e la il me lawson county fair dates · the throne room of the palace when.he new emperor,...
TRANSCRIPT
e 9 No 2 __ GLENDIVE. MONTANA. THURSDAY. AUGUST , 1912 Eight Pages
OUR AIX: TO PUBLISH A NEWSPAPER.. *.i .m mmmImii I i e man a mum la Il me
lawson County Fair Dates Sept.One or more Air Ship Flights Each Day of Fair
By an Aviator Furnished by the National Aeroplane Co.jAP EMPEROR
IS NO MORE
Long and Famous ReignComes to an End.
hi ,to, for 44
..... .did ot 12:43
Y ,shinito llaru-r the formula
. il', promtl-
, ' kin!r is dead;
thr. (ne hun-
:peror of Ja-
.".s many hours
he empress, the
most prominent
. , i and govern-
... ,. ,•,a ,r empress,
: the young
;,t•her of three
..:t is Hirohito.
..,•.. . ... ,- ievitable from
ia),ath was due
,., .'-. hirwise known
S... '. ii.-. 'i:is was com pli-
.'l ain intestinal
:: in such cases,, siolns, showed
- uiroveinent, fol-
: i : !, - Since July 25 the
:per' :'r become grad-
.ih•' fever, weak
h 1ha11o respira-
:- :i;i s recognized the" -..... , ,'•,E a-se every prepa-
' . .r, fr the end. The
",ministers and...r ;tg i•i,, d to the palace
'. ; ri i ,, :ttr rooms for
' : :t h have been
w ith the emperor
S• !:,. : him, while the
:. u:• ,ton, was taken
" ':: ; th physicians,- 'is hourly, giving
o. . f the disease.
' -: uncemnent- thath.e emperor--- was
•" V'::IJ :;rt };, ri.
oi ,,rd of 20,000 sub-" c ,:;'. i, ',lace gates silently
I; ;;l:;tar usl scene when mes-• ' r -:! tti mingled with the
a'•n, a '.'a:trd .announcements
er~ r':s ,hath. Deep emotioneri' .I ml '> Wt h.l, but there was
r{ 'i elct . f ,i'.xc tefment.
thin : h,,e !:aL' t the death wasuniat •th waiting imperialVrar an'i nlitablk.s whereupon with-
-'y :,. acc*'ssion ceremoniesi'Ha, L, : 1 i 'elock at the im-
"'i, tary. The shrine wasl•'ri cording to the Shinto rites.
o'ril l ~ akura the chief ritualist," r iatq! ;. iln r tl', offering on the
'ral~ar: ih was assisted by a• ritinatge who rang a bell while the" u•Wvrea , ,being placed. The oathra read in the ,rt sence of the minis-
of the state, the counsellors andig lnitaries.
The crown prince, Yoshihito, whosucceeded to the throne, was born Aug.31, 1879. He was made self-apparentAug. 31, 1887, proclaimed crown princeNov. 3, 1888, and decorated with thegrand order of merit and grand in-signia of the imperial chrysanthemum.He was promoted to be lieutenant-colonel in the army and commander inthe navy in.1901. He became lieuten-ant-general and vice-admiral on Nov.3, 1909.
The prince was married to PrincessSadako, daughter of Prince Kujo,Michitaka, May 10, 1900.
The ceremony at the sanctuary willbe repeated in the next two days.
A more impressive scene occurred inthe throne room of the palace when.he new emperor, Yoshihito, receivedthe sacred treasures. His majesty en-tered the hall, preceded by the min -
ister of the household, the chief ofthe board of ceremonies, the lord
chamberlain, military and naval aids,and the imperial prince. He was fol-lowed by Prince Yamagata, president
of the privy council, Marquis Matsuk-ata, member of the privy council, Mar-
quis Imouyo, councillor of state, and
others of similar rank, the premier,Marquis Saionji, the ministers of state.marshals, generals and admirals.
The scene lacked brilliancy, al-
though not solemnity, for the majorityof those present were without uni-
forms. They had remained in the pal-
ace for two days and were not given
time to repair to their homes prior to
the ceremony.The date for the funeral has not
been fixed. Probably it will take
place within a month at Kyoto, where
the emperor expressed a desire to be
buried on the site of Maruyama pal-
ace, built by Hideyoshi in the six-
I teenth century.The old form of funeral ceremony
doubtless will be modified consider-
ably because it is impossible to adaptold usages to modern conditions, but
many unique customs will be retained.
It is not believed that the accession
of the new emperor will mark a
change in Japanese policy. Yoshibito
is highly respected by his subjects.
The ceremonies this morning in con-
nection with his accession under the
constitution promulgated by his father
invests his person and surroundinswith the same sacredness as his pre-
decessor.The American am ador C
P. Bryan, was the first caller at the
palace after theas atmmesemt of thedeath of the empeor, and preseated
condolees. All thepowers have been
notified and the forei ea a-
tives wilcall at the palace rw
Cleaniness is next sato oli itry Heuck' bath t#- fotr the a,kind of r h.
1. ,-
Cubs Easily Beat Out Miles
The Cubs neatly turned the tableson the Miles City team last Sunday,easily taking the game by a score of9 to 2, and atoning for their recentdefeat in a close game at Milestown.Sunday's contest was a splendid onein every way and both teams playedsnappy ball. Monihan, the ex-leagueumpire, gave universal satisfactionby his good work and fair decisions.
As the situation stands now, theCubs have bested all the teams playedwith, and will now attempt to securegames with as many other teams aspossible.
The assassinated press score oflast Sunday's game:
CUBSAB H PO AE
Robedee, ss 5 2 2 3 1Bartlett, c 4 2 1 2 0Geib, 2b 4 2 2 2 0Sanborn, If 4 1 2 1 0Fleming, p 3 2 1 3 0Hildebrand, lb 2 1 16 1 0
Jones, 3b 4 1 1 1 1Mack, cf 4 0 1 0 1Taylor, rf 3 0 1 0 0
Yallop, rf 1 0 0 0 0
:1 27 13 3
MILES CITY
Spear, lb 4 1 14 2 2
Jones, p, cf 1 0 2 0 0
Myers, rf 3 1 1 0 0
Shears, 2b 4 3 1 1 1
Casey, 3b 3 2 3 3 1
Hanyon, c 4 0 0 1 0
Wetseh, If 4 1 2 0 0Johns, ss 3 1 2 2 1
Atwell, p, cf 4 0 2 1 1
9 27 10 6
Yallop replaced Taylor. Struck out
-- by Fleming, 9; by Jones, 1; by At-
well, 5. Passed balls-Hanyon, 2.
Three-base hits-Geib, Bartlett. Two-
base hits--Casey. Sacrifice hits--Hil-
debrand, 2; Shears, Fleming. Double
plays--Jones to Geib to Hildebrand,
Fleming to Geib to Hildebrand, San-
born to Geib to Hildebrand. Bases on
balls--off Fleming, 1; off Atwell, 3.
Time, 1:40. Umpire, Monihan. Scor-
er, Love. Attendance--700.
PRIZES FROM MR.BERRY FOR GRAIN
Makes Substantial Additionsto Premium Offers.
In addition to the regular premiums*
offered by the Fair association this
year, E. J. Barry, proprietor of the
Htl Jordan and The New Theckla.
has doted $60.00 in cash as premi-
-a for the best bushel of flax, wheat,
a baulq, corn and potatoes raised
in Bhsna contg By dry land farm-
.w. The hbit are to be judged by
dislJteretfed men coptent to act,
and for the best burbel of each varyr
t itared in the ontest, SLo.o ca.M iaWR S 7T6a p s liberl p
H. W. Mitchell Wins Motorcycle
The closing of the big Dixie Flyercontest last Saturday evening sawan avalanche of votes turned in totheir credit by the leading contes-tants. The final counting wasmade at 9 o'clock at Miskimen'sstore l)y Fred Goulding and ForestGaines. It was seen from the firstthat the big contest would be overthe winning of the grand prize, thehandsome motorcycle. HarveyMitchell and Frank Oliver wererunning neck and neck up to thelast evening, when the mass ofvotes that Mr. Mitchell turned ingave him a long lead.
Both Mr. Miskimen and the man-agement of this paper were more
than pleased at the interest shown,and the satisfaction of all the candi-dates that the contest had bees,carried through in a most fair andimpartial manner.
The prizes won, names and num-bers of contestant', and number ofvotes recorded t:fr each winner fol-low:
First, $250 Dixie Flyer Motorcy-cle, No. 93, H. W. Mitchell, 16,879-085 votes.
Second, $50 in Trade Tickets,good for merchandise any time, No.115, Frank Oliver, 9,782.525 votes.
Third, $25 Suit or Overcoat orTrade Tickets, No. 61, Philip Ha-gan. 4,646,075 votes.
Fourth. Lady's or Gentleman'sWatch, warranted 20 years, No. 27,E. H. Creelman, 4,493,810 votes.
Fifth, 24-piece set Golden Wed-ding Brand Silverware. No. 139, AlSommerness, 4,137,980 votes.
Sixth, $14 Hand Bag, No. 2, MaxBailer, 4,032,815 votes.
Seventh, 12 pairs Holeproof Hose,No. 25, Milton Coulter, 3,964.315votes.
How To Grow Corn
To the boys who are competing forthe Howard Elliott medals and the trip
to the Montana State Fair, September
23-28, by growing corn, as well as tocorn growers generally, the following
may be of interest.The selection of seed, varieties,
and work of planting are already past.
Corn requires much cultivation. It
TRAIN SERVICEFOR VALLEY
Regular Schedule in Effecton the Sidney Line.
The first regular train service of thenew Glendive-Sidney branch of theNorthern Pacific, was installed today,Aug. 1. For the present, there willbe regular mixed trains from Glen-dive to Sidney and return on Monday,Wednesday and Saturday of eich week.The train this morning carried over ahundred passengers, and the people ofthe lower valley are to be congratula-
ought to be cultivated at least once aweek until it is too high for the horseto get through it. Cultivate threeinches deep at first, but after it getsup two feet high two inches is deepenough to cultivate. Do not let a crustform, and keep out all the weeds.
If you irrigate, do it early enoughto cultivate afterwards, and do notirrigate too nuch. It is better to irri-gate in furrows between rows than toflood.
Thin out the stalks to two in a hillbefore they get too large.
Select the ripest, best-developedears for exhibition,-those that are ofeven size the whole length, well filledat tips, with small butts. Deep ker-nels that are close and tight are best.
Keep the corn as dry as possible afterhusking and do not leave it packedaway from the air longer than is nec-essary in shipping it.
The boy in this county who showsthe best ten ears gets a medal, a tripto Helena, free entertainment at thestate fair and free admission to every-thing there, and a free course of in-struction in stock judging during thewhole week. F. S. COOLEY, Boze-man, Supt. State Fair Industrial Contests.
Pleatywood is Live Cauuuaty
Plentywood, July 22.--"Unitedwe will stand; divided we might fall,'"
should have been appropriately in-
scribed on the Fourth of July banner
at the recent two days' big celebrationin Plentywood, as it is becoming moreand more every day the motto of this
community. Two years ago, with the
coming of the railroad, when outsidecapital commenced the building of asystem of grain elevators at the differ-ent railroad shipping points slong thenewly constructed Bainsville-Plenty-wood branch, it suddenly dawned uponthe minds of some of the well-to-doand more progressive farmers of thiscommunity,. whose names will be here-isnfter meatinaed, that if Minunesotacapitalists cold t•atld and operatethese elevators alung this braneh pta sure eas ri oiftuty prot to them-selves,; why oild they not, by a systemof united o atstof te fumaAt thi Upper Muandet &1is sam +iad
Iiee this e aety em- A a reslt
* e uyd at ased f th
,e
ted that they now have a train ser-vice that will meet all the require-ments of their rapidly growing busi-ness interests.
From the present outlook, therewill be more grain to handle on thenew division than the railway officialscontemplated, for the lower valley isblessed with a fire crop.
purpose and as a monument to theirwise decision and judgment there is to-day lined up with the two foreign ele-vators along the Great Northerntracks, the Farmters' elevator ofPlen`.ywood.
Beginning in a humble way, duringthe first year of its existence theFarmers' elevator handled only 28,000bushels of flax, but after paying alloperating expenses wound up theyear's business with the sum of $800to the good. The second year-that of1911 -of its advent into the businessworld, indirect competition with es-tablished big business, it handled 68,-000 bushels of flax and 20,000 bushelsof wheat and after paying all operatingexpenses, including insurance and al-lowing two cents per bushel premiumto all stockholders delivering grain atthe elevator, paid its shareholders thehandsome dividend of 40 per cent. (SeeJohn A. Davis, president of the com-pany at Plentywood.)
Being thus justly encouraged at thesuccess of their first venture the samepersonnel of the elevator company andits shareholders, representing in theaggregate a property valuation of ovt rhalf a million dollars, with J. A. Davispresident of tie company; ForestGoodman, vice president; A. Riba, act-ing temporary treasurer, and J. A.Oaks, secretary and manager, and witha capital of $50,000, of which $25.000 isfully paid, are just at present break-ing the ground in the near vicinity oftheir elevator for a general merchan-dise establishment 50x70 feet, to beoperated in connection with the ele-vator and known as the Farmers'Grain & Mercantile company, to beready for basinegs Sept. 1. J. A. Davis,president of the company, has for msoetime been giving his almost undividedattention to the affairs of theeompanyand has been and is meeting withflattering mces in the solieitatios ofstodk smbscriptions among the farma-ers. The current fall will mark theestablishment of a permanent, mates-fully rwnducted cooperative home es-terpri.e of no psmal proportions.
Doe't fowet that we have the beatquipped shop in the state of Mhatma,ass' do yesr work tis t elhis
*l9pa. C. S. iheate
ums will amply repay the farmer forbringing to the Fair this year the bestproducts of his farnn and will be themeans of showing the many visitorswhat this county grows in the way ofagricultural products by the dry landfarming methods.
Mr. Berry's substantial gift ofthese cash premiums is a move in theright diectio., for the average far-mer in this new eountry has little uesfora silver cup or tPphg 1-t. .