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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 01 Oct. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1915-10-01/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
visit a factory where implements were being manuftretrad „and were to find that thereto pretty iiii•titigik2ir ma- chinerf.anker. Sint I 4' , St - •‘ , 1 • VOL. 5. au* • .•7'11 44 -a n - •-'ert`. „ -‘4*:•.\ • ••••• ••N: \ • /. 0 64; - ?, • VOW- ei•-•*; \t ) 11 4 Ai S., • fah' \h• s s . GEYSER, MONT., OCT. 1, 1915 ATeio. , NO. 31 State Fair is the Best Last week marked the most sueceaaful year in the history of the Montana State Fair. Visitors from every nook and corner of the state came to Helena during the week, swelling the atten- dance to an appreciable increase over the big crowds of last year. The en- tries exceeded 1914 by 2,000 and the grain and stock exhibits were by far the finest ever shown in Montana. sur- passing any of the west. On Thursday over 20,000 people were on the grounds. Special trains were run from six Montana cities to the big- gest composite program ever offered in the northweat. State, sectional, nation- al and world's reeords were broken by famed auto drivers competing for $5,- 000 in prizes. DeLloyd Thompson sen- sationalized the throngs with his won - derful flights. Horse racing took place daily and between the other many events a nine act vaudeville program was run twice each day. Ever Held John Hiner of Reed Point, Sweet fuss County, was awarded the St ude• baker auto wh..ut priz. Misamila county won first prize as the emuity having the best exhibit of grain; Madi- son was declared champion producer of grasses and forage crops; Custer receiv- ed the blue ribbon for the best exhibit of vegetable s and root crops; cascade for the largest variety of product s. and Fergus 111.4 prize. for the best display and arrangement of any county exhibit. In the boys and girls contest, Eliza- beth Cooley of Bozeman took the gold medal in the pea canning contest; Al- pert Pahrmann of Miles City for Dn. hest coni and Frank Kohltetibaner of :limeade county for the hest potatoea. Montana herds in competition with live stock from states as far east as the Great Lakes and as far west as he Pacific brought the lion's share of blue ribbons. MEASURED TO FIT wan who was short of good horses to Comparisons between the farm and \push into the collar\ at the proper the factory are frequently trite and I time. Equally unfortunate is the man who not always fair. Yet if we were to feeds extra loll sea MIA Otitis s I/ Asa their heads oil . wit limit get an adequate return in labor for then keep. Frequently the lack of siillieient \'Could you be happy with horse power should be met mit by to like me?' an old banker quavere, reasing the number of head on Di. a white beach. in, hut by inerea sing the ellivieney. \'Yes perhaps,\ the girl answerer -,„ tt .\ 1 „, o rpath . on innoi. It ttjtyc:: .5 ' 4 1-4,4o much like you.'\ ' amal team of large, well -t ra Med 1l ql 13 ' 4 . 04 1 2 r. _ that has to, see I PL ES t Evi- r y- _„, ke a power plant. , , I horse.' can frequently do the WI)light - weigt IL poorly fed i mi,,,, Ree aism'otxxlunt ?.1121-11 Many OgleCt Thee Perf\it , r 1 Yha Free. st and mules for . '. If You ea . e -broken horses of the type so ye ' kept for farm work. in fact w 14..4„.• air.). to improvieig t lie (anti in f.* . Cutirtntwzthi t oi e Y ma6 0401 \\ v power better horses rot her than w ,74.1 elml. ' i •tWilt - fa b t 4o g made'-„ to more of thent,,Oa usually the greatest . . carry on the work for which one or need. -Farmer and Stockman. more additional teams are needed. To attempt farming operations a year such as this one, where all possible haste to be made and a large amount of work performed' when weather conditions permitted, was no easy matter for the SENATOR FAVORS EXHIBIT That an agricultural exhibit ion in the lobby 111 every post otlice is a great trawing card and is of great adva tit tig.• to a city or town is the belief ot Senator Robert .L Owen, who is ad- vocating swill an exhibition tor the - Muskogee post office. 'II..' OH ti ittis beell adopted by Post. master Emmett Howard, Porter Okla., and lois been found to be a very at• traglise display. In the lobby of his postoffice aie samples ill vi beat , - oats, core, IHA la lia and other Okla - it,. hilt product s. Stranger; era( ring t lie post office see t he display HMI lire amazed at the wide variety of product s may be successfully graia it in Ok la /roma. In adalit I,. being an liii raction to atrangers. I he ideit is also educational to resideots of the city or town who do not hat,' t he opportunity of going into the country to see farm life for them - seises. Senator Owen believes. In the colleet ion and lust a notion of his exhibit. Post 111114er Howard was aided by the (Imlay agricultural agent and Si oator OWetl is of the opin- ion that similar cosopera ion bet ween Postinasteis and eorinty agents all over rhe State. a nit in MilsItogis• Count y Ill parti,ailar. email be to t he Ma- terial adsantage of both farmers all. ..itizens of towns and (it ies.--Musko. gee Daily Phoenix, DISTANCE WHEAT IS HAULED lii alinnesola the a a orage ilist a tits.. (It tIlle• from market s is 5 1 utiles; it Iowa 4 1 -2 miles t ii. South1 Dakota miles s aga inst 7 miles in North link ot a. On the average earth road the cost liatiliog is 23 cents a ton per mile, 01 About ItI.h tt, ma rket It load Ii miles a, igainst $3.:t5 to haul six miles. Tle 'voyage load of whew! hauled in Nortl Da ki ta is Mal bushels as aoa i»st 49 it \l ill s,itiu. WII 511ington and California ;ire the only states in whieh the loath iverage as large or larger than ii \oith Dakota. If one man had market a 11 the ii heat raised in Nl lii Dako Id iii POII t itOlilli 113 Id kell hiji ST17,11/51 (111. I -.I I ,‘. 1 , 1 It ‘V11111.11 his,' 1 a kl 11 1 111..11 one lit' Farmer. Farmer. YOU WILL LIKE OUR CLOTHE5 You can't help but like our clothes. 1st. because they will please your eyes. 2nd. They will fit you. 3rd. The style will be nifty. 4th. They will Wear well, because they are made right, out of the right sort of all -wool stuff, made in Malone. 5th. Our price won't be high. Come in; you will bo busi- ness with us. FOREVER! Because \Wallie\ buys in large quantities for his four stores t liat,!s why he buys for less and WE SELL FOR LESS. Everything in hardware, harness, beds, matresses and springs Kennedy -McConkey Company The Quality Store. Jack Logan is in Again Jail( Logan, recent ly of the state pen- tentialy at Deer Lodge Rad previously if this 'stunt y, made his re•appearanas it the county jail yesterday afternool, viten sas brought here from Whit, lulplon Sin ings by Deputy Sheriff C N•nnis following his arrest hi that dace cletigeit with the theft of a horst nd saddle from William Kernaglian at :pion hop last Thursday night. Until Deputy Sheriff Dennis reecho, Nhite Sulphur Springs it was not Zll(tti Ii th.rt Imgan was the man arreet al for Dies offense and until his retrial :ere yoaterilay it was not gencrtilly nown that Logan was out of the pen tentiary to which he had been sentenc , d about IS months ago for a term o ye years. The liorae and saddle as stolen fron he stohle of William Kernaghan las liras...lay night HMI as Logan had not -oen seen about that place or, in fact fly whet place in this part of th ountiv. he did not come under siispicioi f ha%ing been connected with the at air. Sheriff Eomers was in of th heft arid he notified officers in °t he eetions wit h the restilt that on thi• ollow log day the horse Was ft.11111t1 ill 'hit,' Salphur Spring , ' and the Mon ill vlhose posseosion it was located was 'laced under arrest by the sheriff of leaguer county. The horse was brought back and it vas learned that Logan was the mar vho hail taken it. Ile stated that In lad appeared at SMon Kop last Thurs 'ay night and that he took the hum rein Kernaghan's stabhs merely to rid, ver the mountains to 1V1iite Stallion ...lpiimgs to e, , e Joe Kernaghan in that dare. Ile said be left a note in Wil iain Keinaellian'a saloon telling him of acting taken the horse hut that he pre limed Howard Rickert. who was in th• aloon, had deStrOVed it so that Kerna- n never received it. -Great Falls Tribune. Later reports on the above affair ar the effect that the stories are not ,olding very good and that Mr. Ker- naghan was going to prosecute with a ,, , ogence. OIL STRIKE NEAR DENTON The folloing taken from the Dentor llecorder_ refers to a former GeySel !adies* ranch. Mrs. Paul Sibrieber tIis Nora Byrne, daughter of M. Byrne aid if their oil find ii imam( v to :P,S$ till ser fri o nda of this worthy pair old(' be I be first to offer congratiila- 1 f.. Newbury has been iii lling ..-11 for Paul Schtieber on Ilk Touch ',Hot n mile arid o lIlli northwest of 0114 I day last week a lamp of - threw (Iii- astir t went ?; live feet it of the well. When it receded one II I he Newbury boo - s lit a piece of paper aid dropped it in the well. There was lii intinediate explosion and a flame of iro shirt (lilt of Ihe well goi»g about II! feet high. A ma tch Olin now be wicked to he well and there is HI- , ily4 enough gas to ignite. 'The water ti 'iight up with the slush buckets slimy onsolerable oil floating on top of the er. Mr. Sehrieber Rays t hat he was 'III tile to get waiter in sufficient apia. 11 - it ies for a long tirpri•, hut that it he in't get. water end and gets oil instead. hat he will not care a rap. This is not the first instance where have shown signs of oil, and it .-em to be an assured fact that there s a large guard ity of oil to be found i mind Denton, o11i1 wi. ma y vet has'. an idetioise that will hi t liowatols of to Delo on. it t lu, Ill iiret killi 111}1( . 111111 . 1 V is gibed 11 lietidiN /I pea I 1.1,111 may he 4,Itta Med t here Is eVelV e1SI111 to believe that MI will be found li•.re in large quantities. belived to be a conservative estimate \that the gross number of migatory game birds of all kinds existing to -day m the United States \lova not exceed in per cent of the number which ex i steal here 75 years ago. The ileerease lills been especially rapid during the last 25 years. During this period some species have become extint, while oth- oai are nearly so. Thought ful sport smen and others in - crested in our wild life base long tea 1 zed the impossibility of saving what vas left of this great national asset by tat t' tier . rapid progress of our vaterfowl toward ext Met ion Mader , tate laws was WO Ole. ion& To save he dwholling remnant, in 1913, the Fed - 'al migratory bird law was enacted. lie law hiss Ill e11 * been in etTeet about wo years anal int ext ended inquiry bils '4.11 made hy the Biological Sit ey hii o its effect on migratory birds. A arge number of reports from State rand tiederal game officers and private indi- iduals in nearly all of the States of the inion have been reeeived. The replies ropi a 'small number of states have well doubtful. usually owing to a lack ,f definite information on the subject. From 40 of the States, esti ndine from Janie to California and from the Gulf totes to the Canadian border, is gay - n !mann peach a tile evidence for all ilielefige ill WITteTiIIW dill - Mg the short period the law liaa been .4 buckle in effeet. 'The increase eoin ))))) nly I .1,11 r - kle oversirres _ ,:tated, according to the hicility. to Ire front 10 to several hundred jper cent , mnd unlinks such important species as mallards, black Ilia MIMS, widgeon sprigtails, blue -winged teal, green -iv ing- t•il teal, wood ducks, can vas shucks, Canada geese and swans. El) PEPS PI- I LOSOPHY \The inn stitit the reptt - b.tiort as oc)(1 mix- er' 6st - i1 - ti Rig to tend to the reOttlarjob. The importance of our wild fowl 'is it national asset is evident when their great aggregate value is . rile State of Ma hie estimates the aro- ma' income from its game resources at i13;000,00*, of which about F. oar vent ar $650,000. can safely be allotted to the returns from migratory wild fowl. Ore- gon values the annual returnes flog' Oa mine resources at $5.1100,000. Of this amount about $1,000,060 may- be at to migratory wild f OW 1. It is evident that the actual annual re- turns from this source in the several States rilleil a VI • ry large Ii intutuiut. and the value of this resouree tii the na tion amounts TO IilitillredS 1 of 'tonere. The benefits of the inigrat on bird 'air 1/1 co»serving Mid inerea vim ri a, life of the country is not confined - iolely to tire game - bird. This law al. , protects at all timea throughout th, .'nited States our in sect i vori ins birils xhich inhabit every st art e. bureau Entomology hos est ima la al 11111 iti -wet s iiIjhil e ogricultirre tool farm pro ducts to the amount of $6.:2,4145t,4000 flu - our. Ily. When it is considered that in sect ii orons birds con st tinthy prey upoi and devour myriads of injairiants insect tfirciughoul t he country, the ex. value of these biota ill manila Ming t In balance of nature anal in limit Mg th- increase of our illSeet of MI told value. YOU CAN 11EI,P MOVE WHEisi CROP Ifelelia, \loot.. S1 - 1/1 . 1 . 10 I III/ ship pros and receivers of freight It has liven our evp •rieriee eai h yea. (hiring 1 he full mom hs t hat t lie rail vcay les 1111 Ve Ileeti II 11:1 ble III slip ply the hit pat t Itillt1 I I: for I he now, einciit of ptzuiii mi 1 The pill - re ., of this let ter i- to till at tent ion to the fact that from pc.• sent inilicot ions this sea son will not lie aii exception ITI this respect. i n f ai t i l .• 1 -, will be an eXcept ' HMS Ily lieS1 vy I 11111 I, move doling the next tew month , 4' , led ve II he V.11/ 11 . 1 • .1 11 , 1 1 II , I pal 1 ,111S ely I111 /- - 1 -.1 1 , 1 .t,'lit 1 111 : 11,1,11 /.1•1111 - 11..1 .. 1 11 11 , 1 1 111 4 1•1 1.11 11 1 t ea r shot tags% It t he shippers a 1 . 1S /•1 .4 Iii Hid Ilt ir .• Ill 11(0111 111i1 (1111/ 1 :i 11.1 11 111 , 1 1,1111(/ill 1 . ,1 the SITUttdre II eiltlaidlIelit nIl Iheti . GAME BIRDS KILLED OFF by be agguavateul.. --hipper go For migatory waterfowl. f re consignee is airged III his, 1111 Me it: ' tient ed the t7nited i Stet es in enormous the releai sang of aml it i, eviov•iallx no !Omni, find the supply appeared to urged t hat any cool oil shipment s thin Is' iuiexhausl ble., lharing the last 75 n lie 111/1111. n.m.rather than ,lefi•rie., t (SUS, howe ver. the ;Tomtit of poptilo - tint il the sit oaf ion is more erit t ion and the ‘.a4t ille11 . 11 , e ill tile 1111 III het Hid Ile Tietlyeil. Hid al hunters, combined wit It grea I ly am- mores while 1111 siipply i S coin pa ra t iv e proved firearms and all extraordinary ly en , y, will ralie‘e the inevitable mer111141. ill the fit (sill' ieS for III phi traria- port flu 1011 to the noel( remote haunt v wild life, have resolted In an appall ing reduction in their numbers- It is osershocs_ M en's reckinaws_ Nlen's heavy pants. Sheep lined coats Boy's mittens. Boy's overalls Men's overalls $2.25 _ 1.00 2.00 1.50 4.00 .50 .40 .75 4.00 $500 hoes for Golden Rule Store C, R. .101INtiON„ilanater. be . °ASH red. The coal movement in (his State is a very important item, but if procrastinated, it is bound to deprive the grain industry of the cars that st tie furnished for that business during the fall and ea/ ly winter months. Suggestions 1. Platee order for ci. ut with the statimi itgellt ill 2. Load ears 1.1 (inapt ly awl to full ea [mei y. 3. Not if 1h.' agent a s -moo IIS car Is ready tO 11101e, II talke ad- vantage of the liii I free time allowed under the rules for loading - or 111110iiir - 4. See I huiI sufficient gratin or other isnot iiiii lit ies 1111 11311 , 1 to 103111 the car as soon lit it is phossi. :ii. Do mit ie. , cal s for storage and ilii not 111111 . 1. 1/(111 . (•• fol' more ea I'S than Ate 10.01111 ely lieedist. it'. hill' Commission, W. It, Ithodes. See, MONTANA'S BIG YIELD \The pre.idirit of tile 41, , qt I North- - III railroad. 1ii - I1 king recent ly at t iireat Falls st a ii il 1 hat his line alone would haul 1 111 of N1i,n1“11:1 ibis ye a r ! w i li ly. i•iglit millions or laishels of gt ai in. This almost 1111,1 1 . -. 1 Ill' 1 1 , 101 y114/1 W111111 1.11 , 0 goiei omen, est inia t es for 1 he entire -t ate i it Mimi a ii.i. The t . 1 ,• La t •s u rtl i ,ii. /i leis evact I 11 1 . 111 111a/ 1 , 111 CPI the .411111 .. 1 t i oil t heir esl 101. 1' led:: sd lely be 1..011- .61,1..4 as correct . It i- , , therefore, pull u' sit fe Ii , COW' 11111.` t hat the entire 1i It' it Ill produce into c t ha n double III' trimiont of grain lila al est !mated bv Ii,' To it eIll merit . a nil v.. ill ...• hi it tiourei a l , ill Oa, ..1./w , ...1 Hp a ..., h. ii ; (IL, II • iffi).,1 I 111111 l• :1111.'11 1 li. • lAt '.9 A grain -ttiL i ot Ili- Union. a ‘ery eliiv Li ble a 11/1 1110. 1 1 .11 .. .1 1 . 1•11 11131 1:. Pecilele die -At/ 15 I,, be' Ile% /` 01' st ories of Iii,' hio. ', olds that ii.' S1•11 1 1111 1 311010 M1•11 1 .1 11.1. ..1 111 . V 1 11 ///k i 1 / 1 41 shun A a 1 1/ tome to s. 11 t ha ri the i esaill of ...lief AI:. (*lull- elided slat - ist ws, but ea. la y ,-u u. :1-/ !iglu vs 1 . ) ete M tall:ma ;!...I I 11 1 0 Ito' p.uveriinielit i0 pmts. and :Ir.. Filtd MAilidy. lit , ' - '' filldS a 11.1 t hell' en ert ill I he iit I ttitd, of I housands vile. :lie 11 A , 1, mg for homes And IA did I\ le. -.111 1, 01:1 1 Ill1 y are go- i ng to the i 11...111 -pot o 111 he '1, - ill ill lilt' ilit•I 1 , :i...e id 1. \ [WI 111101 , 1. 1 . 11r , riii 1'31E1111- i/evil 'MI IOW gill.. It See Ills t'. It - IT els N, 101 V1 11 1 $ 03111 , ' Iii : '1 11 1 /11 1:1 31.1 I,, make wise plan to .0,iii e„,, if , • • unit: : .. 1 . 11-1 111,110 - ( ,,lit (If Ill' // /311 , 1 (a 1 /111 - I1111/ to en II be aene nitiii,iit an . , ! I 11 / ,, 11. 1 1 1. i 1111 1 1. , ' 111011 1.1 ( but of the sal., ot their prose, and in fact better aersiszo ean lands. - ' ..., ......,_....