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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 5

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Montana Standard, Tuesday, anmry 31, 19315 lAJofnen WorU Ann Landers Passes on Advice of Woman Who Learned by Experience AJ I II 11 1 ll 1 ill "tt a I -t. 7 A V- hjj'p fWXj.r. I I VlH HiaWn jLc yle Call You Sweetheart Nominated last week by Highland Chapter, Order of DeMolay, were the four Butte High School girls pictured here to compete for the honor of DeMolay Sweet berlain, Ramsay; Judy Peters, sophomore, whose parents are Mr. and Mfs. H.

J. Peters, 1115 W. Broadway; standing, Cindy Henderson, freshman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.

T. Henderson, 2619 Phillips and Dorothy West, a junior, and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A.

West, 1925. S. Jackson. heart at the Sweetheart Dance Feb. 11 in the Masonic Temple.

Left to right, seated, they are: Myrna Chamber of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Cham- Clubs; Social Events ST.

JOSEPH PARISH WOMEV, New Duplicate Officers Are Elected The Butt Country Club Duplicate Bridge member elected the following officer at their last board meeting: Hugh Curme, president; Thomas Joyce, vice president; Mrs. Juel Droubay, treasurer; Mrs. X. J. BoyW, secretary; Allen Ashley and Eleanor Farrell.

active board members. Results of tlie regular weekly game, using the Howell movement, were Eleanor FarrelJ and Mrs. Thomas Kelly first; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Curne, second; Mrs.

C. Havens and Mrs. G. G. Derick third; Mrs.

Lewis Snow and Mrs. James McDonell. fourth; Mrs. J. A.

McNulty and Mrs. A. J. Boyle, fifth. High acores for the month 0 January included Mrs.

James Mc DoneU and Mrs. Lewis Snow, Mr and Mrs. Thomas Joyoc, and Mrs C. G. Derick and Mrs.4R.

C. Hav ens. The members will hold their Open Pairs Championship Friday', using a one-winner movement in a single session, starting promptly at 7:30 p.m. This will bt a trophy vent. Troul Mining Co.

Engineer Named PHILIPSBURG Norman A. Radford, a graduate of the University of Idaho, has accepted a posi tion as geologic engineer with the Trout Mtnmg Co. Philipsburg according to an announcement by C. A. McKjniey.

general manager. Radford will begin his duties with the Trout Wednesday. Radford has formerly been oc cupied aa an exploration engineer Id the uranium fields ki Utah and Washington and for the past three years has been engaged in geologic engineering and soils engineering for the state of Idaho with bead-quarters at Coeur d'Alene. He is married and the father of two children. Granite County Tax Refund Distributed PHILIPSBURG The quarterly refund from the Montana Liquor Control Board, for the quarter ending Dec.

31, 1960, has been received by Granite County treasurer Eleanora Naef. a amount represents the four per cent liquor tax collection. The general fund received the town of Philipsburg and the town of Drummond, $337.65. 0' J' 1 I A Guesls to Hear Discussion ommendatioas in the fields of higher education, state lands and investments, property taxation, and organization of the state government. AH of the bins proposed by the Legislative Council, some of which have aroused considerable controversy, have been introduced in the Legislature for action at this session.

The discussion is designed to identify some of these measures and furnish information to add in consideration of their- merits. League members taking part in the panel include Mrs. Edwin G. Koch, Mrs. Grant McCormell, Mrs.

Sam Orlich and Mrs. Vernon Griffiths, will be welcome, and anyone wishing to attend is asked to caH Mrs. F. AvPascoe telephone 2-2498, for 'reservations. Opportunities ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: Please send me a membership blank for your "Old Too Soon, Smart -Too Late Club.

Here is my story and I hope you'll print because if I had read such a letter eight years ago I wouldn't be writing to you now. I started to so with a man who was married. He told me his wife was cold and she didn't understand him. He said I was the kind of woman he'd been looking for all his life. He begged me to wait until he could "work something out." After three years of waiting I gave him an ultimatum.

He prom ised he break the news to his wife as soon as he could put the house in shape to sell. It took over a year to get the place painted, reshingled. landscaped and a patio added. Then he pleaded wrth me to wait until his daughter graduated from high school. Another two years passed.

After that his son became engaged, so naturally we had to wait until he was married. Another year shot. Then the daugh run 1 a am Mri and Mrs. Daniel J. Mooney returned Saturday from anextend ed trip.

While away, they were in New Orleans where Mr. Mooney attended the National Contractors Assn. as a member of the Labor Committee. They also visited with tneir cousins, u. ana kod- ert Van Wert si the Redston Ar senai, ana etierwea me in' auguration ceremonies find social events Washington, C.

Tney altso visited ki Chicago end New York City. Dr. and Mrs. John B. Frisbee returned Monday from a visit with their son-in-law and daughter, Dr and Mrs.

Robert J. Spratt, and family of Talmage, Calif. Helen Lybold returned the past week from a buying trip to New York City. Mrs. Kenneth Patterson of Missoula was a recent house guest of Mrs.

Tana Keith, 405 W. Broadway. Mrs. D. J.

Meagher of Helena and Butte flys today to Glendale, to attend the Saturday wed ding of her great-granddaughter. Elizabeth Becwar, and Conrad Sprout. Miss Becwar'c parents are Mr. and Mrs. C.

V. Becwar; her mother is the former Alice Meagher of this city. Mr. and Mrs. John T.

Richards, Bill Is Advanced HELENA (AP) Senators Monday approved tentatively a bill requiring a valid tax receipt accompany a motor boat license request. J. S. Brenner, R-Beaverhead, said this would put the property on the tax roll. "Now it is possible to get a boat license without the county asessor knowing of the boat and being able to tax it," Brenner said.

A Mi 1 I 1 1 t. i I t. hav a 15 1H 4 ter became engaged and we had to wait seven months for her to get married. That wedding was last month. Now he tells me his wife is going through the menopause and he's afraid to tell her because she's very nervous and the shock may be too much.

When I told him that some women drag on with the change for 10 years he shrugged his shoulders and said "I just can't do this to her now." Don't bother to give me any advice, Ann right now I'm fthe world's best auDhority on this subject. In fact I can probably give you a few pointers to pass on to other jackasses like myself. Thanks for letting me unload. It's been a relief to get it down on paper. DESERVED WHAT I GOT Dear Deserved: No advice you've got the situation toped.

The line you bought is so familiar it ought to be put to. music for dancing. Thanks for writing. Dear Ann Landers: I'm going with a great guy who is 22 and Climax, are jthe guests of Mr. Richards' parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Richards, and brother, Robert, 2119 Ash. D. M. KeHy is visiting in Woodland Hills, the guest of Mr.

and Mrs. M. M. Mueller. COLLECTED BY tykj vr wonder7 why i 'w baby cranu every thine nd nvthin? into that adorable, v.

ne-bud mouth? Those jn the know tell us that the mouth is baby's "first great teacher." With he gets the first taste of one of the I great pleasures of it lire: comforting If food, Next, (mouthing teaches baby texture and shape. And when little teeth make their debut, gnaw- first step to chewing. Safety flrtf. You'll feel easier if you keep baby's horizon clear of all easy-to-swallow objects. Also, don't let him have toys with dangerously small parts or little things that can be pulled off.

P.S. Check toys for non-toxie paint Baby will be more than "mouth happy" when yon serve Gerber Strained or Junior High Meat Dinners. There's a good reason for this. These excep tional dinners blend heaps of HOLLYWOOD 1 m- 'Z. 11 TZ.

1 fat the 1 fa i 1 i MRS. lain, senior, and daughter AAUW Members, Legislative Panel Members of the Butte Branch of- the American Assn. of University Women and their guests will have an opportunity to consider the merits of proposals made by the current Montana Legislative Coun. cil at a dessert meetmg to be held Thursday evening at 8 o'clock at the Finlen Hotel. The meeting, under the direction of the Legislative Program Com mittee, will feature a panel from the League of Women Voters of Butte discussing the purposes and background of the Legislative Council and highlighting its rec FrE.

Walshes HaveDaughler Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Walsh of Missoula are the parents of a daughter, Christina Leet born Jan. 4.

The baby is the Walshes' first child and her' mother is the former Donna Lee Sammons of Butte. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. JMervin Paige, 415 W. Galena, and Mrs.

Frances Walsh of the Pennsylvania Block. A grove of American oak trees near Yotsuya-mitsuke, Japan, trace their origin to acorns picked up from the lawn of Mt. Vernon, George Washington's home in Vir ginia. guuu uewi 1 1 1 I Work in "Man's Field" Needn't Be Uhf eminine has loads of qualities which I admire. His one big fault is that he doesn't have a oar.

I know he makes $88 a week but be has to help out at home; and he's also pujting himself through nitrht college. We alwav rimthlA. date Or take a bus and I just hata it. It terribly inconvenient to ge with another couple all the tima as we have to make our plans fit in with theirs and it's a draff Will you please give him a hint? SUE Z.Q. Dear Sue: He rfopwn't need a hint.

He needs money. If the fellow is as good as he sounds, consider yourself lucky to go with him oh foot, by ox-cart or pogo-stick. It's the man that counts. Four wheels dorj't mean a thing. To learn to keep your boy friend in line without losing him, send for Ann Landers' "Necking and Petting and How Far to Go," enclosing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self -addressed, stamped envelope.

Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. PAN CERBERv MOTHER OC .111 i tender meat with garden-good vegetables. -(3 times as much meat as regular vegetable and meat combinations.) jAs for nutrition they're high in protein and niacin, the important B-vitamin for baby's Sweet mask fto shell-pink ears. Why not attach tome tiny tinkle bells to the sides of baby's car riage-hood to' tinkle while you stroll, Merry music will delight him when he's awake, won't waken him when he's asleep.

Getting at the meat of the matter. Gerber Strained and Junior Meats are superior sources of the complete proteins that make little bodies grow big and strong. Made from selected Armour they're processed for low fat content and to preserve the utmost Mi nutritive values. Armour Meat Protein is complete protein, supplying all the essential amino acids that build and re-build body tissues. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigan.

PIGURH 46 JOLLY TIME POPS S0 Grbr i Announcing 3a tie TUESDAY LOUISE CAMPBELL CIRCLE, with Mrs. Totlef Cragwick, 2003 Philips, 8 p.m.-BUTTE CIVIC CONCERT OR CHESTRA, YMCA, Fellowship Room, 7:30 p.m. ROT ANA CLUB, Finlen Hotel, 7 open meeting. Loraine program chairman. Dr.

L. S. Groff, guest speaker. AAUW ARTS GROUP with Mrs. John Newman, 2604 Evans, 8 pjn.

Mrs. Howard Elderkin cohostess. Mrs. Avron Oanty will review "Exodus" by Leon Uris. Reservation chairman, Mrs.

E. E. Hamilton, 2-5373, LADY LIONS CLUB with Mrs. Evan Thibodeau, 3216 State, 8 p.m. self and.

then be calm, serene and attractive after hours, socially. Nervous Wreck If she turns her back on the technical career and settles instead on a so-called feminine field, she may be so unhappy in her work His Mother Encouraged His Interest In Biology. that she becomes frenetic, overanxious to get married and the kind of nervous wreck who. makes a man run a mile. The truth is that we ought to encourage young people to follow their own hearts and develop their own abilities, because if they are able to be happy in their work, their lives will likely stay more in line hi other areas, too.

(For a copy of my pamphlet, "Vocational Pointers for Parents," send me a large, stamped, self-addressed envelope in care of this newspaper.) Nctzcrrene Society-Has 1 Missionary Meet The Nazarene Foreign Missionary Society met recently in the church's lower auditorium, the session opening with group hymn The Rev. Ronald L. Meyers gave the special emphasis, "Bible Reading," Gwen Trevenna talked on "Membership; Cecil Sheppard presented the missionary lesson, "Uruguay, the Purple Land," and a trombone solo by Harold Perkins, accompanied by Miss Trevenna, concluded the program. Present were the Rev. and Mrs.

Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. George Agar, Cberilynn Agor, Mr. and Mrs. 0.

A. Perkins, Mrs. Vera Alden, Mrs. Ruth Biiigaman, Mrs, Wesley Snyder, Carol Snyder, Jean Patterson, Margaret Jones, Gwen Trevenna, W. T.

Hugo, Cecil Sheppard and Harold Perkins. Following the service, the members adjourned to the Perkins home, 2407 Harrison, for a fellow ship hour. Games were played and rereshmems served by Mrs. Agar and Mm. Snyder.

parish, hail, weekly card party, 8 p.m. Hostess committee includes Mrs. George Foley, Mrs. David Walsh, Mrs. Milan Tolian, Mrs.

Alfred Burke, Mrs. John Kovich, Mrs. John Hale -and Mrs. William O'Connor. ORDER OF AMARANTH.

Sarah Pettis Memorial Court 1, Masonic Temple, Open installation, I p.m. WEDNESDAY WEEKLY COTTAGE PRAYER MEETING, with Mrs. Richard Gregerson, 1130 W. Granite, 10 a.m. GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN Priseilla Unit, ALCW, with Mrs.

Hilda WiUiams, 425 S. Idaho, 8 p.m. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR, Ruth- Chapter 2, Masonic Temple, 8 p.m. Nell Greenweil, worthy ma tron, and John Davies, worthy pa tron, wm preside. CARPENTERS AUXILIARY, Carpenters Hall, 8 p.m.

Social will follow at Lloyd's. Hostesses, Mrs. Roy Cote and Mrs. Kenneth Clouse. RMCGC, Plant and Pray Divi sion, with Airs, jonn Brogan, ziub Grand, 1:30 p.m.

Mrs. Raymond Lawrence will demonstrate "Home Made Containers." AIME AUXILIARY. Finlen Ho-j tel. 1 p.m. Program, "Description of Schimmel's Art Course," by Mrs.

Robert E. Hone. MARIAN WHITE ARTS AND CRAFTS CLUB, Literary Group 1, with Mrs. William Trudeau, 623 S. Jackson, 1:15 p.m.

ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR. Past Matrons Club 39, Cleo's Tea Room, 1 p.m. Mrs. Nel lie Porter hostess. Reservations, 2-1492.

ST. JOSEPH NCCW. parish hall, 8 p.m. SOROPTIMIST CLUB. Credit Bureau of Butte, 7 E.

Granite, noon. Rose Shaw program cnair-man. Guests welcome. AUXILIARY Butte Post 1448 Vet erans of Foreign Wars, VFW Hall, 1 p.m. Bridge luncheon with Lou Mountain hostess.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN ASSN. FOR RETARDED CHILDREN. Wash ington School, 8 p.rrw Guest speak- er, the Rev. John F. W.

Fargher, pastor St. John Episcopal Church. BSP XI LAMBDA CHAPTER with Mrs. Edward Mazzolini, 3150 Ottowa, 8 p.m. Mrs.

Rodney Salo cohostess. So appropriate So appreciated 'your thoughtful tribute of flowers it tht time of bereavement It means so much to tht family to know you art thinking of them. Send Flowers Ob II Frances Manuell at WILHELM'S or Finlen Flover Shcp 13S (Broadway Pb. t-I695, Smart hriJeg alwatft cboosa our famout Flower Wedding Line Invitations Featuring mete scrtpigi I By ANNE HEYWOOD Those of us who work voca tionally with people in their twenties are constantly astonished by how much their career-thinking is influenced by seemingly casual encounters or comments that may have occurred their teens. The aunt who makes a deroga jtory comment about the field of nutrition, for example, may have a much more telling effect than she can imagine on her niece.

Influences Decision The parent who encourages the young boy in his interest in biology even though it may mean frogs in the bureau drawers! also contributes strongly to the career de cision the young man will eventually make. If, as a parent, relative or friend, you deal with teen-agers, remember that, even though they act 'as though nothing bores them more than remarks by grownups, underneath all they are very sensitive, and much affected by your attitudes as they see them. Be Careful It pays to be careful what you say along these lines. 'Many women who have afl the vocational abilities for engineer ing careers have been driven away from even considering such a field because someone in the family thought It was "unfeminine." Actually, some of the most feminine and most attractive women I have known have Jobs in engineering and are graduate engineers. One of the most successful women engineers is Virginia Sink, a project engineer at Chrysler Corporation's Engineering Division.

Real Pioneer She has been a real "pioneer" in the man's world of wheels. She believes that engineering offers many women great job satisfaction, a chance to express themselves creatively and that the field for them is growing enormously. She says: "The number and complexity of problems in industry is growing, so that the number of engineers must continue to and there' is no reison why qualified women with engineering ability cannot find good places in the field." It is true that there are still handicaps faced by a woman in such a field. She is outnumbered in college, (but this might well be considered an advantage, socially, anyway) and she is apt to be paid less for her work than her masculine counterpart. The fact remains, however, that she is still paid a good deal more than she woukl be paid In many other fields.

But' the important point is this: If a girl has an engineering, technical kind of mind, she should use it oa the Job, discharge bar- 1 MMIIII I SOU. j'SU'SCij Sa e. ABOUT 44 (ALOItlES til SLICE. Even on strict diet, you con tat Hollybreod" Bread of vey meal. Dieters need brad to provide proteins, avoid "hidden hunger" end More and more bride are finding they can have the luxury fook they love and still keep on tin sunny side of their bridal budget with Mquiwt Regency stationery, feature )KeliogTvkig-an smazingly rich, raised lettering with the good taste and distinction of the finest crafte-Bianship-yet costs so little.

Do see our exciting eelection ef contemporary and. traditional type one, perfect for you! Hthttmrint-itot to be eonftmd with mtlrmrw. STANDARD-POST Commercial Printing Dept. 69 W. Iroadway 4 Nion 4200 keep skin and muscles in ton.

But evn th wolves in your family will lovt Hollywood because the 16 vegetables and grains in its formula mako it so downright delicious. Yow limply must try it. IMw Whim hf Nmllnml tokrt Unit (hitmf tUHWH HOUYWOOO I8UD ii U0 If.

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Pages Available:
1,048,989
Years Available:
1882-2024