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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 7

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

J. J. J. J. J.

J. J. J. J. J.

STANDARD, BUTTE, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 7, 1939. STUDENT WHO ENTERS OUR CONTEST WILL WIN. A 'New GRUEN WATCH opportunity OF A fine answer am American" simple, to GRUEN Proud the may qualify To question win WATCH straightforward Be you "Why An to a May, Grand Prize of SCHOLARSHIP ters Some CASH ARSHIP this $1,000.00 student or contest AWARD. who equivalent SCHOL- through' Is Open and have the chance to This Contest AWARD our store will positively, win a Gruen Watch to All win one of the three Graduates Grand Awards Come in get your entry blank now! maybe it will be youl. CORDONS JEWELRY N.

MAIN FREE ENTRY NO OBLIGATION Dillon Bureau Phone 224-J. Homer Faust, Correspondent. CRIMINAL CASES ARE ON CALENDAR Trial Term of District Court to Get Under Way in Dillon May 8. DILLON, April criminal cases, the largest number in several years, will be tried at the next jury term of district court here, opening Monday, May 8. The term of court was announced yesterday by Judge Henry G.

Rodgers, judge of the Fifth Judicial district. Criminal cases listed are: State VS. Willard Hannah, first degree assault; state vs. George J. Johnson, robbery; state vs.

Dale Rumbaugh, burglary; state VS. Carl Rum.baugh, burglary; state vs. Gust Anderson, game law violation, and state vs. Robert E. Woody, charged with operating a vehicle while under the influence of liquor.

Twelve civil cases also are on the calendar. The term will continue until May 27. DEBATE TEAMS TO MEET IN CONTEST DILLON, April -Debate teams of Beaverhead county high school and Montana School of Mines freshmen will meet tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock at the Normal college auditorium. The public is invited to attend. The subject is "Resolved, that the United States should establish an alliance with Great Britain," and the negative will be upheld by the Dillon team, consisting of Bill Taylor, Howard Morse, James Albertson and Bill Tait.

ROUTINE MATTERS OCCUPY COUNCIL DILLON, April -The Dillon city council last night held its first meeting since members were re-elected for two-year terms at Monday's election. The council will not be reorganized until the May meeting, however, Routine matters were discussed at last night's session. COMMITTEE TO MEET. Members of the executive committee of the board of directors of the Butte Chamber of Commerce will meet this noon in the Finlen hotel. Reports will be received and current matters discussed.

Personal To Fat Girls Now-you can alim down your face and figure without strict dieting or back-breaking exercises. Just eat sensibly and take 4 Marmola Tablets a day, according to the directions. Tablets have been sold to the public for more than thirty years. More than twenty million boxes have been distributed during that period. Marmola is not intended as a cure-all for all ailments.

This advertisement is intended only for fat persons who are normal and healthy otherwise and whose fatness is caused by a reduction in the secretion from the thyroid gland (hypo-thyroidism) with accompanying subnormal metabolic rates. No other representation is made as to this treatment except under these conditions and according to the dosage as recommended. We do not make any diagnosis as that is the function of your physician, who must be consulted for that purpose. The formula is included in every package. Start with Marmola today and win the slender lovely figure that is rightfully yours.

PAINT Will Restore BEAUTY Painting and Decorating Rudy Endresse PHONE 4926 DIVORCE SOUGHT BY BEN GORDON One Civil Complaint, Several Probate Matters Are Filed. One civil complaint and several probate matters were filed yesterday in the office of the clerk of the district court. Ben Gordon filed suit for divorce from Florence Gordon, charging cruelty, The complaint states they were married in Butte February 13, 1926, and have two children. The plaintiff seeks custody of the children. In the estate of May B.

Henderson, deceased, Judge J. Lynch set Saturday, April 15, as time for settling the first and final account of T. J. Davis, administrator with will annexed, and for hearing petitions for distribution and determination of inheritance tax. An interlocutory certificate of the state board of equalization was filed in the estate of Frank B.

Pott. deceased, valuing. the estate at $4,629.16 Tax was computed at $12.58. An inventory and appraisement in the estate of Thomas H. Wilkinson, deceased, was filed by W.

M. Kirkpatrick, Thomas and Douglas Sullivan, appraisers, ing the estate at $2,860. A report to the state board of equalization was filed by Adele Wilkinson, administratrix. In the estate of Albert J. Gies, deceased, an inventory and appraisement was filed by H.

L. Loeber, Evelyn Ryan and Virginia Horton, appraisers, valuing the estate at $2,443.10. A report to the state board of equalization was filed by Frank J. Williams, executor. DELEGATES NAMED TO GARDEN SESSION Appointment of wto delegates and two alternates for the state conof garden clubs in Miles vention June 14 and 15 was chief business presented at a meeting of the Alpine division of the Rocky Mountain club yesterday afternoon, at Brown, 'A' 22.

chairman West of Galena. the division, presided at the session. Mrs. J. R.

Crook and Mins, Fred Boucher were named delegates, with Mrs. C. H. Smith and Mrs. Frank Ward as alternates.

Mrs. S. A. Herman presented a report on scheduled activities of the garden club. Progress of Alpine division beautification projects was reported on by Mrs.

Walter Williams, club civic improvement chairman. FEDERAL PRISONER HOSPITAL PATIENT Vincent Benac, 24-year-old federal prisoner who was rushed to St. James hospital Wednesday noon because of an acute appendicitis attack, was reported to be in good condition last night. He was a prisoner in the county jail awaiting trial on a charge of forging a government check. Arrainged March 28 before U.

S. Commissioner George Howard, Benac entered a plea of innocent to charges that he had forged a WPA check. MALTA CITY WATER SUPPLY HELD SAFE HELENA, April city water supply of Malta, flooded by the Milk river two weeks ago, now is "satisfactory from a sanitary standpoint and contains no contamination," H. B. Foote, director of the state board of health division of water and sewage, said today.

AMERICAN ART SHOWN. Work done by former fellows of the American Academy Rome since they returned to the United States to follow professional careers I was shown, by photographs in a recent exhibition in Rome, It tricluded many excellent photographic reproductions of the work of painters, sculptors, architects and land-' scape gardeners. William Phillips, United States ambassador to Italy, was among the many attending the opening. WILDLIFE FEDERATION TO MEET IN DILLON APRIL 22 DILLON, April 6. (Special) Plans for a meeting of the Montana.

Wild Life Federation, District 8, to be held in Dillon Saturday night, April 22, were discussed at well-attended meeting of the Beaverhead Sportsmen's association last night at the city hall. The sportsmen heartily concurred in a motion to invite all stockmen of the county to attend the meeting, a as well as all sportsmen, whether members of the association or not. Among matters to be taken up will be the proposed Beaverhead county fish hatchery, together with probable locations for the planting of elk and possibly some early next year. Other important business also will come before the meeting. After the business session, a program will be presented, including more motion pictures of wildlife such as were shown by Mrs.

William Sweet at the meeting last night, and entertainment by local talent. Many sportsmen of Butte, Anaconda and other surrounding com- Its DIFFERENT! Fragrant, super-soft talc medicated soothing balsamic oils. Buy today--all druggists- only CUTICURA TALCUM Deer Lodge News Frances Hale, Correspondent. Phone 265, FRED DEARBORN SENT TO PRISON Defendant Is Convicted of Possessing Alleged Counterfeit Coins. DEER LODGE, April 6-(Special) Charged with possessing counterfeit coin with Intent to.

defraud, Fred Dearborn was. found guilty by 8 Powell county jury today. He waived time for pronouncement of penalty and was sentenced to 10 years in the state prison, Maurice J. MacCormick. county attorney, charged Dearborn with prior convictions of felonies.

Dearborn assertedly tried to make purchases of liquor in downtown establishments, tendering the counterfeit coins for payment. He will start his sentence immediately. The case of the state of Montana against Robert McCormick was, dismissed for lack of prosecution, The charge was lewd and lascivious acts toward a minor child. With the completion of the case the trial calendar covering criminal actions was ended and the jury dismissed. GOOD FRIDAY SERVICES ARE SCHEDULED TODAY DEER LODGE, April 6-(Special) Church services will be held in Deer Lodge Friday afternoon with the Christian, Methodist, Full Gospel and Presbyterian churches combining services at the Christian church at 1 o'clock, and the St.

James Episcopal and Immaculate Conception church holding services from 1 12 o'clock until 3 o'clock. To permit business people to attend church, all stores will remain closed from 1 o'clock until 3 o'clock. The Good Friday observance has become an established ritual in the city. A. 0.

WORDAL OF AVON IS BURIED DEER LODGE, April 6-(Special) Last rites for A. O. Wordal, Avon resident, were held this afternoon from the Presbyterian church, with the Rev. F. C.

Phelps officiating. Masonic ritual was followed at the graveside. Burial was in Hillcrest cemetery in the Masonic plot. Pallbearers were old-time friends who reside in the vicinity of Avon. BUSINESS WOMEN SCHEDULE MEET DEER LODGE, April 6-(Special) Business and Professional Women will meet next week for the regular study hour and business session.

Mrs. F. Bissonette will discuss "Social Security," and Miss Beth Burks will talk on Without Fear." Miss Ida Fram will also have paper on finances. Miss Winona Lewis will preside over the meeting. The place will be announced later.

DEER LODGE BRIEFS. DEER LODGE, April 6-(Special) James MacGillvary, well known Avon resident, was admitted to St. Joseph hospital yesterday. Mr. MacGillvary will be a patient for a few days.

Mrs. A. L. Piper of Tacoma is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

A. A. Moe, Mrs. Frank Breeding was a visitor in Butte this week. Banned from carrying clubs, hatives of South Africa are settling arguments with knives, and many stabbings are reported.

She Likes U.S. Lola Laszlo, Hungarian musical comedy star, has a bright smile for America as she arrives in New York. Daughter of playwright Aladar Laszlo, she will appear on Broadway, then go to Hollywood. (Central Press) Tardy Casters BEAVERHEAD RANCHERS ASSEMBLE IN DILLON DILLON, April 6. (Special).

Beaverhead ranchers met in Dillon today to discuss the crops phase of the 1939 agricultural conservation program. Another ranchwill meet here tomorrow. Both groups are conferring with the county conservation committee, consisting of Luther Smith, chairman; Walter Featherly and Martin Thompson. EFFORTS MADE TO PROCURE U.S. NAVY BAND FOR CONCERT DILLON, April may hear the touring United States Navy band next fall, as the result of negotiations now under way, with local musicians supervising the arrangements.

The band appear here, it was said, if sufficient sponsoring organizations can obtained. It was only after correspondence started concerning the concert that L. A. Gregory, director of Beaverhead county high school and public school bands, discovered that the band's 'tour director, Wayne Barton, was a former music pupil of his, having taken instruction under him in Chadron, 27 years ago, two years before Mr. Gregory came to Dillon.

DILLON NOTES. DILLON, April 6. (Special) Among Lima sportsmen attending the meeting of the Beaverhead Sportsmen's association here last night were Clyde Meacham, Clay Patterson, E. C. Franks, Herbert F.

Sill, James Burt and James Pierce. Leone Boese of Polaris has been a guest at the Pete Piazzola home here. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald ZeBarth, Mrs.

Don Francis and the Misses Dorothy and Marian Hurley spent today in Dillon from Wisdom. Mrs. Lawrence Taylor of Reichle was a Dillon visitor today. THEFTS REPORTED. Albert Pogreva, 1112 Farrell, last night reported to police the theft of his gray bicycle from the Metals bank corner.

Two flashnights, a screwdriver, a pair of pliers and 8 of caliber rifle shells were reported stolen from a car owned by Wander Butler, 401 Kemper, late Wednesday night, according to a police report, The machine Was parked at 201 South Jackson, Butler I told officers. Invading Nairobi, Kenyan colony, an ostrich took a stand in the middie of the main street and held up motorists until a woman, sounded the siren on her car, at which the bird stepped aside and let the line pass. FLORSHEIM QUALITY HAS BEEN IN STYLE! HIGHER SOME FLORSHEIM Shoes for Easter are as traditional as the idea of dressing up itself. That's because for nearly half a century through good times and bad, in boom times and depressions, we have, with each succeeding year, built more style and finer quality into Florsheim Shoes with the single idea of decreasing the cost by increasing the wear. Today more men wear Florsheims than all See these Exclusive Florsheim Features other quality makes combined because today's in Our Stores and Windows Florsheim Shoes are even better than their Hand-Stained "Old Gold" Calfskin tinguished ancestors! By all standards of fit and Lightweight "Zephyrs" finish, workmanship and wear, comfort and One Buckle "Friar" Shoes Florsheim Shoes with Flarewedge omy, they're the very finest shoes we've ever made Double- Thick Crepe Soles truly the greatest Florsheim value in 47 years! Florsheim Newmarket Bluchers Florsheim Registered Ventilateds Styles Florsheim Shoes with Feeture Arch Florsheim PARK Styles shown, left to right: Times Dearborn, $10; Rambler, SHOE PARK STREET cause a device to hit a six-foot-long piano wire which will be caught by a loud speaker below the Perisphere, the This sound, which can be heard within a 20 mile radius, is such that might, in result diameter, from striking a bell Each flash of light and bell will be the signal for turning on the lights in fair grounds and then suddenly the Lagoon of Nations will become alive with a spectacular display of light, fire, water and sound.

Outstanding' hydraulic engineers. gas company chemists, fireworks manufacturers, Illumination experts, display designers and color specialists, all have combined their talents to make this one of the most unusual and breathless extravaganzas ever attempted by man. Later in the evening, on Fountain lake, there will be an equally spectacular program in which searchlights, mercury vapor lamps, 80- dium flood lights, fireworks and captive balloons will play a thrilling part. Speaking of the combined display. particularly with reference to the cosmic ray, Mr.

Whalen says that the fair directors feel that it "expresses better than the theme of man's groping toward know.eage and it undercois the importance of the fair itself." Can't Eat, Can't Sleep, Awful Gas PRESSES HEART on my stomach was so bad I could not eat or sleep. 11 even pressed on heart. A friend suggested Adierika. The frat dose brought me relief. Now I est as 1 wish, sleep.

fine, sad never felt Mrs. Miller. Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowels. Adlerika gives your intestinal system real cleansing, bringing out waste matter that may have caused GAS BLOATING, BOUT stomach, beadsches pervousness, and sleepless nights for months. You will ba amazed at this intestinal cleanser.

Just one spoonful usually relieves GAS and constipation. Adlerika does not gripe, is not babibforming. Recommended by many doctors and druggista for 35 years. OWSLEY'S, INC. Square, Major, $10 Garfield, $8.75 MYSTERIOUS COSMIC RAY WILL OPEN FAIR (Continued From Page 1.) men.

Mrs. Walker will be present at the fair's opening-day ceremonies. Dr. Albert Einstein, famous originator of the theory of relativity and one of the outstanding sicists in the world, will open the light-and-sound display with an address to be broadcast, not only on the fair grounds, but throughout the world via radio. Other famous scientists and scientific organizations also will participate.

The cosmic rays, produced by encounters between the nuclei of atoms and electrons, constantly, bombard the earth. In this case, they will be "captured" by recelver, a small black box being bullt at the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, by Dr. W. F. G.

Swann, director of the Bartoll Research Foundation. It will be installed at the Hayden Planetarium in Manhattan. As the rays enter the chamber they will set up an electrical disturbance which will be caught by an amplifier and transmitted over specially arranged wires from the planetarium to the Trylon and Perlsphere. There "sounds" -will automatically operate both lamps atop the Trylon and a device in the well below the Perisphere. The lamps, 24 in number, are of unprecedented luminous power, with a surface "color" temperature, when' heated of 7.000 centigrade, greater than that of the sun.

There will be nine flashes of light, the first nine each emitting illumination equal to 18,000 100-watt lamps going at the same But the tenth will emit the equivalent of a million such lamps, powerful enough to turn night into daylight, At the same time the ray will SHOP TOWER MAN HONORED. France has conferred the cross of day out, the Legion of Honor on M. Louts in and who is in charge of the terminus. switching tower at the about Gare Saint-Lazare. Day in 1 and Paris reports, he regulates movement of the trains passing out of this Important In a full day he handles 1,000 trains.

munities will attend, tri addition to the regular district delegates from Sheridan, Anaconda, Butte, Philipsburg and Twin Bridges. Additional plans will be announced by W. L. Snyder of Butte, secretary of District 8. At last night's meeting, the Bearerhead association voted to recommend 8 staggered season on doe deer.

if the state fish and game commission sees to declare such a season in all other sections of the state. The years in which the does might be killed was left to the discretion of the state commission. Another open season on elk in the Wise River section was favored. Reports also were given on the proposed federal hatchery for this county. C.

Pranks, owner of what is considered the most favorable site, near Lima, conented to donate the water rights and necessary site, provided their use for a hatchery would not interfere with his ranching operation. An open season on mountain goats in Beaverhead county also was discussed but no action was taken. M. E. Buck, prominent member of the Rocky Mountain Sportsmen's association of Butte.

gave an educational talk on game animals and also pointed out especially interesting points in motion, pictures wildlife, taken Sweet of Butte and shown by Mrs. Sweet, President J. H. Keenan presided with Mrs. Keenan as secretary.

of Blended Perfection SCOTCH WHISKY Teacher's Scotch is steeped in tradition. Behind thiscelebrated namestand timehonored standards of painstaking distilling. Teacher's skillful blending gives i it that unusually palatable taste, that unvarying quality so much sought TEACHER'S after by discriminating Scotchdrinkers. RAGHLAND CREAM the flavut Infeation of Whis GLASGOW Made since 1830 by Wm. Teacher Sons.

Glasgow SOLE U. S. AGENTS. Schieffelin NEW YORK CITY IMPORTERS SINCE 1794 ON SALE AT STATE LIQUOR STORES.

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Pages Available:
1,049,187
Years Available:
1882-2024