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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 29 Oct. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1915-10-29/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
GEYSER JUDITH BASIN TIMES L Handsome and Practical Corduroy Coat Two favorites of fashion for this season enter into the composition of this handsome coat; they are the corduroy velvet of which it is made. and the opossum fur on the collar. Corduroy fn a good quality is about the best choice one can make among materials designed for coats for gen- eral wear, and the high favor of opossum fur threatens to thin the ranks of the little animal, whose fine inarkings have lately sprung into un- precedented favor. The coat is long, ample and grace- ful. It is cut with the long arm's - eye and easy adjustment which makes it practical for wear over evening gowns. Linings selected for coats of this kind are of thin, supple silk or crepe. in order that the coat may fall in good lines about the figure. It is cut with full skirt, which ripples at the bottom, and is provided with a shaped belt and sash ends of the corduroy, also lined with silk. Machine stitch- ing makes the finish, and the ele- gance of the coat is still further en- hanced by the lack of any other trim ming. The model is double-breasted, fas- tening at the throat with a single large and ornamental button. A sim- ilar button in a smaller size appears on each cuff. The collar is made so that it may be rolled up about the neck and fastened with hook and eye in a high turnover. Although pictured as worn over an evening gown, this coat is appropri- ate for all sorts of wear. The mate- rial is very serviceable, but its rich luster places It In iht, class of dres3y coats as well as among those de- signed for much wear. Beautiful Types of Picture Hats Two of the most beautiful hats of the season are portrayed here, and they belodg to those types that with little variation reappear with each sea- son. They are picture hats on .such good lines and with so much to recom- mend them that their welcome is -al- ways assured. The hat at the left is made of black velvet or of one of the dark shades which are fashionable in colors The crown Is round. The wide brim is flexible and cut with a straight edge at the right side. At the left it turns up and is bent toward the crown, showing, altogether, the influence of the season's tendency toward eccen- tric brims. Its lines are wonderfully becoming. It remained for this season to show just rhat beautiful effects can be wrought by the artist whose medium Of expression is the fancy feather. This hat is trimmed with fancy os- trich. It seems that nothing else could look just as well. The hat at the right is a wide - brimmed French sailor made of vel- vet faced with striped plush. Its color possibilities are worth considering jan inch above. It has a round crown and, for trim- ming another masterpiece In fancy font her& much of the season's millinery. But some feathers, like those of the bird of paradise, are too beautiful in their natural state to be improved upon. while others are vastly changed and beautified by the makers of fancy feathers. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. It In not always easy to recognize the kind of feather which those clever people who work In there convert into the things of beauty that adorn so The New Belts. Four -Inch belts of soft kid In light and medium colors are bound with black or white silk braid. Black rib bon lacings through black eyelets are seen on , smart models. Ornaments and buckles to match are used- on belts, the former being placed at tie back: Buckles are also made of jet gilt, pearl. galalith, silver, beads, et( A very military -looking belt of kit or leather has for a fastening a buck e imitating four cartridges made of gilt nickel, gun metal or a combination o two metals. Embroidered belts ar used of satin, ribbon, soft kid or palm velvet. %nth princess fronts the het disappeared under the side of the on piece effect. Sometimes it is wore at the real waist line, or it may fp White Net Gown. A charming gown is of white net with blossoms hung from the tabs of silver braid. Another pretty decora- Bon consists of bowknots of silver rib bon. ' 1.41111, I l ‘f il E ear^^ le I VV REQUISITES OF GOOD HORSE Well -Bred Mare Is Splendid invest ment for Any Farmer—Get Colts Only From Best Stook. My W. It. GILBERT.) Nowadays farmers are beginning to awaken to the fact thet it takes strong horses to do good work on the farm The fact that almost any horse can be made to do something at farm work is no valid excuse for men who pro- fess to have their own interests at heart to persist in breeding horse s Farm Mare and Colt. that nobody wants, not even them- selves. In the fields a big team makes haste by the width of the furrow or swath they cut. There is pleasure and inspiration in the business of breeding and handling high-class horses. Bear in mind in breeding horses that it is just as essential to breed good feet on to them as to get weight and blood In them. The purebred mare is a good invest- ment to the small farmer, and if he will allow her to share the work of the place she will do nearly as much work as a gelding, and raise a good colt besides. A well-bred mare bred to a stallion of best type will bring a colt worth as much at weaning time as a grade colt would bring at maturity, sometimes a lot more. UNLOADING CHUTE FOR STOCK Device Patented by Illinois Man Is Es- pecially Good for Hogs—May Be Moved Easily. Handling of live stock, especially hogs that are ready for market, is oft - times cruel and a cause of real finan- cial loss to the shipper because of lack of unloading facilities at the local stock yards. An Illinois farmer has patented the unloading chute shown here. It is strong and yet light enough to be moved freely about so that hogs may be unloaded from the wagon on to the level ground. Cleats prevent slip- ping of an animal that is coming down the chute, thus reducing the possibili- ties of broken legs and bruises. The chute may be folded up and carried on Chute for Live Stock. the load of stock, or put back out of the way when not in use. Its use on large farms or at small stock yards is certain to be found practical by busi- ness farmers everywhere.—Farming Business. DRENCHING DROVE OF HOGS Best Way Is to Drive Animals Into Pen Where They Will Have But Little Room to Move In. The quickest and easiest way to drench a drove of hogs is to drive them into a small pen where they will have but little room to move about. To hold the animal while drenching it a noose of sash cord or quarter - inch rope can be placed around the upper jaw, well back toward the angles of the lips, and the medicine thrown into the back part of the mouth with a dose syringe. As there Is danger of a hog breaking a syringe It is best to use a metal one. Some- times when the drench is bulky and the hog hard to hold, It is necessary to elevate the head and raise the fore- feet off the ground. For this purpose a pulley and rope wire stretcher is recommended. It should be hung in the most convenient part of the pen and the animal secured in the usual way by placing a noose around the jaw. Tho end ot the rope is thrown over the heck in the lower pulley and the hog drawn up until it is almost - 1ff the floor. It is best to wait till the hog has became quiet, well under ,•ontrol, before giving it the drench, As there is some danger of the medi- cine getting into the air passages an,. doing harm. For Fatten:n3 Sheep. Pear aro strongly recom nen,led for fattening cheep. When fed in combi- nation with either corn, Larley or oats, eqval parts, better gains are made than when either of the atove cereals Is fed alone. This is especially true where tirnethy hay or corn stover tg fed as a roughage. BELGIAN SCOUTING PARTY IN FLANDERS • is a Ileiglan aeouting party dressed in khaki uni;orm - somewhere\ in Flanders. • ;'• - 4, , ,i,tit) • , tkiag ite way stealthily over a pcultoon INSPECTING ENGLISH GIRL GUARDS ;Tcer.tr: : -e• 5.4 • :4:1;P , \ • Following the lead of the Boy Scouts, the girlhood o. Englanci is organizing into companies known Lis Gill Guards. These little women are taught rudimentary household and social welfare facts which will be of uso te them and their country when they grow up. The picture shows the duchess of Marlborough (in white at loft) inspecting the Guard of Honor of the First Harrow company at Harrow, England. MOS.\ PRESIDENT WILSON LAYS CORNERSTONE President Wilson is shown in the accompanying picture officiating at the cornerstone laying exercises at the huge memorial amphitheater now being built in Arlington National cemetery as a tribute to the heroes of the Civil war. BELGRADE'S FORTRESS WALL SHATTERED ..e., 01,4 • .) al..asiery are on the walls of a fort Is well shown in this photograph of part of the fortress of Belgrade after it had been shelled by the Austro-German guns. WOMEN MAKING SHELLS In the ammunition factories of France as well as of England women have largely taken the place of men One of them is here seen working on shells that are not yet bored. , Always Working Garb. James Kelr Hardie, the British labor leader, whose death is announced, never relinquished his working-class garb, and many were the occasions when his rough attire led to mistakes on the part of others. One story is that Keir Hardie, than many years an M. P., was challenged by a policeman outside the house of commons. The officer asked Mr. Hardie if he was working there. \Yes.\ \On the roof?\ (which was undergoin(, repair). \No answered the leader of the indepen- dent labor party, \on the floor.\ An- other time a laridlady refused to let him have rooms until he gave refer- ences—he looked too rough. The good woman was astonished when Mr. liar - die named a number of the most prom- inent men in commons. He was ar- rested in Belgium a few years ago on suspicion of being in collusion with a notorious anarchist whom t)le Pollee had detained. The Belgian police nev- er could understand why a British M. P. was not elaborately attired. i t