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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 9

Location:
Billings, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Nine Sunday, October 25, 1925. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE THE BILLINGS GAZETTE 1 HS HDLD UP HIRVESTWOBK ERS, 57 TO 0 If You Want the Most for Your MONEY-See KOPPE! A Large Stock Big Volume Quick Turnover That's Why! Much Threshing Is Yet i Second Team Players Score Almost at Will in Game. 1 1- 1 1 1 r. I'M ITT" a 75Tb" 171 (Tej IT" r- "n- 57 hT 'jt'" 51 53 5 55 5b 57" 5Q bo" Mill ri rM 1 1 1 For Instance Water Pitcher silver plated on hard metal, Qn good capacity JJ Sterling (solid) silver Sher in velvet bet Cups, set of six lined case $12.50 Sterling (solid) silver Candlesticks, plain or en- 18-inch well and tree Meat HORIZONTAL (Cont.) 47- Tanbark 48- Type of lens 50-Half (prefix) VERTICAL (Cont.) 14-Hasten (old form). 16- Gown 17- Rules of action 18- Antonym of sow 19- Supper (slang) Platter, silver hard metal 61-lnsect 52-Treasurers 54-One hundred years Perfect Diamonds Exquisite Settings White gold and platinum, some paved with diamonds and sapphires.

$25 $42 $75 and up to $850 "Quaker Shaker Sets," silver plated salts and. pep-p beautiful designs, S11 $1.00 (abbr.) 55-Celebrated 57-Renting 59- Comfort 60- To turn 61- Aft 62-To vouch HORIZONTAL 1-Stieka for defense 6-Succesful flight up 13-Old name for Ireland 15-Proceedlng by degrees 18-Dangerous American snake 20- Way of doing 21-Tools for rubbing out 23- Droop 24- Competent 2-Persplre 27- Stlng 28- Sows with seed 30- To make weak 31- Robo 32- Tumult 34- Barren 35- With top cut off 37- Malze 38- Urges 41-Cautious 43-Marrled 45-lndividual leaf of i VERTICAL 2- Flshing boat 3- Asslstance 4- Passage for smoke 6- Misgivlngs 7- Begin 8- Felines 9- Sklll 10- Paralytlc 11- Struck dumb with horror Consider This We carry nationally advertised goods in all lines. The prices are also nationally advertised. We will sell any article at the nationally advertised CASH PRICE on EASY TERMS. Your money back if you can buy the same article cheaper for cash elsewhere.

calyx SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably sure. These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in each white space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. plated on $7.00 SECURITIES BUILDING- Woman Bicyclist Makes Better Time On Road Than Men Versailles, Oct. 24.

iP) IUe. Jeanne Armouet In winning the women's bicycle road championship this year set such a fast pace that only nine finished. The hourly average of some of. the women was superior to that made, in several road races by men during the summer. Armouet pedaled over more than 20 miles of country roads in one hour and six minutes.

The previous record was one houf and nine Find Body of Crazed Shepherd Near Camp Casper. Oct. 24. W) John Collins. 35, sheepherder of the Bates Hole region, who is believed to have abandoned his flock while in a demented condition late Friday, was found dead some distance from his camp.

He had torn his clothing from his body, which was found naked. The funeral wps conducted from a local church. "W- fat Iftmxm 3 Unfinished; Cattle Shipments Brisk. Helena, Oct. 24f.Special) Continued I I wet weather is holding up all outdoor operations in most of the counties.

I Much threshing is still to be done, and i in a majority of the counties reporting I the root crops are still in the ground. I Properly stacked grain is not being ua.i.dgeu out that poorly stacked in beginning to sprout. Some grain is still I standing. Grain shipments are very heavy and livestock and sheep continue to move in laree summary of the reports received by i yma uepanment lollows: I Cascade ('old. snow and rain.

Thresh-; ing held up. Sugar beet harvest held up, too muddy. Other root crops still in ground. Stock in good shape. Ship-: ments increased.

Custer Some rain and snow. Small grain threshed and being delivered to market. Corn crop practically harvested, some spotted. Potato eroi Ibrhi- local market $1.50 per hundred field uu. A nay yieius light.

With few-exceptions alfalfa seed crop is light. Threshing practically completed. Cattle movement heavy; fair prices. Sheep marneting practically completed. Hogs being marketed; sold close due to feed i snortage.

Fergus Threshing in foothills region delayed by bad weather. Few days dry weather. Potatoes dug: some seeding winter wheat. Bulk of cattle shipments made. Heavy shipment of feeder lambs 'during week.

Potato Prices Climb. Flathead Cool, cloudy. Weather excellent for potato digging; will finish this week. Prices for Potatoes show upward trend. Most or crop will be regraded and sold for seed in western market.

Winter wheat in good condition. Much land being fall plowed. Livestock in good condition. Pastures Rood. Callatin Two clear days, balance wet and cold.

Estimated that only i0 per cent of grain threshed and about S5 per cent of peas. Considerable snow on ground. Vnthreshed pea crop probably 00 to per cent total failure. Small grains damaged. Seventy-five per cent potato crop dug.

Some hay down for weeks. Livestock excellent. Have a few ram lambs for sale. Lewis and Clark Few inches of snow middle of week, c.ild but no damage to root crops. Most of threshing un- inished.

Snow will damage grain in i stack and standing; some reports uf i sprout Potato digging very slow i cut crop fairly heavy but considerable skin damage. Sugar beet harvest not started. Alfalfa cutting at standstill and some damage due to heavy snows. Large numbers of sheep and "bogs shipped dining week. All livestock in good condition.

Madison Weather varied: snow- and heavy frosts. Farmers getting uneasy about Isa ing grain: not ter 40 to per cent threshed and much damaged Some hay and abnut "0 per cent potato crop not taken care of yet. Live stock better than usual; cattle coming olf reserves and most of lamb crop sold Phillips Cool, rain and snow flurries. Heavy frost Friday; snow Saturday. Seed corn and potatoes in field damaged by wet weather.

Beet men worried about getting crop Much alfalfa seed lost. Some threshing still unfinished. Livestock good. 1 Turkey Adding Flesh. Tondera Cold and wet.

No threshing. Well stacked grain holding up fine. No more damage to shocked grain. Poorly stacked grain spoiling badly in north and west. Will be able to get uncut grain if weather clears.

Livestock fine. Turkeys putting on flesh; crop about three-fourths of last year. Prairie Bain and snow. Threshing delayed. P.ean farmers heaviest losers.

Some winter wheat being seeded and estimated acreage one-hajf of last year. Considerable fall plowing; about 10 per rent' more than last year. Livestock fine; ranges good and water also. Heavy livestock shipments every week. Roosevelt Cold with snow.

Harvesting about completed; threshing delayed. Livestock in good condition; some movement to market. Stillwater Cool and wet. Sugar beets two-thirds harvested; yield and quality good. Bean crop one-half threshed; quality unthreshed beans injured by rains.

Karly sown wheat and rye good atamSs. Surplus of hay. Potato crop fair. Livestock fine. Yellowstone Rain.

Beet harvest making good progress. Bean threshing halted. Condition of beans in field good yet. Rain beneficial. Livestock good, with generally good supply of winter feed.

Some nonirrigatcd area short of grain. SELLS INTEREST IN RANCH. Forsyth. Oct. (Special) Jolin Iaird of the ranchins partnership of Iaird Weaver, has disposed of his interest in the ranch and livestock to Mr.

Weaver and A. Know, who has been foreman of the ranch for I he last seven years. The ranch is located in the Rosebud river country. Mr. T.a'.rd left the last of the week for his home at Stuart.

where he will devote his time to the management of extensive holdings in that locality. TRAILS BIG CATTLE HERD. Forsyth. Oct. 21.

(Special) Hyndinan, who has extensive ranching interests near I.ame Deer, trailed a bunch of head of cattle from Weede to the. Cheyenne reservation where he has secured a four-year grazing lease. They were delivered the last of the week, it having taken tbreei weeks to trail them through. The cattle will be wintered in the upper Iiosebud creek country on hay bought from ranchers in that vicinity. ANNOUNCEMENT CARD OF THANKS.

We wish to thank'our friends for their floral offerings and sincere sympathy i during the sudden death of our beloved i brother and father. SIOSK A. AGXKW. PARK I. AG NEW.

MRS. 11. H. GEBHARDT. I RICHARD B.

AGNEW. A. G. AG NEW, I. AG NEW.

MISS FA AGNEW. EE LA AGNEW, MRS. G. BAIRU Advertisement. ANNOUNCEMENT.

There will be a business meeting of the Social club- Friday. October 30. at 9 p. m. Johnson Business school.

Advertisement. Psychology meeting. 720 North Thirty-first street. o'clock Thursday evening. All interested In psychology are cordially Invited.

Advertisement. Katherine Kelleys hat store offers I 20 huts at special site for one week, Beautiful styles, rich materials. Adver- tlsmf nt. Missoula, Oct. 24.

Montana university's second team battered. slaHhed, ripped and tore through a light Montana School of Mines eleven for an easy 57-to-O victory Saturday afternoon. Straight football, with the Grizzly back-field subs crashing through the line, slipping past the ends and wriggling through the smallest openings for yardage, brought eight of the nine touchdowns scored during the afternoon, with the other coming on a long pass to Burrell over the goal line. Montana scored a touchdown In the first three minutes of play. Griffin and Kain alternating in six smashes which advanced the ball 40 yards down the field.

With the miners' line unable to hold at any time and the backs receiving good interference, scores were added at Intervals through a powerful offense. The longest sprint of the game was Milton Ritter's 39-yard dash for the final touchdown of the afternoon, with Sugrue getting away for two nice runs tn the last quarter and Larson contributing a 27-yard advance on a double criss-cross in the third period. Twenty-five first downs for Montana came on straight football, with the miners registering only one first down. Aho zigzagging for 28 yards through center in the first period for the losers' only advance of the day. The miners were game to the core and tried hard until the final whistle, but their lack of weight and the gruelling battering they received exhausted the visitors so that at the end their resistance was slight, many substitutes being in the contest.

Lack of a punter hurt, too. Lineup and summary: Montana (57) Position Miners (0) Larscn Connelly Left End. Axtell Shaffer Left Tackle. Cogswell Murphy Left Guard. riummer (c) Mayo (c) Center.

Fletcher Martin Right Guard. Virheus .7. Quinn Right Tackle. Rafferty Towcll Right End. Hodges Thompson Quarterback.

Griffin Bullwinkle Fullback. T. Hodges Aho Left Halfback. Kain Dennehy Right Halfback. Touchdowns Sam Kain, 3.

Griffin, Rurrelt, Rutter, W. Hodges, T. Hodges, Jllman. Goals from touchdowns, Sugrue, 2. Referee, Dee, Denver; umpire, Beal, Denver; head linesman.

Sullivan, Montana; field judge, Turner, Yale. COLORADO AGGIES WIN. Colorado Springs. Oct. "4.

(vP) The famous jinx, riding astride a man-rating tiger through three periods and up to three minutes of the final gun Saturday's Colorado college-Colorado Aggie game, perished at the impact of a blocked punt, and the farmers won their first victory over Colorado college in four years, by a score of 7 to 3. ELKS IS A Hallowe'en Oct. 31 at Coliseum Open to the Public for the First Time Wear Your Old or Freak Clothes No Masks Necessary 10-PRIZES-10 Special Bingville Orchestra A Riot of Fun for Everyone DANCING 10c COAL Don't Walt for Extreme Cold Weather Order Now! BEARCREEK "As Serviceable As Can Bel" PHONE 6379 I Artificial Ice Cold i Storage Co. I Cornhuskers Hang Up Victory Over Jay hawkers, 14-0 Lincoln. Oct.

24. (P) The University of Nebraska Cornhuskers hungup a H-lo-0 victory over the University of Kansas in their annual gridiron clash at Memorial stadium before a large home-coming crowd here Saturday. Nebraska's scores came in the two final periods after' the heavy line had stopped Coach Krnst. Berg's men five times and held them scoreless during the first half. "Choppy" Rhodes, Nebraska half, plunged through for the first score at the end of the third period and "Jug" Brown, Husker quarter, accounted for.

the second touchdown, with a 45-yard run in the last minute of play, Tulane University Beats Northwestern Chicago. Oct. 24. iff) Two southern states blazed bright in the. football firmament for a brief two hours Saturday, and when they had finished their work destructive the tropical "green wave" from Tulane found Itself in possession of 18 points, while a badly battered Northwestern aggregation hail amassed but seven.

The two stars were "Peggy" Flour-noy. the Dixie team's writhing line-buckiwg halfback, and Captain Leslie Iautenschlaeger. Flournoy accounted for all three of his team's touchdowns. Flournoy countered Lewis' punts i boots averaging well over 50 yards. The lone Northwestern score came in the second period, when two passes.

Lewis toSeidel and Lewis to White, were completed in rapid succession. White running over the line on the second pass. WINTER STORAGE SPECIAL RATES "ON DEAD STORAGE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Alemite Garage 19 N. 25TH STREET 22-Seekers 25-Publishers canal 27-Spanned 29-Penitent 31-Lees 33- Vat or large cask 34- Devoured 36 Illegible writing 37- Chessmen 3 9- A kind or class 40- Th rows 42- To sharpen 43- Phrase 44- Face of a clock be it" 48-One who tunes about for 49-Crown 52- Low 53- To cure 56-Latitude (albr.) 58-To beg Utah University Beats Colorado in Conference Game Salt Ijike. Oct.

1M .) Utah defeated the' University of Colorado by a score of 12 to 7. Saturday plunging through the Boulder line at will and completing fwo forward passes which ended in successful races to tVe goal lines. Boulder made the first score of the game in the first quarter and succeeded in kicking goal. Utah retaliated in the second period, with a touchdown but failed to kick goal. The third period was a repitition of Utah's former quarter when the team succeeded in making another touchdown but failed at goal.

Colorado, depending greatly upon an aerial attack, was unsuccessful after the first period. After the showing made with Boulder, Utah is considered a real contender in the. Rocky mountain conference. Illinois Is Beaten By Michigan, 3 to 0, Grange vs. Friedman Champaign, 111..

Oct. 24. l.T) Michigan, learning about Red Grange in presented Benny Friedman, the Wolverine's point-scoring ace. to Illinois Saturday, to square accounts for the disastrous rout of a year aso. In one of the greatest football games of the western conference championship, Michigan defeated Illinois.

8 to 0, while 67,000 spectators, a record-breaking home-coming crowd, gazed down on the spectacle from Illinois' magnificent $2,000,000 Memorial stadium. The huge double-deck affair was packed from top to bottom and 20,000 persons were turned away, WISCONSIN, PURDUE, 0. Madison. Oct. 24.

(Wisconsin won its first conference start since 1923 Saturday, defeating Purdue, 7 to 0, in a game marked by much passing on a slippery field. Wisconsin scored in the first period when Kreuze twisted and turned his way through Purdue's team for a touchdown. COLGATE, PRINCETON, 0. Princeton. N.

Oct. 24. (Colgate defeated Princeton, 9 to 0 in Palmer stadium Saturday where 19,000 persons sat in a driving rainstorm. After holding its own for three quarters, the Maroon took advantage of breaks to pile up nine points In seven minutes. THE RIGHT WAY I I i 1 I I Forsyth High Loses To Miles Industrial School Team, 3 to 0 Forsyth.

Oct. S. (Special) Tn a closely contested game here Saturday, the state industrial school, of Miles City won from the Forsyth high school eleven by a score of to 0. Downs, fullback for the Industrial team making the score. The Industrial team scored after making two long gains on forward passes during the last few minutes of play in the second quarter.

Previous to this Forsyth held the visitors for downs twice but were unable to score after securing the ball and getting within a few yards of the goal. Grant made a number of spectacular runs for Forsyth while Downs was the outstanding player for tlie Industrial team. The lineup: Forsyth (0) Industrial Schoof L'avics Center. Allen Rucier Right Guard. Buckman Chick Left Guard.

G. Elakesley Peltzer Left Tackle. Stortz Deibcle Right Tackle. Kinkaid Harrington Right End. Horkan Roberts Left End.

Sadler AllexiS Quarterback. Crees Gabrielson Left Halfback. Wood Lewis Right Halfback. Crosby Downs Fullback. Wibaux Eleven Lose To Dakotans, 7 to 0 Wihaux.

Oct. 24. (Special) The Beach. N. D.

high school football team invaded Montana Saturday and defeated Wibaux high school in a clsoely fought game. 7 to 0. Leach scored early in the first quarter, a long pass putting the visitors in a position to score on an end run. For the remainder of the game, teams battled ou an even basis. Veeder threatened the visitors' goal with a 40-yard run but Wibaux was unable to profit by it.

STANFORD CONQUERS O. A. C. Talo Alto. Oct.

2i (JD Stanford conquered the powerful Oregon Agricultural college team. "6 to 10 in a bitterly fought contest Saturday, Schuimerich, left halfback for the visitors, made all of his team's points. The a of mo business and social life are for efficiency. Good Eyesight is an aid to efficiency. Our glasses insure maximum eyesight 19 mi BfmM WffM B'fl $75 CM ThU i-tt Perfect Diamond Full purchase price allowed any time you want Terxns No Interest Ring delivered on fist payment.

Yojr money back if you can buy cheaper fur cash e'sewherJ. Koppe Jewelry Co. Securities Bldg. Baldwin-Made PIANOS Wholesale and Retail fiarealns in NEW and USED PIANOS AND PLAYERS. Shipped any-where on our small monthly pay ments.

Write for catalog- CM. LINDAMOOD MUSIC COMPANY Everything in Music 214 Broadway CQMPA BANKERS NY in The Midland Empire, North and East of the Yellowstone National Park COMES FRORf THE LAMS I Homelike Surroundings and Congenial Atmosphere At The "Met" KEEP THE FARMER ON THE FARM Ranchers, Farmers, Dairymen; Wheat, 5ugar Beet, Corn and Bean Growers; Truck Gardeners, Livestock and Poultry Raisers, and Real Estate Men are the MERCHANTS AND The pleasing appearance of the "Met" helps a lot to make it the ideal place in Billings to eat ycur meals. Of course, good food at the "Met" is an accepted standard. Try our Table d'Hote Dinner today. You'll be agreeably surprised at its goodness.

Served from 11:00 a. in. to 8 p. m. at $1.00.

AFTER-THEATER PARTIES Will Find Our Food and Sen ice Delightful. We Serve Oriental Dishes and Tuzzolino Chicken Tamales at All Hours. will prosper when Farmers and Real Estate Owrters prosper and not before! John Clay of Chicago and head of a chain of western banks says: "Realizing on security has become a mania. The system of pulverizing a slow but staple security into a liquid one cannot go on except the west is to stand up against a deadly blow that is aimed at the very foundation of our coming proseprity." SHOW YOUR COURAGE, CONFIDENCE AND COOPERATION BY BUYING OR BUILDING NOW! METROPOLITAN CAFE NORTH REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT YOUR WAY IS Billing City and County Property for Sa'8. Since 1889.

AUSTIN NORTH, President. On Corner West of Courthouse. L'ositions Open for High Class Salesmen!.

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