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conda aiid 'N. L. HenryJim Dodd was a business visitor 'were visitors •»; . the Gaum Friday, Mr. Sunblade, salesman for the
tt> Jackson the early part of the . August 25. Juag»-" Murphy is a Sweet G»ndy company, a'visitor week; I special representative o f Mr. Fech- in Grant Wednesday.
Mrs. Lucy Jardine, Miss Helen ner, director o f emergency conserva- j Mr. and .Mrs. Omar Larrabee and Sardine and Mrs. Rebecca Jardine, Work,*-and-Mr. Henry is em- children and John Richard motored to left on Tuesday to visit friends in in the forest superYisor’s of- Dillon Wednesday to spend the day.the Fishtrap and Wise River neigh- „ Dillon I Frank Esterwald made a businessborhoods: Miss Helen will leave on • , comnanv baseball team trip to Armstead Wednesday.Friday for Clatskanie, Oregon, where The ?5oth Lompanj Daseoau warn ^ahe Iras a position teaching home lost to Twin Bridges in a hard Mrs. Edith Blair o f Dillon is spends economics in the high school. ' , fought game played at Twin'Bridges }ng a few days -with her daughter,
_ ,, Sunday, August 27. The score at the Mrs. Elmer.Selway. •
^ A. M. LongsetliD ean. Burgess were m jacsson on • • („ ave the Bridges team the - , . n ,,. - , , ■ ,Tuesday soliciting funds for the score. Sidney Voiles, who motored to Dillo Wednesday. .Florence Crittenden home in Helena, p^hed for Company team was Mrs. A. A. Schroeder and daugh,-
Mr. and Mrs. Dodd spent several perhaps the outstanding player. He ter, Le Merne, and May Sprinkle are days' Last week visiting at the home pitched eighteen strike-outs and no spending a week on the prairie vis- o f Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hirschy. .walks. Good work, Sid! We blame iting friends.
The whole community was shocked the snow and rain, preventing prac- Mr. and Mrs. j . l . Waldemar and Thursday to hear o f the tragic death tlce for Uie calamity, ■■ 1 - 'daughter, Ada, and son, Ralph, lefto f Don "Rolfe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Spike Camp H-25, under Foreman for Medford, Ore., Thursday, where Roy Rolfe o f Jackson. The little Larry Flick, was withdrawn to main j they toll spend the winter, fellow in company with Junior Woody camp Friday, August 25. Work at. Mr an(j MrSt s . B Howell spent waa camping in the hills above Jack- Elk Lake has been completed and Thursday in Dillon shopping, son and while examining a gun was they will leave this week for a newj ^ j , f . „ _ TTkilled instantly. Heartfelt.sympathy camp sit on Wisconan creek, close^ Mr a n d ^ Iis^ ^ rg e -IIt ig h ea -le ft is extended to the family in their to Sheridan. |for Dl on Thursday\ >bereavement. Funeral services were Cosmopolitan attractions are being Mr. and Mrs. Len Waldemar and conducted in Dillon Monday from featured at the lluby camp. The children moved into Grant; Thursday St. Rose Catholic church and inter- Glendora players, a traveling vodvil where the oldest son will enter school, anent made in Mountain View cem- .troupe, have been engaged to play. James Elmose was a business vis- etey. 1 at the camp Sunday, ' Sept. 3. T he' itor in Grant Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Neidt, accom-' stage-door Johnnies and men-about-| Mrs. Taylor Bradley and son were panied by their daughter, Miss Ruby, town of the 955th company are a11, guests at the Roy Stocker' home on left by motor Thursday for Iowa. j Wednesday.They expect to remain there for two A field day, track meet, visitors’ j Henry Siefkin returned to his home months for the benefit of Mrs. day, and other entertainments are .in Grant Friday after spending a Neidt’s health. ' i being arranged for September 10. few weeks in Dillon visiting.
This will be the big annual event of | C. H. Mayo was a visitor in Grant Mrs. George Lossl accompanied Mr. ^ g55th ^ the ¡Thursday.
and Mrs. Rolfe to Dillon Friday. | A ^ q . tne 955th boysl George Hughes made a businessMr. and Mrs. W. 0. Smith were attended the Modem Woodmen dance trip to Dillon Friday,
visiting friends in Dillon Sunday, j Sheridan Saturday. August 26. Mr. and Mrs. Bert McMenomey of Mr. and Mrs. John Myers motored Eugene Barone 01- ‘ Burns, Mont., Armstead visited at the Roy Stocker
¡Eugene Haskins of Livingston, and ' ome *ri ay‘ _family Leonard Kelley of Butte left forj Miss Ruth Gelhaus left: Saturday
went to Dillon Wednesday, making Mort Missoula Monday, August 28, to resume her position teaching 1 inarrangements to move back for the where they will enlist in the United the high school at Denton,’ Mont,winter so the children may attend States army. I’ - —«*oo l. | Last week-end the boys of the ’ , D. V Padd°ck ^turned early
Mrs. Woody went to Dillon on Ruby camp were busy erecting in. e we£" foia a re ”Friday. stoves in tents. Cold, rainy weather | and fnenda at Bllllngs and
Emil Schindler and his sister, has made the approach of fall keenly i ‘ • ____ _Wilhelmina, were visiting friends in felt. We are all looking forward to j Miss Mary Gelhaus left Saturday Dillon Wednesday. ̂that trip to the sunny South. j for Augusta, Mont., where “she will
Mrs. Elmer Bateman and family The rains of last week have made teach" again this year, from California are visiting at- thd roads to and from camp a mass of 1home of Mr. and Mrs. pith- Pender- gumbo. Camp overhead and truck1gast. drivers have been busy answering'
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Shepherd calls for helP from tourist3 wit\ * ^ ® ^ ______spent the latter part of the week in stalled cars as wel1 as extracting FOR R E N T -M odern seyen-room Dillon. Don Anson took charge of camp trucks from mud holes. house on North Atlantic street, acrossthe store in Mr. Shepherd’s ab- Five men of the 955th company from high, school. Phone 173-J-l,gence, {have been placed on detached service1 ■
Dr. Morrow was a business vis- at district headquarters, Fort Mis-j Mrs. Gebhard Fassler and baby itor to Jackson on Saturday. ¡soula. John Farris has gone as daughter left the Barrett hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Clemow were clerk; Peter Oljar, Herbert Dunham, Wednesday and returned to theirattending to business in Dillon on George -Sackrey, and Lewis Bair as home in Melrose.Saturday. truck drivers.
What threatened to be a disast- A blizzard drove work parties off
to the Bitterroot on Saturday. Mrs. John Jackson and
On September 8,1883, at Gold Creek, Montana, General U. S. Grant drove the golden spike which opened the first of the northern transcontinental railways, the Northern Pacific. At last the narrow thread of steel stretched without a break from the Great Lakes and Mississippi Valley to the North Pacific area, through vast and fertile fields and mountains heavy with buried wealth. Following the rails came 'civilization, and the growth of this mighty Northwestern empire. Through fifty momentous years, through the struggles and joys of pioneering, through the- greatest war and the greatest economic trial-by-fire in history5} the Northwest and the Northern'Pacific have pressed forward, side by/Side. Now we come to the beginning of
a second half-century. Let us pause for a moment and see, not what we have already done, but what we can yet do. All around us He possibilities which we have not had time to realize, \vealth which we have yet to utilize. As the pressure of increasing population and the urge of new scientific discoveries come upon us with increasing force, we shall enter upon anew era of development which will make even the developments of the past fifty years seem insignificant. Through the years to come the Northern Pacific will continue as in the past—to pioneer in the economical, efficient movement of freight, in the pleasant and luxurious transportation of passengers. I t will work, as always, to give to the Northwest the best of transportation, service.
P. Tate and Mrs. Hilary Tate of Melrose were business* visitors in'
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY(hautes o jj tfue, N ohlfi Coast £im vte .
■a
Much material valuable to the historian and archeologist has been scattered and lost, according to Pijof.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hale and H. M. Sayre of Montana Schoolrows fire started on the Schindler the Gravelly Range road project: last and Mrsl Fl W- Plate left on Mines, who is engraved in gathering ranch on Friday, but for the timely week. The supply sergeant is be- ^_en f °f_a motor tour trou g h inf orrrLation about Montana Im
who habited this region befqi theaid o f the Jackson fire department seiged with requests for skiis and e owsi'one Park< and the help o f the neighbors a snow shoes, great deal of property would havebeen destroyed as a strong wind UNITED STATES CIVIL was blowing at the time. | SERVICE EXAMINATIONS—
Mr. and Mrs. Diggle Emerick and The United States civil service Mr. Fitzstevens came in from Dillon commission announces the following tb'httend the rodeo Sunday and were open competitive examinations:. guests at the Clemow home. | ■ General foreman (mountain road> Mr- and Mrs. Alex Crosby came and trail construction), $2,300 to in and attended the rodeo. j $2,600 a year.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pendergast from ’Foreman (mountain road and trail Boulder and Mr. Bowden from Galen construction)( ?lf620 to $2,000 a year.came over to attend the barn dance . , .
• T _ ,, , I Applications will be rated as regiven in Jackson after the rodeo. I . , .—— — ceived until further notice and must
be filed with the Manager, EleventhU. S. Civil Service District at Seattle,Washington.
These examinations are for the purpose of filling vacancies in i the
Burton Carey of Virginia City was white man came, attending to business matters in the1city Wednesday.
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J. C. Lackore, Dist. Manager.
IMPORTANT FACTS | near Armstead by Mrs. J. WalterOF HISTORY LOST Sc°rt, the^Tdlnes professor states.
“ All ti&se indications present a complicatq^L' picture o f forgotten life which should be pieced together andl studied in detail,” Professor Sayre says. “ With the help of interested residents o f central and eastern Montana we hope that at least parts of the picture may be clearly reconstructed before the short memory o f man allows many essentials to vanish among the other mysteries of the past.”
Chief among the evide: o f for-have been
n are
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DILLON FURNITURE CO.
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THÈ Lon Chaney of the Kilocycles !That’s what they call Ted Bergman,
ituttering burg-burg-racketcer; Bolsh- Bolsh-Revolutionist, or what have you, who is heard every Friday night over a nation-widè hook-up in the Best Foods Musical Grocery Store. Without question he "Tos played more different roles than any other actor in •radio.
Ted has played 1012 different radio characters ranging from gangsters tò roniantic lovers. As he works-in twenty-two separate dialects (including the Scandinavian) he feds right at bqme in any crowd. ; v
Some Fridays Ted takes several parts in the Musical Grocery Store. So far he has never gotten his parts mixed upr but his nightmare is the thought fhat some night he toll say the right tjbíng;m the wrong dialect »
Once, when he was playing a radio
Just-Received New S h i p m e n r l j - ^ ^ S f e S á S ^leaving Ted soloing before the mike. Ted immediately' picked up the other fellow’s lines and finished out the scene playing both parts. Nobody outside the- studio ever knew the difference.
mer life in Montana th largely obliterated by cu' the mysterious ro» s of rocks and so-called “ tepee rings” which were left apparently by prehistoric hunters. Mr. Sayre has asked all older settlers for information indicating the number o f rock circles and rows that existed before cultivation o f their lands.
Most o f the information on the lives of these early Montanans is being dug out of ancient game drives, scores of which indicate that Montana was once a hunting paradise. Most o f these drives or traps occur at the foot o f cliffs or steep bluffs over which buffalo and smaller game evidently were driven to be killed either by the fall or by arrows. From the traps it is possible to dig various types o f arrowheads, stone knives, scrapers, axes and hammers. Graves and burial places are also important finds, but seldom located. j Professor Sayre’s work so far has been carried on in the vicinity of Big Timber, along the Milk river from Malta to Glasgow, in the Gallatin valley and Madison valley, andl in the Yellowstone river region near Terry. He plans further exploration in thaJBeaverhead and Sun river valleys, as well as along the rim of the Crazy im0Untaiijs north o f Livingston. . , / i /
Many th6usands of / bones were found in a .buffalo trap below the rim rock o f the Madison river valley south, g f Logan, indicating a long period o f hunting. Difference in the types o f arrowheads found at varying depths in this.layer o f bones is reported by C. A . Kinsey; B elgrade’s photographer "and curio collector, who hag done'-some extensive exploration in the’ region near Belgrade. Differences in the types of
Miss Barbara Clark and Miss Catherine Spegar left Tuesday for Spencer,. Idaho, where they intend to spend the week visiting with Miss Doris Pott of that city.
Miss Helene Klebba entertained eight of her friends at her home Friday, Sept. 1. It was the occasion o f her sixteenth birthday. Two tables of pinochle were in play and Vivian Allsup was awarded high prize arid' Mildred! Taylor ;)the consolation prize. After delicious refreshments various games were played.
Mrs. Bertha Thibadteau and W. W. Thibadeau, Jr., have been appointed as executors in the estate o f the late W. W. Thibadeau.
Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Romersa returned Monday evening from Sher-, idan where they spent the holidays ■with relatives.
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arrowheads found in buffalo, traps is alsp reported by A. E. George o f Gjfeat /Falls, Mr. Sayre says, and by_F . V. Gillette o f Hinsdale. Old paintings and cairns have been found
*T*HIS year’s smart sheer gloves for... - rniisfimmer wear recall the demuremitts o f Inether day. Santips, as these new tipless gloves are called are made of washable cotton allover mesh, with a crisp cuff frill o f fine pleated organdy* No nrtnicurt need blush unseen when* I W 1 UMUIVUIV UWWU 1/4U9M uUJVWii niiWM,
these are^-om, and the style has many prartical points, too. Dainty fingertips areTeft Ire'ejto do,countless tasks for which gloves ordinarily have to be removed, such as'making change, feeling
fabric^when she is shopping, holding her Teacup, and reaching for her Lucky, for Granddaughter has found that -the mildness and flavor which toasting gives to the modern cigarette are as pleasing to' b $ ^ li to the men she knows. And Granddaughter, likeGrandma, can reedgnize a gdod thing when_she sees, i t So the.mafiy smart women o f today who smoke are finding in the 19̂ 3 version of the oldtimc mitt a satisfactory answer to a very modem glove problem.
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