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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-8/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• GEYS1TI2 ITTI)ItIf uiStW Crowds on the Fun Zone at 'the Panama -Pacific International Exposition V AST crowds throng The Zone, the amusement and concessions sedIon of the Panama -Pacific Ir'erratIona/ Exposition at San Francisco. The Dayton Flood is shown on the ;eft. the Chinese Village Lau loyland Grown Up on the right_ The Exposition is breaking all world's attendance records. H. W. BRANT, M. D. Pr I YSICIAN AND SURGEOA GEYSER. MON7'. Office at Drug Sten. Roast Duck, Olive Sauce. ilfess, clean and truss two ducks; plr-e on rack in dripping pan. sprinkit salt and pepper and cover breas: wel- thin slice of fat salt pork; bake air - at one hour in a hot oven. Sauce. -Melt one and one -hall taW3spoons butter and stir until well brsrmed; add two tablespoonfuls flour, an; pour on gradually one and one -hall cuula brown stock; take ten pitted olives. rover with boiling water and ccr.'s five minutes; drain and add to saune; season with salt and pepper. FR EE LA N D Large Indian Reservation n north central Washingtrm to he opened. For lull part- cAlars, books, etc. send 25c in coin to F. Johnson & Co. 342 Realty Bldg., Spokane, Vk Ash. BEST WAY OF BREAKING SOC 5cme Difficulty Experienced In Turn leg Sod Up With Ordinary Plow - Sure of Good Crop. I have broken sod at different depthe Witt handled it in different ways and this Is the way I have found best: 1Irr•ak it as nearly eight inches deep Is possible. Now In breaking sod _lit inches deep, we find some dui% ulty in turning the sod bottom-sidl ii- a ith the ordinary plow. I take in1 breaking bottom and have extensions put on the moldboard and have those iittite.: sharply turned so that the sod is forced over and down, then I set the plows to cut so wide tat the under edge of the. sod lacks I.Lout an inch of being cut clear acloes, writes J. S. Murphy in Denver Field and Farm. This has the effect 01 steadying the furrow and holding it %there wanted until it is about to be turned down flat when the uncut holt is torn loose. I have turned sod so completely bat. ai.side up in this way that one couLi -Hive an automobile across it, going t..ri miles an hour and hardly get Jarred. Breaking stood up on edg :did kinked in every which way is not od workmanship, and it is almost ir.possible to work it down or keep 10e11 a field from drying out. I follow the breaker right up within the hour with a corrugated roller, weighted down with about 2.000 pounds of rock. and I follow the roller with a disk, having the disk well set over and not weighted. and disking as lightly as possible, only getting a mulch of not more than two inches. Then I fol- low the disk with a light harrow, and this tills up all the cracks between the furrows and a good mulch Is estab- lished. Land handled In this way. even in a medium dry year, is sure to produce a good crop of grain, de- pee.ling somewhat on the rainfall. However, if one can at all possibly afford it, 1 advise against putting in a crop the first year. By not planting you are dead sure to get a good crop the next year, assuming, -of course, that you have maintained the mulch, kept out the weeds and have done the necessary thing by frequent harrow' 111g. Also by not sowing a crop the first year. you will have driven down the moisture; and in a year of ordi- nary rainfall, you will have probably throri-forli gontprit of voldstUre GREEN 5 Fruit Grower IhePOULTRY1 - 1 tr. I 1,1 •415...e\ 1.1•41•• 140.1011 `Ttaq 5tys P,11.11,11 'OCTOIltR. 1104. sou FAlUti'r.. WO, 4\.1.4.4 , • ThE GINTEEKKAN • 6.t fir••• .1 Ill L Y 7=3:13MPIERZIaltalkw - Iggie • FriomE-- .r vomnsomsrvenmeth, $2.00 Our Paper and Any One of These aubs-$2.00 S EVERAL leading publishers of mat azines have joined with us in one or. the greatest subscription bar- gain offers ever put out in this country. Through this combination everybody will be able to get a yearly subscription to three im.gazaies in combination with our weekly paper at practically the price of our paper alone. 4j In this list you will find forty different periodicals formed into thirty-five different clubs. Each club has 3 magazines, excedt one Fpecial Club which has four magazines; some of these maga- zines sell for as much as $1 a year. They are all good and cover a lai - ge variety of choice reading matter, including History, Music, Religion, Edtr.ation, Fashions, Fancy . Needlework, Illustrated Current Events, Home Decorations, Fiction, Literature, Drama, Art, Science, Inventions, General Farming, Dairy Farming, Live Stock, Vegetables, Fruit and Poultry. • On account of the splendid contract we tifv,e made with the publishers ot these magazines, we are able to give our readers a choice of any one of the clubs in combination wit i our paper one year for $2.10. Jo.,-, 25.: more than the rice of our paper alone. This offer is made to everybody. It youhave r‘ever subscribed to our paper before. we ask you to hike advantage of this z ffer. If you are a aohscriber to our paper we ask you to renew so that you trio, rosy get 3 niegazines extra. Lord: over the list IMO 'elect the clue. ,.-..• ke best. Send your order today or give your order to our represe:.tative or call at our off...e when in town. If you are now a subecrlber to any of these magazines a .el want to renew just send your order to us and we will have your suhscript . on extended. If your subscription ',0 OUT papei is pest duff, we advise you to pay up and take advantage of this bargain. If you are in the habit of buying your magazines through ot: er channels, we ask you to justly compare our clubs •nd prices with that of any other offer you receive. You, no doubt, are now a subscriber to sonic of these periodivals. You can save mane?: Ey sending your renewal order to us. Here is a chance to get your :,onni paper and • yearly supply ul good reading at a real bargain. If you want one or more of these magazines sent to different ...t ,:i esses. just mention it. TELL ALL YOUR FnIENUS AND NEIGHBORS ABOUT THIS BIG OFFER tritil No. 1 McCall's (with tree p•tterti) Farm Life Everyday Life LI.U11 No. 2 Woman's World Peoples Popular Monthly Cientiewoman CI.l'H No. 3 Hearth and Home Farm Lite Household Magarine CLUI1 No.4 American Woman Farm Life Household Guest C1.111 No. IS Today's (with free patieroi Farm Life Household Magazine C1.111 No. I Today's (with free petters) Everyday Lile Gentlewoman CILCH No. Fancywork Magazine hveryday Life Woman's World ci.t• n Na. S Farm and Fireside Woman's World Fiume Life CLIC II No. 9 Farm. and Home Woman's World Householl Guest C1.11 . 11 No. 10 Today's (with trze Woman's World Home Life CLUB No. 11 Good Stories Farm Life b.ver yday Life (3.1'11 No, IS Green's Fruit Ori..,:ff b.verynay Life Farm Life No. 13 Today's (with lice potter%) Prairie Farmer Household Mage_ine SI'itIAI. CIAI It Woman's World Homo Lied cI.t , flN,,. 1-5 People's Popular Monthly I arm Progress Woman's World C1.1 , 11 No. IS Poultry Item 1 oday's t with free pattern) Farnr Lilt C11.1 . 11 No. 10 Boy,' Magazine Horn •Lite Gentlewoman Cl.,C11 N... 17 Kimball's Dairy Fortner Horne 1.1(e Geritieworn in C. No. 114 y or t,.y• s I., • . tree pattern) Gesitlew.iroart hotne Lite C1.1.111 19 Succeseml Farming 1-1..me Ltfe hveryday Life C1.1•11 N... 20 farmer, Wile Home Life b.yeryday tile cm t . it N.1. 2 1 Happy Hours I- arm Life Gentlewoman Sante Price as Oilier. Poultry Item Perm Lilo CT.I'll N., Farm, Stock sad Horne Woman's World Home Life CLUB No. 23 Vegetable Grower Soda y's wit in tree vatteriai Everyday Life (t1.1'11 No. '2.1 Woman's World 1..rm 1 de 'f oda) &with free patte'r') (1.1 11 N... V. omen's Home Weekly Vi Sans WOild Hom, 1.11e C1.1 . 11 N.. 20 Fancywo.% , M.tt rye:ideas..., A II Tod.ty'a with free pattern) C1.11' /1 N... 27 Kansas City Weekly Star Lite Everyday Life C1.1'11 No. 28 Gentlewoman Woman's 13.'orlvi Horne Life 1111 - 11 No. 29 Kansas City Weekly Star Fievry:iiiy Lite Horde Lilo ULU 11 No. it, Southern Ruralist }tome Idle Gentlewoman CCU 11 N... !II F,.emee..01 Sly Di.pateli St. Paul his rue Life Farm Lite CLITI1 No 32 Rural Weekly (St. Paul) Leiiilewornan Everyday Life CLU II No. 33 American Home W World Gentlewoman C1.111 No. 31 McC,11's will !fee eerie, a/ 1•Vtri. d.1 V 1 ire Hotiarltold Guest • by not den the moisture In tne pro- duction of a crop, the green, damp sod, helped by the packing given will have rotted the subsoil down a good two inches, so that when backer: you can without the expenditure of much power, turn from two to three inches of subsoil. In the early days It was the custom to break in the spring and backset iii the fall. That method is foolish et the semiarid region. In a season of exceptionally large rainfall one migi , t have Indifferent success by backset• tint; in the fall; but In the average year you will be simply tumbling a lot of partially rotted clods around. Niy experience convinces me that our 804 should lay two whole summers and one winter, or. if the years are dry. two summers and two winters. Should circumstances force a settler to put In a crop the first year. he should be sure to disk the stubble the day he cuts the crop and disk it fairly deep. Flax takes no more substance from the soil than other crops and not so much as some crops; but, because its root system is so much different, the soil is apt to dry out more with flax than with most any other crop. The Ideal time for breaking is when the native grass IS growing the fastest, because it Ilk.,elten tenderest and the sod rots . the quickest. Dry farming Is a new systern of agriculture, con. structed ott the basis of the old prin• ciple, but . with the conservation of moisture as the heart and brain of the idea. The soil in a semiarid re- gion is apt to lack humus and land with much huntua Is capable of retain- ing and carrying much more moisture than land with little humus and you can maintain or restore humus in land by a proper system of crop rotation. There are Borne fourteen elements in our soil which must be kept up, but old Mother Nature, looks after eleven of those herself, leaving three for you to watch and look after -nitrogen, phosphorus and potash. _ CULTIVATION OF THE TOPSOIL Numerous investigations Demonstrate That Evaporation of Water Has Been Diminished. That the stirring or cultivation of the topsoil really does diminish evapo ration of water from the soil has been hown by numerous investigations le laC8 Nessler found that during all weeks of an ordinary German summer a stirred soil lost 510 grams of watet per square foot. while the adjoining compacted soil lost 100 grains -a saving due to cultivation of nearly 60 per cent. Wagner, testing the correct- ness of Nesaler's work0ound, in 1874, that cultivation rdnAliaffthe (-vapors 'don a little more tti0 . 60 per cent: Johnson, in 1878, confirmed the truth of the principle on Aqerican soils, and Levi Stockbridge, worlcing about the same time, also on Anterictia soils, found that cultivation 'diminished evaporation on a clay soil about 23 per cent, and on a heavy loam nearly 13 per cent. All the early work done on this sub. lect vas done under humid conditimut, anti it is only.in recent years that con Urination of this important principle has been obtained for the soils of the dry farm region. Fortier. working under California conditions, determined that cultivation reduced the evaporation from the soil mirface over 55 per cent. At the Utah station similar experi- ments have shown that the saving of soil moisture by clUtivation was 63 per rent for clay soil. 34 per cent for a coarse sand and 13 per cent for a clay. loam Further, practical experience has demonstrated time and time again that In cultivation the dry farmer has a powerful tneans of preventing evapo- ration from agricultural soils. RAISE PEANUTS ON DRY LAND FARMER RADFORD ON WOMAN SUFFRAGE The home is the greatest contribu Hon of women to the world, and the hearthstone is her throne. Our so dal structure is built around her, and social righteousness is In her charge. Her beautiful life lights the skies of hope and her refinement is the charm of twentieth century civilization. Het graces and her power are the cumu lative, products of generations of queenly conquest, and her crown of exalted womanhood is jeweled with the wisdom of saintly mothers. She has been a great factor In the glory of our country, and her noble achieve. ments should not be marred or het hallowed influence blighted by the coarser duties of citizenship. Ameri- can chivalry should never permit het to bear the burdens of defending and maintaining government, but should preserve her unsullied from the allied nfluences of politics, and protect her from the weighty responsibilities of the sordid affairs of life that will crush her ideals and IcoiNer her stand- ards. The motherhood of the farm is our Inspiration, she is the guardian of our domestic welfare and e guide to a higher life, but directing the af. fairs of government Is not within wo. man's sphere, and political gossip would Cause her te aeglect the botne, forget to mend our clothes and bury the biscuits. Whitening Floors. To whiten hardwood doors add two tablespoonfuls of paraffin to the hot soapy water used for washing the floor. This is an old remedy, but a good one, for it not only cleanses the boards, but also destroys any insects hat may be lurking in cracks of the !itt.t._ept at certain seasons of the ye:tt less time and attention need be glees sheep than almost any other ant. • • • 1!-•a minutes vigorous work with • ro:tgt. cloth on a horse's hide after a hart: day's work will do him a lot of goo:: • • • Z. - to see very' often lose their eye sigh- through dust and hay seed fall in . nt..) their eyes from the let. ab.r - ta. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. 1.and Office al Great Falls, Montana. March 2. 1915. Notice is hereby given that OSKAR HUHTANEN of f :eyser L\ lont. who, on August 14th 1911, made Homestead Entry Serial No. 022966, for Nj SW, NWX Sec. 3; SEX NEX an. 1.ots 1 2 and 3, Section 4, Township 18 N Range 10 East Montana MetAian, has filed notice of intention to make Three year Proof, to est:a:Ash claim to the land above described, before Reg- ister and Receiver, U.S. Land Office at Gleam Falls, Montana, on the 11th day of May 1915, Claimant names as witnesses; Andrew Solonen, Gust Uotila, John Wainio, and Leonard Ingrnann all of Geyser, Mont. R. N. Sutherlin, Register, 1st Publication April 2nd 1915. NOTICE FC R PUBLICA FION Department of the Interior, U. S. 1.and Offce at Great Falls, Montana Match 31 1915. Notice is hereby gi‘en that KATE L. GUTHRIE. of Geyser Mont., who, on August 14 1911 & January 8. 1915, made Origi- nal and Additional Homestead entries Sered. Nos, 022976 & 036207, for N ‘V. 'W'' W NW '4, Section 27: N SEX, NEX SW, Section 28; i,!•.; Sec. 28, Township 19 N., Range 11 E, Montana Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Three ye4r Proof, to establish claim to the land above discribed, before R. H. Bemis, U. S. Commissioner, at his office, at Belt, Mont. on the 15th day of May, 1915, Claimant names as witnesses; JulIus P Bain, of Knerville, And Frank R. Spencer, Michael Byrne Margaret E, Clendenan all of Gejser Mont. R. N. Sutherlin Register. 1st. Publication April 2 1915. Market Report [Corrected Fridays] he folloviing prices are in force at :h. !ocal elevator at the time of going to tress: N. , . 1 Northern wheat, per bu_ _$1.28 N.. 2 Northern, per bu. 1.26 \If , . 1 Montana Hard, per bu__ 1.24 N.:. 2 Montana Hard, per but.. 1.22 1:1.x. per bu 1.46 &ley, per cm 90c to 1.00 / S. per cwt 110 to 1.35 /11! Information from the LAND OFFICE m Plat:,- 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 Creat Falls, - Montana. General Blacksmith Horseshoeing Wagon and Carriage Repairing All Work Guaranteed Garrage and Auto Repairs. J. A. Sanders Geyser, Montana 4. • '1 -- 1i