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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 2
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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 2

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Dramatic Rescues Sergeant Alquist Writes of 2 The Dally Missoullan, Monday, February 26, 1 945 Western Montana Events Isolation of Danzig Forecast Four Persons Hurt in Crash South of Cascade Great Falls, Feb. 25. (P) Four Most Major Bills Cleaned Up Helena, Feb. 25. W) Action on all major appropriation bill ex cept two-for the unlveralty ayatem and state custodial LnntltuUona wa completed by the Montana Senate tonight and light sessions l.1..

1U. uijui iui.iuuiii HW chaplains of Montana'a Senate and Youth Has lhance To Recover From Bullet Wound Two Hurt in Mishap on County Road Kaliepell, Ftb." 25Eurl Wrnver Kalisoell. Feb." 25Eurl tnntA House of Representatives, In a Rodion Y. Malinovsky'i three-car collision on U. S.

Hiuh- Second Ukraine army bridgehead on way 81, 14 mllea south of west ban the Hron river yesterday. east Bratislava and Vienna had Most seriously Injured was Rev. bcen 'Ped out Wth the capture of Emll Wendland. 01. of Deer Kemend, 27 mllea chaplain of the state Senate, who llorthwest Budapest.

A total of suffered a fractured skull, possible Russians were killed, Berlin fractured neck, and severe cuts and ga'd- Moscow did not mention these bruises, His wife suffered a con-l8ector-cusslon, broken left wrist, dislocated Mor right angle and cuta and bruises. rIore or Br'Mau Life in the Armv (Continued F'om Page One.) Sergeant Alquiit then went on to dewrlbe the unloading of hla boat under fire and then atated, "Two men were In each foxhole. A Pitta- burith chap and I were toitether. We wrre to trade oil keeping watch and reatlng. I wa.

tired fromj 14 wept, aunougn not aounaiy. uur artillery. wus firing from poinU 'around us and ahead of us and the' communications, The work W8S "r- -we irpeni tnree more nignis there. Sleeping was a problem In trench. Every time I moved Mnd would drop into my ear, nose or mouth.

We wore our helmets fill uunitru Hit HlfTt OCVLIIIg Ul 8UPr snoounK nimru inrougn me early Sunday morning when he was body Just tho heart. II was by Bn automobile about fourport'd toniuht at the Itly Me. Goodridge-Paulson Rites Performed Saturday Evening Hamilton, ten. -a ceremony at tvuigni www Edith Junella Goodridge ana van Leslie Paulsen the Christian church Saturday evening at 8 son of Jens K. Paulsen, well-known East Hamilton farmer.

i East Hamilton farmer. After the weaning i rerepuon was he at trie nome or wr. Mrs Swell, west of Hamilton. The, wedding rake was brought by the bridegroom's grandmother, Mrs. a mi.tr.nlo ur In florenson of Miwoula.

Others in' Itev. mami f- formed the marriage te and the" Kdanu were the brlclfgroom's'f" twin cwMns, Jean and Dean Hyatt. h. The bride is the daughter of Mrs hit If Hamilton. Fob John- V.

oilman of Victor, is 81 lh" Mr' a hoarder at mll(1) soulh ()f KallhjM-H after his oy Rnd est abllahn lent of a wool testing irushed for treatment after he was our faces. inhnrtnrv Montana ntnta rni. into the ditch on the f.jor of his bedroom I "The next day we learned that1 ailed to make a girve a the al boarding house at about 4 the Jap. had been as clo.se a. a on flna, rcftrilnB Ahley re le' 'rLe ml'B A0 That ouri was a measure establishing a retire" fieC(n(l has a frartured right 1 t' Tr.rf -i.

1 na or nwim in nmnuinn, brought to Kalkpell gen-j Sher(f G. Burrell is rral Hospital. Bute nignway th(. circumstances of the (i mv iini i ui iiwiis Appar nuy uie rri car nirinr. which, strannely enough were notions, at units and for too water conservation project.

The "While there on the beach. I saw; ifgHature also authorized a first Japs, dead and alive. The ooo highway debenture referendum. Tv. werf Mr and Mrs alon aooui jo minuu's aner uie llZ "Sd family Mr 8anrtd MrsJ Weaver car had gone into the ditch Urn Paulsen and lamlly.

Mr. and, and to make the curve Mr" H. Pern- and dauRh(er. Rev. on "'y road Young Weaver and Mrs.

Saladen and Jens Paul-;" bafk of luscarand was hit. sen and Llndy Sorenson. Rev. Edward Smith. 82.

of Boze- man, chaplain of the House, suf- fered concussions, cuts and bruises. Mrs, Nellie Wendland. 30. of Helena, driver of the car in which the four were injured, suffered less! serious Injuries. Seven-year-old RalPh Wendland was unhurt.

Air 01 tne injured were DrOUglH 10 Great Falls for treatment In a local Mrs. Wendland'i car was involved in a head-on collision with an auto mobile driven by John David, 81, of Vandalia. highway patrolmen said. A third car then crashed into the wreckage, the patrolmen added David and the driver of the latter car were unhurt More Than 50 Held For Egypt Slaying Cairo, Feb, 25. VP) More than 50 persons were arrested in Cairo today following the assassination of rremier Anmea Maner ra-sna in ine chamber of deputies last night.

i "l.r": Jl i iseu iniuciea snooung, ne saia 10. Marines Take Another Iwo Airstrip (Continued From Page One,) Marine artillery and heavy units of Uie rnclilc fleet Carrier planes from the mighty Fifth fleet so large it sent a por Hon to waters off Tokyo for a sec- ond big strike against Japan's in- UUALItUI UJlitn iillU DL'VL'Ulll I Illy HIT force heavy bombers gave the ground troops close support. Now Hold Almost Half The Yanks now hold almost tho' I .1 r- l. 1 but many thousand Japanese are 'left in the rugged northern end. dead ones were in the vicinity of the artillery that had given us our scare.

The live ones were prisoners Two were wounded, one was de jected and the fourth stole glances ai ine crowa oi uis. "Hundreds of civilian refugees htragKled into the area. They were: htiwrrv and frightened. Before they eoum net 10 me assemoiy area, ine men Mart loaded tnem wun rations "inere was patnos on A-uay, too That came late in the afternoon when nn old. old Filipino and r.

I -1 ntinflun kADNllin A Ivin.l'inn "iru ui-aimg nil niiKlitnii flag. They were the first natives nfllinr PfKtflr we saw. The scene was lJ vIjIUI and for the moment made real why nre fighting Hamilton, Feb. 25. A fellowship "Thase three days provided plen- dinner given by the people of the of excitement.

In the air we Christian church honored Rev. and ronce saia ine, majority oi me, held Saturday afternoon at the arrest were precautionary and were, home of Mr. Ivy Fullerton. Mrs. D.

made to complete Inquiries. Two of Freeze and Mis Betty Freeze those arrested had been near the: were assistant hostesses, spot where the alleged assassin. The corps prepared for the visit Mahmoud el Issawi, fired the fatal 0f the department president, Laura shots at the premier In a corridor of Kalispell, for the next of the parliament. meeting, March 10 at the Eagle Ahmed Maher was given a state hall on North Second atreet. 1 1 117 1111 171 Uli Men in Serviee GETS SIK'OM) DECOItATION Butte.

Feb. dar- jng 0f 20-year-old Montana Ma-' rine has won him his second deco- Corporal Harold Rediske i I 1. our planes go to work on enemy ahead. The way our DomumB anci straung ana "our own Nlmitz reported that unloading P'nrs, oive-wimgra sna operations were functioning clna ting For the 'y ly alone the beaches lu wa terrifying" Am'bSben raided Chichi' As the day, went by Sergeant Al-I Jima, in the Benin islands lmmedi- miist said the denaer from enemy funeral today. The procession, one of the longest ever seen in Egypt, included detachments of the Egyp- Crown Invasion Manila, Feb.

25. od The invasion of Luzon ha been marked by a erle of dramatlo reacue of military prisoner and civilian internee from th Japanese. Here they are at a glance: Cabantuan, Jan. 30. A ranger and guerrilla oieratlon behind the Japanese lines; 510 military prisoner freed, many of them heroes of Bataan and Corregl-dor: 523 Japanese slain: 27 re, cuer killed, three wounded.

Santo Toma In Manila, Feb. A epearhead operation of the First calavry division ahead of the Manila-bound army; 3.700 internee, the bulk of them Americans, rescued, some In exchange for safe conduct of a group of Japanese soldier, An undisclosed number of Internees later were killed when the Japanese shelled the camp. BiUbid. Ancient Prison In North Manila, Feb. 5.

More than 800 war prisoners and 550 civilian internee rescued by 37th division soldiers; Japanese had Liberated groups later had to be evacuated hastily enemy-set fires approached. Los Banos, southeast of Manila, February internees freed by coordinated paratrooper, amphibious and guerrilla Japanese commander, staff and 243 guards slain; two rescuer killed; two rescuers, two Internees wounded. VISIT KALISPELL Kalispell. Feb. and Mrs Emmett Hale and daughter of Flat-had Mine were Kalispell visitors Sunday.

COVG Ill1-" Iff oP tt MttgH IhrMt IrrltttltM rtsul Ing frtm mUi smoking, million wte COUGH LOZENGES Really soothing because they're really medicated. Each i. Cough Losenge gives your throat a 15 minute soothing treatment that reaches all the way down below the gsrgle line. Only 101 box. By J.

R. Williami By Brandon Walsh GlORYCISKY! NOW I SEE! MR. STARK PRETENDED TO BE SICK, SO YOU COULD TAKE HIS PLACE 1 at AlvV (Continued From Page One.) Mutheast of Hfrlln 'crushed, and also declared that Several more blocks of buildings full to Russian shock troops In Bres lu, besieged lower Silesian capital, the only other sector mentioned In the brief Russian war bulletin. The Russians now hold nearly 40 blocks In the southern part of Bres au. Berlin said "especially heavy 'ngniing is raging in ironi oi ine Kuerassicr barracks at the southern entrance to Hohenzollern road and in the cemeterie on the city' fringes.

Breslau' garrison, estimated at 100,000 men. 1 encircled In an area of about 75 square miles. It has been ordered to fight to the death in an effort to delay Russian mus- terlng of full force against Dres den and Berlin In Latvia, where the remnant of 30 German division are isolated, a Oerman broadcast said the Russian captured Prlekule, 20 mile southeast of the Baltic port of Liepaja after a fierce house-to-house fight. WRC DINNER Hamilton. Feb.

25. A poWuck dinner for member of the John Fremont Woman' Relief corp wa CHIMNEY FIRE Kalispell, Feb. 25. Kalispell fire men extinguished a chimney fire Sunday morning at vans tourist camp. No damage was reported.

We Nsed Used PIANOS Will pay cash, sell on commission, will apply as credit on new piano Consult us before you sell. ORVIS MUSIC HOUSE Phone 2553 Evening 4471 Out Our Way IT WAS A PREARRANGED PLAN SCREEN STAR STRICKEN DIRECTOR DISCOVERS UNKNOWN ACTOR TO "1 'REPLACE STAR, army and contingents of Brit anti-aircraft shrapnel" had mount-; tor cd. "We learned." he said, "to DCin- Pct it at dawn, noon and dark. Cme' day two bombs dropped In our VISITING AT RON AN atfiv nriinrnnf to tho nr.nh nn Friday and Saturday. Marcus Island was hit Saturday, Targets in the Marshall were at- tacked the same day by Navy planes, Tank-led Marines, supported bv The brltie came to Hamilton wun her parents last summrr and she has been employed as a tenog-rapher at the reclamation office here since November.

She is a graduate of Livingston hiyh school and the Jamestown. N. telegraphers' school. Mr. Paulsen, a student in; the Hamilton high school, expects to enter Army service soon, lie is a native oi me uamniuii cuiiiinuimjr.

Mrs. Studt Dies In Kalispell Kallspell, Feb. Bertha Btudt, 71, a resident of Kallspell' since 1803, died Saturday fol-' lowing an illnesa of about three weeks. She was the wile of William K. Studt and had resided at 45 Fifth avenue, west, in KaJlspell.

I Also surviving are two sons, Har- ry, who is in the armed forces, and Carl of Chicago, and two daughters, Mrs. Emma Rowe of Butte and Minnie Heltmeyer of Washington, D. 22 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. I Funeral sen ices will be held i Wednesday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock In the Wapcener Campbell chapel, with Rev. Russell J.

Prentice of the Presbyterian church officiating. Interment will follow in the C. E. Conrad Memorial cemetery. FOR ISO CALL Hamilton, Feb.

25. For the next three days Ravalli county will have opportunity to give belated help to the USO call which originated In the late part of 1944, but for one reason and another, principally the last War Loan drive, was shelved for a time. The quota of $7,000 was largest or any yet, sei i or mis coun-1 ty and at last accounts wa sua short of the $6,000 mark, Rev. C. R.

Miller, county chairman said. The call will not extend past March 1 in deference to the March Red Cross War Fund drive. HORSES SOLD AFTER ROUNDUP Hamilton, Feb. 25. Sale of three horses for $20 was made by Sheriff F.

O. Burrell Saturday as a result of a horse herd district roundup the guns of warships, were driving Three men died. Their wounds Brooke of Harrison is visiting her! Madrid. Feb. 25.

(P) Unldentl-ahead slowly acainst the most mod- WFre terrible to see. One night I daughter-in-law, Mrs. J. M. Brooke, Tied planes today bombed the Por-em weapons the enemy has yet heard something drop at my feet; and grandchild, Joe.

Her son, Dr.ituguese colony of Macao, opposite used In the Pacific Including rock- momentum spent. It was a Murray Brooke, is now stationed Hongkong, reports from Lisbon said. eta weighing more than 1,000 pounds, heavy mortars, interlocking undcriiround strongholds, pillboxes with four-foot thick bulkheads, and heavv land mines. Tnrlav rnrrpstvinrtnnts upi-p nor. ratlon, the Montana office of to disclose that the battle in8 tne warships in the naval bat-Marine corps here has announced.1 Iwo was jn tlle balance during1' tie.

When the P-38s came in, what He is Corporal Harold R. Rediske tne irgt day Only the determina-' che" went 11 was a Brand of Ryegate, who dared direct fire tion 0l the' Marines turned the Reeling. from a Jap machlnegun only 15 I "While on the ouskirts I managed yards away to rescue a severely; rnnri eWrrt Amrrirnn'to get into the city a couple of 14 were expected until adjournment of The Senate concurred in 14 House bills, including those carrying p. nronrlati(ms for the state nubile ichwa general fund water conserva. tltm boarfi board aul otflce.

merit svstem for cltv. county and ilut nmnlnvm nH ilfWl (100 in. proprlation for the postwar coir structlon of a veterans' memorial building on the Capitol grounds, Enacted earlier in the session were measures annrnnrlatlnii 14 0(10 from the state general fund surplus for postwar construction at lnstitu for Montana's participation in the postwar Fedcral-atd road building program Those measures, together with appropriation bills for Uie university system and for custodial instltu- tlons, comprise most of the major lrglslntlon of the 20th" assembly. which hns only four calendar days remaining. La lOVAChm I JinnOt" Mrs.t Le eniv ce f.

ma easy cnair 'lvm8 room. fofke a SSS I werta ago to take a state secre- onan, rta. aa. Mrs. E.

M. at uuadaicamu There are more than 128 species of land birds in the Solomon islands, Our Boarding House Little Annie Rooney YOU MEAN WHEM GENESfARK, FHE STAR ACTDR OF THE RIP VAM WINKLE PITCHER, FELL SENSELESS ON THE STAGE. HE WAS NT task Sergeant Stony Craig Reg'lar Fellers SOU'RE IMVIENTOR, BUM IMTEKAS CMILLLD aAE OWE VOW A HORSESHOE HAVMAKER. vJHlLe I WAS THAG OUT, AM IDEA COME TO ME TO ENJO ALL MAKE- TMe GUM5 60 THEV SHOOT i i v'tfTr PRIMARY A RSUTE l-tmm THERE'S A rtWO wounded comrade during the battlelmechBnlzed equipment and the Ma- lor Tinlan. I fmht n.

"His action In pulling the Ma- lit dgainst the firmly entrenched talked up to it to read General rine back from the edge of an 80-' I Mac Arthur's "I have returned" foot cliff'. was a exhibition of Bulldozers are making roads to-'Proclamatlon. As I stood there a great courage," said the citation ac-dav. 8Uppiies are piling up In order-1 group of older men, mostly garbed companylng the awarded of a ly g'y on the beacheS and moving in wrinkled white cotton suits, came Bronze Star medal. (forward to the tattle-weary troop: out and got into a staff car.

One The young corporal won the seabees who already hold seemed familiar and on inquiry I ver Star earlier during the southern airfield wa told he was President Osmena when he rescued two wounded com-i as I had surmised." ish, South African, Indian American troops. and MACAO BOMBED AGAIN The colony was bombed In error last month by American planes aiming at the neighboring naval base, now i occupied by Japan. Major Hoopla NO, HIS REALISTIC DELINEATION OF ILLNESS PROVES STARK ISA FINE ACTOR -AND A GREAT r-KlfcNU! WeSAO.BURKei'LL MAKE: COVER UP MY IT WAS TH' WIRE THAT A A NOTE OP VOUR COMCEP- SKfP- JHREW ME IMTO IT 1 HtIOM TMERE'S A VERMEL ttakd I wVo'A 'it SJw c'D I OF WiSDO INj IT BUT 1 around it SOS a $1 TthpId fOR TH5 PRESENT LE-T'S FT aWeuSeD )r MOT FALL IWTO it- FER LIFE PUGILISM I THAT OUGHT A I A 'XjrC BE EMOUGHV (UNA IT rAUST HAVE 6EENi Jjli A RE50UMOIMG VOALLOP JSJ j.lVr- PAklCBEROUS PROTECTIOM Homer Locuridge, a a i Marshall. He was wounded in rancher, bought them. The three making the rescue and wears the are part of of a herd of a dozen jpurpie Heart, that has roamed the area.

The corporal Rediske Is the son of horses are branded but advertising Mr. and Mrs. George Rediske of failed to bring forth owners, hence Rvegate Tne family formerly re-the sale. The East side herd dis-; sided jn Terry, trlct was created early last year by; Three Armies Roll Up On Cologne fPnntlniiprl Prnm Pnss Clno the board of county commissioners. HanfiS Feb 5 -Rev Alex-' England-Raymond A.

ander Macbeth is convalescing at i T100, J'- of Kalispell, a pi- ho afte -t recent hTnital Uness 'lo 011 '-engine B-24 Liberator bomber, has been promoted from highway, seized Stelnstrass. 17 miles eeant Alquist and his fellows had a from Cologne. Stelnstrass was a chance to see Filipino native rlch prize for there the GermansjOf one thing, he said he is yery had refitted their armored divisions. i sure and that is that the Filipinos Hundreds of U. S.

medium, light and fighter bombers heaped fresh destruction on German defense all SerTKaSS until his recoverv meeting of the narish Friday nlng returned W. E. Pollinper, Dr.i L. L. Budden, Mrs.

H. W. White H. I the way to the Rhine. The German! said the two American armies were supported by tremendous artillery barraoes that shook the earth for miles around Associated Press Correspondent Don Whitehead reported from the t- iU nHn jjiai, ttlillV liUllt Llint H1C UUIUldil to office with the addition of panlons on Kwajaleln atoll in the PROMOTED was bV Colonel W.

R. Robertson, Charlotte, N. officer of the 93rd oomDarameni group in tne tigntn air force. The Kalispell airman is a member nisi oomn gioup ine Eighth air force to complete 300 missions against the enemy. Dur- irn a i rets ft hnca to flro -wmu i-ov alrmrn dropped over 13,600 i tons of bombs on Germany and oc-.

head county hiah school in 1929. He i inlnpri flip Qlrri nnmhnrHmpnt crrnnn I in November, 1944. Kallsnell Pph An nnnpnl1 a trf, i'm thi Wnr inrturHnn'hnnrH ZJ.i Hp i rJrlu'Uo" bla d' urgent need for salvage paper In the war effort. "In order to meet the paper requirements for our mil- Brr oruy nB11 Luy Dlocl1 BWBy P'ece 01 snrapnei, dui woman i nave injured me. "I saw number of enemy air plane shot down.

We had a par- ticuiariy Daa ume auring uie icw CIBVS wnen our livers were BUjJixjri- times. On my first visit I came I to a government building and On that same eventful evening, Sergeant Alquist passed a Seabee mess line and in it saw an old friend from Conrad. His experiences in the next few days included falling Into a foxhole full of water and getting caught on the edge of a typhoon which he said was plenty even if it wasn tne rela McCoy. Thpn hptrqn nerlod When Ser- are Ameucan. Mrs.

Lulu Smith Taken by Death Sunday Mrs. Lulu Smith, 69, resident of Belmont hotel, died at a local hospital Sunday night. The Lucy mortuary is in charge of funeral arrangements, which will be an- nounced later. Two daughters survive. They are Mrs.

J. R. Day of Lewlstown and Mrs. P. A.

Peterson of Portland. PRATHERS HAVE DAUGHTER A son was born Sunday to Major and Mrs. L. H. Prather at the hospital.

Major Prather is at present in Texas and Mrs. Prather has been here for the past few months with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Hayward. PROMINENT CHINESE RESCUED Manila, Feb.

24 (Delayed), VP) Tai Kui Seng, vice minister of the overseas commission of the cen- tral executive committee of China, and his secretary, Tong Seng Pck, nave been rescued after hiding from the Japanese sliice they were caught in Manila at the outbreak of war on December 7, 1941, it was dis-- 'closed today. SERIOUSLY AFFEf TED Moscow, Feb. 25. (JP) Japan's military position "has been seriously affected" by the new American operations in the Pacific, the newspaper Pravda said today. of DRY ECZEMA scratch and suffer another hour, wiihouttry-in Kfsinol for quick relief.

Thii soothing ointment, medicated with ingredients well known to physicians, is Vspecully blended lor smooth-slness and gentle, lingering kaction. Get comfort loJa! Max McKee. HnsPITSI VOTFS Hamilton, Feb. 25. Robert inr wnrxkmnn pt Hnrnpr'n ramn defense there had noticeably llRht ened.

AP Correspondent Wes Gal the was released from the Daly hospital territory and destroyed 113 lagher on the Ninth army front told Sunday, after several days' medical 'n('my aircraft of the rapture of numerous attention. Mrs. Fred kuhn and' Thon, son of Mrs. R. complete with ammunition; Mrs.

C. O. Munson and graauaiea irom me riai-j also went to their homes, Carl Bowers. 16-vear-old Gihhnns ville, Idaho, youth, was brought to lMiCtUl the hospital for treatment. GOVERNORS' GRANDDAUGHTERS WPR StfPP Hamilton, Feb.

daughter arrived Sunday morning at the Daly! ai hospital for Mr. and Mrs, Charles rQPer INS6Q H.James. The mother was former-1 I' By Frank Rentfro and Don Dickson 3 I Fm c. iCT utp to A 1 vmdek Mv GREAT GUNS A I eET KNOCKED OFF jZi IF I COULD 6UP I SCMEBODV'S KNOCKING JrW 'Bvi I 2 ly Dorothy Ford, daughter of Gov mv W- 'alU tied ernor and Mrs, Sam C. Ford James is cashier of the Ravalli county bank.

The baby was named Kathleen Rae VISITING IN RONAN Charjes'itary and essential needs, we must vvua. MMtj feU. V11U ULl from crews unwilling or unable to defend them. uermans wimarawing Reports from the Canadian army front said the Germans were withdrawing crack armored units to meet the peril from the Americans, and were pulling troops back from northern Holland and the Dutch Islands at the mouth of the Rhine. 1 -l'- tured Dueren, the U.

S. Ninth army the north flank Of the 25-mile front speared to within 10 miles of While the U. S. First army cap speared Munchen-Gladbach and was threatening to encircle Erkelenz, a highway center guarding the approaches to that Ruhr city. of 4Q 0OO Dueren was the next! largest German city-second to Aachen-taken by the Americans.

As tne GermanB struggled to bring poured troops, heavy equipment and supplies across the Roer to keep the advantage gained by the first shock of their onslaught. The number of prisoners passed the 3,300 mark, and hundreds of warplanes were setting up more German for the kill by blasting communications in the front of the movlng niass of American troops and guns. Gulliton of Superior. arrived i The fall of Dueren on the third day In Ronan last week and is a house greater the blg push gave Eisenhower' guest of Mr, and Mrs. B.

W. ever cetore, he writes forRes control of the road Hnd rail. ander. Mrs. Gulliton, a sister of! uy bC0Uls or Ameiica.

are way network across the Cologne Mr. Alexander, came a week ago re3uesle continue their -laln Witn a neacetime nonulatlon be with Mrs. Alexander while conecuon oi paper our husband was confined at St. Pat rick's hospital in Missoula. FORMER RESIDENTS VISIT ,1 UD reinforcements from the south Ronan, Feb.

25. Mrs. Gus Wag- Mrcll4uI AP''11 30 will be along bomb-shattered communica-ner a former Ronan resident, andiiglbLe lor the Scout tion lines, the two American armies KUU1 lur TZ Boys who collect 1,000 pounds of, 1 mvln medal. Births Kalispell, Feb. and Mrs.

Kenneth Mullln of Niarada are par oi a ctHugnter, oorn caiuraay night at Kalispell general IRKBFKAII SOCIAL HOUR Hamilton, Feb. 25. A social hour followed the Rcbekah lodge meeting of Friday evening, with Mrs. Josephine Dunbar, Noble Grand Anna I aura Peterson and Elizabeth Humble as hostesses. Flowers were isPnt to Mrs- Cora Ppham, who has By Gene Byrnes WAT A1NT SNOW YOU AW, BUTCtr- TH'LADY URiTAlW JUiT HUNS A- BED 3HEET OUT 'M WIINUUW TO iMCXV AT LAST I'VE BEErt THINK.

If TWJNOW 1 AM' LOOK. AT IT- WWTIN' FOR. A COIN' IN 15 WGHtR. I DEEP ENOUGH TO A flDRW LIKE. THIS I THAT THAN TH' COVER.

WINDOW? IK I ALL WINTER. I I I. GET-UP HOUSCl rAvV rr must w- TtNHY 1 now vheru Jr NJZ children of Spokane, are spending x. Mrs. Wallace Mayer.

Wife Wins Relief From Neuritis Pain Thousand of tuff urn fmn tk- Mini dtift in i quicn-icuiig tormula whith aiieedilv nucular achea and pains NOKITCJ i a tratworlhy and dependable really nrkt fan. If you want lo again ln Ky of relief from pain ao you can work in comlort-ba and try NUHITO under thi ironclad (ruaranlea. If th try fint tluea dotea do not relieve that cruel Jo dgjit Ladi Mm it Irratv aatu ill I U. S. TIRES and BATTERIES For All Can and Trucks GRAEHL MOTOR SERVICE 615 W.

Broadway Phone 4612.

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