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COULD NOT WALK FOR TWO B LOCKS Well and Strong Again Since Taking Tanlac, Declares Los Angeles Woman. "At the time I got Tanlac ray health was so bad I couldn't walk two blocks, but now I'm so well and strong it is hard to realize I ever was sick a day in my life," said Mrs. J. A. Kfagy, 606 W. 85th St., Los Angeles, Cal. "Two and a half years ago I had a complete nervous breakdown, and was so bad off I just seemed to have no strength at all. I couldn't do a bit of my housework, and felt exhausted all , the time. I ha d ino appetite couldn't sleep and just seemed to get worse right on. I tried this, that and the other medicine, but nothing helped me. "Finally I got Tanlac, and even be fore I opened my second bottle there was a wonderful difference in the way I felt. I began to eat acid sleep bet ter, and from then on I improved steadily and rapidly. After finishing my fourth bottle I found I had gained eleven pounds in weight and my health seemed just perfect. I've beon doing all my housework without a bit of trouble ever since then and have not had a sick day. I have told dozens of my friends about Tanlac. and only last week my husband started taking it. I just know Tanlac is the best medicine in the world for people who want something to give them strength and make them feel right." Taitilac is sold in Great Falls by Model Itx Pharmacy, 312 Central ave nue and Cascade Rx Pharmacy, 110 Third Street south.—Adv. WHICH DEPUTY ÜS Fl Accused Man Describes Affair as Stumble in Which He Caught Guard's Neck. Los Angeles, Jan. 6.—The seventh week of the trial of Arthur Burch for the alleged murder of J. Belton Kennedy ended late Friday with tak ing of testimony still in progress. Judge Sidney N. Reeve, in announcing adjournment until Monday told the jurors to be prepared for night ses sions next week. Dr. Louis J. Webber, alienist, testi fied to a belief that Burch was "sim ulating insanity." Burch denied a report, made by a deputy sheriff, that lie had tried to jump over a railing from the second to the first floor of the county jail while on his way to the court room. The deputy said he pulled Burch back when he wns half way over the rail ing. 'The truth of the matter was that I stumbled," the prisoner said. "As I did so I caught the deputy about the neck and I was at no timo in danger of falling over the railing. If 1 wanted to commit suicide, as has been inti mated, there are plenty of other ways I could do it. There is no reason why I should kill myself, for I feel certain I shall be acquitted." SEATTLE-FLATWILLOW WILL BE COMPLETED Special to The Tribune. Lewistown, Jan. 6.—AH arrange ments have been completed between the Great Northern Oil Development com pany and the Seattle-FIatwillow for the completion of the latter's well in 29 14-29, in the Flatwillow anticline by the former and work will be resumed as early as possible in the spring. The well is east of the Black Hawk and is down 2.300 feet. The annual salary of the professor of physics at Cambridge in 1626 was about $200. rQUAUTY-FOOD' It's not volume, but quality in diet that aids healthful growth. Scott's Emulsion it a quality-food that, many neea to help tide over times of weak ness. It's rich in the precious vitamine*. AT AU. DRUO STORES PRICK. HJiO and OOo. Sott ft B»—», N. X MAKERS OT K i-moid S ^ T ndigestiow 3t-U*k of* olo MAKES SHORT WORK t Pain. 'loatù for rheumatism lumbago sciatica neuralgia sprains,strains weak hacks stiff joints At all druagMt*, 35c. 70c. $1.40 Sloaitis Linimentes Makes Sick Skins Well One of Dr. Hobson's Family Remedies. For a clear, healthy complexion use freely Dr.Hobsorïs Eczema Ointment Highway Death Traps to Be Eliminated on Government Projects Washington, Jan. 6.—Grade cross ings will be eliminated wherever pos sible and rejilaeed with bridges or under-pas^es on all roads of the fed eral highway system to be constructed under the federal highway act,'the bureau of* public roads announces. Important roads, many of which at present cross and recross railroads at grades, hereafter will be built entirely on one side of the railroad even though this increases the cost of construction work. BELIEVED !» SIGHT Engineers Report on Project Favorable and Construction Waits Finances. Special to The Tribune. Shelby, Jan. 6.—The Toole county irrigation board announces that early in the year, Ralph Scheenlock of Portland will arrive in Shelby to con fer with the board in regard to the purchase of the irrigation bonds. Owing to the weather conditions, his visit has been delayed. The project was brought to Mr: Sclieenlock's at tention by F. C. lvnowles. of the Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Co., and it is expected that several mem bers of this firm will accompany him. A force has now beeu at work on the survey and drafting of maps for the past two years and a half, and has proved to the satisfaction of dis trict officials that irrigation in Toole county is feasible, and would be profit able to the county. Report Favorable F. C. Knowles visited the project last month, and in company with Henry Gerharz, chief engineer, spent, a week on the (Klackfoot neservation collecting additional data for the de tailed estimate - of the cost of con struction, and inspecting the territory where the bulk of the heavy construc tion work will take . place. Mr. Knowles, before leaving for Seattle, conferred with the irrigation board, and gave a very favorable report on the project. He stated that all the dams, except ing perhaps that of Lost lake site, lent themselves readily to construction by the hydraulic fill method, and that the cost per cubic yard would be low; and that ideal foundations exist where drillings for foundations were made this summer. Ile also stated that Toole county project has a great operating advantage owing to the fact that it has some 160.000 acre feet of storage available in the heart of the project which ls uot possessed by one in a hundred of such projects. Ready for Construction When the bonds are taken up. it is expected that construction on the project will commence immediately, or as soon as the spring opens up. Hie engineers' report is almost complet etl, all eliminations of land not suitable for irrigation have been worked out, the yardage involved in the construc tion of dams, main ditch and distri bution system has been computed, seepage losses, and in fact all work connected with the project has been computed, and will be ready in a short time. Prisoner's Loud Song Was Covering Noise of Saws Cutting Bars Seattle, Jan. 6.—While James E. Redmond, a prisoner in th<> county jail here, who is wanted in Chicago on a highway robbery charge, sang loudly to cover np the noise of fellow pris oners at work with steel saws, James E. Mahoney, recently convicted of kill ing his elderly wife here, and six other prisoners held on murder charges at tempted to saw their way to freedom. The plot was frustrated by the sher iff and jailors, who investigated the singing. Seeking Liquor Stock Worth $35,000 Stolen From U. S. Hospital San Francisco, Jan. 6.—A search is being made of the hills near the Pre sidio military reservation for a stock of liquor, said to be valued at $.'15.000. which is missing from the hospital, according to announcement by military authorities. The announcement followed the ar rest of two privates who were charged with being intoxicated while on duty. "Whisky, said to have been part of the hospital stock, was found oji the two soldiers, it was announced. U. S. Educated Far as Sixth School Grade Kansas City, Jan. 0—(By The As sociated Press.—The United States is mentally a "sixth grade" nation, John B. Coleman, director of vocational ed ucation at La Crosse, A\'is.. told the annual convention of the National So ciety for vocational education here. Mr. Coleman explained that by "sixth grade" nation, he meant that the average education attained in this country is that provided by the sixth grade of public school, two years short of completion of graded school work. OVERALL FACTORY TO TREBLE OUTPUT Special to The Tribune. Lewistown, Jan. 6.— M. M. Holman has returned from Butte where he Rep resented Lewistown men who have taken an interest in (he Manning-Wy man company, manufacturing overalls. Due to the support given the concern fry men of this city, its capacity will be trebled immediately. LICENSED TO WED. Special to The Tribune. Lewistown, Jan. 6.—A marriage li cense has been issued to Gust Thorn quist, 34, a particularly well known res ident of Grass Range and Miss Mary Paith, 37, of Lewistown. A western zoology professor de j clares that there is more money in I slnirh fhïin în. n d"'ry co-v If crossings are unavoidable or jus tified by local interests, the road will pass over or under the tracks and the railroads in most instances will be called upon to bear one-half the cost of building the bridge or under-pass. The three years ending with 1920, according to records available at the bureau, 3,636 lives were lost and 10,<544 persons were injured at grade crossings in the United States. Graves Re-Opened to Behead Dead and End Other Deaths Winona, Minn., Jan. 6.—The graves of Miss Frances Bloch and her brother, Joseph, will be re opened here Saturday, it was an nounced by the police, to determine whether or not the story told by their father, Thomas Bloch, in ex planation of his action in opening the graves last week, are truthful. According to Bloch's story, four of his sons died following his daughter's death five years ago and a fifth son recently became ill. Desperate, he acted on the oft repeated suggestion of superstitious friends, he said, who had told him that the spirit of the first in a family to die "calls" the spirits ot other members of the family. His friends told him, he asserted, that the only way to prevent similar misfortune to other members of the family was to disinter the body of his daughter, decapitate it and place the head at the toot of the coffin. Accordingly, he, with a friend, dug up the coffin containing the body but found that only a skeleton re mained. Not disturbing it, he re placed the coffin in the ground, he said. He then dug up the coffin containing the body of a son but it, too, bore nothing but a skeleton, he said, and he also replaced it, undisturbed. Local emablmers told the police that it was unusual for bodies to decompose so completely as to leave nothing but a skeleton within five years. Because of this information the graves will be reopened to verify portions of Bloch's story. Roosevelt Pilgrims Pay Homage at Grave on Death Anniversary Oyster Bay, N. Y., Jan. 6.—The Roosevelt pilgrimage, an appreciation of close friends and admirers of the former president, journeyed here Friday to commemorate the third anniversary of his death. At the grave Dr. Lyman Abbott, chairman of the association, introduced James It. Garfield, Roosevelt's secre tary of commerce and labor, who read the" address delivered by the colonel be fore the Nobel Prize committee in Christiania in 1010. Mrs. Thomas Robbins, of Philadelphai. placed a wreath on the grave. The association then went to Sagamore Hill, where- they had luncheon with Mrs. Roosevelt. By transplanting trout the fish may be caused to change their characters tcs in a few generations. 7?* ■er Hair and Skin Beauty PreservedByCuticura If you use Cnticura So«p for every day toil« purposes, with touches of Cuticur* Ointment as needed to Boothe and heal the first pimples or scalp irritation, you will have as clear a complexion and as good hair as it is possible to have. •ntéria*. Dop« M*. MiMw tS.Mm*." BoMrvmry wjje«. So«p 26c. Ointment M »nd »e. TatlesnBc. WCiiiicwt Soap thtTW without mus. Nearly 1 2 at GUY'S DENTAL OFFICE The Kind that Gives Complete Satisfaction Ask for Dr. Guy. 1 am always here to serve you. DR. W.F.GUY, Dentist Hours: 8:30 a. m.—9:00 p. Phone 6697 Rr£t National Bank—Taka Elevator to S«vpnth Floor SUITE'S HIM RESERVE STRENGTH SETIPTMEII Skeleton Regiments of Infan try and Field Artillery to Be Organized. Helena, Jan. 0.—Upon the basis of 10 per cent of the military population of the state, Montana's reserve strength will be 5,378 men, accord ing to the schedule adopted at the conference hehf here Thursday and Friday by the state reserve board in conference with Col. Frederick L. NNIVERSARY LEARANCE ERCHANDISING SALE CELEBRATING THE SECOND ANNIVERSARY OF THE OPENING OF THE CRESCENT 7 DAYS SELLING CELEBRATION Birthday specials in all sections of the store will be the attraction for hundreds of shoppers seeking lower prices on standard quality Crescent merchandise. SALE STARTS AT EXACTLY 9 O'CLOCK THIS SATURDAY MORNING Birthday Sale of Women's and Misses' Ready-to-Wear — Extreme Reductions Shown on All Sale Garments Women's Fancy Fur Trimmed Suits - $49.50 Values Up to Three Times the Sale Price Are Offered in This Lot Which Includes Every High Priced Suit in Stock 1-2 PRICE SALE OF WOMEN'S READY-TO-WEAR Smart Suits 1-2 PRICE Silk and Cloth Dresses 1-2 PRICE Women's and Children's Bathrobes 1-2 PRICE Silk Fibre and Wool Sweaters 1-2 PRICE All Women's Light and Dark House Dresses 1-2 PRICE Hard $2.75 r seal brown, $3.95 $2.49 [ $3.95 49c HEAVY CHARMEUSE SATIN 40 inches wide, $5.50 values. Colors navy, ing blue, taupe, seal brown. Sale price, yard SILK CHIFFON VELVET 40 inches wide; $6.50 value. Colors seal brown, black and rose. Sale price ^ ALL WOOL JERSEY 54-inch tubular; $4.95 yard. Color, Kelly green. Sale price, yard CHIFFON BROADCLOTH 56 inches wide; $5.50 values. Colors black and navy.- Sale price. TURKISH BATH TOWELS 22x44; 65c values. Sale price, each FANCY TURKISH BATH TOWELS Guest size; colored borders; 16x32; 59c values. Sale price "IwC BARLAN HEATHER PLAID COITON j BLANKETS Size 64x76 ; $3.95 values. Sale price, each WOOL BLANKETS—STANDARD QUALITY Size 68x80 ; $9.75 values. Sale price, each 72x90 COTTON BATTS Pull comfort size. Regular $1.25 value. Sale price HEAVY FANCY BATH MATS 40x22; $2.75 values. £4 Q|? Sale price ^ I «wî# HEMMED BED SPREADS 72x80; $2.25 values. Sale price. ALL WOOL PLAID SKIRTING 54 inches and 56 inches wide; $4.95 vaulesT Sale $rice. $2.59 $6.59 79c 27-INCH TOILE-DU-NORD And A. F. C. Dress Ginghams. Our regular price 25c yard. All new plaids. 4 Q. Sale price Iwl# 36-INCH LIGHT AND DARK PERCALES Our regular 25c values. 4 Qf% Sale price ■ wV EXTRA QUALITY WHITE OUTING 27 inches wide; 22c values. 4 Sale price ■ vU BOYS' AND GIRLS' RIBBED HOSE Black, white and brown; 25c value. 4 Qf% Sale price, pair I ww CHILDREN'S MERCERIZED RIBBED HOSE Black; 60c value. Sale price, d»4 #|f| 3 pair for ■ ■WÜ WOMEN'S COTTON HOSE Black, white, cordovan; 35c values. 91%#* Sale price, pair fcww WOMEN'S FASHIONED SILK HOSE Colors, navy, cordovan, black and Ä»4 JÏA Russian calf. Special sale price, pair, ^ I »vU BIRTHDAY SALE OF UNDERWEAR Misses' Fine Cotton Fleece Lined Underwear. Sizes 8 to 16. Values to $3.25. Sale price All Women's Fine Knit Underwear on sale at $1.69 Warm Winter Coats 1-2 PRICE Wool Plaid Skirts 1-2 PRICE AIIKabo Corsets in Stock 1-2 PRICE AU Silk Waists 1-2 PRICE Remnant Sale Saturday 1 Girls' Knit Underwear at % Off Boys Knit 3 All Muslin Underwear 1-2 PRICE $1.49 *G $2.39 Underwear Off at % Off ♦ The * a A CASH STORE FOR WOMEN Great Falls. Hont 416 central ave. F. K. McNElL, President n.il im,in» ! iwwm GEORGE HARPER, Sec.-Treas. M Fashionette Hair Nets Regular lEc value. Sale price, each 10c Knudson, chief of staff of the 104th division, with headquarters at Fort Douglas, Salt Lake City. These men will be enlisted for reserve duty fol lowing the organization of the skeleton reserve regiment. The state is placed with California, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada and Utah in the Ninth corps area. Officers only will be provided for at this time and they will be trained to take charge of troops to be en listed in case of a national emergency. World war veterans will be given Safe 7ïlU&\* INFANTS .«i INVALIDS ASK FOR Horlick's the Original Avoid Imitations and Substitutes For Infant», Invalid» and Growing Children « Rich milk, malted «rain extract In Powder The Original Food-Drink For AU Age» I No Cookin* — NourUhinf — Digeatibl* positions opened < under th# reserve program, it is announced. The 104th division will be allotted the plan of giving three of the 27 to Montana, Idaho and Utah under reserve divisions to each of the nine corps areas in the nation. Its head quarters will be at Fort Douglas. In this unit of the reserve Mon tana is to have one signal corps con sisting of 150 men, one ordnance main tenance corps consisting of 105 men, one headquarters corps of the 207th infantry brigade consisting of 88 men. a 413th regiment infantry consisting of 2,950 men, a unit of the 836th field artillery consisting of 1,442 men, a unit of the 320th engineers regiment consisting of 318 men. a unit of the hospital battalion 329th medical regi ment consisting of 27 men and a unit of the 414th motor transport company consisting of 78 men, making a total of 5.378 men out of 18.553. me MILLINERY &pecialtj> &f)op 227 Central Avenue No. 4 Third Street North fyrja) ifour Chicago Visit a t fa _ MORRISON HOHL * * THE HOTEL OF PEBTECT SERVICE** and the