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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 6
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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 6

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Roullier Services Are Thursday Endsley to Head Fire District Hamilton Planning Old-Fashioned Fourth of July Celebration Th Dairy Mlssoullan, Wednesday, June 20, 1951 200,000 Kilowatts of Power Said Available Soon for Industry ft i 'complete. There are 20 Legion mem Stevensville. At a regular meeting of the board of directors of the Stevensville rural fire district, the following officers were elected; Hamilton, "An old-fashioned Fourth of July for Hamilton" is the slogan for a one-day celebration being planned by the Ravalli post of the American Legion. Working with the Legionnaires are several businessmen Big Mountain Lift To Begin Summer Whitefish. Official openinf of the Big mountain chair lift for th summer is scheduled for next Sunday, announced Ed Schenck, operator.

The season on the mountain wa given an Informal sendoff last Sunday when 30 picnickers made tht trip. Two black bears and many deer were seen along the lift line. More than 3,000 visitors went up the big hill in the chair lift last summer and Schenck expects a much larger number this year. About 40 per cent of last year's lift passengers came to Whitefish es bers on the Job collecting money for prizes for events and other celebration costs. The committee is composed of Bob Savage, John Ford and Lloyd Rennaker.

Hellgate post No. 27 of the American Legion at Missoula will send Ralph Endsley, ohalrman; Orvllle Jessie Bicrman Is Going to Germany Kalispell, Dr. Jessie Bierman, professor of maternal and child health at the University of California at Berkeley, is one of a group of public health specialists who will go to Germany during the summer for a series of public health institutes, scheduled to open at Frankfort and extend to other cities in that country. She will be sent by the Unitarian church. Dr.

Bierman is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bierman, Kalispell. She is a product of the Kalispell schools and a graduated of Montana State University. Prior to World war II she was director of maternal and child health for the Montana state board of health.

Buker, vice chairman; Cyrus Inger-soll, secretary-treasurer; Vivian Irvine, publicity director, and Ranger Tuesday 43 pledges from business riUson of the club's camp committee. The Lions maintain the camp for use of youth groups during the summer sea-son. Right now, they reported, they are recruiting volunteer labor from club members in getting the first new cabin into readiness for use this year. The program of the Lions calls for one or more cabins a year to replace tents. firms amounted to $578 and the its drum and bugle corps to Hamil- Charles McDonald, adviser.

It was committee said contacting was not St. Ignatius. Graveside services for Henry H. Roullier, 58, of Spokane will be conducted at the St. Ignatius Catholic cemetery at 10 a.

m. Thursday in the family plot beside his wife. Funeral rite for the former Frenchtown and St. Ignatius resident were conducted at Spokane and the body will arrive here Wednesday morning. The Fearon mortuary is to be in oharge of arrangements.

Mr. Roullier died at Spokane Monday. He was born July 23, 1892, at New Bedford, Mass. Survivors are: Four daughters, Ola Parseau of Spokane, Julia Mun-zenreder of Ronan, June and Pearl Ashley of Pablo; three sons, Albert Henry O. and Frank; one brother, Leo of St.

Ignatius; sisters, also voted to seek the services of Dean Hart, the new alternate ranger, as an adviser ton for the parade which is planned as a starter for the day's celebration. Afterward the corps will give a performance at the high school football field. The parade also will feature the Missoula Forty and Eight's locomotive and cannon. A motion was carried to prepare "What to do" cards to be distributed among the farmers to keep them Helene Collier Re-Elected Billings, June 19. (V) Helene informed on what to do in case of pecially to go up the mountain, Schenck said.

The lift has a vertical rise of 1,024 feet and the round trip Collier of Missoula was re-elected! from the ski lodge to the top la 6,500 feet. ScoutLaboratory Is 'The Outdoors' Kalispell Woman Takes Medal Honors In Whitefish Tourney Rose Deschamps and Amelia Berard of Missoula and 16 grandchildren. Thor O. Thorvilson Poison. Memorial services for Thor 6.

Thorvilson, 81, who died at Flathead Builders Outing Sunday Kalispell. The Flathead county 4-H Builders will have their annual outing in Glacier national park Sunday. Cars are to leave the county courthou.se here at 9 o'clock and the Bigfork east of here, at 9:30 o'clock for the Jaunt through the park. A potluck dinner is planned but those in charge state plans for the picnic location have not been definitely determined. The picnic will either be at the Sprague creek or the Avalanche picnic grounds.

The group is planning an all-day outing. district president of the Women's Missionary society and Mendal Collins of Butte was named Nazarene Young People's society president Tuesday in conventions at the First Church of the Nazarene. The conclaves are being held in connection with the Rocky Mountain district assembly of the Church of the Nazarene, which will start Wednesday. More than 140 laymen and pastors from Montana and Wyoming are expected to register, according to Rev. Murray J.

Pallett, pastor of the host Bljllngs church. Whitefish. Betty Bischoff of fire. Orvllle Buker was appointed to check into all angles of the insurance problem for trucks and for volunteer firemen. Joe Little, outgoing vice chairman, conducted the business meeting and at his suggestion a motion was made and carried to authorize any board member at any time, on learning that the truck was not in operating condition, to have it fixed immediately.

It was announced that the order has been given to have the horn on the fire station in Stevensville wired for a switch on the lower floor or until such time that the local telephone company can obtain the needed equipment to connect the alarm to the switchboard in the local exchange. Kalispell was medalist with a net score ot 35 in the annual women's a local hospital Saturday after a short illness, were conducted at the Retz chapel in Poison at 10 a. invitational golf tournament. Sixty-' four contestants played the nin holes despite the rain. Somers-Bigfork Road Is Begun Kalispell.

The O'Brien Construction company of Great Falls has started work on the Somers-Bigfork road project under a contract awarded by the state highway commission. The contract calls for construction from U. S. highway No. 93 to the Keller corner, a point near the site of the present Holt bridge, all west of the Flathead river.

Eventually it is expected a new bridge will span the river at a new location and the road continued on from there to Bigfork. The state is to build the road which is to be maintained by Flathead county. Tuesday with Rev, E. S. Tollefson officiating.

The body was sent to Park River, for final rites Josephine McNeilly of Whitefish Kalispell. "The out-of-doors is the true laboratory of scouting," William L. Royer, chairman of the Flathead district committee of the Western Montana council, Boy Scouts of America, said Tuesday in reminding Boy Scouts that they should register now for the Boy Scout camp at Melita island. He said there will be three one-week periods at the 60-acre island on Flathead lake from July 6 to 27. He said applications had been put in the hands of the Scouts, and that additional information may be obtained from Judson Compton, Western Montana council field executive at Kalispell.

Mr. Royer said the skills of scout got a 36, Veronica Justin of Kal-ispell got a 37, Irma Dedon of Kalispell. Don C. Troloar, chairman of the Flathead Valley Citizens committee and chairman or the Kalispell Chamber of Commerce power committee, addressed the Lions club at Us noon luncheon meeting at the Temple Tea room Tuesday on Flathead valley development. Mr.

Treloar said that industry follows power development and that that would hold true in the Flathead, where 200,000 kilowatts of power would be available for Montana industry from the near-by Hungrv Hnrse dam project. Mr. Treloar and J. G. Edmi.ston.

a director of the Chamber, returned this week from a trip to Washington, D. whrre they represented the Kalispell Chamber on development for the Flathead. Tliat the first of several new cabins to be erected at Bitter Root lake, west of here and maintained by the Lions is a "must" for the year was explained to the Lions by Mike Collctte and Walter Mau- Stcvensville Will Have O-Mok-Scc Stevensville. The St. Mary's Saddle club will stage its first o-mok-see (an Indian word for playing on horseback) at 1 p.

m. Sunday at the club arena at the community park. Registration will open at 10 a. m. the same day.

'Only members of saddle clubs belonging to the Western Montana Saddle Club association may enter. An exception will be made for members of the newly-formed Hamilton Saddle club who will be guests. There will be 16 events: 1, men's saddle and go; 2, women's egg race; 3, men's rescue race; 4, men's and women's Gretna Green; 5, men's saddle and go; 6, children's balloon bursting; 7, men's pole bending; 8, women's pole bending; 9, children's spud race; 10, women's barrel and stake race; 11, men's and women's wheelbarrow race; 12, children's water race; 13, Indian wrestling for men 18 and more; 14, women's musical stall; 15, men's musical stall, and 16, western gaited. Children's races are for those 14 and under. and burial.

Mr. Thorvilson was born Decern Whitefish a 38, Mildred Warren of ber 29. 1869, at Cresco, Iowa, and Missoula a 39 and Betty Blanken-ship of Missoula a 40. Bonner Is Opposed To Power Grant came with his parents to Park River in 1875. He was a resident of Kalispell from 1917 until he came here in 1945 to make his home with Retired Railroader a niece, Mrs.

Joe Erickson. D1- In April, 1896, he was married tolLlCS at Helena, June 19. 0P) Governor John W. Bonner said Tuesday he is opposed to giving Canada one-third ing are best practiced in the out- Poison. Edward B.

Powell, 83, retired railroad man, died at his home here Monday after an illness ph LT wb Z6' of-doors, and that advancement re-Sh Mff quirements "may be more effectively Hilrr a 'translated in terms of things to and to do in the open, he Mina Johnson who died in 1903. They had one child. Surviving are: His daughter, Mrs. Hanna Braaten of Fairdale, N. three brothers, A.

O. Thorvilson of Kalispell, Ole O. of Adams, N. and Barney of Bothell, one sister, Mrs. Anna Brown of Birsay, of several weeks.

Robinsons to Attend Bankers Convention Stevensville. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Robinson, and Mr. and Mrs.

Ralph Robinson, Will leave Wednesday to attend a bankers convention at Canyon hotel in Yellowstone park. They expect to continue to Billings, where they will visit at the home of Mrs. W. J. Kelly, sister of Mrs.

Robinson, Jr. Robbie Robinson will join them on the return trip having gone to Billinga with Lee Cowan and Vicki Kelly. rr. LU said, adding "a Scout becomes skill- mission in Washington, D. C.

ful throueh freauent Dractices." Funeral rites will be conducted at the Retz chapel at 2 p. m. Thursday and burial will be in Lake View cemetery. Rev. Charles Dustan will Williamson Second In Boat Race Whitefish.

Len Williamson, driving for Hutchuck, local boat dealers, brought home the second-place trophy ni the runabout cla.ss race in the Invitational meet of the Spokane Power Boat association at Rose Lake, Idaho, Sunday. Rough water caused his fuel tank cap to vibrate shut and cut off the fuel supply a short distance from the finish line. Fred Stanard of Whitefish had motor trouble in the same race but won third with his runabout in the faster hydro class. Racing conditions were bad, due to high winds, and several boats tipped over. Three other Whitefish entries failed to place.

The Idaho trophy is Hutchuck's second this sea-son. Their entry won second in the Memorial day race at Shelly lake, Spokane. Mr. Royer said trained directors me aarn in tne Kootenai rive, near Libby would back up water 4: in anllaHnc prtntinfr anrl nohira will slf ntrhpll'fl Pfltmrifl ft 1 fl 1 miles into Canada. The officiate.

diniy en- inr-inriprl in t.hi onmn staff gineers estimate its complete cost Mr. Powell was born at Kosciusko, nieces and nephews. Pallbearers were Charles Casper-pson, Poison; William Jensen, Poison; December 8, 1867. In 1904 he was married to Estella Vitula Shinn at $271,000,000, The dam would have an ultimate generating capacity of 1,030,000 kilowatts for the northwest First Aid, Safety at Joseph, Ore. The familv has re power pool.

sided in Poison since 1927. He was Programs Progress Bonner wrote Stanley: "I under in the employ of the Northern Pa stand the Drovince of British fin cific railway from 1911 until his retirement in 1939, working for Grange Will Stage Dance Festival Hamilton. Rocky Mountain Grange will sponsor a square dance contest for all Ravalli county granges about October 1, R. O. Inman, the master, and the dance committee stated Tuesday.

The Mountain group will be host at a dance Saturday night at the Grange hall south of Hamilton. Mrs. D. It. McConnell of the Rocky Mountain Grange, and Mrs.

Weldon Eddy of Deer Lodge will have charge of crafts at the state youth granRe camp at Camp Rollins on Flathead lake late this month. Mrs. McConnell said Tuesday. Dates of the camp are June 26-29. Ed Bratton of Ronan is state youth chairman and Mrs.

Blanche Bailey of Poison is a state superintendent for the camp. There will be leathercraft, copper wire work and chenille flower-making among the crafts taught this summer, Mrs. McConnell said. Preparations are being made for more than 100 boys and girls at the camp. lumbia experts to demand one-third! Stevensville.

The forest ranger of the power senerated at the Libbvioffice reports that its first aid and many years as a section foreman project safety programs are well under way and should contribute materially to a safe season for the em- Surviving are his widow, Estella of Poison, and four sons, Roger K. of Bend, Edward B. of "I believe that such a grant of power to Canada would be against iNeis Lionner, itauspeu, vjeorge rewards, Kalispell; Charles Stubbs, Kalispell, and Ole Jardet, Kalispell. Alice Rosetta Matteson Hamilton. Alice Rosetta Matte-son, 71, native of Southwest City, and Darby resident since 1897, died at a Hamilton hospital Tuesday after a long illness.

She i6 survived by her widower, Henry; a son, Earl Matteson, Darby; four daughters, Marjorie Hoi-seth, Gertrude Barbie and Rene Currell of Missoula and Fern Bel-ston of Lolo; two brothers, Jesse and Joe Hart of Darby, and a sister, Carrie Beam of Hamilton. Mrs. Matteson came to the Darby the best interests of the state of Ploves 01 iorest service. There Freewater.Ore.; Vernon of Florence Montana and the TTnitwi KKnrp now six men working in the and Weldon W. of San Francisco, and seven grandchildren.

district and two more men have been notified to report for work. All hands of the service recently I believe further that such a grant would be contrary to existing law." Bonner said Canada wnnlrt hp GRANGE HAS PICNIC Stevensville. Stevensville Grange No. 117 had it's annual picnic at the Upper Burnt Fork camp ground with fine picnic weather and a good attendance. Contest games were played and a fine outing was gion post No.

44 and a member safety inspection satis- benefited by construction of the' of Thompson Falls lodge No. 70, dam, by the reduction of flood dam-1 la'ly- age and the increased power output Next week most of this crew win The IJC held hearings this spring I the toe training at Helena, Spokane, Cranbrook and I schol in Sula' which wil1 be June Nfilson. tn ripbrmin Bvnf26 through 29. It Is designed to He is survived by his widow and one son, Kenneth, and two grand children. area as a young girl with her par Pallbearers were H.

R. Lani, Floyd Raab, William Hunson, O. J. Murray, C. A.

Baxter and Edgar of damages the dam's backwater! 77" 7 rmnaie various ent8 the late Mr. and Mrs. J. F. would cause in Canada.

"re, ind flres bv compass (DjCio Hart Her marriage took Representative Wesley A. Ewart1 ana allaaae readings, make proper there December 19. 1897, and Mimeographing Modern Business College WORK GUARANTEED PHONE 2202 I Lacock. 'the rePrts read maps. Special stress is opposed Archbishop Trial Set for Friday The Shrider mortuary of Plains (R-Mont.) recently Canadian proposal.

piaceu on various metnoas ana tecn- fighting different types niques of of fires. took he body to Spokane for ore mation. Hot Springs Baby IS the family home has always been in the south Darby locality. There are several cousins, nieces and nephews in the Bitter Root valley and several grandchildren. Arrangements are in charge of the Dowling mortuary and are to include burial in Lone Pine cemetery at Darby.

Weatherproof and Waterproof Education Compacts To Be Planned (Continued From Page One) British sterling and Swiss francs In his house. Pongracz, who had worked with Ronan. An infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Penas of Hot A school is also planned for "co-operators," who have agreed to assist the forest service in detection and suppression of fires.

These co-operators range from bulldozer operators and pack string owners to women whose homes are so situated that they have a command TUFF-ECOT the USIS since December, 1946, wasj declared to have been "the inform-! June ant of the fascist counterintelligence I John w- Bonner today appointed a service" and to have given regular cmmittee to meet groups from 4D HsEZt Springs died in a local hospital Tuesday evening. The child was born Monday. She is survived by her parents, two brothers and two Frank Smith Hill nv rpnnrU nhoiit. Hnnenrian nolit.i- suaics 10 pian mier for ing view of portions of the district. Kalispell.

Funeral services sisters. cal, economic, cultural and educa state educational compacts. The 1951 legislature authorized If the weather of the last few days Frank Smith Hill, 84, were Monday the fire danger is expected to rise at the Waggener Campbell chapel Hotpoint Home Appliances Sales and Service WESTERN MONTANA ELECTRIC Electrical Contractor It Dealer 205 WEST FRONT Phone 4849 tional conditions. The U. S.

service issues daily news bulletins, shows documentary compacts with other western states so Montanans can attend colleges The father is employed at the Hot Springs bathhouse. Funeral services are to be conducted at Fearon chapel at St. Ignatius at 11 a. m. Thursday.

with Rev. Ralph Werner officiating. Burial was in the Whitefish rapidly, fue officials said, and increased caution to prevent fires both in the forest and around farms is urged. SAVES WALLS SAVES M0NE1 Low Monthly Payments Get tht Facts Today Fret) RANCO WEATHERPROOFERS PHONE 8797 P.O. Box 825 Missoula films and maintains a library here.

cemetery. Pallbearers were Ed Mo-tichka, David Nelson, Henry Malu-nat, Hans Jensen, E. T. Mauser and John French. Mr.

Hill was born October 27, SAN FRANCISCO COUPLE VISITS uttnt. luui.xa iiul tivcumuie 111 Montana University system. Bonner said Tuesday this would apply principally to students wanting to take medicine and veterinary medicine. He said the compacts would let them enter schools in Rill Lowering: Draft Becomes Law (Continued From Page One) UL Kalispell and Somers Men in Hospital Due to Car Accidents 1866, at Sherbourne. N.

Y. He later moved to Wisconsin, where he was why much of the machinery for this married in 1892. He came to Co Hamilton. Mr. and Mrs.

Herbert Hayward, arrived from Circle, where they had been vacationing with Mrs. Hayward's relatives, and are guests of the father. Dr. Herbert Hayward, and others of the family. The young couple resides in San Francisco.

system should not be well along compact states witnout delay before the end of this session of i ana undue expense ceucou; lumbia Falls in 1926 and retired about ten years ago. He is survived by his widow, Vin-nie May; four sons, a daughter, 18 grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren and a sister. congress. UMT is a long-range program, designed for application after the Dr. J.

R. Van Pelt, president of the state School of Mines at Butte, was appointed chairman of Montana's committee for a four-vear nresent military emergency. All TWICE-A-DAY CLASS AD WIN Poison. William F. Timms of Kalispell.

who is in a Poison hospital following an accident in his car at the Charlo cut-off Friday, is still in a critical condition, with little change, his physician said Tuesday. Paul Speyer of Somers also is in a local hospital as the result of his car running off the road about a mile west of Poison on U. S. highway No. 93.

His injuries are not serious and the other passengers Elsie Staarup eligible youths would be brought into term ending June 19, 1955. it at the age of 18 to take six Dr. Frank McPhail of Great Falls months' training and then to stand was named for three years ending by for seven years and six months in1 June 19. 1954, and Mary M. Condon, the reserves.

state public instruction superintend- Secretary of Defense ent, will be on the committee for two Earl J. McGrath, commissioner of I years. Hamilton. Funeral services for We Sell and Install a i IRON FIREMAN OIL, COAL and education congressional leaders! Bonner was one of the compact attended the signing ceremonies in; plan supporters when it was first escaped injury Elsie Straarup were conducted at the Dowling chapel Monday afternoon, with burial in Riverview cemetery by the grave of the husband, Claus Straarup. Rev.

Lawrence Roumpf was in charge. Pallbearers were Mike Knez, Glen Hackney, Dale Jennings, George Rennaker, Sid Clark and Gordon Knowles, all neighbors in the Charlos Heights area where Mrs. Straarup had lived for 37 years. the White House. I considered by the council of western The new law establishes a ceiling' states governors in 1949.

Compacts 1 of 5.000.000 men for the armed forces! were planned between Montana and, 1'ead Alter reck Nedr Columbia Falls and, among other things, lowers mental standards for induction. 1 GAS-FIRED WARM AIR FURNACES, STOKERS, OIL BURN-ERS and CONVERSION GAS BURNERS. Missoula Hardware Plumbing Co. 228 North Higgins Telephone 6669 (Continued From One) Hungry Horse dam when they over Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, California, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, Hawaii and Alaska. Bonner got a letter Tuesday from Frank Bane of Chicago, secretary of the National Governors council, iook me car James wimberlev was FIRST ANNUAL MISSOULA-PLYMOUTH MODEL AIRPLANE CONTEST SUNDAY, JUNE 24-9 A.

M. Insurance on State Property Bought driving and in passing are believed C. O. Todd to nave siaeswipea ine wimoeriey vehicle and then to have hit the Thompson Falls. Funeral for C.

O. Todd were conducted saying lour other western states have had the educational compact Helena, June 19. The Mon- itennenerg car head on. The en Missoula County Airport tana examiners board purchased plan approved bv their legislatures tire accident was seen by Bill at the Methodist church Tuesday. $36,044,700 worth of insurance on; He did not name the states, state property for a three-year costi Bane also told Bonner he expects of $215,547.

several other western state legis- A contract, effective July 1, was latures to approve the compact plan signed Monday with the Montana soon. 14 PRIZES 7 FREE TRIPS TO HELENA SEE YOUR LOCAL PLYMOUTH DEALER FOR ENTRY BLANKS another dam employe, through his by Rev. B. L. Fridley.

rear view mirror while en route Mr. Todd, a veteran of World war home. died in the veteran's hospital at Street was a cousin of David, fort Harrison Friday. He was a Street who was killed a few years retired employe of the Northern ago about three miles away on the! Pacific, a member of American Le-same highway. He was a son of i Association 01 insurance Agents.

Bonner said this state will pay The insurance will cost abtjut 4 compact member states their actual TodayfKING is felly cents less per $100 than it did for cost per student for education given! Jack Street of the Tally lake dis- Uie past three years, according to Montana students. Montana stu- trict. Board Secretary W. L. Fitzsimmons.j dents will pay their own tuition and The Kennebergs were en route Value of state property in those other costs.

home from Bonners Ferry, Idaho, years rose $10,000,000, partly in new: The governor said the compact) where they had been visiting and the rest In in- plan will save Montana the cost of tives. The Hoves and Kennebergs IF YOO NEED PLUMBING REPAIRS or Fixtures Installed Call F. W. KETCIIUM PHONE 8560 I creased worth of older property. including schools and courses in the; are related A coroner's inquest will be called.

lfH HIT LJuIil state university system that could not be self supporting because of the relatively small number of RUMMAGE SALE 1 Women's hats; shoes, size dresses, size 14; coats, size 14; girls' dresses and suits, size 12; Scout suit complete, size 12; men's top coats, size 38; women's purses; upright Philco radio, fireplace screen and portable ironer. These items can be seen at the rear door of 521 N. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Investigating the wreck Tuesday night were Sheriff Dick Walsh, County Attorney Ed Schroeter.

County Coroner S. J. Catron and the highway patrol. EYE CAUTIONS Britht, jMartng lignt tlren ej'M. Avoid reading In a shadow.

Dlffusrd. indirect light Is restful To sooth and relax over-morkrd. sore, tired burning, Itching eyes RECEIVES TREATMENT f5 Hamilton. Dale Mansfield, 18, RUMMAGE SALE 3 Women's, children's and maternity clothes; crib; high chair and other baby equipment; miscellaneous items of all kinds. 129 STRAND AVEME use tomtorting pleasant tavoptm.

35 Stevensville, received treatment for 3lOntananS Are Added years success. Praised by thousands. Oeta severely cut thumb at Daly hos- To Casualty List Lavoptu today. lEye-mp included). Be piui.

returning soon afterward to his Made Especially for the Millions Who Prefer delighted or money back. All druggists. home. Little Annie Rooney By Brandon Walsh a Lighter Blend GUESS I'M JUST A SCAREDY- EVEN IF THE TIGER DID "Z'-l DO NT LET THAT WORRY W.KlDH i Acrnir.ur wAccrnoMVTiirv CAT-TMIS BREAKFAST IS SWELL. HOWL, THE" SWAMP IS TWENTY LTOOMT WORRY (BUT I AST HCARDTlE WlND I lOWLIKJG OR TAE kADIOSAiD MAY6ET A MOUfJD DOC BAYING ABOUT ttUT AM 1M TERRIBLE GLAD I i SAFE IN THIS LOVELY JAIL- MILES AWAY AND YOU'RE WERE ALL TlGEC, I TiiE GUAPDS A AT THE MOOM--fe SAFE AND SMUG, WOMEY-; New Light Formula New Light Package EAT YOUR GF.R RORifi BREAKFAST, ,7 H.ii i v.

Washington. June 19. defense department Tuesday added the names of eight Montanans to the Korean casualty list. Air force Sergeant Joseph L. Barr.

husband of Mrs. Jean E. Barr of Hot Springs, is missing in action. Wounded were Army PFC Alvin I Blades, brother of Mrs. Beatrice E.

Beebe, Columbia Palls, and Pre Edsel M. Gable, friend of Henry Ballenger. Sommers Springs; and Marine PFC David L. Bond, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Jack M. Arthur. Augusta; Cpl. Richard D. Cline, husband of Mrs.

Richard D. Cline of Cut Bank, and PFC Kennard C. Irgens. husband of Mrs. Kennard C.

Irgens, Kelvin. Injured were army PFC McKinley Iron, husband of Mrs. Nathelle A. Iron, Crow Agency, and Pvt. Russell Williams, brother of Miss El AWriK.

LOUD 1 hONEY- I rt if- -1 MM3W 3 CniCKEN RANCHES Priced from $400 to all ready to go. 270-ACRE small stock farm. Includes 20 head of cattle, $12,600. 1-BEDROOM HOUSE Ideal location, $8,500. 4-BEDROOM HOUSE On sewer, living room, dining room and kitchen, furnace, $10,000.

3 LOTS Near Washington school, $700. t-ROOM HOUSE Part basement, $2,500, $1,000 down. Gavin Realty Co. Phone 6319 or 7123 127 East Main Union Block mm mm KING BLACK LABEL Blended Whisky. The Straight Whiskies in This Product Are 4 Years or Mors Old.

SVi Straight Whiskies, 62 Grain Neutral Spirits. 86 Proof. MOWN -FORM AN DISTIlllII CORPORATION i' VfCVF i i mm 1 i Fidel M. Williams, Three Forks..

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