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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 13 Aug. 1914, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1914-08-13/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• , course to the sea, to merge at lewstit law en an entty made prior t \ ts June Iflour• 35 per cent binding twine• IS ter \P rettli P ublic i \ ° \' I As a reeult of today's action, there is with the chill wateru of Hudson Bay, ible of irrigation from such system. I s • must be a proceeding sufficient in it. .cent, seeds; and 10 per cent, salt. Among now in cieulatimi more etirretwy than the balmy tides of the GO of hlexico, aelf, to place the entryman on his de- l other commodities handled are cement , fense, or ton require of him rthessiaft of :tilt?' farm machinery, lumber. fenre at any previous time in the history of or the rolling billows of 1.6e Pacific.\ I This 48 page publication, which cot,- t‘i but tlw country. niaterihl fact, when served with notice posts, oil, and wire fettetil. Clearing house certificates fcl• the 'al taint 25 halftone illustrations and maps, eiglith of the area thereof is suseept• were not large enough to signify aide flow and finally start down their long !.« or protest o defeat t . mitted tinder the original homestead coat; 41 per cent. feed; 40 pet tent. s VOL..4. , res. GEYSER MONT., Latest R4.111FIAS- of .the F'tiblic Lands of quality and quantity sufficient to Land upon which deposits of granite • The following decisions concerning public lands and the comment -on the saute by the editor of a bulletin put out by the Collins Land Counpatiy will be of interest to all those who have ex- perience with public lands: in remarkable ianttriat ., with the pre- ceding regime, dal dispen: -of the prenent administration of the Land De- partment is to favor the settler ,and claimant, so far as is reasonable and proper. Following is submitted the gist of some recent decisions, nearly every one a reversal of former rulings, and ilaustrating the tendency of the De- partment to get back to first princi- ples: HiMeeteads Where as entrytnan executes and deliyer .to. l anpfber a relinquishment of hie entry, 'with the view of desriing to filoPOOOctis his wife who is qmilielled on the land, the wife upon the filing of the relinquishment is eatitled to Make entry' of 'the land in her own behalf, as the deserted wifo, dto receive credit for resideffoll from the date of her set- tlement fitideon with her husband. The Act of June 25, 1010, relieving entrymen within reclamation projects from the necessity of residence until water is available, applies to all bona Me and qualified entrytneu who made entry prior to the act and have made substantial improvement, regardless of whether they have established and maintained a residence. Where final proof is rejected because of insufficient showing as to compliance with law, supplemental showing by ex 1 parte affidavits may be accepted with- out requiring new publication of notice, where the defect has been 'cured and the siosernment is satisfied of the entry - 5)111's good faith. Desert Lands Land, whish as a rule lacks suf• ficient rainfall to produce agricultural eropa without the necessity of resort- ing to unusual Menlo& of cultivation, such as the system commonly known as \dry farming,\ is, if suseeptoble of - irrigation, subject to entry under the desert land law. A desert hold entrymall who relin- quishes hie entry and makes a second entry ofakhe name laud under the Act of Feb. 3, tell, cannot receive credit on annual proofs upon the second en- try for expenditures made on account' o e original entry. The making and subsequent assign- ment of a desert hind entry will not be held to disqualify the entryman from taking a reesaignment of the same lend from the assignee, such re- assignment being regarded as a mere reciasion of the assignment. ,aga any proceeding e govern - of thern limit the number of shares that elates, the tension relaxed until at the n, se e rest an m r• ' render it vaultible -- therefor, is mineral land and not subjetd to selection tinder the lieu selection act of June 4, 1897. 1 - - --- A diseovery or showing in commer• trial quantitiee is not necessary to a valid bele location, but it is sufficient if the vein is found beating mineral in towli quentity and ,of such quality as prudence in making (Miller expenditures of money and labor with h reasonable operations on the particular claim to . t i . , which it is sought to be accredited, is Their are 1 1 70 - . 'faiiners7 elevators in financial centers. and Octended three times and, after each available towards m ee tin g th e statutory minne , otit, the aggregate membership! Saving banks and private banke in develbpntent, the congealed masses met- es a basis for patent, of whirl,. is a bout ;Kam, livers/r i ng. 12 1 ., New York state halt into Well the ted away on the return of milder elimat- I A married women, otherwise quail- .• intuit of funds to depositors for 60 days Generel to a tympany. One farmer out of evert ' 13 \ .. Whirl ' P enni \ I bein to ,I °h' P R Y\ ic condition\ until at length only' the efive in the state belongs to a fannere small cliff glaciers of the present day 1i -A is entitled, upon proper application. . , . , - . .. _, and 311 days respectisel, after appliea- elevator «impaily. rilllllels Oil II al It ILO In have offered and to puree:tow aides,- . • . sum , for the „.i thdro „ „I, ,ii,' w „ d ,,. 1 . 1 „, Sre left lurking in the protected recce- fmt) per ( . all of recent yeomen:, outiloe of gold to Eit- sea at the heads of the capacious val- companied and own practically e r r o r; led i'lu s . it ' aut lf t il t i t l it c hh il e r . e f : li t: I t: lf believed ti' tin' 1 le)8 \Many the itork in most of them. The aggre- ! i i ith tti gatootue f business wa whcih s ahoue$24,-of the rock -walled atnphi- t prospect of stitress in developing it eel tut e mint. A it aeon road or trail constructed in good faith and for the manifest pur- pose of aiding in the conduct of Wining s e-es\ - sS3 ) • -: •-- -t ;. 13,. 1914 -1 . 11•1 7 - NO. n WE OFFER YOU A POLICY - of flee insurance at a very reascn,able cost. Better have us issue you one this very day. You are as likely as any one else to have a fire and your turn may come tonight;' The pitcher that goes often to the well is sure to he broken. If you keep on putting off- the fire insurance question you are apt to , .bd \broke\ too. Plenty have. FRESEMAN & MOODY. itted or mountainune tract of land. In cases t;:f t.respass upon the public 000 Ooli r the 1912 crop, of $22,- have beet, stopped. t eine n n connection w tile eta ng - of timber tthe stumpage value t nil not theaters are no longer onomied by ice, While is for .the axioms ate were I A desert land entriyman may proper- ly in hie entry a legal sub - 'division necessary for use for reservoir Pio!' . .Y 6 the value after aeveratice is the proper 000,101, ropreeents value of grain soLd d st rda It took foyers) but from all there issues streams fed i the th waters awhile d i I ment as well as against private con- close of the day Wall Street was ahnor ror in their crystal depths the dark green of the irrigation system adopted 13y t ila e yeere 1913. Sixty•three 0 ,,It t buy ale from banks, while heavier than metal again, from lake to lake, the water,* Where a emetuutation proof is sub- try A .st 6, 1012, or initiated ,prior to said date by settle -meat on uusurveyed land, it Will be sufficient in the matter of citizenship If the tatryniateshows he has deelateet intent166 — et' - beeoming a citizen of the United States, or is by lawl given that status. The three jiewr homestead Act requir- es the maitsteepe i nce of actual residence upon the entered for at least seven months each . ,year, does not preclude temporary absences such as are ordinar- ily necessary and incident to the con- duct of a farm. The right acquired by settlement upon public land is co -extensive with the right of entry conferred by the home- stead law and a settler upon unsurveyed land subsequently designated under the enlarged homestead act, is, upon the filing of the township plat of survey, en• titled to make entry of the land em- braced in his settlement claim of the full area of 320 acres permitted by the enlarged homestead act. and $2.000.006 etalue of supplits put- etrall g e Y e e Y' measure of damage in cases of inner- a df- hours of rapid work this morning to Put by' melting snow and ice. These elle These eletators marketed about 311 per tent of all grain marketed in them into operation. 'nail tfatt had plunke over the cliff . % in beautiful, foam. cent trespass. been accomplialied, the financial district dog cascades and rush on down tle. mom: - I Under the 7th Section of the Act of Milines \ \ ' was untie somethhig of a strain, but tale gorges. The melting glacers left March 3, 1891, an entry is confirmed eluety-tour and one-half per cent have i t b • th the one -man -vote prinsiple, nve.sixtbs as the hours passed without serious (NI- many ineloaed basins, largeand small, and one person may own, and 26 per cent testa or protests, unless much proceed' have the patronage dividend. l'•learls manY dull. Two small private banks of the starrounaing forests, the rich col. I ing is pending at expiration of two t1,e date of the issuance 50 per cent paid no dividendat all. t were closed, hut there were no other oc• ors of the rugged mountains, and the purposes, or for other neceesary part r • least 20 per cent lost money during the eurreenees of this nature, and withdraw- deep blue of the cloud•fleeked sky. On of the receiver's receipt mans ti 1 41- The loss of the discovery upon which a mining location is based invalidates the location, unleas. Ptidrt9 aPPlifati 43 \ for the patent or the assertion of an adverse claim to the ground her thu mining laws, a sufficient discovery is rnuitory effect of the proviso to Section 7 of the Act of March 3, 1891, , j tIferentnerrd etigi - pfee s eerting will be eun-0011Pies out of 239 reported the hand- sidered as pending from the moment l ' u g or Come other commodity js as . tie of is ebend. $O0,000.000 were issued, &hewing the present .and /cornier ciatent attd it espceted that further large ot the glaciers, turf which may be per , - the affidavit is tiled, in the case or a TL\ D. II' .°111 \ :1 • \ • a mounts would be demanded by the chased from the Superintradeiit of Doe - thereof. bank% shortly. During thr 4 1907 flank umente, Government Priuting Office, private contest or protest. or from the !moment the Commissioner of the Gener• • G od the maximum amount of certificatee Wanhington, D. C., for 15 cents, contains The verification of an application for patent. to a mining claim by all, attor• ney in fact for the elaimant, at a ti inc when the applicant is both resident anti physically within the hind district. is not authorized and an entry allowed upon such an application is invalid. A tleponit of :shell rock used for build- ing purposea, construction of roads.' streets, foundations or lunettes is not a mineral within the meaning of the gen- eral mining law. I 1 Ifr led alf f the govern. 13usiness is o . 03 500 St A that i detailed descri (jolts of the pefnelfla a ant we. n o g issued %tam $1 .04 t tat t me al- merle. requires thing to be done by Fes the at iiiii tut of bank notes outstane• glaciers an dtheir attendant phentaingna. ; the entry man. or dire( a a Raring tqem h e European war now waging be- i ng wee s o me %that larger than now, but It includes also a discussion of the work specific charge- A 111Cre [MAMA or tateetAteoris and Servia together with th e present (mai of currency exereels all done by the glaciers in modifying the adverse report be a Tecial agent wilqil i cir r es pectii, allies without doubt ether surface features and an account of the not stop the running of the Mallets :h as mad, it incenvenint in many a eys ! th e . the clearing house. previous extent of glaciation in this re - for the time le•ing, tor the unveiling of eertificetes are in cireulation. the usual. gion. Land embraced 'in school indemni- ty selection is not subjeet location as a building stone placer. In accordance with n !sty passed by fie last NI' itti legislature the (lit i- sien of agricultural ec iiiiiii ities of the College of Agriculture, is collecting re- ports f rim] co-operative orgaisieat ions jut Nliiinesoln. The 101101,1 prelimi- ary fignr4; with regard 14) Fe rulers' t let a tors ha f' her!, 1.;•411 ,, l : SALE OF SUMMER GOODS AT ZERO PRICES We must have room for fall goods which are arriving daily. BEGINN- ING FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, we place on sale all our ready made summer clothing for men, women and children at exactly half price. Ladies' and Children's dresses, skirts, corset covers, prin- cess slips, shire waists, silk waists, house dresses. under- wear, aprons and dozens of other garments which for lack .of space we cannot itemize. 'Men's shirts, trousers, union suits, two piece underwear, shirts, boy's blouses, trousers, shirts and underwear. All new goods. Not a \relic\ not a \wreck\ in the entire lot. Needless to say hurry. These will go like ice cream at a picnic. Coughlin Bros. & Co. Geyser, Montana. FARMERS' ELEVATORS ilmsinees 11111- hid detailed bank -it :dement will not Is m iNNE sor A COO Orel -IS the Money Olaf ket. j s..i p' - h.'rid , itspill - 4111 . d ill III07 the exch anges and the handling of but President Wilsou lint assured Iii,' leaders of these industries that A incr i a is libi-4011141 - 4y to handle the shills 4.1011 and that the inconveni('nces will be °lily temperary. The Aldei ich-Vreeleiol section of the bald:nig law has 1)(441 taken! aeltau)age of and an action of congress has the a...strattee of more thin,, a WI h.,n of COT r.-ncy to the eireelating turd *num of the Stales. Secreiar . ) Nk has held a rout:el-41hr with ih. New Nork bankers and return...el tit tilt' T s reaury p department to keep a Cleat' tab on the action of the currency of the c ount ry. A press diapatch from New York explaies the financial emelition of tl..- :stmitry ii follow*: financial posit' thi; eti1111- I iy, to all a1i1ear:1m,, Cu 5. 4111111 . 1`1•131111 het tsr tonight than. U11.1 the case 2 I hu or, ngn. Crontpt relief iii,':, -sires c situation which for e lim threatened to bereenter II hilt' it I* yet it,,, early to measure' elfect 'woe do n , 'tic attaie-: of the I p a 'stro. leill healal and ifs attendant embarrasment*. hankers w 110 1114 iiigl.t admitted the 1.1111.41k cc:,-. I rolle lllitt, rl 1001011 that II,'' e l trivel je . , l. - l. -, r1 , 1111,1 Mee lle t /111 ii' - '\ is lie SHOW oliilli )))) .11.1111. Skelt0I1 Wil ha illS, comptroller id the currency, who spent the day at the si l l terasury. and k.ept a close watch r the development. At the close of t le day 11r. 1Villiains said all was I he finances of the country. - he add - are in A tel'Ilellt ;111,1 thee r , no need fn. any 'me to There are im tinantial squalls iii .111 the eurreney lhat nee , - at Ibis lime is in eirenlalion. - here probable reser eas atteilier da:t s: .lie iii-.t,.r ut the ...tenors oft a Itt Ii • e vat 41f 1 , 111111rP11111 , 1% III. it • • ' Weer !MI Otto fon, Rata ''t Of her citic; thenii7tioni the ..soltry decided toissile Clearing lemec I ne-linin of 1Sn-elation ii, settlement of '1u-, ,s'siietioti a, ))))) tig batiks. Nlaity mil . 1.•o ttf dollar. of elliregelley Sled for by the .1 blrich-Vrisdand 1.1 , s, were shipp4 d Jo Nee l'Ork 1111,1 1 ,1 1111 when only a bare summaryDigF of the week- ri f S F zes or State ai r 1%' bank operations wits publielted, stock esehan Ae ge brokers llled dwn o From the 1914 Premium List. istmed for a long period of inactivity. for it by the Montana State Fair Board, it was 1!;e general opinion tied the market would seem that there are plenty of would lima risopened for several inducements for Montana farmres to weeks. Commission houses receiied in make their Iambi produce crops of the !joiriem which showed Iliere 'was a con- kind that are found only in Niontana, siderable druid' od J for ocks from in. the hest o the wrld both a., to quantity visitors. In time eases. it wee said, of- arc otTered. for the beat exhibits of (lie - (era were maple ratigieg from 1 to 3 many and various prodects oof Montana points higher thsn the footation.; pre. soil. There are several that ought to t si hi up it boiling ttelS all , pell , 112111 tentpt even the farmer 110 never tried Thursday night. -for a prize of any kind in his life. ,Elfoits were made to stop trannoc- I% The .Niontana State Pair Board is of- t' 111 St OAS IIN\ irresponsible private feting the largest find most valuable concerne, lllll lif which, taking advan• ipremitImsi,ever put up by state fair, sage of the esmictivion the exchange, .They arc going to give - away R. $1,400 elltleat'lleefl 10 Set. thernseltes up in butsi- automobile fo rthe best five sheaves of Hess. , ,wheat and. one bushel of wheat raised in Montana in 1914 ate! displayed at the CLACIERS OF GLACIER PARK State 1.'air. This is certainly something 'Float the het tields Itliwier Niles:10 worth trying for. Some of us would l'ark iticseet s: ins of the le.st ex: espies an whole 14it to enjoy the privilege of gliseicis now fon iid 1;,s. riding around th ecountry in a $1,400 ted Slate., is a stat.ensitt made by Mr. roadster whenever it happened to be W. Aleleue in Olph1.1 jus; .01Ir sweet will to do We hope that 1, y o f an , .•Tl i e !some of our progreeeive ranehers in h t tis have - , etting neignilieeilA will \get bomy\ aand submit alr • scenery?' says, N1 r. 11.1.11. 11111t will bring this car home eel - pissed in grandeur anywhcre. Madge RS we wouldn't mind bean invited for a joy ride in it O l ier a w hile. Aside from the automobile offered by the stale fair, I herr are n few it e nt9 in the list that an- eorthy of r than ordinary effort on the part of the exhibitors. The International Harvester Company of America is offering the sec- ond largest prize for farm Products. in a Wily in lip \n4en it Ii'M o• ight llllll dain reingc-. v 'fill fun) ne,- for in Ilia te ol t11 , inlet..sting . Eiji.* open to the tourist. \'There. are in the park abeut 93 small glaciers. ranging in size from Mad: ft I (111111•:er. W''.111 it eqiis re miles ..f doWil Iii 11111, I•S 11 feW ItereS in extent. yet exhibiting the ch:‘ , .arter i the form of a 3 1-4 inch Columle is is4 Of tille Ostlers. 'Mountain Wagon, fully equipped, 'value 'After 4•NallIlilli/1/Z 111. a- feat - $1:35.00. This wagon hip\ -a repiitation eaSily t Ili111 , elf, :IA le s I for quality and all 111'01111 , 1 arl vii -.'8114 is :leen the %alleys, the gmat rieews of a prize that ought In pro', quite pop. li-e Whie :4 ll ill 11 , -S eascaded fr om multi.,, v r, a eery fame can a rr always ue st Ite OM, behm. I hi. tipper rum ;IWO It, K orai a llVaillnge. 11 I'S. liked ci 1 7 6-••1 as tributaries from the ninny !ii.; \1.4 2 - in the. catalogue brainell %alley+ Rod '11,1 k 1 81141 is II. gi;ett W or for the hest i le imueittation he can sr.r. He se bushel of hard wheat, any tarn -4y, rais- tomintsie ealley...) from ' ow l .4 nne j ae h sa strs e y a sie stas , f a , & . s he l i e n r‘r ippon 1he herderine html I . e wen). le. I It'- cc might y N nirrous other special' prize's, the 1 u uphickile,z awa . i Ili , rock ribs of , vallie of which totals several thousand I!„. stimoillieg. grinding. end dollars, will also be g:ien in the 17 ili , .p the irregulariti , s and CAreeil- 1,4011: as °Whiled ill the 1911 Calmly flelll'is to b e spr e ad oil the 11113 beell Seill Old by Secretitty slant, below. Theo. glariere developed A .1. Breitenstein, of the lair. I