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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 14 May 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1915-05-14/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
DINING C'AR\ CHEFS PREFER at BAKING POWDER Those who have had cakes ruined by jarring the stove, slamming the oven door Or a heavy footstep, may have wondered how the dining car chef can turn out such marvelous biscuits, hot breads ad pastry when his oven is being incessantly jarred and jolted and shaken by the motion of the train. To get pastry to raise, and stay raised under these con- ditions, a baking powder must be used that continues to give off its leavening gas—that sustains the rail;e—until the dough is baked through. 4 M 111. - we Fs Te4 , 4 le T' Dining Car Chefs have found a baking powder exactly suited to their needs in K C and you will find it just as well suited to your requirements. K C is really a blend of two baking powders, one active as soon as moistened, the other requiring both mois- ture and heat to start thegeneration of leavening gas. No matter how moist and rich you make your cake, K C Baking Powder will Sustain the raise until a crust is formed and all danger of falling is past. K C Bakfng Powder is pure and healthful. it is guaranteed under all pure food laws, and is guaranteed to please you. And it is sold at a reasonable price -no baking powder should sell for more. st Try a can at our risk and be convinced. SUBJECT FOR BILL NYE'S WIT ALMOST MADE HIM MISS IT - --- Humorist Made Bright Verse Out of Of Course Wife Was to Blame Question Theatrical People Come cause Opportunity Nearly to Dread. Away From the Man. Anybody connected with the amuse- Opportunity knocked mice at the meld world will tell you that the dead' titan's door and iii, it to knock a hest and most maddening question is. third time alien the iii (it' was hurried - \Where do you go from In' re?' Bill ly opened by a woman. Nye, touring the country with James \Where is the man?\ said Dimortu. Whitcomb Riley. had a great many nits. \Come! I've no time to lose.\ one-night stands to visit. and came to '•You're the very one he's looking suffer acutely through the insistent for,\ said the - 'LP'S OC- reliPliti011 fit Ibis boob 011ory. At last cu pod.'' he wrote the appended verse. which, \You're his Wife, aren't you. Tell It is believed. never found life in him to coin,' \ print: \Where ilo you go from here?\ asks the landlord of our howl_ And -Where do you go from here?\ asks the boy who answers the bell, And \Where do you go from here?\ Oh! Lord, and \Where do iii o from her e?\ 'Pill in fancy we stand at I he last (.otit- mond. quaking with Slifilb.11 tear, And St. Peter says, \Oh bin.it. )irut go trom here?\ Among the Wounded. It happened at t'lirist's church dis- pensary. The littk. fellow hail a bail- 1y - dislocated thumb. Ile was only - nine ) cars old, but It, was bray,', and Seareily winced as I hi. doctor pulled and hauled to get it back into posi- tion. \Veil have you back ili Ii 'riches soon.\ said ilie•doctor. low do you stand Oil this war, anyway?\ i \Ilow do vim Vint; I stand?\ said the boy a Belgian.\ -flow did yon dislocaie your thumb?\ asked the doctor somewhat z. ba shed. \.Swingin4 on a German kal, but gee!\ --a grin of delight overspread his 4 ountenatice - - you just °light to see hini!\- New York Evening Post. He's Got It. \Doctor Fin afraid I've an attack or spring fever and ague.\ \Indeed? flow does it affect you?\ \My temperature goes up whet: I Be. Got \lie won't believe think I'm mistaken. I I ell think you are soiticone else.\ \That isn't my fault. I've done lily duty Good -day.\ \Oh please dOrCt go. HI try to convince him (five me a Hole inn...\ .1ust at this moment tlw man ensiled Gill and grabbed Opportunity. Then Ill' turned roughly to his wife. \Why didn't you let me know she was knocking?\ he said. \Why. she almost got away. Just you!\ - I fi BABY LOVES HIS BATH I'll tell him who you ar.. With Cuticura Soap Because So Sooth. ing When His Skin Is Hot. These fragrant superereamy emol- : Bents are a comfort 'to children. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Oint- ment to soothe and heal rashes, itch ings, chafings. etc. Nothing more ef- fective. May be used from the hour of birth, with absolute cenfideece. Sample each free by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cetiesra, Dept. :SY. Boston. Sold evers - shere.-Adv. Heir Not a Gale. The guide suddonly halted the party of Americans. \Ali there comes the heir to the throne, - he said, renioving his hat as ti royal equipage appeared. The little boy of the party nudged his mother and whispered: start fcr business, and when t get \Did he (sae off his hat for fear the there I feel like shaking work.\ air would blow it off?\ Proof. Will -So you think she loves you? Ned --01 course! She accepts everything I give her! Judge. It is easy to size up egotism that is rot causing Mir own Shill, I to bldg.' While tiw average man would like to be ahead, he is pretty well satisfied it he catches up. Every man knows how different he would act if he were some other 'nth - Canada is Ca11inYou to her RichWheat ads 'She extends to Americans a hearty in- vitation to settle on her FREE Home- stead lands of 160 acres each or secure some of the low priced lands in Mani- toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. This year wheat is higher but Canadian land just as cheap. so the opportunity is more attractive than ever. Canada wants you to help to feed the world by tilling some of her soil -land similar to that which during many years has averaged 20 to 45 t bushels of wheat to the acre. Think what you can make with wheat around $1 a bushel and land so easy to get. Wonderful yields also of (s Oats. Barley and Flax. Mixed farming 0. ) , ts is fully as profitable an industry as grain gr E rRE t .... growing. it . f..i.. 411. The Government this year is asking farmers to put increased acreage into iats grain. Military service is not com- pulsory in Canada but there is a great demand for farm labor to replace the many young men who have volunteered for service. The climate is healthful and agreeable, railway facilities excellent, good schools and churches convenient. Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to W. E. Blsek Clifford Bleck, Creed Forks, N. D Dui. Davies, 1.6,Dusa RM., Great Falls, Meet. Canadian Government Agents. GEYSER JUDITI-I BASIN TIMES [RAISING DRAFT HORSES IS PROFITABLE Richelieu, Prize -Winning Belgian \Thge is nothing more profitable to the average farmer than the raising of a few good draft horses,\ says Dr. C. W. aleCampbell. secretary of the state live stock registry board, \pro- vided he has plenty of Pasture and ac- cess to a good stallion.\ If a good stallion is not standing for service in a community, the wan who has at least five or six good farm mares can afford to own his own stal- lion and use him as a work horse. A coming two -year -old stallion can be bought for approximately $400 and, taken in hand at this age, he makes an excellent work horse. The raising of draft horses is differ- ent from that of any other live stock on the farm. Important factors are good food and attention. Good breed- ing gives the possibilities, but good feeding is necessary to bring this out to its fullest extent. It is better tor the man of limited means, believes Doctor McCampbell, to raise horses only as a by-product, because the exclusive raising of draft horses for market requires consider- , able capital. The returns at first are slow, for draft horses must be six years old before they are ready for market. The man who has other cash crops to meet his expenses can afford to wait for the returns from his young draft horses. A few good brood mares on the or - Stallion at New York State Fair. dissry farm if bred to a good stallion should produee several good colts every year, besides doing the ordinary farm work. To secure the best results th.• brood mare that does the farm work must be given the best of care mai attention. The use of silage as a horse feed still is a debated question. Some horsemen have used it successfully and ethers have had disastrous results. All silage fed to horses should be seeet and fresh. Moldy or spoiled silage also is an unsafe feed for horses because of the danger of caus- ing colic. The silage should be made of fairly Mature cro:..s. and it should be stored in the silo properly. If you don't speak to the horse ev- ery time you pass behind his heels, you may wake up some morning with a skinned head or a - broken bone. When a horse hears a racket behind him, sometimes he doesn't wait to see what it is, but whacks away at it with both feet. Be careful with the colt you are breaking this spring. Don't try to do it all in one day; If you do you may not only break hir to WOt k, bet you may break his heart as well. Get hint used to pulling gradually. It isn't reasonable tia expect a colt to go out in the field hitched to a disk or plow and do as much as the old seasoned horse. EASIER TO PREVENT , ATTENTION NEEDED THAN TO CURE ROW ) ; BY A SHEEP FLOCK Most Satisfactory Method Em- ployed by Expert Poultrymen , of Treating Disease. lily J G. HALPIN, Exp. ri- nient Station.) An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. It's the old, old rule and it' works as well with poultry as with anything else. Prevention, expert poultrymen te;I us, is the most satisfactory method of treating soup Keep Fleeces Clean and Free From Burs—Furnish Plenty of Good, Fresh Water. If it is worth while keeping a few sheep, it is worth while keeping good ones. Remove any members that may be ailing to a place where they can be well- cared for. Don't let the ram run doe n during the breeding season, and give him good care afterwards. Sheep require about the same pas' This annoying and wasteful disease turage acreage, weight for weight, as can be preveuted by keeping the pout- 'do cattle; sheep thrive on a shorter try house 'dry, well'ventilated anirlcblte:\; clean; by forcing the fowls to exercise on cold wet days in a deep litter of dry saes's; by breeding from strong vigorous birds: by feeding clean and wholesome feeds and by taking every precaution to keep the disease from the farm and flock. If any of the birds do develop soup or extremely bad colds, they should be removed from the flock and the houses disinfested with a coal -tar dis- infectant or a 5 per cent solution of carbolic acid. Unless the birds are valuable it is advisable to kill and bury all sick fowls. With all birds that are worth the time necessary to give them individual treatment, the following method will prove success- ful. Thoroughly clean tho nostril and eye of all the cheesy material that has collected. Inject into the nostril with a syringe a saturated solution of permanganate of potash and dust bo- ric acid Into the eye and nostril. This treatment must be followed several times a day until decided improve- ment is noticed when the permanga- nate of potash can be omitted. The boric acid should be continued until the nostrils are dry and all enlarge- ment of the eye has disappeared. it is not advisable t for most people to attempt to remove the mass that col- lects beneath the eye by an operation and if taken in time the other treat- ment will prove effective. The first symptom of soup Is a wa- tery discharge from the eye and a thin, yellow discharge from the nos- tril. The eye then becomes enlarged due to this material filling up the spaCe around the eye. When the first symptoms of a cold appear, begin using permanganate of potash in the drinking water. Make up a stock solution of the crystals and care of that after Intelligent pruning then pour enough of thls in the drink- has been done. When the fruit buds come very thick, most people take It as a sign of a big yield, but when fruit grows too thickly it must necessarily be very small. Experts have no conscience When It comes to thinning fruit. The way they pick off the huds-often destroy- ing four where they leave one ----1, enough to give an amateur the shivers Keep the sheep's fleece clean and free from burs, if you wish to get the top price of the market for your wool. The ago akwhich a ram ceases to be useful depeltds largely upon his inherent vigor, and the amount of service he has to do. Grain never gives such largo re- turns as a hen it is fed to young lambs. While it is advisable to see the sheep often while they aro on pasture, still it is not necessary to stay with them all the time; and good results may be obtained with plenty of good water, salt and feed, and a weekly visit, If the dogs do not trouble them. If, however, sheep -killing dogs are around, be on your guard with a good shotgun. A pen or creep should be so covered as to protect the grain from rains, and should have a trough in It, in which the grain should be kept all the time. The lambs will grow and thrive wonderfully, and when weaning -time comes, they may be taken away from the ewes without any setback at all. LET SUNLIGHT INTO THE ORCHARU TREES ing water every day to give It a vio- let or Wine color. Feed for Geese. Clover and alfalfa arb good for the geese when pasture is scarce and ducks will sometimes eat It when mixed with ground grain or cooked vegetables, but most like bran the best. It should be steamed or scalded. Nature Will Take Care of Shade After Intelligent Pruning I -12s Been Done. Cut (c..:t the U - .e1^1z; brush in your old trses astl give the sun a chance to reach ever,- part of them. Of ccurse the fruit must have more or less shade, but nature will take Push of the hoggish variety does not always promote lasting popularity. Drink Denlson's Coffee. Always pure and dela:Jou& lie who advertises for a wife may get what he advertises for, but lie sel- dom gets what 'le wanted. YOUR OWN DRIIIRIST WILL TELL YOU Try Hoene bye iteonedy for Rod, Weak, Watery Ryes and (Regulated Byelids,• No Smarting - Just Nye comfort. Write fur Book of the Nye by mail nee. Merino Nye Remedy Co-. Chicago. The Pessimist. Payton -A bachelor is a nian who has been crossed in love. Minneapolis, Minn. -\After my little Parker -Yes, and a married man has one was born I was sick with pains in ray sides which the doctors said were caused by inflamma- tion. I suffered a great deal every month and grew very thin. I was under the doctor's care for two long years without any benefit. Finally after repeated Sug- gestions to try it we got Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound. After tak- ing the third bottle of the Compound I ALLEN'S 1 , 00T-EAst: for the THOOPH was able to do my housework and today Over 100,000 packages ,-1 Allen'n Foot -Ease, the I am strong and healthy again. I will antineptii• being nsed p by the Geon owder to shake who Allied our Sill.troop ..S.:11 at e answer letters if anyone wishes to know ais and s the Front bevause it rests the feet, gives about my case.\ -Mrs. JOSEPH ASELIN, slant relief to ('or,,', and Bunions. hot, swollen :wiling, tender feet, and wakes walking easy. Sold everywhere. 2.5c. To It TODAY Don't accept any substitute. Ail*'. Ain AFTER SUFFERING TWO LONG YEARS Mrs. Aselin Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pink- ham'a Vegetable Compound. been double -crossed. -Life. DR. J. H. RINDLAUB (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Fargo, N. D. A Tale Often Told. \Society is just now afflicted with a new species of bore.\ - Still :Mother?\ \It's the young woman who tells everybody she meets how the war in Europe prevented her from finishing her musical education.\ Fathoms Deep. The boy yawned over his geography. \Ilow deep is the ocuan?\ he in- quired, pointing to Ow center of the Pacific. \Thousands of fathoms, my son - thousands.\ \Well how much is a fathom?\ \A fat 1101)1 is --Pr -1'r are you look- ing at the Pacific! Well, your Uncle Karl years ago was shipwrecked in the Pacific and the pirates cattle MD after him, and the cannibals but I'm too busy now to tell you the story. Run along to bed.\ 605 Fourth Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and today holds the record of being the most successful remedy we know for woman's ills. If you need such a medicine why don't you try it? If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia U. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound will help you.writo to Lydia C.Pinkliam MedieineCo. (confidential) Lynn,Mass., for ad. vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. FACE COVERED WITH Your Liver PIMPLES ALL HER LIFE Is Clogged Up Nov. 23, 191 -I: -\All my life my face That's Why You're Tired -Out of was covered completely with -Have No Appetite. a mass ' of pimplea, blackheads and blotches. I CARTER'S LITTLE spent a .ot of money on numerous LIVER PILLS remedies and treatments without sue' will put you right cess and no relief at all. I tried so in T a h fe e w y d da o ys. many things that I was afraid my case could not be cured. Resins.' ointment their duty and resinol soap seemed to do me good CureCon- stipation, right from the first. I used two jars Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick headache of resinol ointment amid sonic resinol SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. soap, the total cost being only $2.00, and this completely cured my case. Genuine must bear Signature My skin is without a blemish, and I am the possessor of a beautiful cons lex ion.\ (Signed) Mabel! Ayres, Stole Mountain, Va. All druggists sell resinol soap and resinol ointinents-Adv. It is a custom animus the itidnell Of Java 10 chew betel nuts, which dis- colors the teeth, giving them the look of black varnish. The trouble with most plinks is that they won't mirk. - Pimps) 11141.1 iiiiii 10/1110111111111111111 7.S a = t g 1 21 = _ MM. ALCOHOL -3 PER CENT AVegelable Preparation for As - similaling the Food and Regula- hag the Stomachs and Bowels of INFAN1S.'11111.DKI.N Promotes Digestion,Che,erFul- nessand Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral NOT NAR C OTIC Alva, .101,1 DrSANUE1 i9701fet Soso! ..rown• • draffArile Sails • As* Sea • er+overment • ii(orimaleleda•• iffritA Sled • ClerAd 8s•g•r• Kalyrrem rinvor A perfect Remedy for Constipa- tion ,Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms ,Convulsions .Feverish- ness and Loss OF SLEEP racSimiie Signature or THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK. AtO months . :old 35 DOSES —35c E rri• Exact Copy of Wrapper. Sorts s CARTERS si 1 PILLS. ITTLE IVER Best cash market -Handle poultry and Teat. Write for prive lint and (aim THE R. E. COBH COMPANY, 14 East 3rd Street, St. Paul, Minn. PATENTS ,..:1:7..%)F;..r.vIVInningroZ D.C. Advice and books ITS, alItAt rcasollet.le. Highest references. Besteertiout W. N. U., FARGO, NO. 20-1915. CASTOR _For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castkria Always Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA Y141 CIIINTAVI% COMPANY, tow Tons CITY. WORMS. \Wormy\, that's what's the matter of 'ern. Stomach and in- testinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. Cost you too much to feed 'em. Look bed --tire bad. Don't physic 'run to death. Spoke's Cure will remove the worms. Improve the appetite, and tone 'eta up all ronnd, and don't \physic.\ Acts on glands and blood. Tull directions with each bottle, and sold by all druggists- SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. _ DAISY FLY KILLER r,-- — acts sad kills all ales. Neat, °leas, or- namental, 0011 , 10111110te shoes. Lists all season. a aa• et metal, can't spIllor tip oesri will not soll or isjor• anythiag, thisraeteed ofroetivo. All d•sttorg orS soot oversee peol foe RAROLD 11011116, ISO Ds Salt Av... 111, W. Gosben. Ind.. U. S. A.