coal.) Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Great Falls, Mont., May 6, 1912. Notice is hereby given that Rudolph Alber, of Belt, Mont., who, on Dec. 1, 1911, made homestead entry No. 025313, for seX se section 9, SWX t.vs t section 10, wYz nwYt section 15, township 19 north, range 9 east, Mon- tana meridian, has filed notice of inten- tion to make final five year proof, to establish claim to the land above de- scribed, before R. H. Bemis, U. S. Commissioner, at his office, at Belt, Mont., on the 24th day of June, 1912. Claimant names as witnesses: Frank Rush, of Belt, Mont.; Thomas Watt, of Highwood; Michael Lynch, Jr., of Spion Kop; W. Frank McLeish, of Geyser. 5-16 E. L. BARNES, Register. H. Resented at First the Comments of His Unknown Critic, - An art 'student was copying one of Abott K. Thayer's paintings at the Met- ropoliten Ninepin') of Art in New York one day when a plainly dressed man who looked as if he might be a me- chanic approached and, posting himself at the young man's elbow, watched bins as he labored over his subject. \You're got the angle of the month wrong, and the left eye is too oblique.\ remarked the man. decidedly. The etudent blinked angrily, and the hand (list wielded the brush trembled slightly, hut he took no notice of the on criticism. \There is too toneh yellow In your flesh tint,\ continued the man. Still no reply from the student, who - Boot, and Spurs. A contempornl Manuscript account of the the diet of iteiahOni held in 1030 by Emperor Ferdinand B. .it the oe- eli sion o f th e lapdiee of Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in Hernlapy, men- tions as a remarkable (lel that the Hungarian cavalry who rode through the streets to the cerenionbil wore their spurs on their boot aohie. It is thee° spurs were shod o lF r e s kt an i ll i ed li 9; h : o :.l es rs rP4 ee 44 p r i n t e t e i r a t o l h l r i l' t14 : 111 : 1414 11 - 1 1.....\T eitt.ilfe th e orr .i 7 t ,. 1 : 11 . w i l ik : size of the spurs worn at the 'writs'. e considered. Probably the writer in- tended to indicate that instead of be- ing fastened to the heel in the usual i fashion they were made la project from the fore part of the military boot. which Is a portion of the ele. The :same manuscript adds (het time Hun- •garlan bore's had their manes, tails and feet painted red. Letters of Marque. Letters of marque mid reprisal, as they were called, were thee isseed In the time of Edward I. to ,give leave to retaliate beyond the tnnines or limits of a country for wrongs sliffered at the hands of a power unnilunlly at Peace. In this first Instance they were 'timed at Portugal. About 100 years inter two Hanse town,' in Mecklenburg. wishing to relieve their prim e, who was beleeetiered in Stoehholm. Issued letters of margin- -thieves' letters, ns the sufferers yelled them—to all the rascals of the retitle authorizing them to victual the besieged city. This done, they turned themselves into a confed- eracy of sea robbers' known as Victual- ing brother -A. or St. ‘ltalime brothers, and rendered the Scandinavian seas unsafe for half n century. Reduced. \I bear the Pudgerleighs are in great- ly reduced circumstances.\ \Are they? How did they lose their money?\ \Oh they haven't lost their money. My. Pudgerleigh has find typhoid fever and is a mere walking skeleton, and Ids wife has been trying a new anti -fat remedy which lies brought her weight (town nearly foriy pounds.\—Judge's Library. Noah Was Lucky. \What are you smiling about?\ ask- ed Noah. \I was just thinking.\ replied Ja• pheth, \how lucky it was we could go ahead and build this ark without wait- ing for an appropriation from con- gress.\—Waehington Star. Not on the Level. \How can mountain climbers he be- lieved?\ \Why not\ \flow ran swim a timing as mountain climbing be en the level?\—Baltimore American. The man who cannot forgive any mortal thing IP a green hand in life.— R. L. Stevenson. We have the agency for the BEST LAUNDRY in the Country—the Billings Steam Laundry Baths The bathroom will be resen•ed for the use of ladies only on Mon- doy. Wednesday and Friday even- ings. JOHN BRYAN the Barber Steam Plowing We are prepared to take con- tracts for plowing and preparing ground for crop; will also put in spring and fall crop On shares. First -Class Work RENNER & JOHNSON GEYSER, MONT. 7 All Information from the LAND OFFICE and Plats Furnished Promptly HERE are enough uncertainties about trading in lands without guessing at the title. Be on the safe side —demand an Abstract of Title. The Hubbard Abstract Company Great Falls, • Montana. ADAM HRUBY Carpenter and General Building Contractor JOBBING AND REMODELING GEYSER, MONTANA COL,. .:!'ARK, The Noted AUCTIONEER For all kinds of sales as well as PEI). 'GREED STOCK A SPECIALTY Let me know at once. so I can arrange the date pd everything. It means 3 3 more to you in the end. Any ads ice free; terms reasonable. GREAT FALLS, • MONTANA Kodak Finishing! The best your lisss will produce will be yours in the finished picture. It will pay you to send for our price list. If not whv not get the best at lower rates than you are paying others. f` a lic j_-4et ... Studio CENTRAL AVENUE GREAT FALLS CHAS. OLSON GLASER, MON F. Contractor and Builder Estimates Cheerfully Furnished Dr. R. H. Armond Dr. Loretta B. Nelson Osteopathic Physicians Conrad Block, Rooms land 8, over Strain's Dry Goods Store, Great Falls, Montana. Roth graduates of the A. T. Still Kirks- ville College of Osteopathy. Acute and chronic cases successfully treated. Office hours 9 to 12 a. rn. ; 2 to 5 p. m. Both Phones 196. PIANOS We represent fourteen of the woad's great- est piano factories. Great Falls Music House FRANK CANTLON Easy Terms 13 Fm e rt . h t Sm. South Fills, Mont CLARK & WRIGHT LAWYERS WASHINGTON, D. C. Public Land Matters; Find! Proof. Deaert Lands. Contests and Mining Cute,: Serie 4 :Pular WOrk for literary,