{ title: 'The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925, October 15, 1909, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075230/1909-10-15/ed-1/seq-1.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075230/1909-10-15/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075230/1909-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075230/1909-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 15 Oct. 1909, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1909-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• 4 • , •• • THE HARDIN TRIBUNE. Vol,. 11. NO. 4 t. H1r1)1'N . 1 1 LI (i‘VS - 1k , COUNTY . , MONTAN - 1 1,11) XY, r Sem() PFR YEAR. W I LL HAVE N 14 1 ,W DEPOT Superintendent of Construction Advises that the Material Has Been Ordered That the Burlington railroad , officials believe in the future ot Hardin is to be demonstrated this 1H1 py the rebuilding at this point. V ranchers and fit -growers, lit -growers, will 7, NEW STORE Trials of a Minister 14 •••••• •••••. \Mo. Vo , war , . .•SI NOW •16 , 410-4.16. -Ja•- .•••• 4ol• Ad. Au. •10i- Ann Ail\ )e well rei)r,‘,.nted at the At Lawrence Kansas th.. fourth Dry S'a l'f 11111g Congress F01?. • other day, Rev. D. H. (,4rri , E wheat king of the Palouse coun- t. Huffman, superintendent of try,\ C. B. Kegley, master of construction, was in the city State Grange of Washington and Tuesday and while here stated L. C. Crow the president of the that the company is to build 40 , Farther's Union, Others are feet additional room on the west prominent farmers and orchard - end of the present building to be :ists. used for a freight room. The present freight room is to be con- verted into the office and the room now used as the office in Conjunction with the present waiting room will comprise the new waiting room. The entire building will be „ refinished throughout. The material. has been orded and a crew to do the work will be here as soon as it arrives. ' These improvements will not only add to the convenience of the depot hut also to its appearance and as afore stated is evidence that the Burlington company be- lieves in the future growth and development of this vicinity. Land Board Issues New Orders An important order has been sent out by the state land coM- missioners which will have an effect on nearly all the . public lands in the state as well as those holding leases upon the same. The order reads as follows: \No more five year leases will be granted on state lands, unless the land has been reappraised within this year. It has been found that a number of those - 1e.sing the land under a five- year term for grazing, purposes have been in the habit of sub- letting the land at a higher rate than that paid by them to the state.\ It was Mr the purpose of cut- ting off this practice on the part of those who held long leases that the order was issued. The state land board now has five appraisers in the field. These will go over all the state lands and reappraise and reclassify them. —Manhattan Record. S. S. Convention at Billings On Sunday afternoon next, al- so upon Monday and Tuesday af- ternoon and evening with' a short session on Tuesday morning, the Interdenominational Sunday School convention of Yellowstone county will be held in Billings at the Christian church. General ling on in full blast at the big mill James J. Hill will Speak State Secretary J. A. Alford and ' and beets are coming in bx rail James J. Hill. builder of the Elementary Department Supe r - land wagon at the rate of several Great Northern railway, is to intendent Mrs. J. M. Ross of hundred tons each day. deliver an address to the farmers Bozeman will be there to conduct Throughout the sugar district and visitors' at the National Corn the various sessions and the scene is now a busy one, for , exposition to be held in Omaha, deliver addresses. Besides these growers are taking advantage of December 6 to 18. Mr. Hill says two state workers, Rev. Maples the favorable weather and are he will present some figures to minister of the Christian church making strenuous endeavors to show that the west and north - who has been appointed chair- complete the harvest before cold west are not indebted to favor - man of the program committee, ; weather sets in. It is said the able seasons and bfute force says that he has secured definite tonnage this year will be the alone for the good crops which promises to speak, upon assigned lar st in the history of the val- will lse harvested this year. He ge at Billings, October 26 and 28, when an effort will be made by the Spokane chamber of corn- A Dry Goods Firm From At. merce and allied organizations to fiance, Nebr., Will Open capture the sessions of 1910 or Store Here 1911 for Hat city. Marion E. A Mr. Hill from Alliance, forced to retire from the pulpit, Ilay L , ,, n •))1()r of Washington, Nebr., was in the city NIonday give up their work for .the kink'ppo forty-three dele- and secured a lease on the room dom of God and the uplift s as , s)! nom are Lillis lately occupied by the Hardin mankind, because of the fact. Stith, , ,vh() known as the Drug Co., in the Thomas building that their flock, or a large . per- t. .1 will open a dry goods and s centage of them, expect the sts , eng store there in the minister to live on the love of s sir f, , God and air, largely. Many of Mr. Hi, \ sson his return trip these good men go on in silence from further up in the state and in cases endure actual where he had been looking for 'ant, preferring this to .the giv- business openings and he stated ing up of the Lord's work; now that this place appealed to hint and again one is stung beyond en - the most of any he had seen. durance by a more flagrant case While here he stated that the of neglect and when the flood - motto of the firm would be the gates of feeling are raised he \right goods at the right price.\ pours out in words just what he rn and seeAd very confident that feels toward his flock because of there was a future here for their the cold and calculating manner business. Which they display toward their spiritual adviser. s lI A portion of the wail of the Kansas minister is that \The public never sees behind the Scenes of the pastor's Inane, or it might realize the trials and griefs which the pastor and his wife are forced to beans A min- ister's wife can not even make e pretense of dressing ordinarily well or the people will think they are paying the pastor too much or that he ought to save 'part of his salary and give it to missions. He can not put on a pair of pat- ent leather shoes without every person who has contributed the slitliest mite toward his salary looking at them as if to say 'I helped to pay for those shoes; there's where our money goes.'\ Of all the professions, the min- isters are the hardest worked and poorest paid. The calls made A pes& ,4?„iorri t +, 444riso -*maw upon them are the most exacting and numerous. They must pre- side.at the marriage, christen 1 baby, guide its footsteps in the path of righteousness; fill their pulpits on Sunday; visit the sick, care for the, needy, when the heavy hand of death is laid upon the the hcIrrie, say only those thing which will bring comfort to the heart of the bereaved— and live on a pittance little better than nothing. It is a constant source of sur- prise to us, and more than once has elicited our admiration for the man, to hear a minister pre side at the funeral obsequies 01 some one whom he and the en- tire community knew to be the embodiment of all that was 'm( „ and selfish and pepurious, extoi the virtues he should have pos- sessed, and commit his soul to the One who gave it. It,is also a l i'lvillylv‘ •••••••••• 4•• ‘` .11 ' 111\1 1111\Y% %%'%'%,%, Constitutionalist May Organize Henry Kuippenberg, who was the representative from Beaver- head county to the constitutional convention, reports there are plans being laid to organize a conStitutional association and that the first meeting will prob- ably take place on the twentieth aniversary of the state Nov. 8, of this year. Recently Governor Norris re - Out of the eighty delegates who ceived a telegram from a New were present on that memorial York newspaper seeking his occasion but forty-five are in ins ws as to the statement of Jas.- the state, some having died J. Hill that the United States others having removed. If the would,soon become a , wheat im- organization is completed they porting nation. Mr. Hill made will undoubtedly meet annually the statement in course of an address delivered at a banker's convention. The following is the governor's reply: \Conditions in Montana do not indicate that the production of The Latest Stamp agricultural prodsicts will soon be The 12 -cent stamp just ordered. less than the demand for home prepared for the postoffice de - consumption of the nation. Rapid settlement and more extensive The announcement that it will partment was last issued in 1870. cultivation of agricultural land in bear the head of George Wash - Montana insure an ever-increas- ! ington was based off the assump- •ng volume of agricultural pro- ton that the last 12 -cent stamp is \Irrigation projects under way ; that it presented a profile bust of and in contemplation will in - Henry Clay. The new stamp , crease the irrigated area six , times the present amount. There hereafter. Mr. Kuippenberes action in the matter was prompt- ed by a suggestion from former Senator Clark. will be designed on lines similar to the old. Above and below the busy of Clay will appear the words, \U. S. Postage\ and \Twelve Cents,\ in white capit- als. The two words\Twelve Cents\ to be separated by the number \12\ in Arabic. The word of denomination are all block letters. The proposed 12 -cent stamp is calculated to cover the cost of the new registry fee of 10 cents, plus 2 -cent postage rate. • Boosts Montana resigned from the pastorate the Christian church and has ,gone to work as a street car cot. ductor, adding another to the list of godly men who have bees are lands of sufficient productive value to justify the cost of re- clamation and available water supply to irrigate the same, to further increase the irrigation area. Farming without irriga- tion is a proven success. Twen- ty million acres of Montana lands will untimately be cultivated at a profit by that method. Reclama- tion and cultivation without ir- rigation of western lands and drainage of the southern lands will solve the problem of produc- tion and continue this as an ex - Largest Beet Harvest in History porting nation of agricultural The first sugar manufactured products. • In the west there are by the Billings factory this sea- homes for the from abandoned farms and crowded cities of the east. In Montana opportunities are especially inviting.\ son has just been sacked and placed in the warehouse of the company and a sample of it is on display in the window of a local store. Manufacturing is now go - ' 01 H 01 II : 4 1 14 04 04 01 =. 11 , tiqr ••10. ft , vs, X41 X XX XXX /It ftia AMY .1.A. AN. .0•11.. AM. .a .elt• .410. 4air•• • he Money Deposited ,11 this i)ank is ,aned to the peol)1)) of this vi, rcople ‘k 1 , 1i impro‘e their hoin•-, or inr•rease th, ) H.t tat inter- est. 1 ) y depo,tor of th - ' , ..inkono matter how small his del), helps build up the en- terprises of this c, •iiinunity, helps to m ke this 'a better town. V‘ !•\ not open an account here? • G. F. BURLA, President E. A. HOWELL, Ca•er The First National Bank of Hardin ACV I 1 e r -Scott Dealers in FR iteS I e rs ( s i •• et Us Ripire \\'ioti *1. 0 /6 PA • 1 t.ading and Best Liquors tli \Aont. 7z1.!,,,,ALINESISVPM MM.. ;°C, t !Xi ;it Ak - Imported and Domestic Cigars kitit s Place MILT LYON, Prop. Sunny Brook ‘C Bonded iskev Fdmily Trade 4 a Specialty... 4 t 111 If: 1 S. it II Al; :ill it T. 1P.'10 0 4 1 go•so••••••MM• Ishadlial•INCVNYMIN•04 ware 'W't\ . .7174 i'''F(7.!SPIPKW,„lcilicmiLeaux•=x Builders Hardware Enamel and TinWare Everything in Hardware and Farm Machinery Every Thing Cutle licatrig Stoves and Ranges Stove Boards Baru Wire Always on Hand G. H. Thomas I , Always Glad to Show our Goods Washing Machines and Cloths Wringers *cabs 40111111111.- 4011111110*- 44111111.- -teal*. -04111)..-441111.6.--..alft.- some scurce of surprise to us that more of these good men do not give up their work of labor and love for 0 a people who show so little ap • preciation as to sometimes actual- ly begrudge them the clothes they= -may wear. —Lake Shore Sentinel. WlIl Build Terrace House Mrs. Mary contract to A. Rousseau building of a twelve room ter- race house for tenement pur- topics, from 16 of the most prom- ' ley, and in that event the length ts a firm believer in the mixing pose on her property situated . on ment speakers in Billings and of the campaign will be Some- of brains with muscle and gives Cheyenne avenue. The building the surrounding towns in the whatmore extendes1 • than last brains most of the credit. His will be 38 x 48 feet one story county. year. --Billings Gazette. ' address is one of the big drawing built of brick. When complete , i Everyone interested in the wel- cards of the exposition at Omaha. it will provide four appartments fare of the Sunday school g of the An exchang.• eiss that \one - I of three rooms each which wi. county without fail should be third of the 1 , . , - Ti the country be for rent at a moderate figurs. present at this convention, think they can - it a lawyer in I We have just heard of a school expounding the law. One-half ma'am introducing a new featike think they can beat the doctor in her school. When one of the in healing the sick. Two-thirds girls miss a word the boy who of them think they can put the spells it gets permission to kiss In Hi...!,. r in the hole in preaching her. The result is the girls are thc ',.‘,.ipel: and all of them think b, In i ng i,,- slwlioN while the H: san beat the editor running boys are improving rigq along'. N. net 1 / 4 sii.aper.'' - . - • i - • \ Ll.. Many Delevates VS ill Attend Information from Spokane. Wash.,says that districts in east- ern Washington. where modem methods are 'emplored by the Brennan has let for the Will Rebuild This Fall The large barn belonj. , :- Curry & Smith' which stroyed 1s the heavy' •wind ii August is !,, this faL so we arc 'sd • J. C. BORDEWICK General Merchandise Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Clothing. Complete Line of Men's and Women's Fine Shoes wwb, ihe Montana Saloon W. A. BECKER, Mgr. Diplomat Whiskey. ' JUST RIC HT\ Imported sod Domestic CIGARS B udweiser and . illings E E R () ® Corner Central Ave. and Second Streets. OP 1