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Image provided by: Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT
Newspaper Page Text
FRAZER By Mr«. J. W. Calfce Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Dahl and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Peters entertained at five tables of whist at the Peters home last Saturday evening. Mrs. Verl Vanderhoeff and Victor Jelm berg won high score prizes, and Mrs. W Wright and Joe Otremba the low prizes. Mr. Jelmberg also received cut prize. A midnight lunch was served. E. P. Brooks is sick this week. Miss Mildred Sletten attended the basketball tournament at Williston last week end. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hovey. Mrs. William Peters, Miss Barbara Kneift guests at the W. Wright home Friday evening. The seniors have started practic ing their play "The Uninvited Jester" which they will give in the near future. It is directed bv Miss Perry. Mr. ard Mrs. T. F. Dahl and Deanna were Glasgow callers Mon day to consult a doctor about Deanna's cold. Lawrence Holtberg and daughter Carol and Marv Sue left Monday to visit Mr. Holtberg's mother. Mrs. Hannah Holtberg. and sister. Mrs. R. Ralhman, of Havre. Mrs K, Zenner and Reta Davis were Glasgow callers Tuesday after noon. Helen Otremba of Glasgow spent Tuesday night at the Joe Otremba home. Mrs. J. A. Quirlng entertained at home Thursday afternoon. The afternoon was spent visiting and sewing. lunch was served. Mr. and Mrs. Chet Haralson and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Peters were Glasgow callers Wednesday evening Gorm Pedersen returned Wednes day after spending a week with Mrs. Pedersen and son Byer. She teaches near Chester. Ted Dahl and Robert Hovev at tended Masonic lodge at Wolf Point Thursday evening. B. A. Hovey, Chet Haralson and Joe Otremba were business callers in Glasgow Friday. Mrs. Toby Unrau and daughters Patsy and Barbara and Mrs. Reuben Baerg and children of the north country left Saturday morning to visit Mrs. unrau's sister, Mrs. J. P. Wiens, in Minneapolis. Corp. Kristian Skyberg and brother Melvin arrived Tuesday to spend two weeks with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Skvberg, south of the river. Kris has been on Kiska in the Aleutian islands for the past few months. This is his first visit home since he was drafted in 1942. Melvin is one of the head electricians at the shipyards in Bremerton. Wash. Kris will go to a camp in Colorado from here. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Taylor and daughter Betty, who visited their son Richard at the Trinity hospital in Wolf Point Saturday evening, were accompanied by Janice Das sonville who visited her sister Phvllis overnight. Ardis Elison and Thelma Long snent the week end at the Rex Nichols home in Wolf Point. Mrs. William Peters left early Sunday morning to join her hus band. who is at a camp in Oregon. Mrs. Chet Haralson. B. A. Hovey and Mrs. J. W. Calfee were Glas gow callers Tuesday. ller HINSDALE Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cotton of Glasgow and Charles Barth of Nashua attended the Farmers Union play and program Friday evening. Henry Hoerster returned Friday morning from Portland, where he spent several months working at the Kaiser shipyards. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Caspar, Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Rocke and Miss Dorothea Rogers were in Glasgow Saturday afternoon. Art and Lorraine Weasa and Wal ter Rlggin went to Glasgow Satur day. Art and Walter also made a trip to Malta the following day. Jack and Earl Bumer, Mrs. Agnes Hartley and son Wilbur and Lee Ellsworth drove to Glasgow Satur day. Mrs. Jack Burner returned to Hinsdale with her husband, after spending a week at the Deaconess hospital recovering from an opera tion. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Jones of Saco visited here Saturday evening. Mr and Mrs. Billy Drabbs enter tained at dinner Sunday in honor of the newly-married Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Swanson. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Swanson and Mr. and Mrs. Clair Duncan and family. Mr. and Mrs. E F. Simmons were callers in Glasgow Saturday. Miss Olive Harpster has beer sick with tonsilitis this week. Miss Sylvia Schafer returned Sunday from Chester, where she spent the past week with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Ne'son were callers In Glasgow Saturday. Mrs. John Pyan of Tacoma. Wash., is visiting her sister. Mrs. Peter Gaasch. Mrs. Erick Kukl and son Billy arrived Monday morning from Butte to visit Mrs. Kuki's parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Salo. and her brother George. The Hinsdale Bridge club met Fri day afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. H. Jacobs. Three tables were in play and Mrs. Billy Drabbs received the high prize, with second prize go ing to Mrs. M. J. Weiten. Mrs. Homer Claypool captured the much coveted traveling prize. Mrs. Jacobs served lunch. BOBCAT TRAPPED OPHE1M—A bobcat was caught in a trap by Joe Fisher last Tuesday near the old coal mine about 7 miles west of town. It was displayed at the Markle transfer that evening, and later taken to Gus Keiner to be mounted. Y OUXL BE important—to your country, and to your fighting men—if you lake over a vital job in the Army. In the Women's Army Corps you get expert Army training that may pave the way to a postwar career. You'll have a chance to improve your skill or learn a new one — to meet new _ people, see new places, "have ex periences you'll remember all your life. • Get full details about the WAC at any U.S. Rccrolt'ng sta tion. Or write for interesting booklet Address: Montana Re cruiting & Induction Headquar ters 321 West Galena Street. Butte, Montana (Women in es sential war Industry most have release from their employer or the U. S. Employment Service.) '• <• ^ M I: x . ■ - i s Arms side - : .XX 1 ■■ X m « I ■ w H- ■■ ■y <) mß > ■■■ .< , v im s fr v^v:x' v i ■ ? : : w :<h.. PPS» W : . v j -.-.vv mi :K : : : x •x x x Mi M m , ••• • x .••>. yy : ■X < - Hi v %:* mm ' i . m 'y j»;3 m x ■ i> : ■ ' ■ : mm xx % i m p. . m y v m.'ü m •< ; : M m ■ m ■ % X f. ;;Sc ;i m : y : & A: ■ ■ >V . Pi ■ i;-;' \ • . P"' : : : : pp; l&i r : 'y -xx /■", v.r mt - •iv ti • < jC & y. . i tip: m ü ■ ;■ ( -x' mm I ■ ,' l X •X ? <■ æ . '■ 1 X (5-tX m x-;; m y ' ■ m "v.> : W K • • •: A ■y. ' x P x p; : •x;v mi ■■ \ | - mi ; if; •xx Wx r.-. m ... : I ...--y" J : x . %■*< ' ; ix t: m ' x • ii; :¥? V : pi # . p: XXX. pi i .. v •" : ;Si « üii ii: ■x : i: : ÏSÏ ■: is; , Pill . ■ . - .xx'Xx -x-X ' ; V • - ; **:■ . ■+• : V :Vf U m I iV m m L other things too —coffee and doughnuts after a weary march—real American cigarettes and bacco—a bed with real sheets when he leaves the lines—rest homes and all those little comforts that only the Red Cross can bring him. Yes, I have given my blood and I will give it again. But even my blood is not enough. Red Cross needs money, too. For this year, when the need is so much greater, when Red Cross is serving eleven million Ameri can fighting men, I want to give more and I am giving more —much more. "1 am going to dig deep—deeper than ever before—and ously this year to the Red Cross, MY RED CROSS. "For wherever in the world mjf Jim is I know ... to SAW a wounded man last night—lying out there —alone. "He didn't cry. He hardly moved. But his sunken eyes kept turning—searching for some human sign. "And then I saw his face— "It was Jim—my own Jim ! * * * 1 "And Jim was not alone. "His buddies saved his life that night—his bud dies and the blood. * * * i gave that blood and I was glad. But when I woke and knew it was a dream, I could not sleep again that night. "Something within me kept repeat ing, 'Even your blood is not enough !' I remembered the look in Jim's eyes, the aloneness that was in that look. "Then 1 understood. "Jim needs the blood we bring him through the Red Cross. But he needs From way off over the hill they came at last, while the cry rose in my throat and I stood helpless. "They came and knelt beside my Jim and stuck a gun into the ground and hung a bottle from the gun. GIVE TO THE give gener RED CROSS "And then blood poured from the bottle, and Jim's eyes opened. the RED CROSS is at his side, and the RED CROSS is YOU! yy THIS IS AN OFFICIAL U. S. TREASURY ADVERTISEMENT, PREPARED UNDER AUSPICES OF THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT AND WAR ADVERTISING COUNCIL AND IS SPONSORED BY Service Store Morgan & Jarrett The Elat Shop F armers-Stockgro wers Bank Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. Tork's Drug F. A. Buttrey Co. Buttrey Foods Midwest Lumber Company Peterson Mortuary Self Service Grocery Glasgow Cleaners Gregory Se Boyd Home Oil & Refining Co. The City Market First National Bank The Fair Store Elmer Johnson General Repair Shop Stemhagen Insurance Agency West Side Grocery Men's Wear Holland Chapel Glasgow Flower Shop Geo. P. Mitchell Otto M. Christinson Land Co. E. L. Bowles Dunn's Club, Coffee Shop & Newsstand Glasgow Transfer Glasgow Hotel Alvord's Food Store Scott & Snyder Shannon Hotel Westland Oil Company O. C. Teigen Magruder Motor Co. Federated Store Markle Transfer Co. Nor-Mont Dairies, Inc. The Hub Lounge Montana Bar Stan's Bar Glasgow Flour Mill Co. A. M. St. Clair & Co. Jon's Ice Cream Litening Super-Service Yale Products H. Mohr Allen Cafe Roxy Theater Saveway Stores Glasgow Farmers Union Oil Co. Hanson-Mersen Motors, Inc. Glasgow Steam Laundry Co. Northern Montana Seed Growers Ass'n Pacific Hide & Fur Co. WonderKrust Bakery Friedl's Nashua