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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 10 April 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1913-04-10/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• • I, , VOL. 3. GEYSER, MON i ///, C s- • . l it: • • • • - APRIL 10, 1913 NO. 4 • 10=0=20=0=10=0 0=0) o Death is as Sure o as Your Taxes! Freseman & Mood GEYSER, *0=0 101=101====101=10 0 rm. ••\ O 0=0 4OO 20=0 01:101=0=0=01=102 (OLIO Have you made provision idor your loved ones in case you are called away? The will o' the Ivisp assessment insurance has practically faded away. Better get an old line legal reserve policy in the Northwestern National . Life. Get it this week. II 9 Talk with g CASCADE ' (oao io=m=ovno==x o=c1=10=01===o=o What the Home- steader May Grow. Some Good Suggestions for the First Year on a is,gs to Plant for the Home and Good Start Essential. By Prof. Thos. Shaw. Ve homesteaders are just now g their work on home- steadlch they have taken. It is of the ost importance that they shall beg' t. This paper will dis- cuss that q tion and more especially with referen er to the needs of home- steaders who have families. It is specially important that they shall be able to grow food for themselves and mIssioners of said ('ounty, thaV, be authorized to issue coupon bonds of said County, in the sum of Eighty-five, lies(T1). t l h h e icre kne is r, y N e V t he aa i t mi b it ily t e ‘ r „ — en ' t-fi b ‘ e .e - thousand ($85,000.00) dollars, draw- ' thousand bushels of grain in the coun- the animals that they have when they' the homesteader must have some mon- 'Fhe cultivation may be given in great , trig interest at the rate of five (5) per ,c 1 >' yet to be marketed. In spite of fent per annum, interest payable semi- e muddy roads I have been taking in come to their claims. Under judi- l ey crops these should be flax and aur- part by the harrow. Squaw corn plan- m naally, and bonds maturing and pay -1 a thousand bushels of grain every day.\ cious management they may do this. 1 um wheat, ted thus in hills will furnish grain . le in twenty years after the issue i .0. NI. Sherman- - Geser is no ereof, said bonds to be issued for big enough to support a telephone ex- rpose of purchasing land and ense_. I _Ch . a r \\ k -' - e eon -ms• . /..i .4. . rthe enterprise to do all the work and uon and equipping a building there- 1 p. but without knowing how may fail. Which are the crops that can be1swine and fowls, but it will not fu It is .presupposed that every man 1 : grown for the live stock? The home- much fodder., isn mas ns ao toad fm... crandar ..an a row for these oar& to pro. To provide for the 'home a liberal with a family will take with him to vide food for horses, barley and peas to supply of potatoes should be planted. that farm four horses to enable him to • provide food for the cow or cows in They will grow well on breaking. on to be used for a jail for said Cas- take my pay in stock. Geyser wants an exchange and will have one. Let plow his land, a cow or two to provide winter, and hulless barley of the white The land may be prepared as for corn, cade Coenty. In this way an ample supply of po- The polling places in each precinct us get together on the proposition.\ tatoes may be obtained for home use. to be open from 8 a. in. until 6 p. m. E. B. Sikes—\What we need just If white navy beans are sown on sod- By order of the Board of County now is a few sidewalks, and I do not land and broadcasted, they are fairly , Commissioners of Cascade County, blame any one for not appearing out sure to produce a good crop, 'Ind the Montana. K. B. McIver. after dark for the mud has been some - He should also have enough gram it may be made to furnish much food . same is true of rutabagas. The only Chairman of the Board, thing terrible. I am going to make an with him to feed his horses, his swine in an average season. In a very dry labor involved will be the sowing and L ee D e n n i s , effort to have a sidewalk built from and his fowls until he can grow some season the results would be very (Is- harrowing. Vegetables may also b e 3-6 C ount y Cl er k. Main street to the church.\ the following autumn. appointing. Ii would not be necessary thus grown. In these ways the home- I I A ndrew Hedinan--\You can say Whar. money crops can he grow the to thresh the oats for the horses as in steader may do much to lessen the out- If President Taft is to take the chair that this is the best lighted hotel on first year? Only two, one is flax and some newly settled sections it might lay the first season. the othet, is durum wheat. Of these not be easy to get a maChine. The flux is th&surest as it will bear up bet- pea and barley crop should be drilled ter under 'dry conditions, should the in, using 3 pecks of peas' and 2 of bar- Raynesford last Monday. his family with milk and butter, a variety to provide food for the swine brood sow that will nourish pigs to the followinv winter, and also to pro - give meat the following winter, and a vide food for the fowls. few hens to provide him with meat or The oat crop is not so sure a crop as its equivalent in eggs the fir s t summer, the durum wheat on breaking, but it ley to the acre. These would be cut when in the dough stage, and they would be fed to the cows•as hay. The white hiltless barley could be sown At the rate of 3 to 4 pecks periCre and it wc,uld furnish food to swine and fowls the following winter, either in the Farm Loan C OUNTY, 0 MONTANA. r o l =c)ctc) c)=0 012:101=====0=01=01:101 01=210111 eport of Grammar Grades. Ray Adams --\Would I have ii- hotelbusiness is good and I am enter - digestion if I eight minutes to eleven?' • taming a but of strangers every (1.0 Pupils enrolled 15 19y, Freseman & Moody, real estate— H. C. Lyng, mana , .zer of the Mis- . • Days taught 199 - If you want something real nice, see souri River Lumber Co. — \From the • Total days attended us before you buy.\ inquiries are coining in concernin Average attendance tlireshed or 'the ...-.s.....hedjorm. Ifwin Buckner, Cass Finfrock. Noel' has certainly come down our way, and Present every day Clyde Abbey, John Henley of Merino— - Spring Anderson. • Erie B. Sikes, things are getting active dossn in our Stock. A Corn is one, of the best dell to is..... to furnish food'for horses • or cows in ^ neck-of-thp : woods.\ Notice of Special Election. S. C. Purdy — \As soon as this winter. (Mod crops can be grown . * new breaking. to 6 ; To grow ; Notice hereby given, that a Spec- blanket of .snitow is gone, things ar form, the land should bebrbiteti P season prove dry, than any other cer- , t•speplAki., i al Election vvei be held in the County ' going to open up strong in every line I 4 ta, on the 3rd. day . of businesS•here in Geyser... pt Cascade, Mont, cal crop. But to be sure o f a crop it inches deep. It should be' pagkatpk. should not be sown to early. The flax with a disk_' as 'soon as brokek:If May A. D. 1913, for the purpose Dr. Brant- - Flaey used to sav that is sown at tie rate of I '.. Pecks per • A tine mulch should be made on ft :' 01 voting by the qualar.d electors of man was made of clay, but now days acre, and the durum wheat at the rate with the harrow. The corn should said County, on the questi'm whether unless he is made of reinforced con- oflo 4 pecks per acre, of cou w rse it ould ' pliinted in hills 31'.. / . feet apart each r not the Board of Courn v Coin- crete, he is behind the times.\ be better in the long run to summer- was. The varieties to plant include fallow all the land broken the first the Mercer Flint and the Northwest - year, and to sow the bulk of it to win- ern Dent. They should be planted as ter wheat the following August, but if soon as the danger from frost is past. • at Yale, it's high nine that the furni- the line. I am going to install a light - tore makers should begin work on it ing system all th'tu the hotel, which Sam Blake was a business visitor at :so as to give the concrete base time to will be superior to the old kerosene settle, lights, and a whole lot less work. The building material. I should iudne there was going to be considerable buildin , going on in Geyser this sonny. 1\ 1 ,41, we have laid in a large stock and are ready to meet the demand. - An Old Timer — \Yes I believe he month we have just passed thru was as Severe as any March that I can . remember, and I have been in this country • nearly twent) -eight years. Of course we have had cold spells but not in such large chunks as we did last month. It was not so 'bad, as we look back at it, Some of our snow banks will last a king time et, but then we need the moisture, and will tend to keep the price of ice down.\ Louis Coughlin, of Coughlin Bros. and Co. store.—\When women start out to make purchases they usually go to the ptores with which they are inint lAmtliar. And they ask for the foods _ in which therreet they can place 04 most confidence— the goods which have been advertised into a standing. !The merchant who gets the bulk Ird trade, both in season and Ma of season, is the merchant who advertises week in and week out all the year 'round. It takes time to educate the public in- to believing in the store. Ii takes con- stant hammering to establish the quality of goods. _ It is truthfully said that fain or shine, cold or hot, hard times or good times. money or no nu....1 , UM\ ... \ t'AI , MW measels, the printer, the preacher ina the doctor are always expected to 1 ake their visits on time. . 1.1 The Store of Quality The First Call of Spring! WE beg to announce to atl men that the Taylor Fabrics for Spring and Summer are now on display and wait your kind indulgance. Both the fabrics and the models this season are strikinglir .handsome and are bound to appeal to the dis- criminating dressers. The TAYLOR system is made - to -measure and every garment is guaranteed to he perfect in detail. A visit is suggested. You are under no obligation to buy when you look the fabrics over. The most exquisit Summit_ T line of the season's oil nobbiest and up -to- i shirt date laundried and Look soft collared dress for the shirts that this - town Collar. ever saw, will now be shown in our Dry Goods department. Exceptionally Big Values 75 cts. and up. We have managed to obtain better qualities, bigger values at more reason- able prices than ever before in the lines of working pants. working shirts over- alls and gloves. _ - - • COUGHLIN BROS. & GO.. GEYSER. MONTANA