Montana Oil and Mining Journal (Great Falls, Mont.), 1939-04-15, [P PAGE

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Montana Oil and Mining Journal (Great Falls, Mont.), 1939-04-15, [P PAGE ü PAGE TWO MONTANA OIL AND MINING JOURNAL Saturday, April 15, 1939. FADT r*! A PL'TT | from one state to another, until his r UK 1 LLAlit 11 I Tm same matmerf no action ***& taken |R0AD PENALTIES ta nans, Inc., said. nr TIT rr 1AT i n f*n : Maryland family dating from before Fishing Licenses against Clark to prove it." » » ngt nmirrun Formation of such a delegation Kl III ||\ I Xh / the Revolution. His father was both a DUIL1 1a 1 J-Uli < lawyer and a planter, who left Mary- iÄS»ss*Bii,!i MADE SUFFER ! land in 1850 for the far west of Keokuk, Go On Sale May 1 '"ÄÄsS! FINES PEOVIDÊdbÏ NEW LEGIS- «0«JBTSSuS ÄgTÄS «Tccmmf a IIa- when William was 12 years old. The WAS LOCATED ON MISSOURI A, boy gained his education from the Montana’s 1939 fishing SHORT DISTANCE ABOVE MOUTH ! schools of Keokuk, and a portion of will go on sale May 1, officials of OF JUDITH RIVER his legal education in the Albany, N. Y., the state fish and game commis­ ‘ ‘ n?ne ^ $10 TO 550 states affected, especially Montan«. law school, where he Studied a year, sion said. °f ________ Wyoming and the Dakotas. The insect , . „ and was admitted to the bar before he During the last fiscal year, Äfor» *“y chances. weirht of nirhwav Vehicles damage ln Montana alone amounted Trading Post Named for William H. was 20. 121,698 licenses of all kinds were T-here are plenty of tnstaoees recorded s**e and of “,gh'‘^ , .TT to more than $6,000.000 last year, Mr. Clagett, Who Served Montana Terri- His father was strongly proslavery, sold by the state commission. in the history of the young west, of Including Trailers Are Regulated by Porvuson ««trf tory As Delegate to Congress During and at one time was mobbed, it is Existing fishing licenses ex­ ri'ârk Und their frSJSL“ 5^ Amendments Adopted by Recent At a meeting here of the executive 4 Clark and their friends, when it was J committee of Montanan*. Inc., C. R. V.— ona um said, on this account, the office i pire April 30. ; the question of who should shoot first State Assembly. M^aveofOreat Palhformer nre£ the »ears 1872 and wrecked where he then published a; Nonresident fis hing licenses and straightest. There was one similar ------------- ' o?££lzÄ w™d«l& paper and the press thrown into the i for a 10-day period Will cost $2.50 The appellation “Fort” was ap­ river. With such antecedents we should ! this year. Formerly, they were 4 , r,he_n CrawfPrd. (ÿsa,>led Heavier penalties are mandatory ed to represent It as national councilor plied indiscriminately in the early naturally expect to see the younger $1.50 and could be used for 15 Plummers right arm, so that he was . ... ^ f T • . j * at the annual meeting to Washington days of the northwest, alike to Clagett allied with the ultra-southern days. The legislature changed the compelled to train his left In marks- ln the cases of those convicted of at c 3«av 1 to 4 of the UnltedsSta* trading posts and to a government element when he entered politics. This, price of regular nonresident fish­ manshlp. Crawford left the country, violations of new state laws cov- chamber of Commerce. establishment where troops were I was not the case, however, as his first J ing licenses from $3.50 to $5. WÄÄÄ operation of motor vehicles stationed for the protection of the political speeches were made for J Other classes of licenses in country. Fort Clagett. although Stephen A. Douglas in 1860. this state are. Fishing and bird agents). Clark did not attempt to flee, on state highways, according to a , bouse March 16, blister rust control, listed among the government forts In 1861 Clagett married and on the hunting, $2; big game resident and no one ever attributed his willing- digest of the amended laws. The the wheat situation, a bill to establish Is thought to have belonged in the day of the wedding started, with his ( licenses, $1, plus fishing and bird ness to go to St. Louis after McKenzie regulations ad noted hv the a department of public works, another trading post category. Possibly a brother, across the plains to California; | hunting license; sportsmen’s li­ was slain, to any such cause. He stayed. new regulations, adopted by tne authorlze further relief to water small body of troops may have been his wife taking what was thought by censes, $5; alien fishing, $10; ft was Harvey who left the country, recent legislative assembly, regu- users on federal and Indian bureau stationed there for a short time, some to be the easier route, the ocean nonresident bird hunting, $10; He, Î4rLteo?î?ei wl0“8’ late size and weight of high- i reclamation projects, and one to au- but what troops, and when, is voyage, and across the isthmus. nonresident big game hunting li­ mere fact tnat nc acted as a represen- , . , . ® & « thorlze construction of numerous largely a matter of conjecture. Eighteen months later Mr. and Mrs. censes, $30; alien big game bunt­ tative of the American Fur Co., in- i ^f^.Te^.C,?*Vlre£,î?a*l? îw* wC, **** water conservation and utilization ing licenses, $50. jured his trade. The Indians hated I number of trailers, limit the total and t projects in the arid and semlarid great Fort Clagett was located on the Mis- Clagett were reunited at Carson City, him, taking the first opportunity to1 axle weight of any vehicle, and In plains region of the United States, souri, a little above the mouth of the Judith river, and very nearly on the u There could have teen no luxurious express their feelings when they left i many instances provide for higher pen- consideration was given the request site of Camp Cooke, the first perma- h°me prepared for the bride s arrival, m*tw r\f\V -mm /Tf 1 nu ; Port McKenzie naught but a pile of | altles than have been assessed in the 1 of Schubert Dyche, athletic coach at nent military camp in Montana. The as Mr. Clagett finding no other em- MAI ( III |w| I I AU 14 ashes where nothing can be found ; Past. Montana State college, Bozeman, that latter was built by the 13th Infantry ployment to be obtained, cut and iTlrilAjl/JLlTl tLflllll today but a few mounds of earth over- .The law now provides tlrntno vehicle J g^t jg be made Montana day at the In 1866 and occupied until 1869, when hauled wood for a living, lawyersnoti iinrniTniu grown with vegetation, and perhaps shall have a greater total width than Francisco world’s fair. The Bobcat the soldiers were sent to Fort Benton, seeming to be there m demand. Theni L ft 1 F|) \1’L L\71L I some beads, to indicate the site of i eljght feet, except in the case of ve- i football team will play San Jose Junior Fort Clagett sprang into existence the came news of silver discoveries to Hum- I fllLLlLLI Iff IVEiilZiilj what wasi once a thriving trading Post i hides which have teen changed over ; coUege there that day, and the Bobcat : at the head of navigation on the £om.solid to pneumatic tires, with the will be on hand for the event, next year to serve as a trading post t»oldt county, Nevada, and together Missouri. - SÿS/ÏÏSAüie ÆdS above eiSt ^ Wh® ““ 1x1 hlS request' The for the Powers’ interests with a company which included Mark __ , . ._. V f Twain, Mr. Clagett set out to investi- «rp.ro took pî.acf on AN AMER- Traders and trappers who cut them- matter will be discussed further with bthVp newsoaner^re- Rate that re8ion- Here he resumed his ‘ v rn nnAT KFAR TnF J selves off from civilization and their feet.t ^ In greater such athan case, 102 total inches width Height may Governor Ayers and the Montana fair l*Td ^vth^te°f law Practice, and was twice elected to ICAN *3? C®1 J®® 1 own womankind cannot be Judged by a hlfhwav vehicle^ Ihnl^dto813 commission. port, which states that Fori Clagett the Nevada territorial legislature. He MOUTH OF MILK RIVER ordinary standards. They not only ?5 ta g £?ches and length to 35 feet <?- ^868. The^same wag nQW jn the ranks of tge republican ------------- dealt with Indlans-they lived with ^clusive of f^o^f and rear burners ’ as the old P-N ranch on the Mis- Part««iflnd speaklng Two Men Had Some Standing Cause îî?n1r?’^n5i(51ncmtiid^l0^^1man^prUof Combinations of vehicles must not On Kent’s island, Bay of Fundy, herring gulls trample down tree top* 85souri 60 miles» n north,r .n. TrnZtffMof Lewlstown onHand fordidate William for theM. ünitedStewart, States who wasænate can-. .for Dispute___, Between Them,__ and Clark. lifetoms at as an more Elated suited trading to the post,manner or ofIn : JStweaterx . unitsthan ’ Bflfeetwith a Thetotal Æipne+h of so solidly that a man can walk atop ^ “Remal^ of the^d ad^be tot Humboldt he moved to Virginia Shot His Opponent While He Was In J^ ^ÿerness. Chllizatlon exiled üiem an ^hicle ^ n“t StoJSoJJttaS the abommally grown branches. aaos. rtemains ox uie uiu ou uc Clt Ney and there practiced law for a State of Intoxication. through Its demand for one Item of ; three feet bevond the front of the vp- on the west side of «^ Judith show a /ear and half w^en he returned ________ luxury-beaver fur.
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