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The producers news. [volume] (Plentywood, Mont.) 1918-1937, November 23, 1923, Image 3

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ÆliBEKS ONLY -
Nov.
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TEADY, safe and
is the pace
0 f a car equipped
*ith Goodyear Tires
with the famous
Weather Tread.
The high, thick,
.harp-edged block*
of that powerful
tread provide the ut
most in gripping
traction. They,give
you seqirity all the
time, and promote
the efficient, eco
nomical operation
of your car.
s
sure
t. Goodyear Service Station
[£ j, *e tell and recom
mend the ^aw Goodyear
Cmit * ht beveledAll
Weather Tread and back
them up itith standard
Goodyear Service
0. M. DONALDSON
JOE REDMOND
Plentywod. Montana.
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tural and Poetical situation in Mon
tana, a representative of a nationally
known newspapper supply house said:
"Speaking of rihe changing political
conditions in this state, it might inter
est you to know that not so very long
ago my firm had on its list of Mon
tana customers 27 weekly newspapers
! whose accounts were guaranteed by
1 the " biK inte rests" of the State.
j " You realize, of course, that no
I such order was officially on file, but
it was the distinct understanding that
these newspapers were not to be lim
ited in their orders, and that if they
j got behind in their accounts, the de
ficiency would be forthcoming without
question.
, "it is a significant fact that this list
! 0 f newspapers whose accounts the "big
interests' guaranteed has now shrunk
; to seven. To my mind this indicates
that the large corporatiins, whose in
! fluence at one time was strong in
j every section of the state, are losing
; their grip upon the smaller publica- ,
! tions, the owners of which no doubt •
ence a strong reversal of public sen-j
iment.
.
,
• •
NATION READY
TO TALK DEBT
Washingt Nov. 0. — Press dis
patches from Belgrage today gave the
treasury its first news that the Jugo
Slavia government had selected a com
mission to discuss the funding of its
debt to the United States.
The Jugo-Slav commission is the
first to be sent to Washington by any
of the British and Finnish debts last
summer.
i
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AMOUNTS TO $60, 000, 000 |
Belgrade, Nov. 9.—The fiovern- i
ment has apointed a commission to
go to the United States and discuss
Jugo-Slavia's war debt. The debt
amounts to approximately $60,000,000
with interest.
Scobey Woman Placed In
Roosevelt County Jail
Poplar, Nov. 17.— Sigrid Olson, also
known as Mrs, J. Foss of Scobey, has
I been a prisoner at the Roosevelt coun
ty jail since the latter part of last
week, having been placed there at the
request of Daniels county officiate as
the jail in that county is not equipped
for taking care of women prisoners.
Mrs. Olson or Foss is charged with
arson, it being alleged that she fired
her own house in Scobey on which,
it is said, was considerable insurance.
County Attorney Nyquist was in Pop
lar yesterday conferring with the
prisoner and was assisted by Assist
ant State Fire Ma- shal H. J. Johns
ton of Helena.
1922,
MONTANA WEEKLY
INDUSTRIAL REVIEW!
Dillon—Now $30,000 garage build
ing being erected.
Richland county has over 400 acres
beans this year, some yielding a s high
as 40 bushels to the acre.
Shelton to vote on $8,000 road
bonds.
Great Northern to double-track line
from Troy to Kootenai Falls.
Billings—New $750,000.00 St. Vin
cent's hospital dedicated.
Kali spell—City renews 5-year
tract with Mountain States Power Co. !
Freight revenue accuring to Great!
Northern for shipments having Kal
ispell as either point of origin or des
tination, totaled $87,740.93 during
October, a gain of slightly over $20,
000 as compared with same month of
con
Helena—Valuation of inter-counties j
properties of Montana Power Co., 1
Great Falls Power Co. and Thompson |
Falls Power Co. placed at $61,000,000 i
for taxtion purposes.
Sugar beet crop will net growlers of
Richland county $275,000.
Hamilton—Northern Montana or
. , . . .
cba ^ f S shipping large crop apples to
eas *' ern C1 *' ies -
Yellowstone county produced corn
valued at $301,000 and $500,000 beans
this year.
The Miles City Commercial National
bank and Miles City National bank
combined. To be known as Commer
cial National Bank,
Sate lowers railroad valuation $1,
124,874 from total of 1922.
Sidney—6,000 acre Arthur Parsons
ranch, lying east of Yellowstone river
in Richland county, changes hands,
Missoula—Yellowstone Park high
way between West Gallatin and Bea
ver Creek completed at cost of
$75,000.
Jardine shipping arsenic valued at
$7,000 per car to Cleveland, Ohio.
Montana produces on an average
more than $135,760,000 worth of man
ufactured products yearly.
Great Falls—Stock shipments in
crease half this year over 1922.
Anaconda to improve city hall.
In current year to Oct. 15, Copper
Export Association hag sold 268,300,
000 pounds copper at average price
of 14,93 cents per pound.
New York Times says predictions
being made in iron and steel in
dustery that railroads will place ord
ers between now and Jan. 1st for be
tween 80,000 and 100,000 new freight
cars.
are
Advertise where it pays—circula
tion 2,000 every week.
Call the Com
mm
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i
ii:
Blow, O Horn of Plenty, blow!
Call the corn from crib and row;
Call the corn and bid It be
Banisher of misery!
Tell the corn to Journey far,
Find where hungry children are;
Find where eyes of sorrow stare
Into lardera cold and bare.
Blow, O Horn of Plenty, blow!
Make our thankful heart to know
Just how sweet It is to dwell
In this Land of All-goes-well.
Land \> here, if one field denies,
We need only turn our eyes
To another, there to find
God has been Just doubly kind.
Blow, O Horn of Plenty, blow!
Those a-hunger soon must know
That, though they have been denied.
We will seen them satisfied.
From a thousand fertile farms,
Borne by sturdy yeoman arms,
Will go gifts in such great share
Hunger cannot linger there.
Blow, O Horn of Plenty, blow!
Call the corn from crib and row;
Call the corn and bid It be
Banisher of misery!
Then a stricken land will bless
American unselfishness;
Then a still, small voice will say;
"Truly 'tls Thanksgiving day!"
—William Herschel, In the Indianapolis
News.
Quaint Song êlSESSg»
of Thanks
Through the hard days of the World
war while the men were fighting, the
women of Amer
ica were working,
waiting, eves?
courag eously.
Now that those
days are over and
the difficult after
math needs care
ful handling,
woman is still striving to add her serv
ice wherever there Is need of brave
and patient endeavor.
w
I At
to'
Post-war times are always trying
ones. Hence it is with a little more
sympathetic understanding than usual
that we read the lines of a quaint old
Thanksgiving hymn, bearing the date
of 1783. Its author is unknown, but its
sentiment holds true today, though we
may wish to change the name of our
first President to that of some later
leader.
The Lord above, In tender love.
Hath saved us from our foes.
Through Washington the thing is done;
The war is at a close.
America has won the day
Through Washington, our chief;
Come, let us rejoice with heart and voice
And bid good-by to grief.
Let us agree, since we are free.
All needless things to shun;
And lay aside all pomp and pride.
Like our great Washington.
Though we do not proclaim this
anonymous writer as a second Shake
speare, let us follow his counsel by
bidding farewell to grief, by laying
aside pride and pomp, and turning
this Thanksgiving season into one in
which we remember only our mercies
and blessings, which are many. "Come,
let us rejoice with heart and voice,"
for what we have, if It be but little,
helping the less fortunate, if It be an
abundance.
g ; Day of Joy ^
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Thanksgiving day!
Thanksgiving day!
The plumes of celery are gay.
Cranberry sauce Is glowing red.
The sun shines blessing on your head.
And from the oven comes a whiff
That makes each little tiker sniff.
Give me some w r hite meat, if you pleas?,
I'm busier than honey bees!
Thanksgiving day! Thanksgiving Cay!
It's fairer than the buds o May.
Stewed onions, sweet potatoes plump,
A turkey perched on every stump.
When folks on farms decide to eat,
Believe me, it's a merry treat!
Give me a drum-stick— gravy, too.
And ma, I drink the hejrlth o you.
Ü
n
"Thanksgiving Day."
Tls a good day to have in our cal
None of us would see It
endar.
dropped, whether there Is much or
little to be grateful for. At least,
there is always the day to be glad of—
Thanksgiving day. _
,!fESTIVAL NOW
ALL AMERICAN
Though Its Origin Was Pagan,
Thanksgiving Is Peculiarly
of This Country.
Pilgrim Fathers Gave Religious Char
acter to Celebration Which for
Centuries Had Been Occasion Only
for Material Jollification.
People who do not chloroform their
sense of fun before starting to read
history have had many a chuckle over
the Pilgrim and Puritan festival of
Thanksgiving. These early settlers of
New England were so militantly Chris
tian that they could not bear any sug
gestion of an earlier creed. They
objected to Christmas as "heathenish,"
because it contained—as it still con
tains—so many relies of pre-Christian
days. Having done this, they turned
round, seized on the most thoroughly
pagan of all celebrations, that of the
gathered harvest, and made it an insti
tution that has grown and spread for
three centuries, is the indictment
drawn by a writer In an eastern maga
zine.
But the joke is not all on the Pil
grims. True, they went back to a fes
tival which has been held ever since
man began to plant and gather crops;
but they made of it something peculiar
ly modern, Christian, and, at the last,
A inert "an.
They gave a religious character to
a celebration which for ages had been
a purely material jollification, and
made ii a part of the community's pub
lic policy; an occasion for coming to
gether in common aspirations, hopes
and gratitude. All the changes and
developments of the last 300 years
have not been able to change the es
sential character of the Pilgrim
Thanksgiving. How many inventions
of today will last so long?
The first Thanksgiving feast, held
in the fall of 1621, was not ordained
by formal proclamation. The colony
was too small to need such a notice.
But the circumstances under which
the celebration was held are told in
Governor Bradford's history in a way
well worthy of quotation :
They (the colonists) begane now to
gather in the small harvest they had,
and to fitte up their houses and dwell
ings against winter, being all well re
covered in health & strength, & had

all things in good plenty : for as some
were thus imployed in affaires abroad,
others were exercised in fishing, aboute
codd, & bass, & other fish, of which
they tooke good store, of which every
family had their portion. . .
begane to come in store of foule,
winter approached, of which this
place did abound when they came
first, but afterwards decreased by de
And besides water foule, tlier
great store of wild Turkies, of
. And
now
as
grees.
was
which they took many, besides vension,
Besids they had aboute a peck
meale a weeke to a person, or
now, since harvest, Indean come to
that proportion,
afterwards write so largely of their
plenty hear to their friends in Eng
land, which were not fained, hut true
&C.
a
Which made many
reports.
Excepting small boys, one can hard
ly imagine the folk of a modern com
munity boasting about their plenty
under the stimulus of a "peck a meale
s weeke to a person,
conld he trapped, or shot with flint
lock firearms. But such things depend
mainly on the point of view, and that
may not have improved so much in
the last three centuries as we think.
We of today know more of a thousand
things than did Governor Bradford and
his companions, but it is not so certain
that we know more of the basic bnsi
plus such game
as
ness of living.
"Excellent hearts had our fathers of
old," and for steady, cheerful cour
age, the Pilgrim colonists never have
been surpassed.
Twelve years later, the colony had
much that a formal procla
The first
grown so
mation seemed necessary,
one was issued on October 1, 1633,
and the Thanksgiving celebration
held two weeks later, October 16.
The custom soon spread throughout
Then, on October 3,
was
New England.
1789, the new President of the new
nation, George Washington, called on
the American people to assemble on
Nov. 26 and give thanks, among other
things,
For the signal and manifold Mer
cies, and the favorable Interposition
of His Providence in the course and
conclusion of the late War . .
for the peaceful and rational manner
in which we have been enabled to es
tablish Constitutions and Governments
for our safety and happiness ; and par*
tlcularly the national one now lately
instituted."
Washington, it might be deduced
a nationalist.
from this alone, was |
with no leaning whatever toward state
sovereignty, and with a perfect readi
make his preferences mani
well as in any other
ness to
fest, in prayer as
An amusirg instance of tins
1 frankness occurs
proclamation, where he asks the peo
ple to pray heaven. "To protect and
guide all Sovereigns and Nations (e*
shown kindness
way.
later in the same
pecially such as have
to us)."
honored lineage, that of this
It started
An
best-beloved festival,
the days when the Neolithic dweller
lakes of Switzerland finished
his scanty harvest and
by the
bringing in
settled down to a secure winter,
is close akin to the Dlonysiac feasts
of ancient Greece and the "horkey
of rural England. But it has
night
a peculiarly American flavor and suh
stance; "and tor this, 'one "musT thank
the sturdy Pilgrims, whose iron cour
age was tempered by a fine humanity,
and who probably smiled into their
beards when, over their supper of snail
soup, they thanked God, "who had
given them to suck of the abundance
of the seas, and the treasures hid In
the sands.


Vf".
Humility Goes With Thanks.
Thanksgiving Is essentially a re
ligious holiday. Like Christmas, it has
lost something of its significance
through the overemphasizing of Its sec
ular features. The other holidays
commemorate the birth or the deeds of
great men or perpetuate the memory
of great events. They speak to the
mind In Its happiest moods, telling
over a record of glorious actions and
repeating reasons for contentment and
love of country. Thanksgiving day
ought at least to suggest the virtue
of humility.
Try a Want Ad, it brings results.
We have the best equip
ped line of Drugs and
Accessories in Northeast
ern Montana
At The
Plentywood Drug
Order
Now
A
i*2
i
: •_
0** •
' s r
The safe way to insure a perfect Turkey of the
weight you prefer for Thanksgiving is to place
your order with us now—and we will select
the proper one as we receive our supply.
All will be Spring Turkeys, freshly dressed.
The New Market
FRED FORMAN, PROP.
1
;
ALUMINU
WA]
L
V
m
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<■
Ml
m
w
hH
When Thanksgiving Dinner
IS MENTIONED, THE
.
housewife's thoughts turn at once to the Kitchen.
One of the greatest aids toward lightening labor is
an ample supply of Aluminum Ware, an ample sup
ply of which we have ready for your choosing.
-ROASTERS
Fine Aluminum Roaster, Nothing Better Made
—Can be furnished in the cheapest makes, also
the ery best.
PRICES
According to Size and Quality
$1.25 to $6.25
in
HELLAND-STRAND
It

THE OLD RELIABLE STORE
<<
A SAD AND GLAD
THANKSGIVING DAY
(By Marie C. Best)
One noon Johnny sat on his door
step. He heard strains of music com
from Billy's house. It's Thanks
It's Thanksgiving! cried he.
mg
giving!
At that moment a sad glare came over
his face. He thought of his mother
becoming poor after his father died.
He heard the sound of laughter and
shouting. A tear came to his eyes.
He thought of the Thanksgivings
when dear papa was alive and the
thirty pound turkey they had. Now
they had nothing. A big tear was
rolling down his cheek. _ It's just a
plain gray Thursday, said he.
isn't like long ago on Thanksgiving.
His mother came to the door,
said, come and we will prepare
dinner and we are Thankful that you
and I have our good health. It isn't
what we have that makes Thanksgiv
ing, but it is the thankfulness we have
in our heart. Then they hugged each
other and that was Thanksgiving in
deed.
It
She
our
A business man usually advertises
sooner or later," sez I. "Some of
them after they go in the hands of
the receiver; they advertise or are ad
vertised.
..

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