Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • Page 12

Location:
Helena, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HELENA WAKEHOUSF This is an architects drawing ot the Associated J'tioil Stores warehouse which is tcing constructed on a Northern l'acific Railway site near the airport roart. Cere $2 Million Investment AGAIN rtof wnsn your lomi TOILAFLEX Toilet Plunger Unlifce ordinary dflej urn tiennit meisy water try With Tollarl net! Hiroueh the it down. Can't mini TO AT ANY ANCLE AIR 1, CENTI Bf, ITEEl.r, CAN SHU! TAMSeO TAIL GlWtS AIR-IIOHT FIT Genuine AT HMOWARE MOMS tVHrWKMI Irvin W. Hayes Dies at Home Sunday Irvin W. Hayes, 60, Montana Highway Commission engineer, died unexpectedly Sunday morn ing at his home, 71B Broadway.

Mr. Hayes was born Feb. 7, OK, in Anaconda. He attended schools in Anaconda before study ing-at Montana State College. On Feb.

2, 1935, he was married in Missoula to the former. Margaret I.uthje. Shortly alter their mar- nago they moved to Helena. Mr. Hayes has-been employed as an engineer with the bridge depart ment of the Montana Highway Commission lor 11 years.

Survivors include his Margaret D. Hayes of Helena; daughter, Vivian Hayes of Aran-' rillo, Texas; Iwo sisters, Mrs. Linnie Sawtell and Mrs, Henry 1 Beckman, hoth ol Anaconda; in aunt, JTevva Bertsch of Cbrvailisj and a nephew, Uruce Beck-! man of Butte. The body will lie in slate In the Hagler Chapel Monday eve-i ning and all day Tuesday before being taken Wednesday to Phil-, ipsburtf where funeral services! will be conducted at 2 p.m., in the Phillpfburg Community Church with the Rev. Raymond' Cheyncy, officiating, Burial rail be in the Miilipsburg Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be A. Mai-crle, A. W. Greiner, It. Beck-crt, Albert W.

Jones, Rex Grimes, and Edward Miller, Fighting Hay Flare Up New Delhi, Prime Minister Nehru said today Red China's cease-fire and withdrawal maneuver may be only a trick and warned his front-line troops that fighting might flare up again in the Himalayas. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH and Worry Mo tatiffer be fiuuoycd or terl Hl-nt-num hucBiise or loose, wobbly inieo tMlh FASTEETH.an improve tUlca- reel more comfortable. Avoid emtmr- FASTKETH toddy monies observing (he construction be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. Celebration onWednesday For New Warehouse A ceremony commemorating! the completion ol the (nundnlion for Associated Foods new half-million-dollar warehouse will take place at 2 p.m. Wednesday on the Airport road.

Chamber of Commerce president D. N. Lalus will he master of ceremonies. Speakers will be Gov. Tim Eabcack, City Commissioner John Schroeder, Chairman George I.

Redhair of the Helena Mrs. Lloyd Blewett Called to Denver By Mother's Death Mrs. Lloyd H. Blewett of 730 Hauser, is scheduled to return today train Denver, where she was called by the unexpected death on Saturday her mother, Mrs. Emily Stodden Helena.

Mrs. Stodden was killed in a pedestrian-auto accident in Denver where she was visiting with her son and daughter-in-law, and Mrs. Raymond W. Stodden. Mrs.

Stodden had been making her home since the lflia's with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd H. Blewett. Her husband, John Stodden, was a teamster lor the Anaconda Com pany in Bufte before his death many years ago.

Surviving in addition daughter here and-son in Denver are seven grandchildren, including Gary Blewett of Champaign, Arlene, Jeff and Mark Blew ett, and Bonnie Lamping, all of Helena, and a great-granddaughter, Becky Sue Lamping ol Helena. Funeral services and burial will be in Butte. FOWEMUL PLUNGER CLEARS CLOGGED TOILETS Chamber's industrial officials ot the Northern Pacific' Hailrund, Donald 1'. Lloyd, execu- vice president and general manager 0I Associates! Foods from Salt Lake City, and Eddy chairman of the board of Eddy Bakeries. Chamber of Commerce members and the public are invited to attend the ceremonies.

Speakers will point to the fact that the co-oporation of ciiy officials and of Great Northern Railway officers made the construc- the r.alt-n::llini: d-Uai warehouse possible in Helena. The warehouse will have an 80,000 square foot capacity and with its inventory will represent a total investment of S2 million, according to Frank Hutner, who manager of Associated Poods in Helena. Olhers who are expected at the ceremonies Wednesday afternoon are Joe Hansford, an Associated Foods director from Rnzeman; Frank Stupca, secretary treas-urcr of the concern, from Anaconda; It. L. Stradford, the building contractor from Billings; and Peter Knrotf, subcontractor, from Helena, Members of the Cathedral High School band will play at the ceremony, under direction of Sister Mary Incarnate.

Their selections will be "Amer- and Military Square Feel The warehouse will provide for (td.OOO square feet of storage space, including 6,000 square feet for frozen food and 3,000 for delicatessen. There will also be 6,000 square feet of office space. A completely covered shipping area for equipment will accommodate 18 tandem axle truck and trailers. Associated Food Stores is totally retailer owned wholesale grocery company distributing groceries and related products to members in Utah, Idaho and Montana, plus scattered cities in border states. The company has 508 mem- her stockholders who operate 352 stores.

Montana Boy, 8, Trapped 6 Hours In Stolen Car Billings An 8-ycar-Dld Uig Timber boy, trapped for six hours with a companion in a wrecked car, was reported In serious condition in a Billings hospital. The boy had a broken leg and severe facial cuts; His 14-year-old companion was treated and turned over to juvenile author ties. Juvenile officers said the boys were trapped in the wreckage of a stolen car that crashed into a bridge culvert about 2Q miles north of Billings on U.S. High way 37 sometime early Friday morning. Tests Successful Washington Secretary of Defense Robert S.

McNemara says the U.S. nuclear tests in the Pacific this year were highly successful. In a message of appreciation to Joint Task Force 8 Friday Me- Namara said "on the basis of re sults achieved, Dominic was highly successful series." Operation Dominic was the code name given the tests over Johnston and Christmas islands which began April 23 and ended Nov, 3. For 90 Minutes, 50 Champions Demonstrate Techniques In "Many Moods of Skiing'' MONDAY December 17 Junior High School Auditorium-8 p.m. Sponsored by Belmont Ski Club $125 7CV I Students under 18 GET TICKETS NOW Hlagini M.

I. Brown Rucktack Any Member Schnablegger, Succumbs to Long Illness Tony Schnablegger, Sr, 77, oi the Helena Valley, former Win ston area rancher, died Sunday at tus nome following an extend ed illness. Schnablegger was born Feb. 19, 1005, in Austria eamc to (he U.S. in 1804, and! lived in vnrious parts of Montana until settling on a ranch tn the Winston area.

He later moved to the Helena Valley. He was member ot the Roman Catholic Church. Survivors include two daunt ters, Rose Knapp and Laura An-! erson, Doth ol Helena; sons, Tony Schnablegger of Helena. and Joe Sehnablegger of Seattle; sister, lledwig Egtler of Orlando, several grandchildren, and nieces and nephews. Haglcr Mortuary is in charge of Cancer Stricken Dick Powell Cancels Shows Actor-director Dick Powell, under treatment for cancer of the throHt and lymph gland, canceled his television appearances for the rest of the 1062-63 season on his doctor's or ders.

A spokesman for Powell said the actor's doctor "jus I said he wasn't ready yet to return to work." Nike-Zeus Missile I Has Trouble, Falls in Ocean Point Mugu, Calif. Tin- Army says a Nike-Zeus antimis sile missile had trouble in its third stage during a lest firing and fell into the Pacific. spokesman said the missile accepted and executed control commands, and most of the test objectives were met, but the missile fell short of its mark. The test was terminated by an automatic device. 11 did not blow Self-inflicted Gunshot Wound Fa tia I to Menard Joseph H.

Menard. 37. o( the Helena Valley, former Jlutto-Ana- condn miner, died late Saturday of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to Sheriff-Coroner Dave Middlemas, Mr. Menard was horn Feb. 6.

35, in Helena and attended scliuols here. He was employed in vnrious jobs in the Helena area before serving four years with trie U.S. wavy during World Wo II. He also worked in mines in Butte and Anaconda and for the Anaconda Company for several years. He was last employed by Lewis and Clark County for about three years.

He was unemployed at the lime of his death and had been despondent, according Mirtdicmns. Survivors include a sou, Handy eicnaru ot Helena; his parents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Monard ol the Helena Valley; two sisters Dorothy McCarty, and Marian Monteilh; a half-brother, Edward Black of the Helena Valley, and numerous nieces and nephews Funeral services will be ducted at 2 p.m., Tuesday in Ihe Hagier unapcl with the ltov, Wayne Moore of the Seventh-Uuy Adventist Church officiating. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Guldens.

Edward Moat, Albert Hung, M. H. Pare, juliu Stemplc, James Thomas and Shek Sias, wilt he pallbearers. Italian Consul Ousted Ndola, Northern Mhodcsia (fl5) Italian consul in Eliza- hethvtllc, Guido Natali, expelled rriday uy the Katanga interior minister as a danger to public tranquility, has arrived here. A spokesman at (he United Nations earlier reported Natali missing, Natali was kept in etistudy from Thursday afternoon until Friday night.

The Independent Record, Helena, Montana, Monday, December 10, 1962 Puppies Would Make Nice Christmas Gift Puppies that would make In expensive Christmas gifts for hildren still are- available in good supply at the City Animal Shelter this week. The pups ranee from four to six weeks in age, and include honey-blonde part GoUien Labrador, two black Lahradors touched with while, a black and German Shepherd aud four other Shepherds from one Other dDgs at the Shelter arc two Airdniles, six mouths in age; a white Selter with a black eye patch, six months; a black and white Terrier, one year, and a black and white Cocker, 10 months. Two kittens, one a tan long hair and one with an orange striped coat, and a large white mother cat complete the roster. The Independent Record nub- lishes regular reports of animals available at Ihe Shelter. Helena veterinarians have offered dree examination ot any animal placed, Further information is available from city police.

Phone 442-3231 Hunters Pump Bullets into Deer Hide Draped Near Highway Ulg Timber (ffl A four point deer head on a hide was draped over a tree by a ranehei living along the Moulder River This was one day before the deer season the area was to end. Before the day was over, Lee Smoot, reported later, the hide was well punctured and the head a shambles. least dozen hunters shot at 'the "deer" with one uumping five shots at it, Finally, Dnc disgruntled hunter without a senso of humor came oat-it auer tiarn ana KnocKeu over the stup, whreh the Rig Timber Pioneer described as "a mastei fnl job of deceit." Miriam Chapter Meets Tuesday For Its Party Christmas party for mem bers of Miriam Chapter No. 1, Order of the Eastern Star, will be Tuesday al ij.in, instead of Thursday as was inadvertently announced in the Sunday jjaper. The meeting will open in short form, and an initiation is scheduled.

silver offering for ihe Ma sonic Home will replace the customary gift exchange. The prngram will be presented in the dining room where refresh ments will be served following the regular meeting. In recent research at Yale University, investigators have found that wine can reduce emotional tension levels. Red Cross Again Tops Quota in Blood Donations The lied Cross again exceeded its quota for the second consecu. live blood drawing, when the Pearl Harbor Day drawing was held Friday in the Moose Club hall.

The quota was for 141 pints, and 149 pints- were donated. There were 158 prospective donors al the drawing, and of these, 20 were ncsv donors, according to Mrs. Myles Thomas, chairman of the blood program. The Red Cross also exceeded its quota at the drawing early in November, after having fallen short of Ihe quotas for more than two years. 0mirnoff THE GIFT THAT LEAVES 'EM BREATHLESS WORLD'S LAMEST SELLING VODKA eoiNBiniiifw i.

kh.hu Could your home "weather" an estate settlement, Too? William W. Woll ower Block, 44S-193 Us lie Wolverton tiraniie Block, 442-G05n When nature strikes, you're confident is offered by New York Life's reasDn-your home and your family will ride ably-priced. Whole Life insurance. Its out the storm. But another kind of 810,00.0.

minimum face amount pro-storm can hit. which might be far vides your family with immediate more difficult for them to weather, cash to help pay estate taxes and ad- It happens when you die without leav ing suiiieient cash to meet estate settlement ens Is. Your heirs may be forced to sell your homo to meet them. Protection agaiost losing their home list We Are Your NEW YORK LIFE ministration cosls. In addition; Whole Life steadily builds cash values for.

emergencies for a lifetime income when you retire. Write, phone, or visit one of AGENTS in Helena INSURANCE CO. I A I. Wayne Evelantt Livestock Bldg.j Harold E. lengmaid, Jr.

616 Ewlnfi, 442-1630 An open challenge to owners of Cadillacs and Lincolns Recently, you and many of your friends received personal invitations to drive and compart Imperial ivith your present care. We find these came as a welcome challenge to many, In fact, for some of our guests, this was the first opjwrliinity in years to evaluate their cars as thev might any other $6,000 investment. The comparisons were most revealing. Most owners of other cars were quick to note the controlled riile and true handling (hat Imperial achieves through its torsion- A A bar suspension. They found greater sp.icc inside than their own cars provide.

Even iiKidont.il luxuries, such as hidden compartments in the front doors and power windows as standard equipment, provoked special comment. Aud almost to a man, they agreed ihat Imperial's new 5-year, power-train is the best testimonial to an automobile's engineering qn.iluy and craftsmanship that they'd ever heard of in the luxury car field, ST A I' If j'du haven't as yet made your own comparison, just call your Imperial dealer. He'il see that you soon have the pleasure oi judging our 1963 Imperial lor the qualities you lequire in a luxury car. Imitciiil fitiltr1! tVurzamy asatnit Acletll in mtilirfal and oft cart hat bicn ex tended to include ftfbcemcnt or wifhpitl (barge Sor required parti or fdfcor, lor yran or lOftQQ inrjfi, hiihevtr tomes fiulf on the engine head fur r.ni internal faru; tariue converter, drivt Tjiiivfrjtfl lOlnli (excluding dust rear Bile and end tent cc.ir^-ijj. e'o-nded the vehicle har btcn Serviced rrotrntblc interval! accoriint la the Cnlifed Car Lore schedules.

I CAR NORTHWEST MOTORS, INC. 516 FULLER AVE..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Independent-Record
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Independent-Record Archive

Pages Available:
1,158,054
Years Available:
1874-2024