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The Bozeman courier. (Bozeman, Mont.) 1919-1954, August 05, 1925, Image 6

Image and text provided by Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86075113/1925-08-05/ed-1/seq-6/

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PROGRAM ARRANGED
FOR MEETING OF
PIONEERS
Large Attendance Expected
When Old-Timers Gather in
Bozeman Next Week for An
nual Convention
There will be a large attend
ance at the Forty-second annual
meeting of the Society df Mom
tana Pioneers and the Thirty
first annual meeting of the Sons
and Daughters of Montana Pio
neers to be held in Bozeman
Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
August 13, 14 and 15, according
to reports received from mem
bers over the state. A rate of a
fare and one-half on the certifi
cate plan has been granted by
railroads in Montana for mem
bers and their families.
Miss Lottie Rumsey, secretary of
Sons and Daughters of Montana Pio
neers, has sent out notices to the
members of that organization, urg
ing every one to secure one new mem
ber. She calls attention to the fact
that men and women coming to Mon
tana on or before December 31, 1868,
membership in the So
are eligible to
ciety of Montana Pioneers, and that
their descendents are eligible to mem
bership in the Society of Sons and
Daughters of Montana Pioneers, soo
the roll includes grandchildren, a»
well as children of pioneers.
Officers to Arrive Ehrly.
Frank D. Brown, of Missoula, sec
retary of the Society of Montana Pio
neers, and Miss Lottie Rumsey will
be in Bozeman August 12, and pos
sibly the previous day, to meet the
early arrivals and consider applica
tions for membership as well as to
collect dues. They expect to be es
* pecially busy on the'morning of Aug
ust 13.
Headquarters for registration and
information will be at the Montana
Power company office on Main street,
the company having kindly granted
the use of the room, which is more
c<|nvenient than the chamber of com
merce rooms as the latter rooms are
up stairs. Some changes may be made
in the suggestive program, but the
outline is about as follows:
t The Program.
Thursday, August 13 — Morning.
Arrival of Pioneers and Sons and
Daughters. Registration. Room as
signment and general information at
headquarters, Montana Power Com
pany office.
Afternoon—Opening session. Joint
meeting of all pioneer organizations
at the auditorium of the Emerson
school.
Evening—Band concert on Main
street. Theater party.
Friday, August 14. — Morning
Business sessions. Places to be desig
nated.
Afternoon—Old time parade at 2
o'clock, followed by a visit to flower
show in the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium.
Evening — Reception to Pioneers
and Sons and Daughters at Elks'
Home.
Saturday, August 15—Morning—
Business sessions.
Afternoon—Picnic dinner at Boze
man Hot Springs at 1:30. Program
of sports, dancing and plunge and
old time frolic.
Evening—Band concert and dance
at Bczeman Hot Springs.
;;|w rt*
ROUNDUP OPENING
DEIAYED BY SUIT
Civil proceedings in the courts
threatened fer a short time to prevent
the use of the Roundup grounds Mon
day but the opening performance was
begun about an hour late after Judge
Law vacated a judgment brought last
spring by M. S. Cunningham and
Hans Biering against the roundup as
sociation, and setting the date for
the hearing in the matter for Monday,
August 10.
The sheriff had received the writ
of attachment and locked the gates
at the stadium, holding thousands
from entering the place for more than
two hours. The order of the couit
■ automatically allowed the sheriff to
remove the padlocks and the crowds
streamed into the bleachers and
grand-stand.
N. P. GRANTS LOW RATE
TO LEGION STATE MEET
the certificate
Special rates on
plan have been granted by the North
Pacific to the American Legion
*ta 4 e convention at Dillon August 18,
14 and 15, at one and one-half fare
for the round trip. Ticket» will be
sale from August 5 to 15 inclusivë
19 is the last day upon
era
on
and
tlic r«
MRS. J. W. BLODGETT
Wd
m
£
' ■
.
-
v
,
•••
'

: :
..4,
Mrs. John W. Blodgett, wife of a
wealthy lumberman of Grand Rapids,
Mich., who has provided a fund of
$550,000 for Vaosar college, her alma
mater, to establish a department of
•uthsnics, the study of the heme. All
but $60,0d0 will be for construction of
s nsw building.
NEW SETTLERS
■ bi
(Continued from page One)
bookkeepers, school teachers, musici
ans, and sailors are discouraged when
they write in regard to "taking up
land" in Montana for their own good
as well as that of the state inasmuch
their limited knowledge of agri
culture pitted against the actual con
ditions will not weather. What Mon
as
tana wants is the substantial farmer
who is willing to plod for a while,
if necessary, and build up a perma
nent home and livelihood, for in this
way only will the agriculture of the
state become established and lasting.
County Committees.
The land settlement program calls
for a committee of five men ; n each
county consisting of the county agent
or Smith-Hughes man, a farm leader,
two business men and a reliable pub
licity agent to whom new settlers can
be referred for authentic information
and all possible assistance in getting
settled—a poster giving the personnel
of this committee to be displayed in
coun
The - program does not intend to)
various public places in the county
for the benefit of settlers who may
come in without any means of ac
quaintance. These committees are
to serve without pay and in the best
interests of the state, investigating
and reporting to headquarters all
colonization projects in thei
ties, as well as in assisting individual
settlers.
hamper in any way the real estate
business cf the state other than see
that all representations by such firms
are fair. It will, rather, in that
sense support and protect every legit
imate real estate business.
The program also aims to lend as
sistance in furthering cooperation in
farm communities in the production
and marketing of products; gathering
soil survey information for each ccun
ty; and in securing the passage o
irrigation district laws which will
safeguard public and private inter
t
osts.
..
.
a
DICKEY TO SUCCEED
SHOVELL AS CHIEF
OF HORTICULTURE
Missoula.—Edwan^ Dickey of
Kali. t »pell, who has been appointed
to succeed W. H. ShoveU of Mis
soula as chief of Hie division of
horticulture, with headquarters
in Missoula, has arrived to spend
« few days qn business.
STOCK INSPECTOR
TO BE STATIONED •
AT SPOKANE, WN.
K. A. Phillip«, secretary of the
Montana livestock commission,
has beeai granted permission by
the state hoard of exa miner s to
make a trip to Spokane for the
purpose of appointing an inspec
tor for Montana 1 nhipmenhs of
cattle to or throoglr^glft stock
yards at that market.
In a letter to the board of
aminers Mr. 'PhiBipo pointed ont
that the appointment of an in
spector at Spokane
>. far the re*«» thht »«her
on« reports of stolen cattle being
had been made and the eommia
deemed it advisable to pro
sit
vide the
ducted at eas
the great hu»
r ^o R o"RD N
Il
!
% f
Takes Fancy to Carpenter
Who Dislikes Species.
New York.—An unusually large and
valuable collection of rare birds ami
beasts from vhe Upper Amazon ar
rived In New York from Para and
Pernambuco.
The collection ar y lve ^ charge of
Philip Schuman, who had spent five
rump öiuu
months, and had employed six hun
dred Indians in bringing it together.
The gems of the collection a» 1 « ■
Moracaja Jaguar, a beast about the
size of a fox-terrier, with a curious
mark on its forehead resembling a
Chinese laundry ticket; three alinkers.
large birds the size of pheasants, with
a unicorn-like spike on their beads
and sheathed spikes on their shoulders
for offensive purposes ; a rare and
very valuable yellow parrot, a white
marmoset four inches long, and a
three-year-old tapir, the size of a
Shetland pony, very affectionate.
The collection also includes 44
monkeys, 19 macaws, 22 marcos ducks,
B maracas, 6 garsas, 9 kutios, 3 antas,
26 parrots, 8 Jacamees, 5 mutons, 5
alligators, 8 snakes, including a flfteen
foot boa-constrictor; 8 owls, 21 land
turtles, 1 gwara, 1 three-toed web
footed giant Brazilian . waterhog,
which resembles a highly magnified
guinea pig, and 9 anteaters.
The entire collection was housed 09
the forward hatch 'and covered by a
canvas tarpaulin. This unusual dis
position of such a perishable cargo
was explained by Capt. Walter Denson
as due to the light cargo and the at
titude of the crew.
A Royal Foast of Nuts.
"Except for a little rubber and the
animals the only cargo aboard was 500
tons of Brazil nota. If we had struck
any sort of a sea the cargo would have
shifted, the animals would have
broken loose and, let alone the Job of
recapturing them, would have feasted
royally on Brazil nuts from Pars to
Sandy Hook. * ■ tw
tried to
housed in the forecastle, but the crew
objected.
So the only alternative was to put
them on the forward hatch, which we
did. There was room for all but the
tapir. At first the chief officer tried
to have the beast stowed separately*in
the carpenter's shop. But the latter
came to me and requested to be pot
in irons.
I
It ain't Christian,' was all he
would say. Alf Moore was his name,
and he said he had lost a cousin in
u 4
stralia from the kick of a tapir,
s orl right for 'im to sye that the
beast's gentle,' Moore declared, 'but all
I knows is that you'll 'ave to put me
in the brig for mutiny afore I ships
with that bloodthirsty reptile.'
• "The worst of it was that the tapir
seemed to have taken a fancy to Alf.
We made him fix the cage on top of
the others, surrounded by the ant
eaters and the waterhog to steady It.
But every time the ship rolled the
cage swayed, and no amount of stay
ing could make it fast. All the time
Alf was working, the tapir kept wrig
gling his nose st him and uttering low
o( affection. Bot Alt took no
notice.
"All went well until two nights out
a
from New York we struck a nasty Utile
sea crossing the Gulf stream. Alf
felt hungry along toward midnight and
stole aft to the galley to brew a mug
of hot tea on the sly. As he passed
the tapir the beast gave a mournful
cry of recognition, but Alf hurried on.
Frightened by the Tapir.
"A bit later the chief engineer, Mr.
Brand, spied something moving against
the cyack of light by the galley door,
.^mu^ng to play a joke on Chips, who
had got so he couldn't bear to have
tapirs spoken of in, ,his presence, he
sung out, 'Loo$ out, the tapir's broken
loose.' .
"'Oh Gawd I the tapir I' Alf yelled,
and dove Thto/the lazareet and barri
caded the door.
"Wotd passed that the tapir was
loose, and eight men and the boson
begkh hunting It in the dark. It was
dirty weather, the old ship rolling, ske
was so light, all the birds and animals
squalling and Jabbering, the Jaguar
meowing like a chorus of tomcats,
and the anteaters giving shrill crie$.
"The men carried no lantern,
there was one nasty moment when
of the crew tackled the bosun—he
Bristol man, and they came 1
Cardiff. They handled him m bit
roughly, and It didn't make matters
any better when they explained that
they bad mistaken him for the tapir!.
, "Finally, the chief took a hand, mid
found the tapir hi the galley. Only It
=
in
wasn't the tapir after all. It was (he
four-inch white marmoset
"One of the parrots was dying gpd
Its mate «et up such a Jabber that |he
marmoset could not stand it Be
didn't like Bring with parrots anyway
and was nearly crazy from the gtpell
of the Brazil nuts in the hold.
"The marmoset had crept out of jthe
basket and found its way forward to
the galley. When the chief fount) U
It had Just finished a piece of hie
and Jam the doctor had been ea
and was swearing horribly beeau«
had burned its nose in the doctor's
on out 1 * the ch
itf* f
it
it
called
, I
'We've „
"So Alf c*a#ied out
. " 'Here's your tapin'
pointing to the little,
trying to bUe the edgj
chiefs brass buttons.
he-lazH
.Bi
who
e of-the 1
looked at It.
ke me
«
sH.pWORKBfflN«
NEW TYPE ROAD
Experiments in Cinder and Oh
Crown Are Under Way
at Billings
Billings.—Work was started Satur
day on a new form, of road surfacing,
w hi c h if it proves satisfactory, will
. Î , , , ,
probably be used on many unpaved
v .. *. . .
streets m the city. The experiment
is being tried out-on Ncrth Twentieth
street from First avenue to Sixth
avenue and consists in surfacing the
road with about five inches of cin
ders which are mixed thoroughly
with the dirt of the road and after
the surface is well packed a residue
oil is applied.
determine how tho cinders will mix
with the soil here," said E. M. Sneck-,
The experiment right now is to
a
enberger, city engineer, who is .n
charge of the work, "and to find out.
if this type of road surface will prove
satisfactory under the local drainage
conditions.
ff
Mr. Snecker.berger returned recent
ly from Great Falls where 17 miles
of streets are surfaced in this manner
and it has proven very satisfactory
there, he said. Qne of the difficul
ties to, be encountered here, however,
is thq., matter of drainage, because
Great Falla js slightly sloping while
Billings is built upon a flat, "The ex
périment en Twentieth street will be
watched closely and it will probably
...
som 'C time before any definite con
clusion can be arrived at on the new
road surface.
MONTANA QUEEN 10
HAVE GREAT TIME
Helena.—As the time for the Mon
tana State fair draws near interest
in the fourth Queen of Montana con
test is becoming much more active.
Practically all of Montana's counties
are conducting contests which will re
sult in sending representatives to
Helena on Sept. 7, 8, 9 and 10 for the
purpose of participating in the event
which will decide which Montana girl,
chosen as a representative of her
county, will graduate to the higher
honor of Queen of Montana and rep
resent this state at the national con-1
vention of the American Legion at
Omaha and the International Petrol
eum exposition at Tulsa.
This year's Queen of Montana will
be a much-feted personage. After
the four-day, whirl incident to the
contest at the State fair the Ameri
can Legion is planning on introduc
ing the Queen to several the cities of
Montana prior to the national conven
tion.
The social events at Helena, Omaha
and Tulsa will b© the most brilliant
and varied w hich it is possible for
cial committees named to have charge
of the contest and the plans have pro
gressed Sufficiently to make it certain
that the 1925 princesses of Montane
will have a wonderful four-day enter
tainment.
those communities to plan and they j ^
will indeed be an experience for the j S
girl winning the State Fair contest, j
Details of the State Fair entertain- j
ment are now being planned by spe
DRAPERY CLEARANCE
Special Clearance of Drapery Fabrics, Cretonnes, Curtain
Nets to Make Room for Fall Stocks
•j .
TWENTY PER CENT OFF DRAPERIES
n
' —One big lot of 36 and 50-inch drapery silks in colors blue,
rose, brown, etc# plain or brocaded patterns
Special this week
off
. 20 %
11 YARD CRETONNES, SPECIAL 75c
>5—Large assortment of 36-inch Cretonnes in Veledge, Diar
; mond taffetas and many, other beautiful designs and pat
terns in cretonnes selling regular at 90c and $1. rtw T1
_Special, yttl.., > .. I 9C
CO
»
SPECIAL GROUP OF CRETONNES, YARD 29c
—A very speci&l collection of 35c and 39c cretonnes in the
season's newest colors, designs and pattern«.
Special, per yard ...
Drapery Fabrics ;
29c
TTTgjLL-CHOSEN
, .▼ ▼ draperies arc as co
scntial äs comfortable
chairs and good books.
For mid-summer days
curtains of the new light
weight, soft-hued Colonial
Drapery Fabric* now
in stock' will creme in

TWENTY PER CENT OFF CURTAIN NETS
dgns m
in nets
—Large assortment of
several pairs of made-ii
Special from the
regular price .
tin nets; also
Off
an a
■... .. I ». .... 'm .
-

MRS. HOWARD S. CANS
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B 1 TET-T 1 -- —I .
Mrs. Howard S: Gans of New York,
I president of the Child Study itiocli«
tion.
i
*
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REGIONAL BOARD
MEETS AUGUST 6
AT GREAT FALLS
; for transportation dating the
. coming fall season was called
Saturday by J. F. Reed of St.
Paul, general ' chairman. The
session is scheduled for August 6 ■
tat Great Falls, Mr. Reed said it
also was hoped to obtain a gen
eral survey of all business condi
tions within the state. Oper
ation, transportation and traffic
officers of the Montana lines will
be present.
St. %ul.—A meetng of the
Montana division of the north
west regional advisory board to
determine the volume ofc commod
ities to be offered the railroads
ilUffiL
r~'
I*! !
**♦ S*
i
= S»'
rümr
^^3
T
Yes Sir!
It's crGruen
t ?vf r
A rectangular movement in a rectangular case;
making possible larger and stronger parts. This
gives you a strong "he-man's" watch.
It has patented dust and moisture-proof non-pull
out stem. The back of the case is curved for
comfort on the wrist. Spring lugs permit change
of strap without sewing. Has a long mainspring
and therefore will run longer than the average '
watch.
Masculine in style and design, sturdy in construc
tion, made in 14 kt. white or green gold reinforced
case—priced at $,45.
See this new creation—now on display.
H. A, Pease & 9 Co,
Fd
CHIMNEY INSPECTION
IS UJIGED AT HELENA.
*
Helena.—Inspection of flues and
chimneys for damage, resulting from
the recent earth tremors, and repairs
of any damage found before cool
"weather sets in, ane ur.?ed by Fire
Chief Martiä. Juhl, as a prevention
against lose of property by fire.
Chief Juhl quotes the state fire
marshal as saying that a chimney
cracked by the quake cause 1 the re
cent fire which wiped out rn entire
business block- and other bui.dings at
Toston,
Amundsen Plans Another
Flight for North Pole
New York,—Lincoln Ellsworth, co
explorer with Roald Amundsen in the
latter's recent polar flight, returning
Saturday on the steamship Freder
jick. III, said another flight to the
(north pole would be attempted,
I certainly hope to try again, he
said, "and we look on the last at
tempt as merely a preliminary. We '
have not as yet, however, made defi
nite plans for a new start.
Mr. Ellsworth said the planes used
on the first flight were not entirely
satisfactory. A dirigible would be
more feasible for the trip, he said,,
but the expense would be great, ,
The expedition found no land near
the pole, Mr. Ellsworth said, but they
saw an auk and two geese flying to
the northwest, which might indicate
5.
land.
' a:
Mansers neve been
caPy defined to be a contrivance of
wlro men to keep fools at a distance.
Fashion Is shrewd to detect those who
do not belong to her train and sel
dom wastes her attentions. Society
Is very swift in Its Instincts and. if
you do not belong to It. resists and
sneers at you. or quietly drops you.—
Ralnb Waldo Emerson.
it eyni-

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