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1 THE CARBON COUNTY NEWS CONTINUING THE CARBON COUNTY CHRONICLE : Published Every Thursday, at Red Lodge, Carbon County, Montana O. H. P. SHELLEY, Editor and Mgr. ___ "E 1 tered at the Postoffice at Red Lodge, Montana, as Matter of the Second-Class, Under the Act of Congress of March 5, 1879. Subscription Per Year $2.50; Six months S1.5C; Three months $1.00 All subscriptions Payable in Advance Advertising Rates based on guaranteed circulation and furnished upon application. Discount given on contracts I ; TELEPHONE NUMBER NINE FOURTH OF JULY 'J* i Xhe Fourth of July again draws near. The greatest day our nation ever saw, or will see; the day that instituted the liberty and freedom all now enjoy, and laid the foundation for the great est republic on the face of the earth, delegating to all equal rights, equal justice, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; so let the welkin ring, the cannons boom, the rockets fly, the banners float, and "My Native Country, Thee," "Red White and Blue," well up from every heart, and the "Star spangled Banner" never cease to wave o'er this land of the free and the home of the brave. We hope all of our young readers will have a good time—a glorious Fourth. Proud of your freedom, proud of your country, we would not suppress the enthusiasm that wells up from your hearts, but bid you shout; and yet, we would kindly admonish you not to be reckless, careless or thoughtless, but evince true manhood in daring to do what is right and turning from all that is wrong. We also trust that, perhaps in a quieter and less noisy way our older readers will likewise enjoy the occasion to the full extent of their ability. Three hundred inches of snow fell in Glacier Park during past winter. There are so many "Os" in the figures of that French debt they look like balloon tires. i i » When You Take That Trip You pack your bags, get your ticket or gas the car, see that the office and house doors are locked and get aboard. But— WHERE WILL YOU SLEEP? Do you always make your reser vations in advance? This is the crowded season in all hotels, telephone message quickly settles the point. Y ou can't wait for a re ply to your wire but you specify ex actly what you want by telephone, get your answer and start on the trip with full assurance that you will have a comfortable night. A station-to-station call will suf fice for this conversation. That cuts the cost down by twenty per cent. A ; I I ; 1' , 1 #2% 1 ■' » ¥ w. n $ 1 v, I * The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company One Policy. One System, Universal Service, and All Directed Toward Better Service THE HOMEMAKERS I Conducted by Miss A. L. Webb, State College of Washington.) A Cooling Drink Did you ever try a combination of iced coffee and ginger ale for a cooling drink? Fill each glass a quarter full of crushed ice. Add half a cup of cold coffee pretty strong and freshly made. Then fill up the glass the rest of the way with ginger ale, ginger pop "Anzac", or cider. This is especially good when served with thin sandwiches of cheese, cold tongue or with nuts between graham bread. Lemonade For Two If you want a pitcher of lemonade and there are only two of you (it is often so hard to make things just for two!) put 10 heaping tablespoons of granulated sugar in to 10 tablespoons of lemon juice, and into these slice an orange very thin, then pour in two even quarts of ice water. The receipe may be increased proportionately for more people. Iced Tea Much of the delicious flavor of iced tea depends on the original blending of the tea leaves. I like to mix an ounce of uncolored Japan tea with half a pound of the best Oolong. The Japan uncolored tea is of a pale, greenish hue not to be mistaken for the green tea of China. In making the tea, never pour on water that has stood in the kettle. Put freshly drawn water into the emptly kettle, bring it to a brisk boil, scald an earthenware pot with the boiling water, then throw out that water and put into the pot a teaspoon ful of the tea leaves for every two cups you will want, and finally an extra spoonsful for the pot. Have the water rapidly boiling and pour in two cupfuls for each teaspoon of tea leaves (except the last spoonful). Cover it closely let it stand 5 or 6 minutes but DO NO BOIL. If the pot is one you value especially, you may set it in a pan of hot water instead of on the back of the stove. The tea should be strained and the tea-leaves thrown away, not used again. If you are go ing to serve it hot, you may use cream and sugar; but if you are to serve it cold with lemon (or hot the same way) it should be steeped only 3 minutes. A variety in the iced tea may be made by putting into the pot, before making the hot tea, a little grated orange rind, a few sprigs of mint, or if the tea is to be poured in hot, 2 cloves to a cup. Left-over tea may be poured off the leaves into a glass jar and cooled not in the ice-box; that wastes the ice and makes the tea cloudy). Then it is covered, chilled, and served with sliced lemon and sugar. A much better way, if you arc care ful not to crack your glasses, is to fill the glass half full of crushed ice, pour on hot tea, and serve with powdered sugar and sliced lemon. Warm Weather Textiles Perhaps the coolest goods to wear on a scorching day is organdie, be cause of its thin crispness. Away back in the 14th century it was known in England, and was also made in Switz erland and France. The Swiss, in fact, still jealously guard their secret pro cess for making that crisp quality permanent. Some authorities say this permanent crispness is produced by applying a combination of albumen and casein before a vigorous calender ing between hot rollers. Other organ dies may look as crisp, bm, the Swiss is the only one, I believe, that keeps its special delicate stiffness after washing. Being imported, and having gone through the extra processing, it is naturally a little more expensive 1 bought a superior quality recently for 69 cents a yard, and it was 45 inches wide, too. Organdie is always woven white, and then piece-dyed, not in the thread; or the pattern is print ed on the white ground. It is made of very fine cotton yarns, and is usually, if patterned, printed in 4 delicate colors. A big he-man would laugh and jeer at the idea of a chiffon undershirt, for what we know as chiffon is the softest, most flimsy of silk cloths, the name being from the French work for a rag, flimsy cloth". But in the first place the Roumanians had a bleached cotton cloth shirting by that name, and the Germans a stoutly woven linnen that they, too, called "chiffon" and used for undergarments. It takes 8 miles of thread to make a pound of the silk chiffon popular in scarfs, mil linery, trimmings and evening dresses for women. July 4th Table Trimming Johnnie Firecracker, made a red mat-stock paper with wire legs and arms covered with red crepe paper, and features inked or painted on, makes a good centerpiece for an In dependence Day luncheon table, seated on a mat or red-white-and -blue crepe paper, and supplimented by place markers at the plates of little fire - cracker Johnnies. ^ THIS WEEK'S CR9SS-W0RD PUZZLE I «/ ! 3 5 4 I 2 6 7 8 9 11 10 is \I3 < I 14" 'I •5 17 76 19 2 o TjäZ !S 25 i27 [*« SO 151 |33 32 87 tor [42 A4 A* [43 4* Ïïô 47 vn [54 [57 [59 [61 6 » * HOW TO SOLVE A CROSSWORD PUZZLE The first letter of each word is, indicated by a number placed in the blank spaces, and by referring to the list of words given below you will find the definition of a word which will fill in all the white spaces to the first black space at the right. Number one verfiele gives the definition for Horizontal 1. A bivalve mollusk. 4. Road or route. 7. Soft mud or slime. 10. Fortune or fate. 11. A gambling game at cards. 12. Competent. 14. Namely. 15. Peaceful; quiet. 16. Eager or greedy. 17. Accomplish. 18. Sorrows. 19. A narrow opening. 20. Slightly sweetened raised biscuit. 21. Royal. 23. A large oven. 24. Give food to. 25. Some. 26. Pennsylvania (abbr.). 27. Exist. 28. American Society of Ornitholo gists (abbr.). 29. A circle of light around the head. 31. Angers. 34. Embodiment or incarnation. 38. Large graceful trees. 39. Run or jog. 40. A movable cover. 42. That is (abbr.). 44. Upon. 45. A snake-like fish. 46. Color. 18. Idea. 50. Parsonage. 62. Commotion. 63. Wander. 54. Annoyer. 65. Regarding. 66 . A flower or nosegay. 57. Kill. 58. Myself. 59. Tumult. 60. Black substance lodged in chim ney. 61. Human beings. 62. A vegetable. 63. Suggest carefully. 64. Head coverings. Vertical 1. Plain. 2. Ship's record. 3. Near. 4. Friends. 6 . Provide with weapons. 6 . Thus. 7. Death( French). 8 . Aged. 9. Zanzibar Ethnology (abbr.). 11. Autumn. 12. A river which passes the birth place of Shakespeare, 13 . a small body of water, 15 . Earth or mud. 16. Friend or confederate. 17. A contest between two people. 18. Refuse to notice. 19. Seventh tone of diatonic scale. 20. Exist. 22. Comfort. 23. Glasswort. 24. The terminal parts of the legs, J 26. Domestic vessels, 27. Contemptuous term for a child. 28. Quick to learn; likely. 29. Abode of one's family. 30. Often (poetic). 31. An image. 32. Mute. 33. Terminate. A long cut. A metal. Greases. 41. Conceal. j 35 . I 30 . ' 37 . 43, Game, sport. 45 . Simple, ( 4 «. Sharp or caustic, 47 . Native, 1 43 . Office or position, : I 1 Paradises, 1 53. Subterranean part of a plant 1 54 p| i 49. Form of "to be". 160 . Animal flesh. a word which will fill in all the white spaces to the first black space below. The black spaces indicate the end of a word, and no letter ia placed in them, pleted; the puzzle must read hori zontally and vertically or across and down. When com 66 . A pastry crust with filling. 67. Male child. 68. Encountered. 69. Prefix meaning "again". 60. Tone of scale. ' 61. A parent. Answer to Vast Week's Puzzle S| L| A lUd p M ANY EM» E L N 6 AD V A [N I C rMa I G O G DE E R R M N O Me TTTTn MA M AU T E a|r TR I A S ATI N O tTa B s PRE F Oldfashioned Gent . Touch not a hair on yon gray head; She's m'wife and shant be bobbed, he said. Then She Shot Him 'Did you have this book Winnie: rebound ?" Bill: 'Didn't have to. It's "The Story of Rubber.' w = ? I 1 ■ I 'J 4 t i That Feeling of Freedom} Freedom meant more to our forefathers than life itself. They sought it. They fought for it. They died for it. That they, fortunately for us, attained it—accounts for our annual celebration of Independence Day! Yet many there are who, in their older days, wish they had "fought" for Financial Independence in the days they were young. That they had attained that feeling of complete Freedom that comes with knowing that one does not have to worry about the to-morrow- That feel ing that makes for contentedness in mind and happi ness at heart. SAVE! Save while you're young so that when the time comes and you feel you have earned a rest, you can stretch out your arms and shout to the w t o rid—"Free! Free, am I, from every kind of worry.! We're at your Service! Stop in! I I £ 3 3 •• I = i United States National Bank I I * iiitinmuuiiiiimiiimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiHtiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifitiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiMMiitiiiHiiiiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitniiHiiiiiHiiiiiiitiHiniiitiiiiiimiiHiitiiiBitiiiiiMittmmii Dp, Theresa ßannun Visits Here While i On Western Tour > i Dr. Theresa Bannan of Syracuse. New A ork arrived in Ked Lodge Mon day from Billings. She is making a tour of the west, this being her first trip west of Chicago and stated that she was delighted with her western findings. Her object in coming out here is to find "an honest to goodness ranch and to ride horseback". '- >r - Bannan came west by way of the Great Lakes, Duluth to Billings and from there was taken to Absarokee. She returned to Billings and was in troduced to Jim Shoemaker, secre tary of the Billings Commercial Club at the Billings Gazette. She was in ' troduced by Mr. Shoemaker to Mr. D. , .. . .. W. Columbus who was there at the ,, „ . . , .. . 0 , Mr. Columbus left for Red time. Lodge shortly afterward, accompanied by Dr. Bannan, who will be a guest at Camp Senia for an Indefinite period. Later on she will tour the Yellowstone Park, making her entrance by way of Cody and out through Gardiner and Livingston, then on to Spokane, Se ' The Straw Hats They're Wearing Every other fellow that comes in here wants a sennit braid. New styles spread quickly and most of them spread quickly. And most of them want fancy braids—That's correct too. Come in and try one Keep cool for the 4th. $2.75 to $5.00 iflemingjijibü attle. Los Angeles, Denver and back to 4 New York State. She will celebrate the Fourth * Cod y Dr. Brannan is a prominent physi c ! an °f Sy ™ use : having pr " t ï ed there for thirty-five years and has been connected with the department of health for fourteen years. she hatl written a number of books, which have had a wide circulation. One of her byoks ca iied "Waifs of War and ot h er stories of France" w ide circulation overseas, cee< jg 0 f another of her books has made her trip to the West possible, During her trip out here and farther has had a The pro west she will write weekly stones for the Syracuse Journal, giving her im pressions of the west in general, Mr. and Mrs. William Haggerty and children have been visiting with old acquaintances in the city for the past . , _ , , . . few day*. They have been making .. . , J ^ , their home in Billings and left by car . „ . .. today for New York City where they will leave the children 'with their 1 mines in Red Lodge. daughter, Mrs. Mae De Laney. From 1 there Mr. and Mra. Haggerty will j motor to Miami, Florida, where they expect to locate. Mr. Haggerty was formerly superintendent of the local