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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 15 Oct. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1915-10-15/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
NAM , GEYSER jurmm BASIN TIMES' Are They Still Friends? TIP* young women present were di& inswing their get.. And one of the girls field: \it delft kanw what it is about my aPPOaran co, but everybody always guessee we a lot younger than I really anti' Mad another of the girls answered. oh, so Sweetir \Oh 'that's atter they have heard you talk, Isn't It, dear?\ Ontario's area Is 497.262 square valies. For a really fine coffee at a mod- erate price, drink Denison's Seminole Brand, 85e the lb., in sealed cans. Only one merchant in each town sells Seminole. If your grocer isn't the one, write the Denison Coffee t o.. Chicago, for a souvenir and the name of your Seminole dealer. Buy the 3 lb. Canister Can for $1.00. —Adv. A Religion With Him. ,\What is your father's religion?\ \Golf I guess. It'o the only thing he does on Sundays.\ The Kind You Have Always Bought. T 1118 is the caution applied to the public) announcement of Carstoria that has been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. II. Fletcher for over 80 years—the genuine Osstoria We respectfully call the attention of fathers and mothers when purchasing Castoria to fee that the wrapper bears his signature in black. When the wrapper is removed the Flame signature ap- orq both sides of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria tor pear little ones in the past years need no warning against counterfeits and imitatipns, but our present duty is to call the attention of the younger frener- ationah the great danger of introducing into their families spurious medicines. A is to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the nefarious business of putting up and Belling all sorts of substitutes, or what should more properly be termed counterfeits, for medicinal preparations not onl . for adults, but worse yet, for children's medicines. It therefore devolves on 3 e mother to scrutinize closely what she gives her child. Adults can do this ,1.pr themselves, but the child has t,o rely on the afrither's watchfulnesa. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of The Menu. \My friend Is a woodman.\ \Then why not order eltops?\—lial- timers American. The door of hope swings both ways. The General Says:— Roofs don't wear out—they dry out. When properly made they dry out very slowly and give the beat service. Certain -teed Roofing Made with a soft center asphalt and coated with a harder blend of asphalt, which keeps the spit saturation within—the life of the roofing—from drying out quickly. Guaianteed 5, 10 or 15 years according to ehicknew—guarantee backed by the largest Roofing and Building Paper Mills In the World. Sold in your.town at reasonable prices by Toot own dealer whom you know. General Booting Manufacturing Co. worm.. tamest an vfoet u nes of Roofing end Building /Were Zark a a w akage PlitadelpUa Si. Leith Pitt,è,r5h Derek Saa Frieda* 'CleidawatiNseip.li. Caws aty Seattle Adria Newts. Leaden Hankers Wee, WRITE US ABOUT OUR FACTORY DIANos REBUILT A Prices From $100 Up THE SAVING IS ABOUT HALF These pianos are sold to you under our personal guarantee of being exactly as tli nted. They are instruments tsrIn exchange, returned from rent- ing, eta., and ha% e been thoroughly ren- oysted and rebuilt la our own work- rooms. Borne almost like new. Our 85 years of square dealing protects you against misrepresentation. Write or cell, department D. METROPOLITAN MUSIC CO. IIIUNNEAPOLLS Reirresentatives Steinway.lves & Pond, Lothnte and Strohber Pianos VEAL, POULTRY AND EGGS WANTED We pay blithest reek price.. Slap today or art to for teas and prices. Wisconsin 4Dairy Oo.. *1.58 East Third Street, ht. linui. CRA A 0 ENT'S-Smarty SC003 0 Large m an n facia re r ci Jihmilkerinhii sae Deno Wed*, .t... wishes re present•il e In eachlocatity. Vector? to consumer. His profits, 4oneet gonna, vilo or spare time. Credit siren. II he inelleirin Mengel 5fu.O5.411111aia 84..Benoldls,11.1. PATENTS Watson R.Oeslestais,wsah I ngton , D.C. Books Iree t 1 serelerecioes. Beet Fargo Directory WE TEST YOUR EYES .. 10 For over 30 rears we have been the leading Opticians and Jewelers of North Dakota. We keep trained men who - know how\ to test your eyes. illESCADVIC CO., 72 Roadway, Farm N. D. Phu 696 MAKE YOUR TIME WORTH MONEY Write for information to 'Fargo Auto & Gas Engine School 1228 Front St Farto, N. D. and Temnrsaucceatfully treated without knife or plum All work guaranteed. Come, or write for Free Rook I , DR.WIIIIAMS SANATORIUM' , ON Csiversity Av.. M inn,. p•Vis, Minn. 4 I EVIDENTLY NOT AN ARTIST Judging From Comment, Bilkins Had a Good Deal to Learn About Photography. Young Bilkins is an enthusiastic de- votee of amateur photography. He al• ways insists upon \taking\ hia family and friends posed in more or less ar- tistic attitudes. Not long ago there was an exhibi- tion of the work of a local photograph- ic club to which the young fellow be- longs, and where were displayed the results of certain of his efforts to im- mortalize his family and friends. In one corner hurt; a group of figures twisted into the most extraordinary positions, the general effect being that of persons in various stages of par- alysis. \Who In the world are those queer - looking people?\ asked someone. \Oh those are sonic of Bilkina' strained relations.\ said a bystander. Warrior of Today, George Wharton Pepper said at a luncheon at the Pittsburgh training camp for officers: \The methods of warfare have changed enormously in the past year. The sword, for example, is no longer carried. The sword has quite disap- peared from war. \A story comes from the Argonne about a French chasseur who took a German officer prisoner. The ch- at a boy, a tyro, said to the officer: \ 'Give up your sword.' \ \But the oflicer shook his head and answered: \ 'I have no sword to give up. Bur wcn't my vitriol spray, my oil projec- tor or my gas cylinder do as well.? ' Implement Generally Used. \Sir we are starting a new railroad and want your daughter to drive the first spike.\ \I have no rigebt she will consider it an honor to officiate.\ \Thank you. We have provided a small gold spike. Also a silver ham- mer.\ \One minute. I don't think she could drive a spike with R hammer Better provide a hair brush.\ Paw Still on the Job. Little Lemuel—What'a a hook -worm, paw? Paw—It's a worm that would rather digest a book by eating it than by read- ing it. If you are able to appear indifferent the man who wants to sell you his dog filially will glve him to you. Readers of this paper desiring to huy -anything advertised in its col- I , arum should insiit upon having what they I for,rafiwingallBOA itotesor imitations _ W, -N, U., FARGO, NO. 42-191f., Assisting Ambition Men of ambition—with the desire to forge ahead—need revitalizing food to help them to compel success. Grape -Nuts is a success food. It is made from whole wheat and malted barley and, pound for pound, contains far more \go and get there\ than ordinary Foods. It retains all the nutriment of the grains, including their natural mineral salts— Phos- phate of Potash, etc., often lacking in ordinary food, but essential to thorough upbuild- ing of sinew, brain and nerves. Grape -Nuts is partially pre- digested and agrees with all. It's the ideal vigor -food for child and adult. \ There's a Reason \ Sold by Grocers everywhere. IMPORTANT FACTORS IN SEED SELECTION Hang Corn So the Air Will Circulate Freely Around Every Ear. (By C. F. 13ULI, ;mod L. H. ROBISINS In case one has no \special seed plot,\ in which his best and earliest maturing ears were planted, it is then necessary that his seed corn be se- lected from the field. The most prac- tical method to do this is to go through the field with a sack tied across one's shoulder and select the choicest and best -matured ears. Two rows of corn may easily be examined at once. During the process of selec- tion, consideration of the strength and character of the stalk, the height of the ear from the ground, and the size of the shank, should be noted. A stalk does not necessarily have to be large to bo a big producer. A tall spindling plant lodges very easily. The stalk should be of good size and strong at the base, gradually tapering, and not necessarily tall. Strong, vigorous stalks of medium height, usually pro- duce the best and earliest -maturing ears. The ear should be attached to the stalk by a medium-sized shank, which is long enough to allow the tip of the ear to hang down. All ears in a cornfield will not ma- ture at the same time. A variation of 15 days in maturing of ears in a field is not uncommon. One ot the rea- sons why a good selection of corn can - Selecting Seed Corn In the Field, not be made from the shock, or from a field late in the fall, Is that one is not able to tell the time the ear matured. Desirable ears may mature ten or fif- teen days later than the average freezing time; and, if those are select- ed, they will insure a late -maturing crop. Again, if corn is left unhusked until late, the husks prevent the ear from drying out properly, and, as a consequence, it is likely to be frozen before it is husked, or at least before it has had time to dry out after husk- ing. In the choice of corn for seed, one selects the ears that he believes will give him the largest yield of good corn the following year. It is a good plan to choose an ear of corn that is as near the typo wanted as possible; then keep this ear from year to year, or un- til you get a better one. At any rate have a sample ear that you can look at occasionally to help you in following one type. Keep this type -ear handy when selecting corn in the fall; and in the spring, when the final aelection is made, it is well to compare all ears carefully with the type -ear. A common practice is to select cars that are too large. It is mitch better to grow three medium-sized mature ears to the hill than it Is to grow three larger immature ears per hill. As a general rule, the larger the cob and the deeper the kernel, the longer it will take the ear to mature. Indications of maturity are looseness of kernels on the cob, a high percent- age of moisture, chaffiness (or thin. small, poorly developed kernels), ad- herence of the tip cap to the cob, and generally a large amount of white starch. It may be well to emphasize the fact again that many are inclined to select ears that are too large. This is a very natural thing to do, because everyone likes !ergo ears of corn better than small -mos; hut It Is yield per acre rather than large ears that determine profit, And if one allows himself to select ears so large that they will not mature, he is the loser thereby. It has been learned, by many tests, that ears of a certain form yield more than other ears different from the standard form. Ears of corn likely to give best results carry the butt diame- ter well towards the tip; they are free from indentations or other irregulari- ties that would tend to decrease the yield of the ear; they have straight, regular rows of uniform kernels, anci have kernels extended well over the tip and butt. It costs Just as much to grow an ear of corn that has kernels covering three -fourths of the cob as it does to grow - one with kernels covering the whole cob. The kernel contains most of the feeding value. The cob Is of very little value as food, hence the rows of kernels should round well down over the butt and extend well over the tip (not necessarily clear over) thus insuring a good proportion of corn to cob. The rows should run straight from the butt to the tip; be- cause, in crooked rows, there are more irregular kernels, and kernels of irregular size make it impossible to plant a uniform -number in each hill. To get the most feeding value out of an ear of corn there should be no space between the kernels at the cob. It is the tip of the kernel—the end that contains the germ—that is richest in food nutrient. Pointed, chaffy tips in- dicate low feeding value and poor germinating power. Every precaution should be exercised to select seed corn that will grow and produce strong, vig- orous plants. Space between the ker- nels at the cob, and lack of furrow, usually Indicate a low proportion of corn to the cob, immaturity and poor vitality. The tip of the kernel should ho wide, allowing room for a long, broad and deep germ. Nothing will aid more in making a high yield of shelled corn than a deep, well -formed kernel. But do not select a too deep kernel, because the deeper the kernel, the greater is the length of time required to mature it; and, above all other things, maturity in the first consideration. To secure uniform planting, the kernels of selected seed corn must be all or nearly the same size, not only on one ear, but through. out the whole selection. SOME FIGURES ON ROTATION OF CROPS Interesting Data Collected From Demonstration Farms in North Dakota. The crops are rotated on the 23 dem- onstration farms operated in North Dakota. This gives each crop the beat chance to do well. In 1914 the aver- age cost per acre of producing the crops was $9.13, the average Income per acre was $17.49, leaving an aver- age net return of $8.36. The net profits per acre from each crop was: Corn $8.49, hard wheat $8.02, durum $18.33, oats $7.87, barley $2.07, oats and peas $7.83, clover $8.96, timothy and clover $17.36, potatoes $9.51, winter rye ;10.80, alfalfa $20.95, and millet a loss of $1.76. The first of these farms wore start- ed nine years ago. A five to six year rotation is practiced on most of them. The Dog Nuisance. Fear of offending a neighbor often makes us put up grudgingly and growlingly perhaps, with many little annoyances which really we should not be asked or expected to endure. The keeping of useless, worthless curs is one of the most prolific causes of such petty annoyancot if not at times of actual dangers, or of considerable loss. Dogs worry and often kill sheep at night, anti poultry in daytime. Chickens Like Sunflowers. Save all the sunflower heads you can get and feed them to your flock occa- sionally during the winter months. The oil in the seeds adds quite a bril- liant luster to the feather, if fed be- fore exhibiting. NOT AS HE EXPRESSED THEM. Teamster's Words Would Have Re- q uired Adjustment Before Their • Use In the Pulpit. A man waa brought before a police court charged with abusing his team and using loud and profane language on the street. One of the witnesses was a pious old darky, who was sub mitted to a short cross-examination \Did the defendant use improper language while he was beating his horses?\ asked the lawyer. \Well he talk mighty loud, sub.\ \Did he indulge in profanity?\ The witness seemed puzzled. The lawyer put the question in another form: \What I mean, Uncle Atm, is—did he use words that would be proper for your minister to use in a sermon?\ \Oh yes suh,\ the old man replied with a grin that revealed the full width of his immense mouth; \but dey'd have to be 'ranged diff'runt.\— Everybody's Magazine. CUTICURA SOAP BATHS Followed by a Little Ointment for Baby's Tender Skin. Trial Free. They afford infanta and children great comfort, permit rest and sleep and point to speedy healrneiat of ec- zemas, rashes, itchings, chafinga and other sleep destroying skin troubles. Nothing better at any price for the nursery and toilet. Sample each free by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. Period of Romance Ended. \No more shall I hear his footsteps on yonder walk Just as the clock strikes eight.\ \Gracious Jeannette!\ \And the old parlor light will never burn low for him again.\ \You don't mean it?\ \I do; and, furthermore, he will nev. er sit on this sofa three nights a week and call me pet names, as lie has been doing for two years.\ \I am anstonished.\ \And tonight I am going to burn all the old love letters in my chest of drawers.\ \B -but why? Are you going to dis- card him?\ \Discard him! Why, you goose, I am going to marry him!\ Why They Don't Go. \flow did it happen you didn't go away during the summer? I thought you were having an extensive outfit prepared for you?\ \That was the trouble. By the time I got the outfit paid for I didn't have any money left.\ DR. J. H. RINDLAUR (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Fargo, N. D. It is easy to get around anyone you can manage to see through. There are 28.0b0 printing establish rnents in Italy. Keep Young lust as well bo -4 ' youn g at seyclity mis old tit fifty. Many people past iniddlo ago suffer ltune,Lent, nchin g back L und disnfe6.in g oil- nmaty disordere, when a littlo help for the kid- neys would fix it all up. Don't wait for gravel, dropsy or Bright . 3 disease to get a start. Use Dose's Kid- ney Pills. They have helped thousands, young and old. They are the most widely used remedy for bad backs and weak kidneys in the whole world. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS 50 4 r at all Stores Fostervmiiburn Co. Props. Buffelo,NX For Fouls in Cattle and Injured Hoofs ,1 1 ,011,•4 1 1 HANFORD'S Bals A an i 9V9rrh For Galls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrush, Old Sorel, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. Made Since 1846. Ask Anybody About It. Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 All Dealers a cIl t a\t v ord r Og- cc , SYRACUSE. N Don't Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgativet. They brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Try CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegetable. Act gently on the liver, eliminate bile, and soothe the delicate membrane of the bowel. Care Cenetipaties, Biliousness, Sick Heed. ache and Indigestion, is tailbone Itmew. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature ere • Is it possible there is a woman in this country who con- tinues to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound a trial after all the evidence that is con- tinually being published, which proves beyond contradic- tion that this grand old medicine.ha§ relieved moresuffer- ing among women than any other 006 medicine in the world? We have published in the newspapers of the United States more genuine testimonial letters than4have ever been pub- lished in the interest of any other medicine for women— and every year we publish many new testimonials, all gen- uine and true. Here are three never before published: From Mrs. S. T. Richmond, Providence, R. I. PROVIDENCE, R. I.—\ For the benefit of women who suffer as I have clone I wish to state what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I did some heavy lifting and the doctor said it caused a displacement.. I have always been weak and I overworked after my baby was born and inflammation set in, then nervous pros- tration, from which I did not recover until I had taken Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound. The Compound is my best friend and when I hear of a woman with troubles like mine I try to induce her tootake your medicine.\—Mrs. S. T. Multiform, 84 Progress Avenue, Providence, ILL From Mrs. Maria Irwin, Peru, N.Y. Faun, N.Y.—\ Before I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound I was very irregular and had much pain. I had lost three children, and felt worn out all the time. This splendid medicine helped me as nothing else had done, and I am thankful every day that I took it.\—Mrs. MARIA Inwiri, R.F.D. 1, Peru, N.Y. From Mrs. Jane D. Duncan, W. Quincy, Mass. sour!' QUINCY, MASS.— \ The doctor said that Iliad organic trouble and he doctored me for a long titne and I did not get any relief. I saw Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ad- vertised and I tried it and found relief before I had finished the first bottle. I continued taking it all through middle life and am now a strong, healthy woman and earn my own living.\— Mrs. JANE D. Durram, Forest Avenue, West Quincy, Mass. III*WrItft to LYDIA F.. PINK HAM NEI:MUM CO. • (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, HASS., feradvlee. our letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict oonfideme.