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Great Falls Tribune from Great Falls, Montana • Page 3

Location:
Great Falls, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pace 3 THE GREAT FALLS TRIBUNE Wednesday 3Iorning, October 16, 1940 barrels sealed. Nose was arraigned before Commissioner Earl V. Cline in Billings and bonds, set at $500, were furnished. AH Around the Treasure State 2 Sheridan Persons Are the Missouri river. He was tttrwptr Mrs.

Dwieht Jones of Musselshell Man Faces U. S. Alcohol Charge ROUNDUP, Oct. 15. (Special) Joe Nose Sr.

of Camp Three was released on bond after being arraigned on a federal alcohol tax evasion charge. He was arrested Friday for possession of an unregistered still, mash. 18 gallons of illegally manufactured whisky and 600 gallons of wine. The whisky and mash were destroyed and the wine Cify Wafer Registrar HAVRE. Havre's longest growing Dodson, district lone troop program consultant, met Turner Girl Scouts and addressed a meeting of mothers.

tjashtta When the first frost Laid to Rest season in the history of the local weather bureau ended Oct. 14 with a killing frost. The growing season hit Nashua and vicinity, many beet was 180 days, extending from April 17. The date of the killing frost did not break any record, the latest frost ever recorded at Havre having farmers suffered loss irozen Dee us as these were not accepted at the beet dump. ROY.

-Mrs. P. Plumb received word of the sudden death of her mothpr at their old home in Minne Campaign Pin Dates From Lincoln Days HARLOWTON, Oct. 15. "ial) Mr.

'and Mrs. Walter Lfiford of this city have a campaign button from the historic campaign between Lincoln and. Douglas In 1860, -4n which the "rail splitter" was victorious. The button has on its face the picture of "Honest Abe" Abraham Lincoln and is without reading matter. About a year ago the Luncefords received from George Mapes, a friend, a box of trinkets.

Mrs. Lunceford found the "Lincoln" button. Mapes says the button was given him by his father, who fought with the Union forces "during the Civil war. Fathers of both Mr. and Mrs.

Lunceford also fought with the northern forces. PLATFORM ROCKERS come Oct. 18, 1938., But that year the growing season was only 163 days, due to late frost In May. Demonstration Club Council for County Assembles at Poplar WOLF POINT, Oct. 15.

(Special) The Roosevelt county home demonstration council held its annual fall meeting at Poplar. The revised constitution and bylaws were discussed. Mrs. E. L.

Neixkirk of Bainville reported on the achievement day. Mrs. M. So-renson, Mrs. John Palm, Mrs.

O. B. Miller, Mrs. John Warmrod, Mrs. B.

H. Seip and Mrs. S. R. Nees were appointed to plan for the 1941 achievement day.

Poplar home demonstration clubs invited the council to hold the 1941 achievement day here in June. Depot Work Starts LIBBY, Oct 15. (Special) Workmen have torn down the warehouse at the Great Northern depot. The rest of the depot will be moved onto the west side of Mineral avenue and left there until the new depot is completed. Leo S.

Ross Co. of Seattle has the contract. A combination wood and stucco building is being erected. apolis. Her mother was 79 and had BELT.

Dorothy Fox, who has been in poor heaitn lor two years, but death was not expected. RED LODGE. James Wheeler. 60, -Rifrv is in the Carbon county been teaching in the Geraldine school, assumed her duties as instructor in Belt Valley high school. Falls Woman, Child Are In Hospital Mrs.

Wm. Kaste Hurt When Car Turns Over' On Highway Overpass HAVRE. Oct. 15. (Special) Mrs.

William Kaste Jr. of Great Falls, injured In an automobile accident, is confined to the Deaconess hospital with broken ribs and bruises and cuts. She and her five children were enroute to Havre to attend the funeral of Mrs. Kaste when a tire blew out. the car going through the guard rail on the overpass near Big Sandy and turning over several times.

All the children were cut and bruised. The door of the car did not open, which prevented more serious injuries, according to Arnold Fredriksen. highway patrolman, who investigated the accident. One child. Lorraine, is also still in the hospital.

Sheriff Appointed HELENA. Oct. 15. (U.R) J. W.

Speer, Great Falls, state chairman of the Associated Willkie Clubs of Montana, today announced the appointment of Fred B. Sheriff, Helena, as secretary of the She takes the place of Henry Harsch. jail pending charges after an at who accepted a position at Red Lodge, succeeding Leo Spogen. also of Belt, who has been teaching at Red Lodge but was appointed postmaster there. Miss Fox will teach English, freshmen citizenship and assist in public speaking.

tempted holdup of a Beirry tavern. Wheeler, whose record shows one other attempted holdup, was drunk at the time, according to-Sheriff J. R. McFate. LnnfiE.

Pete Kerscher. Red Nels Sampsei and Mrs. Jacobsen Are Buried; Services at Dagmar PLENTYWOOD, Oct. 15. (Special) Nels Sampsen, 85, long time resident of the Dagmar community, died following a heart attack while driving his car from the home of his son, Sam Sampsen, to the home of a daughter.

Funeral services were held at the Dagmar Lutheran church and burial was there. Sampsen was the father of nine children, three of whom preceded him in death. His wife died In 1937. Surviving are his daughters, Mrs. Anna Jensen, whose home is In California: Emma Andreason.

Mrs. Lena Rasmussen and Mrs. Freda Lodahl, Dagmar. and Mrs. Minnie Christen-sen.

Reserve, and his son Sam, Dagmar. Sampsen came to Dagmar and homesteaded In 1907. Death claimed Mrs. Maren Kris-tine Jacobsen, 75, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Jens Lind, near here.

She was ill several years. She was the mother of three children and had been a resident of the Dagmar community from 1913 until 1931, when, following the death of her Lodge cowboy now performing in NASHUA. First publication of the Madison square garaen roaeo. was hurt while riding in a mounted hasiTAt.hnit came, according to a let Ed N. Davis ter received here by Ben Green- Drive to Minnesota LIBBY, Oct.

15. (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Orvilla Gamache and Mrs. A.

J. Becker left for Grand Rapids, by car. A brother of Gamache died suddenly and they will attend the funeral. Mrs. Becker Is a sister.

the school paper, "The Porcupine," has been issued. The editor is Joe Lutz and others on the staff are Marjorie Nicol, associate; John Ti-hista, art: Elsie Kohrad, Bernice Buen, Thelma Manning Leon a Hal-stad, Beulah Cherney, Ed Tihista, Leona Orth, Claude Johnston, Ho Cook, Bernice Milsten and Oliver Cole, reporters: Ruth Bissell. Bea nough from his daughter, Margie Greenough. who is a featured rider at the rodeo. HAVRE.

O. J. C. Norem, United States minister to Lithuania, and Mrs. Norem visited with Havre friends enroute to Northfield.

In choice of colors. Extra special $7S "It's easy to pay (ha Standard way." BARBER MUSIC STANDARD FURNITURE Grandstand Progresses ROUNDUP. Oct. 15. (Special) Republican Candidate For CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT The office of City Water Registrar is appointive by the Mayor and subject to confirmation by the City Council.

My appointment expires early in May, 1941. and for that reason I am seekins election as Clerk of the District Court. (Paid Political Ad.) husband, she made her home with her daughter. Funeral services were held at the Dagmar Lutheran church, with the Rev. Mr.

Sidney officiating, and burial was In the Dagmar cemetery. Surviving are two sons, Aage Jacobsen and Paul Jacobsen of Reserve, and a daughter, Mrs. Jens Lind, Reserve. Also surviving are. two brothers.

Mads Strandskov, Dagmar, and Lauritz Stranskov, Luck, Wis. trice Mitchell, Byron ulvestad and where Mrs. Norem has been living Joanne Tade, class reporters: Marilyn Beach, Leila Milsten and Clark since her return to this country a The grandstand at the Musselshell county fairgrounds will be completed during this WPA work period. It is expected by that time concrete willi all be poured and the roof erected.1 Hill, typists; Claude Johnston and Oliver Cole, mimeographers; adviser, Christine Erickson. year ago.

"A minister without a country." Norem is still with the state department. Driving to Minnesota BELT. Oct. 15. (Special) Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Johnson and children are leaving by car for Rochester, where Johnson and their son. Dale, will enter the Mayo clinic. MALTA. A.

P. Peck. 84, resident of Phillips county 35 years, died at a local hospital. Funeral services were held at the Bell chapel by the Rev. Leon Hawley of the Community church.

Burial was here. Mr. Peck, who lived here for several years, had been a rancher on fi? 'BStaSBflff H0 a to3 mm I "St ft THE mighty straight-eight that propels the 1941 Buick Century, Roadmaster and Limited, is, we believe, America's most powerful standard-production automobile engine. That suggests immediately that here is the instrument of great speed but the fact is it wasn't speed we were after when we built it. We were shooting for more The 6-passenger Buick Special Sedanet shoivn is priced' Mrs.

Phillips Zortman Woman Who Died From Blast Burns, Is Buried MALTA, Oct. 15. (Special) Final rites for Mrs. Lynn Phillips of Zortman, who died from burns received in an explosion at her home, were held at St. Mary's Catholic church in Malta by the Rev.

Joseph Crowley. Burial was here. Mrs. Phillips died at a local hospital. Her injuries were received when kerosene with which she was attempting to start a fire exploded.

Her husband received burns as did a daughter, 2. Four other children escaped. Mrs. Phillips was born July 29, 1906, at Rush Center, Kan. She married Phillips at Roundup Oct.

29 1929. Phillips and five children. Charlie, James. George. Betty, 2.

and Billie, 4 months, survive. There are ilso several brothers and sisters. Several Are Injured When Cars Skid Off Wolf Point Road WOLF POINT, Oct. 15. (Special) Mary Russell and W.

B. Wood, Miles City; Miss Russell's grandmother. Mrs. James Dunlap, Sheffield. and Mrs.

Thomas B. Wynn. wife of the superintendent of schools at Saco, are in Trinity hospital recovering from injuries received in a head-on collision on Wolf creek hill. Wood was driving east and Wynn was driving west. The road was slippery from rain and the cars skidded and overturned down the embankment.

Mrs. Dunlap received fractures of the leg. Mrs. Wynn, head cuts, Miss Russell and Wood, severe shock, and Wynn escaped without injury. "Brother.1 know efficient use of the fuel you burn more economy, more power, more pick-up yes, even easier car handling through less frequent need for shifting.

Ab ove all, we were out to cut through a lot of the complications that feature current automobile design, and give you a simpler, sturdier, less involved mechanism. S.S.S.Tonic is grand for a run-down conditioiwt increases the appetite-it boosts energy YOU will be surprised how often you can generate new power to make you "feel like yourself again," toy doing two simple things: build rich, red blood 2 improve digestion S.S.S. Tonic may be Just what you need, in tbe absence of an organic trouble or focal infection. It stimulates the appetite improves assimilation thus helping to better digest food. Further.

It contains vital mineral elements so necessary to rebuild red blood. Two important etepe bock to health. a trial will convince you Thousands know of the amazing' benefits of S.S.S. scientists have proved It. too.

Try It yourself to build sturdy health the kind that will give you new zest to enjoy work and play. At all drug stores la two sizes. Ask for tho big 20 oz. size at a saving In the purchase price. S.S.S.

Co. BUICK PRICES BEGIN AT Nashua Youth Still delivered at Flint, Mich. Transportation based on rail rates Consider, for example, just one quality of this great power plant the tremendous reserve of power it puts at your command. At 20 miles an hour this Buick uses only 7A of its available power at 30 only 9-7 at 50, less than one-sixth, and so on. WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARB TS In Critical Condition From Auto Accident for the Business Coupe state and local taxes NASHUA.

Oct. 15. (Special) (if any), optional equipment and accessories Irwin Stohl, who was in an auto accident, is still critically ill at a Glasgow hospital. The accident extra. Prices subject to change without notice.

BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM occurred six miles east of Hinsdale. He was a passenger in a car driven by Glenn Jinks of Cole. The other passenger was Robert Junge of Cole, who sufered a leg injury. Stohl's head and spine were injured. Jinks left for parts unknown after the accident.

A sister, Lorraine Stohl. is also Mink-dyed, Sable-dyed, Baum Marten-dyed Northern You can see for yourself how this tremendous reserve, instantly available, eliminates much of your need for shifting to lower gears, hence makes unnecessary any involved device for this purpose. It does even more for with all this power, we can use a more economical gear ratio in our standard top speed. And that means that all the time you travel in high from 15 miles an hour on up you are getting the equivalent of overdrive or fourth-speed economy without mechanical complication, In consequence: miles per gallon go up as much "as 10 to 15. This husky 165-horsepower giant actually gives more gasoline economy than our 107-horsepower engine of a year ago.

At 50 it consumes no more fuel than the same- at a Glasgow hospital with rheu matic fever. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stohl of -tow Nashua. Named Draft Judge sized engine of conventional design drinks up at 30.

Two things account for all this good Fireball design that gets more power out of every gallon of gasoline and Compound Car-buretion that gives your engine two distinct ranges of power. Each of these is important enough to call for personal investigation. Get off on the right start early see your Buick dealer now about the year's most important engineering advance. From Stock or Mode-to-Meoju HELENA, Oct. 15.

(U.R) Montana FURRIERS military headquarters here said today MaJ. Adrian Williams, Helena, has been named liaison officer to act with the secretary of war and the state selective service headquarters. Major Williams, it was said, will act as state adviser on deferments due to occupations of prospective draftees. or.wur., -ora Only on. Cecily driving.

off preV.d oirt'o P0 7 EXEMPLAR OF GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Nu-Cresf Salad Dressing A flavor all its own that -millions prefer. In the popular size Jars. At Your Home-Owned Grocers BBINC OS YOUR PRESCRIPTION WITH THE COMFORTING ASSURANCE THAI IT WIU BE COMPOUNDED EXACTLY AS fKJOUlO IT YOUR DOCTOR PAY LESS Drug Store SUHR MOTOR COMPANY Phone 4301 13 Fifth Street South OPEN EVENINGS.

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Pages Available:
1,257,013
Years Available:
1884-2024