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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 06 Feb. 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1913-02-06/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
' 10 THOUSAN Acres in -- or ts good wheat land as there is in the world. For sale on easy terms, ranging in price from $20 to $60. • • The Best Wheat Land in the World. These lands are located near the new Mil- waukee railway. Some are well improved, while others are raw. We have 880 acres all in wheat ' 1 —4 - improvements of all kinds at a very rersonable price. Small amount down, bal- ance on crop payments. 2,000 acres under I • • close to railway. One sc,-venth down and a small yearly payment at 7 per cent. TERMS—One-seventh down, the balance in live or ten years at 7 per cent. interest. The TimesOffice , 'BAYER OF MODERN WOMEN IN BALKANS WILL PROCEED fillies Break Peace Negotiations With Turkey. WOUNDED COME FROM FRONT Rumored That Fighting Has Already Begun Along the Tchatlaja Lines Near Constantinople. London, Jan. .30.—Notwithstanding the Balkan allies' action In breaking the peace negotiations with Turkey there still are optimists in the diplo- matic world who hope a resumption of the war may be averted, either through fresh proposals that Turkey Is reported to be including in the note she will deliver to the powers or through the fall of Adrianople be- fore activities can he begun again at the Tchatalja linen. A majority of the Balkan delegates refuse to admit the likelihood of either contingency, believing that the life of the Young Turk gai'ernment depends upon the resumption of the r - war, typal - . , • , azIt were 'a II I 0 pr , ipone the conflict. tiey are of the opinion that the present tailor.. of ;it the worst. only an intcrit.tle, halve% er, for they will leave tow I - seta-sent:W. es in ',tondos' to imam take the ,ettle- mcnt anew. Reviled Pasha, after retching the note. said: \The coneequentis may he of the nra‘est naaore. 'I Vie resk lies not alone with the allies. led with the powers who encouraged the Balkan states and have shown no fairness toward Turkey. although bp. fore the war they had solemnly pro- claimed the print Mi.- of the itte hange- ability of the status quo.\ Intend Storming Adrianople. The plan of the allied governments, so far as the plitnipmemiaries are in- formed, is to «mcentrtee their forces The allies expect that a preliminary treaty of peace will be signed in Adria- nople by the Bulgarian and Servian generals. if they are victorious, and ill he embodied in the treaty whieh twill he concluded in London. for tt hich each delegation is leaving on.- represe ,nta FIGHTING MAY HAVE BEGUN Wounded Men Constantly Arriving at Constantinople. Lendon, Jan. :10.—A Constantinople dispatch by way of Constanza ic the Post says it is evident that something Is happening at Tchatalja. as wound- ed men are constantly arriving front there. Unconfirmed reports say that 15.00n Circassian troops have mutinied and rioting also is reported among the on Adrianople Use,, diately after the troops at the Dardanelles expiration of the pi eserthed four days, if ilia surrender of that fortress ORDERS ARCHBOLD'S ARREST does not occur in the meantime. The Bali -an representatives declare Warrants Issued for Three Standard that all reports that Rumania would Oil Off -dais by Texas Judge. aid Bulgaria against Turkey are ell - founded and they add that if Itti- Dallas, Tex...ian. 29.—Federal Judge m a nta s h ou ld t a k e n u t allt,g, or the F.. It. Meek mailed to New York e ar- opportunity to gain her territorial rants for the arrest of three Standard claims by ft,ree, %011ie the Bulgarian Oil officials. Ile announced that if acuity is engaged 1 '. 1 ; 11 TlirbeY. Bialgarni my difficulty Is encountered in making would lei her occupy the territory tie arrests he will send Texas officers titer the men who are wanted in the Cnited States district court here. The three men charged with violat- ing the Sherman anti-triast law in Texas are John D. Architold, 11. C. Folger, Jr., and W. Teagle. she demands. But es soon as the But garian army disposes of the Turks the Bulgars noted turn their at to the Rumanians and attempt to make them pay dearly for this racial dis- loyalty, which the Bulgarians consider would be treason. - nez Haynes °Rimers Gives It a New Expression That Makes Food for Thought. ''Lord, we have come out of the lark and the quiet and the calm of he past Into the dazzle and the noise :lid the hurry of the present. But eeterday we lived inside four sealed ,alls, the hearth our earth, the taut- ly our world. Today the door and the vindow have swung wide and We ase out. The earth lies before Us. by world encompasses us.' These are the opening sentences of The Prayer of the Women,\ by Inez Jaynes Gilimore in Harper's Bazar. n it are also the following: \We thank thee that we were born n this day. \Help tie to give hack to the chil- li - en who toll ell the tender love and LII the fairy lore of their lost child - mod: ite green fields and sweet wa- ers, its bright flowers and blue skies, .ts soft winds and warm sunshine, Its golden sends and changing seas._ \Help us to give back to the worm, en who sin all the love and honor of their lost womanhood, its gaiety and aecurity, its helpfulness and happiness and peace. \Help us to open the hearts of all good women to their new duty. \help us to make easy the way of the working woman. \Help us to point out new paths of service to the idle women.\ SEEMS A POOR OCCUPATION Demand for Female \Kennel-Malds\ Said to Be the Latest In the Old Country. Ladles have been advised to take tip the profession of \kennel-rnaed but the latest development of this oc- cupation appears to be that of \ca- nine nurse.\ Reports from the old country tell that there are actually institutions for training ladies to be- come nurses for dogs. They are taught to study the different ailments of the canine pets, and have to servo an apprenticeship for at least twelve months before they are qualified. A eood nurse can command a good sal- ary. Only recently a lady in Dublin engaged one of these canine nurses at $16 a week, besides paying traveling expenses. At most dog shows in Eng- land one sees girls in nurses' cos - tunics attending the valuable animals that are on exhibition. An advertise- ment appeared in a Ispdon journal only a few weeks ago offering $300 per year and all found for a qualified kennel maid. Modern Young Lochlnvar. • A modernized version of yffung Lochinvar, a l'Apache, is reported from Poitiers, France. A young man was in love with a girl who did not reciprocate his sentiments, and had promised her hand to \another.\ De- termined that if she did not marry him he would spoil her mateimhnial chances elsewhere, he decided on In- volving the girl in a scandal, and man- aged to induce her to go for a motor car ride with him. Once aboard the car the chauffeur \let out\ at full speed, when the lady, perceiving it, broke one of the windows of the car In an endeavor to escape. The chauf- feur, thinking that a lovers' quarrel was in progress, calmly went on driv- ing until midnight, when the party reached Poitiers. Here the abductor repented of his rashness, and seeing the girl covered with blood as the re- sult of an Injury sustained while win- dow -smashing, the hero of the adven- ture calmly abandoned her, leaving her to wander about the streets until she was rescued by a good Samari- tan. Viking's Bread. A fellow of the University of Stock- holm I Schitzten I has discovered a loaf of bread dating from the time of the Vikings. Microscopic examination show that the bread was made of the bark of the pine tree and the flour of peas. This discovery shows that peas were cultivated In Sweden nine hundred years after Christ. Few archaeological discoveries of bread have been made and very little bread dating from antiquity has been found. In 1908 a cooked loaf of wheaten flour (a find dating from the fourth century after Christ) was dug out of the ruins of an ancient castle in Boberg.—Harper's Weekly. Bombay Plans to Fight Cholera. Bombay Is taking steps to cope with the cholera and other epidemics. Dur- ing the recent visitation of cholera there the need of a hospital for Cases of infectious diseases among Europe- ans was emphasized. This want was brought to the notice of the municipal- ity and later to the government. Ae a result of the agitation the Bombay government has addressed the con. oration on the subject of providing a new hospital for the treatment of these diseases, and the Bombay goy- ernment proposes to co-operate with the municipality by assuming the en- tire cost of the hospital building, pro- vided the municipality will furnish the cite and maintain the Institution. In Ancient India. A writer on Italian women of 3,000 years ago says that they were \treated with suspicion.\ and quotes from Kranya Kande to support his aetter- Bon: \W'omen will continue to like their husbands only so long as they are rich and influential: but the me. ment they are reduced In circum- stances they will be abandoned by them. Women resemble the lightning In their waywardness, weapons In their sharpness, and the high gale In llol'screet baste.\ otel Geyser Geyser, Montana American Plan $2.00 per Day Special Rates by Week or Month first -Class Service Special Attention to Commercial Travelers ANDREW HEDMAN, Nor. 411111111.1111.1111111N11110111 ETROPOLITA N FURNITURE COMPANY Dealers in Everything -1 ,;°,er Home Furniture, Rugs, Stoves & Ranges, Crockery, Kitchen Utensils, Trunks and Suit Cases, Beds and Bedding, Lace Curtains, Rockers, Hardware and Sewing Machines Credit Extended to Responsible Parties METROPOLITAN FURNITURE CO. 412-414 Second Avenue South : : Great Falls, Montant, \Walk a Block and Save a Dollar\ M. E. PARRISH U. S. Commissioner GEYSER, MONTANA Land Filings and Proofs. All land office papers correctly prepared. I\ GEYSER LIVERY I & TRANSFER Let Us Do Your Draying 4 41•41110•1110•411111•4111)•41.• ED • dia. IS • • *MP* Me • 41110•1111• tl.•4111111* 411.•40 LIQUORS CIGARS The Silver Dollar Saloon George S. Kneer, Prop. American and Budweiser Beers. • N1ONT \N 4110•41•41111• 411.• OP fill, • OP • alla• AD • 1111•41P • EP • Gio•ige..a.me o . 1 The Great Falls Hotel 1 1 Fitzgerald & Foster, Proprietors 1 European Plan A First -Class Cafe in Connection , . 6