A
LEGAL, PUBLICATIONS
NOTICE
Notice ia hereby given that W. E.
ftoiiB is m longer a partner in the
■eartrack group of^mining claims ait
Rock Creek in the unorgan
iaad mining district.
M. E. MARTIN
R. D. SCOTT
Efanst publication Feb. 26th, 1926.
laut publication April 30th, 1926.
SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION
fa (Ur District Court of the Thirteenth
Judicial District of the State of
Montana, in and for the County of
Carbon.
The United States National Bank
of Red laxlge, Montana, a corporation
Plaintiff against I. N. Dailey and Ber
tha L Dailey, his wife; the Detroit Oil
Company, a corporation; George W.
Swords, as Receiver of the Stillwater
Valley National Bank of Absarokee,
Montana, a corporation; The Fisk Tire
Cwnpany, a corporation; Northwest
«Auto Supply Company. . corpora-1
$ms>; Joseph F. Glenn; Reinhard Bros.
Company, a corporation, and Mrs.
Matt Buxbaum, Defendants.
THE STATE OF MONTANA Sends
Oeeting to the above named defen
summoned to
faute:
You are hereby
sttswer the complaint in this action
wKich is filed in the office of the Clerk
of this Court, a copy of which is here
with eerved upon you, and to file your
answer and serve a copy thereof upon
the Plaintiff's Attorney within twenty
stays after the service of this Sum
exclusive of the day of service;
in case of your failure to appear
answer, judgment will be taken
against you by default, for the relief
demanded in the complaint.
The said action is brought to fore
dost that certain mortgage, dated
November 29th, 1922, made, executed
«nd delivered by the defendants, I. N.
Dailey and Bertha I. Dailey, to plain
te®, which said mortgage covers and
ia a lein upon the following described
fand situated in the County of Carbon,
State of Montana, to-wit: The North
east Quarter of the Northeast Quar
ter of Section Twelve, Township Six
Seoth of Range seventeen East, M.
F- M. also Lot Fourteen and the
Northeast Quarter of the Southwest
Quarter, and the West Ha'f of the
Southeast Quarter of Section Six,
Xowinship Six South of Range Eigh
teen East, M. P. M.; and the follow
toscribed land situated in the
Cfarnty of Stillwater, State of Mon
tagna, to-wit: The East Half of the
Northeast Quarter and the Southeast
Quarter of Section Thirty Six, Town
ufcip Five, South of Range Seventeen
Saat, M. P. M.; also the Southeast
Quarter of the Northeast Quarter and
the East Half of the Southeast Quar
ter of Section One, Township Six
Sooth of Range Seventeen East, M. P.
9L together with all tenements, hered
itenuente and appurtenances belonging
fa said land and said premises, includ
«II water and water rights appur
tenant to and used in and upon said
premises; and for the further pur
paw of securing judgment upon and
«■farcing payment of that certain in
«•ebtedness secured by said mortgage.
The plaint® herein is now the holder
mad owner of said mortgage and of the
indebtedness secured by said mort
Witness my hand and the seal of
wd Court this 1st day of April, A.
».M25.
G. L. FINLEY,
Clerk.
By JOHN DUNN, JR,
Deputy Clerk.
John G. Skinner, Red Lodge, Mon
tes««, Attorney for Plaintiff.
Third publication April 16, 1925.
Fourth publication April 23, 1925.
First publication April 2, 1926.
Second publication April 9, 1925.
[SEAL]
SHERIFF'S SALE
William W. Lincoln, Plaintiff against
James Phillip Callahan and Aurelia
fane Callahan, his wife; First Loan
and Securities Company, a corpora
tion, and Northland Securities Com-1
pany of Minneapolis, Minnesota,
Korporation, Defendants.
To be sold at She
tWti day of May, 1925, at one o'clock
p. m., at the front door of the court
tonne in the City of Red Lodge,
tens County, Montana, all the follow
ing described real property situated
in the County of Carbon, State
Montana, to-wit:
South-half of Northeast Quarter;
fS%NEV4) North-half of Southeast;
Quart 'r (NV4SEV4) of Section Eleven
111), Township Seven (7) South,
Mssngc Twenty-three (23) East of
Montana Principal Meridian contain
MK One Hundred Sixty (160)
'c Sr.lc on
or less, according to the Govern
Survey, together with all
and
appurtenances
belonging or in anywise
Dated at Red Lodge, Montana this
14th day of April, 1926.
JOHN ALBERT,
Sheriff.
,
John G. Skinner, Attorney for Plain
tiff, Red Lodge, Montana.
First publication, April 16, 1926.
Second publication, April 23, 1926.
Third publication April 30, 1925.
Fourth publication, May 7, 1926.
I
SUMMONS
In the District Court of the Thirteenth
Judicial District of the State of
Montana in and for the County of
Carbon.
The Midland National Bank, a na
tional banking association, a corpora
tion, Plaintiff vs. Frank T. Uyeda and
Ito Uyeda, his wife; R. M. Davies;
Link Realty Co., a corp'n; J. G. Link;
R. P. Woodlark, an unmarried man;
Elbert Hymer; Securities Trust &
{Savings Bank, a banking association;
and C. F. Smith, Defendants.
THE STATE OF MONTANA Sends
, , .
meeting to the above named defen
'* ants:
•
which is filed in the office of the Clerk
of this Court, and to file your answer
and serv a copy thereof upon the
I plaintiff's attorney within twenty days
are hereby summoned to
the complaint in this action
You
answer
! after the service of this summons, ex
elusive of the day of service; and in
! case of your failure to appear
j answer, judgment will be taken
against you by default, for the relief
demanded in the complaint,
; a decree of this court for the fore
closure of that certain mortgage dated
The said action is brought to obtain
June 19, 1922, described in said com
plaint, and made, executed and deliv
ered by the defendant Frank T. Uyeda
to the defendant R. M. Davies, and
thereafter duly assigned to the plain
tiff herein, which said mortgage covers
and is a lein upon the following
described land, situated in the County
of Carbon, State of Montana, to-wit:
All of the West Half of the North
east Quarter (WtsNE'A) of Sectioh
Seventeen (17) in Township Five (B)
South of Range Twenty-three (23)
East M. P. M., containing eighty (80)
acres, more or less, according to the
Government survey thereof; together
with forty (40) shares of the Bartlett
Ditch stocks, together with all and sin
gular the tenements, hereditaments,
appurtenances, easements, water, and
nil other rights belonging or in any
wise appertaining thereto;
that the premises conveyed by said
mortgage may be sold and the pro
ceeds applied to the payment of the
debt secured by said mortgage, evi
denced by a promissory note, of even
date, in the sum of $3,000., with in
terest thereon at the rate of 8% per
annum from date until paid, and in
event such proceeds are not sufficient
to pay the same, then to obtain an
execution against said Frank T. Uyeda
and R. M. Davies for the balance re
maining due, and also that the defen
dants herein, and all persons claim
ing by, through, or under them, may
be barred and foreclosed of all right,
title, claim, lein, equity of redemption,
and interest in and to said mortgaged
premises, and for such other and
further relief as will appear by refer
ence to the complaint on file herein.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said Court this 18 day of April, 1925.
G. L. FINLEY,
Clerk.
By JOHN DUNN, JR.,
Deputy Clerk.
H. C. Grippen, Billings, Montana,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
First publication, April 23rd, 1926.
Second publication, April 30th, 1926.
Third publication, May 7th, 1925.
Fourth publication, Moy 14th, 1926.
[SEAL]
A thermometer is an instrument
that makes us wish it would go up
in winter and down in summer.
[ Agriculture
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C IAvtocaVtsrI
Renick W Dunlop of Pickaway
County, Ohio, Is the new assistant
secretary of Agriculture. He left
his farm In Ohio to accept the port
4j
JOHN SMITH AND HIS RADIO
A Serie« of R»dio Talk* by D. W. Colaaibtis and L. W. Lyon*
of the Red Lodge Electric Company.
And are willing that radio fan* should be amused and profit by their
evening experience*. They have a faculty for finding out things so
it will pay radio devotees to follow th ym in this paper each week.
No. 9: The Simplest Receiver
A request from Smith to come over
to talk radio with him the evening fol
lowing our luneh-table discussion
-bout the tuner showed that he had
ained a little lead on the young son
whose superior radio knowledge had
become such a source of annoyance
to father. When I reached the Smith
household the big machine was set for
(he strain of an opera, but down on
the floor Smith and Smith junior were
busy with a few wires and knick
knacks which they insisted would soon
be a receiving set.
"You know." said Smith, divulging
his discoveries, "I get puzzled when I
try to figure out those wiring dla
grams but when I actually start to
make a set and follow the instructions
it's really very simple. I find I have
an end of a wire here and one there,
and very often common sense tells me
where to attach them."
"I-ine!" I said. "You've got the
right idea. About the best way to dis
cover how your big set works is to
start building a small one. Pretty soon
the two meet and you're ready to talk
super-heterodynes as fluently as for
cign exchange."
Smith laughed.
mist," he accused me. "Pd think the j
world was mine if I even had a slight |
I
"You're an
idea as to how the simplest set works." I
He said this while Smith junior ran '
over to a friend's house to borrow a
fixed condenser, so Smith could talk
freely. ,
"For the simplest set, and one that |
probably wouldn't work except under t
the most favorable conditions, you
need but an aerial, a ground connec
tion, an inductance of sohve kind, a
crystal detector and a pair of ear
phones. Crystal detectors are of sev
eral varieties, some being very cheap
and very pe. ;y, v.i ;;c others thaï arc
sealed higher in price are quite satis-1
factory. The wise radioist just goes
to the accessory store and buys the j
best they have. The inductance, as 1 ;
told you before, can be merely a coilj,;
of wires that you can tap at any
you desire. The telephones are a story !
in themselves, but for your purpose
just picture them as delicate electro
magnets operating upon a thin dia
phragm which, in vibrating, gives the
same sound, values that are being
j
j
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simple units so that they will form a
circuit, for you know that all electrical •
instrumente operate only when the c.r
cults are complete and correct. j
j
registered on the microphone at the
broadcasting station.
The next thing is to connect these
Start with the aerial, for here are
where the radio frequencies are com
ing in. The aerial gathers the faint
energy and conducts it down to the
lead-in wire to one end of the induc
The energy
tance device, the tuner,
is picked up from whatever turn of
the inductance coil you tap and is then
led to the crystal detector and through
it to the ground.
"You know that the tuner is used to
bring the aerial-ground circuit into
tune with the radio waves you want
to catch, but perhaps you forget that
the frequencies of these waves are so
high that you couldn't begin to hear
them with the ear-phones. The radio
may be alternating or ocillat
waves
ing several hundred times per second.
Somthing has to be done to change
these into frequencies that are within
hearing range.
"Here's where the crystal detector
figures. The phones are connected in
series with the detector. By this I
mean that one of the phone wires is
attached to the post of the detector
where the higher frequency is enter
ing while the other is attached to the
post of the detector that leads to the
ground connection. The phones, there
fore, register the audible sounds that
the detector makes possible.
"With such an arrangement, how
you wouldn't hear a thing until
ever,
the waves you were catching were
varied at the broadcasting station by
j omeone talking, singing or playing
I into the microphone."
Just then Smith junior came run-1
|ning back with the small article known
a fixed condenser. Smith and
I stopped a moment to watch him con-1
I nect it in series with the phones. That
1 is, he connected it across the circuit
I of the phone« just as though he were
! cutting the phones out altogether.
! "Now what's that for?" Smith
; as
! asked.
The boy shook his head and tnumbi
I ed something about the Jones lad get-1
ing better results that way.
"What it does," I said, "is to furnish
an easy path for the high frequency
to pass through the circuit. Other
wise it would all have to pass through
the circuit of the phones and would
be seriously hindered by reason of the
high resistance they offer. These con
densers are a whole story in them
plvea, and you'll probably find a mim
jber of them in your big set,
"Do you hear that?"
dressed junior. "If we're going to get
anywhere with our radio we've got to
know why we get results, and not just
guess at things,"
At last they were working as part-:
piers. Smith ra 1
for a boom,
tiens,
Smith ad
stock was ready
Next week: No 10: Splitting Sta
AM hfWfr Id' {'ïj' ß A DIA
ÄH ftUVt 1*
______ . _
pDlW'DAH* L( i ■< Il p A K
1 IlWUlltlll i HJlx 11 ï flfa
tS.i r ter wave
length from 7:3
time, on Monù
Broadcast on a
j. g y, in., Pacific
lay and
Friday. April 24 Bass solos. Harry
1. Tommy Lad,
2 When Song is
... Friend O'Mino,
the Land of the
Wed.no:
End. y.
Isaacs, Seattle:
Teschemacher;
Sweet, Sans Souci; 3.
Sanderson; 4. Fp
tural Profession,
Johnson. Contralto solos, Vay Kerns,
Sky Blue Water, f'adtnun; 6. Re
opti-'quiem, Sidney Homer. The Agricul-,
Dean Edward C.
Garfield. The Petroleum Industry,
Prof. J. L. St.Johns. Readings, Edith
Armand, Ritzville: 1. Toboggan
Slide; 2. Mr. Brown Has His Hair
Cuit. Violin solo. Ralph Strumshi,
Raymond. Present Day Styles of Ar
chitecture, Prof, Fred G. Rounds. The
New Books, Miss Alice Lindsey Webb,
Color in the Kitchen, Miss Gladys Gal
lup.
p au i Christen, Baritone, Butte, Mon
tana> an( j Harvey Selah. Readings,
Josephine Fitzgerald, Walla Walla:
j Little Ah Sid; 2. Part Panther,
Baritone solos, Paul Christen. Art in
Relation to Dress, Nellie B. Jacobs,
Tenor solos, Han ey Wixson. Choos
n n. ;hc Site for Your Home, Prof,
Dirn.Qg^,, p Beeman, Are the Japanese
a p er jj ■>
Monday, April 27—Vocal duets:
Dr. Fred R. Yoder. Scep
t j c Tank for the Farm Home, A. B.
Crane,
Vvenesday, April 29.—Sigma Kappa
\.y program: 1. Groups
,of sengs by the girls; 2. Piano solo,
jPel Street, Mary Elizabeth Turner,
Spokane;
Boot Song, Vera Bohlke, Grandview,
I, Dorofhv wilhelmi, Tacoma; Mary
Turrer accompanying; 4 . Reading
Etnn Nckcn> ,. r?kanc; 5> Soprano
s0 , 0> Vera Bohlke> 0 sleep why Dofjt
Thou Leave Me?; 6. Reading, Sec
ond Trial, Audrey Savage, Calgary,
Canada; 7. Vocal solo, At Dawning,
Dorothy Wilhemi, accompanied by
Miss Bohlke; 8. Piano and Banjo
popular selections, Mary Elizabeth
Turner and Helen Frink, Yakima; 9.
Sigma Kappa group songs. The Role
of Vitamines in Livestock Feeding,
Prof. Jerry So tola. Building Mater
ials for our New Home, Prof. Ogden
F. Beeman. What Sewing Club Girls
arc Doing, E. Belle Alger.
3.Vocal Duet, Venetian
Whon Germany joins the League of
Nations in September, wouldn't you
like to be there to see France perform
the initiation!
Whenever a flapper kills her mother
they try to prove she is crazy. This
might be all right provided they get
up a severe enough penalty for being
crazy.
[
Minnesota Honor*
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Mrs. R. L. Lord, of the Wells
(Minn.) Mirror and now president
of the Minnesota Editorial Associa
tion. is the first woman «ver elected
to that office in timt «tote.
ARTIFICIAL LEATHER
DISCUSSED IN RADIO
TALK OVER K F A E
"Leather substitute known as ar
tificial leather, i* a modern chemical
product, a woven cotton fabric coated
with various chemical products dc
rived from cotton, producing a non
chemistry department of the State
College of Washington in a recent
radio talk over K F A E.
.absorbant and waterproof surface,"
jaid Prof. Carl M. Brewster of the
With the improvement in the pro
cess of manufacture, uses of the ma
terial have extended till it has become
a strong competitor for leather, and
we open our magazine to the unusual
sight of full page advertisement de
fending the virtues of genuine leather.
"Recently a large publishing house
announced that it had bound a million
books in leather substitute. Large
amounts are used in the furniture
trade. There is hardly an automobile
on the market today which does not
use leather substitute in some form or
other, either for tops, curatins, seats,
tire cases, rear trunks, or even com
| plete body covering. There is a large
! demand for. it from car builders, car
{ ria .K e manufacturers, makers of
! ' runks, gloves, coats, hats, caps, and
i
"Extension of the use of leather
substitutes since thee wer ha- been
i American business.
were 17 establishments making leather
'one of the notable development! in
In 1910 .here
substitutes valued at more than $26,
One company alone
2,009,000 yards each
"60,000 a >ear.
turns oi.. i ,.,i
' , ... ...
"The reason for this great develop
nK ' nt 3 ^ ' ^ A : a . num € *. 0
i pxam P ® s - en ac ones ma mg
automobiles or furniture attain an out
put of several thousand cars or sets
a day, th".
i of genuine leather
raises difficult problems. Leather
varies greatly in quality, must be sep
arately cut by experts, and is very ex
pensive to handle because subject to
great waste. Where small economies
per car or per chair are important,
leather substitute gives an advantage
because of the superiority over the
cheaper grades of leather in wearing
quality, waterproofness, and especially
because it is made in long rolls of uni
form width so that manufacturers can
reduce waste to a minimum, and the
operations of cutting to pattern can
be greatly simplified.
"Most concerns making leather sub
stitute are constantly searching for
new uses and developing new markets.
Wonderful tests have been made to de
termine its suitability for specific pur
poses. In the bookbindnig trade, for
instance, where it has replaced leather
for many editions, it is used because
it is completely immune to dampness,
mold, ro the attack of insects. A
recent test was conducted in the Phil
ippines where the great enemies of
books are the insects. In order to find
out just what effect these destroyers
would have on various coverings, a
special book was made up with leather,
leather substitute, and cloth bindings.
The book was then put away for a
time. When it was again examined
it was found that the insects bad com
pletely destroyed all the bindings ex
cept that made of leather substitute.
This was because there was nothing
in the composition of the leather sub
stitute on which insects can feed.
"A remarkable market for leather
substitute has been found in mine ven
tilation. In some of the lower tunnels
of mines, the miner's efficiency has
been declared by engineers to depend
upon the amount of fresh air received.
There is now in use in the copper
1 mines, tubing of large diameter made
of artificial leather, conveying air to
j the side chambers where the miners
Because of the nature
are at work.
of the material it stands op under the
dampness, moisture and fungus-pro
ducing atmosphere better than most
other substances.
"The largest consumption is by the
automobile industry, for the curtains,
i tops, cushions and linings of cars. But
(there are other industries closely re
hated to that of leather substitute
when looking
into the manufacturing process. When
cbtton is treated with a mixture of
I sulfuric and nitric acids for a short
f acid quickly
manufacture, as one sc
j time, and the excess
f" ... . . - . . .i ' T I
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Noonan of Law"
rence, Mass., don't mind at all in feeding
thirteen mouths three times a day,—thetft'
famii> of ton girls and three boys, — nor
have they ever found it a hardship.
Forty-Five Meal* a Day to Feed This Fatally
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BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
J. C. F SIEGFRIEDT
M.D.
O. J. Simmons
ABSTRACTS
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
TELE. 275-R1
BEARCREEK. MONT.
Fire Insurance
Bonds
RED LODGE. MONTANA
J
V.v.
ÆgYjjjj yiVillard Batteries and Service on all
LWiiuä:
makes of Batteries.
Treasure City Eelctric Service
=0*
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JOHN G. SKINNER
DR.C.L.KOEHN
LAWYER
United States National Bank
Building
RED LODGE MONTANA
PHYSICIAN * SURGEON
Office Phone 77; Residence 114 i
RED LODGE, MONTANA
-,
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
RED LODGE
MONTANA
/r
l) *
DOWNARD'S FUNERAL
HOME
Dr. A. H. McFarland
Osteopathic Physician.
OFFICES; Meyer-Chapman
Building.
Phones; Ofnce, lit; Res., 402-J.
BYRON B. DOWNARD
Funeral Director—Licensed Em
balmer—Lady Assistant
Red Lodge and Baarcreek
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H. A. SIMMONS
DR. F. W. SCHWIN
Dentist
Attorney and Counselor at Law
U. S. National Rank Building
RED LODGE, MONTANA
Office: Meyer-Chapman Bldg.
RED LODGE, MONTANA
_ ~J
D'r
Hemstitching and Picoting
NU BONE CORSETS
R. G.. MARTIN
i
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Licensed Embalmer
Phones: Office 7; Residence 7
RED LODGE, MONTANA
Theresa Opitz
Over Grove Store
Room 3,
Red Lodge, Montana
/—,—_
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See L. P. CHAPMAN
JOHN T. HAYS
Lawyer
For All Kinds of OIL
— and —
TEXACO PRODUCTS
Improvement Block
RED LODGE, MONT.
Meyer - Ghapn?»n P ank
RED LODGV MONTANA j
. -
ss N
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Legal Blanks,
Typewriter Paper
Carbon Paper, Typewriter Ribbons.
THE CARBON COUNTY NEWS
-N CSS
Would You Like to Play Some
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT?
Select your desired instrument
and give yourself a trial a
WM. NOETZEL'S
Music Studio
Electric Shoe Shop
I Expert Repairing, Half Soles
and Rubber Heels.
CHAS. KOLANDER, Prop.
20 South Broadway, Red Lodge.
I
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P a ™ ln «PP^nce as before. It is
now soluble in various liquids, and the ;
gelatinous material may be coated on
washed out, the nitrated cotton has
new properties, though very much the
fabric, or even spun into lustrious fib-1
It is this material which is the !
basis of several important industries: 1
the making of leather substitute, of
ers.
artificial §ilk, and of so-called French
Ivory, also known as Fiberloid or
alin. The latter material has innumer-1
able uses, for combs, brushes and other,
Lc'let articles; for windows in auto j
curtains, for door handles, buttons, l
and many novelties; and for photo- j
graphic and movie films. I
"These industries ..arc bas-vd cn eon- -
sumption of large quantities of cotton,
Pyr- '
it
E. P. CONWELL
Lawyer
I
Improvement Block
RED LODGE, MONTANA
substitute competes with the tannery
product in many fields, though it can
never fake the place of real leather.
The nrtific'al silk industry influences
the market for silk and also for cot
ton. And the French Ivroy and auto
curtain plastic has innumerable uses
in industry."
and thus influence a number of old
established industries. The leather