IJHJiU* .mimni A.rtrrWCC MlIN IAY mNVrJirO Iflvl*"*** _ t u roonev who &***> F ™ 1 'Wwbtalrtcm hurt «S With administra * l ««Strives, was in New rdief fXetu . w matters and ft 5 ity to° Helena Wednesday yarned m-vernor has called the " legislature into special jytana - Nov. 2/. It >s M "S/' opinion that the Î *° vern l wifl last foe- ei*ht session ■ s' 'The days -r ten rew WILL SHIP ^ CAR OF TURKEYS ^_ If the Northwest Mon içcociaticn met in »ra B° ub 'nov 15 and it was ^shipment of turkeys . s i » taken np. , . Taxpayers Assn, to Hold Meeting Dec. 2 at Reserve School Local Brevities "Van" Clay wa s in from Raymond Friday. j Elmer Hultgren of Westby - a Pler-tywood called this week. S. J. Palubecki attended to busi ness matters at Outlook Thursday. was. Mrs. James Thompson who lives east of town is reported very ill. i Wm. and Hugo Hass, prominent j Outlook farmers Svere in Plenty , wood Wednesday, i Robert Grasham and Robert .Smith were Williston callers Tues day. Hans Olsotv and CJiariev Lindval : were transacting business in town Thursday. . ! Verne Sachow is confined to his bed with an attack of broncho asthma. Ray Roache was qn the sick list I several days this week. Martin i Toftness was baker during his ill ness, John Christofersop and - daughter Clara, were here from Westby to day attending the hearing of Mrs. Hanry Larson. Pred Stlffl er of Dooley was in. I Plentywood several days this weeki visiting with his brother, George Stiffl€r> | —oo— Among those from Antelope who attended the show at the Orpheum evening were Mr. and Mrs. Ed ' Van Hee - . u , T™*' . „ A cherry Velcome at the Beau f ort Hotel 112 3rd Street South, opposite Federal Building, Minne apolis 75c, $1, $1.50 per day. Park mg next door. — 00 — , A 'arge crew of men and teams !>ave started work on the hill lead I mg into town from the cemetery, . The road ^ in be made wider an Y d I the curve at the botton also will j b e widened ou.t i I Contractor Woody was a visitor I ! n Æ e city Sunday - J j loohi.r.g over some road work m I Daniels county on which a con tract is to be let in the near fu ture. He had been Irvin Sachow had sufficiently re covered from pneumonia that he was able to be removed to his home Friday of last week. He is not as yet able to be up and around but is convalescing rapidly. „ Simon Swanson and Mrs. Lemer motored to Williston Monday eve ning where they met Mr. and Mrs. Rob Hall and brought them to Plentvwood. Mr. Hall is the new editor of the Producers News. Mrs. Braddock of the Outlook vicir.itv was brought to the hos pital Wednesday suffering from a paralysis stroke. M. R. girls were enter te 1 '^ Thursday night at the home of Alta Olson. They are making forget-me-not quilt. A delicious lunch was served at the close of their meeting. P scar Helseth made a trip to Minot after a load of lumber to be used for the A. O. U. W. lodge hall in Westby Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Espen, Norma, Pal mer of Lone Tree. Mrs. Frank An derson cf Comedown, were guests Thursday at home of Mrs. Oscar Helseth. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Haas, Mutriel and Dorothy, and Chas. Johnson of Pleasant Valley spent Wednesday w Westby. „ W - Eelldws of Plentywood, and Berger Larsen, of Crosby at tended the auction sale given by Mr. Smith at the Nelsen-Sanrud store in Westby The young daughter of Mr am. Mrs. Rohweder of McElroy has been released from the Ambrose hospital and is at her home. She is still confined to her bed and will remain there for some time. . She is suffering from heart trouble. Mir. and Mrs. Gunder Rust of Alkabo attended the auction sale in Westby Tuesday night. Nick Rodney of Alkabo was a Westby caller Thursday. Ed Ferguson attended to busi ness matters in Crosby Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Halbert Nereson of Lone Tree. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Solberg of McEkoy spent Thurs dav at the Martin Nereson home. Mrs. Martin Neresen entertained the Pleasant Valley ladies aid at her home in Westby Friday after-I A large crowd turned out _ Mrs. Gust Stubbe and Lillian spent the week end on the farm. Mr. Thoen ard family of Elk-1 horn spent Thursday in Westby shopping and calling on friends. The Lutheran ladies aid will be entertained in the church parlors Dec. 1. Thenpublic is cordially in vited. The W. H. D. C. have a fine butterfly spread on display in the Otto Enger Shoe store. Call in and Otto will give you a chance on it. Proceeds go to the citv park of Westby, ' Mrs. John Rohweder called or, Mrs. R. Stubbe Friday. The W. H. D. club has been posi poned for the month of November to the first Tuesday in December AU noon. and a delicious luncheon served. was at tbe Peter Miller home, members and social members art ur ?ed to be present as this is our annual day for election of new officers, please be present. Hartfwicfc Bergem is doing the carpenter work in the lodge hall. confirmation class of Rev, Almlie motored to Crosby Satur ** ay 40 bave tbeir cla ss pictures taken. This is the Lone Tree class. Martin Paulsen of Crosby at tended business affairs ini Westby Tuesday. Mrs. Maurice Bergh entertained a few ladies at luncheon Thursday afternoon in honor of her sister wbo is visiting here from Minsne sota. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mortenson of Grenora attended Pentecostal ser vices in Westby Thursday night. . The local grade school is going to put on a Christmas operetta this year and are now busv re hearsing. The Junior orchestra is progress ing rapidly, soon they will be able to compete with the Senior chestra. The American Legion Auxiliary met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Campbell and the time was spent ini making a quilt to be given to a needy family. Mrs. P. A. Nelson of Alkabo and Mrs. Oscar A. Neston and daugh ter of Westby. motored to Ante lope Thursday to visit Mrs. Fete»r Lee. a sister of Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Neston. Mrs. Oscar A, Neston, and her daughter. Ethel motored to Alkabo Friday afternoon to visit at the home of Mrs. P. A. Nelson a sister of Mrs. Neston. onr GIGANTIC RUSSIAN AIRCRAFT CRASHES MOSCOW, Nov, 22.—The giant all metel aircraft K-7, with accom modations in its thick wings for 128 passengers, crashed yesterday near Kharkov, in the Ukraine, killing its 14 occupants instantly. The plane was completed eight days ago andi had already made more than 20 successful flights. The plane weighed 20 tons and had a wing spread of 208 feet. It had 16 cabins with four sleeping berths in> each. The K-7 was the world's largest airplane. However, the DO-X, the German flying boat, is larger, it having taken up more than 160 passengers in one flight. Tires and Tubes Tire Tube $3.90 $1.10 ...7.20 85 . 8.45 85 .5c to 25c $4.75 $ 1.00 $ 1.10 Plentywood Farmers Oil Co. Service Station 30x3 Yi . 4.40-4750^21 6-ply 4.75-19. 6 ply. BOOTS, all sizes 13-Plate GIANT STORAGE BATTERY BIG WEST GASOLINE 5 Gallons for .. APPLES 40-lb. Box . ■ PETER BRUVOLD OF COMERTOWN MES IN MINOT HOSPITAL r . ,, . ... . La®* weeks Plentywood Herald ls rK . akmK . a desperate attempt to f nvince its v r A eaders that the , farme,rs .°n the Allotment Commit îfjf ™ ade a f. rave mistake in let \ ® b J m -V nS ! C0 ^ raC n tr_ p ^ rt f to the Producers o'®* .u . , the reasons given by the 5" ald . for ba fJ. lri K the Producers 5 e * s Voting the printing is . M 16 Pr oportunity be httled the NRA/' e "S? 4 we have done those „ a f® rot running a !? ap f r for the purpose of fool L Jl *5? And ; wan t to as -^. tbe Harald, Isn t it the ad mim stration that hag brought the present crisis onto the farmers, and has anybody done anything Ve f J° correct it. outside of making a \ 0 } no ^ e •., , Herald has ever taken j e far m®rs part, if it has ever ,, ne anything far the farmers at f + U : ™ e . woald llk ? to know. All 18 dol f^ 3 s trotting alorig behind those ™ bo happe , n to be in power, no matter who they are, trying to pic £ u P a few dropping^, Nobooy could claim that Hoover dl . dl anything for the farmer but * U1T1 , m ' , when Hoover £ as ir ' udweir the Herald was for Hoover and the Republicans. As |? on as Hoover was defeated, the Herald was for Roosevelt and the democrats. Never at any time was *.*!, Herald for the farmers, and ^ sesms think that it should be put on the preferred list when fair mers hand out printing. Harry Polk don't give a darn for Hoover. Roosevelt, or the farmers. It is printing contracte that he ïs after. The party who can hand him a printing contract is the one he is for every time. If a print ing contract could he secured by marching up and down Main street carrying the red flag and singing After having been in ill health tor more than a year, Peter Bgu vold, Comertown, died at the Mi not hospital last Monday morning after an operation, where the sur geons failed to find anything which could be corrected. Mr. Bruvold was 52 yeairs old: at the time of his death. He came to Montana from Ambrose, N. D., in 1912 and settled or. a homestead near Comertown. While there he took an active part in public af fairs. He was twice married, and the father of twelve children, five with his first wife and seven with the one now mourning his death. Funeral services will be held at Comertdwr, on Tuesday at 2 p. m. under supervision of the Masonic lodge of which he was a member. Rev. L. S. Almlie of Westby will preach the sermon. CHEWING PRINTING CONTRACT AGAIN or even the "Internationale," Hanry Polk would be the first one marching. While the Allotment Committees were being formed and elected, many a secret meeting was held at the Herald office between Harry Polk and Carl Peterson try ing to lay plans as to how the Herald could get the printing, and when their plans failed, meetings were held and the whole thing had to be done over again. Not because the farmers had done anything wrong, hut because the farmers were not supposed to their own association. About the printing the Heirald says: " got a fair price. mort run The committee .certainly * But, what was the reason they got this fair price? It was simply because the Producers Ndws had set that price, and the other papers had to .come down to it, although they did not like it. In the same article the Herald has a fit oyer the Producers News editor getting some money from New York. Something the Herald pretends to be better posted on than we ape. But what has that got to do with the printing con tract? If there is anything we need here in Plentywood more than money, jt is still more money. If any of it could he sent from New York and spent here we surely should be the last ones to object to it. But that is not the stand that the Herald takes, Which gives a fair example of its editor's narrow mindedness. That some money has come into Plentvwood the last couple years, through the Producers News from different parte' of the United States is something we should 1 not object to if we have any sense at all. What we should object to is a Plentywood editor living at Wil liston and draining our county for every dollar he can get out of it. That the Herald is singing Nels Olson's praise is nothing more than could be expected and doubt Nels is nrond of it. More nrroud of it than the people who elected him. no at Ipswich, S. Dakota IS I ■ j ■ I Clay McLean, alias John Roam, who had been working in. the Com-1 ortown country, sold a couple of bushels of wheat to a Comertown elevator and received a check for! $1.35. At Peterson's hardware store in < hut the amount Ca had d been raised raised to $61.32 • °/ The following day he left for i —i >-' ,. 1 — . -, dan WdTirDTwteT ttTSJilfT!? catei him and U now S to have him returned to Sheridan onenaan , | 24 county. Dakota Cities Vote for , municipal Light riants Two cities in North Dakota re- f 4 cently voted in favor of establish- i * ing municipal light and power plants in preference to the high ' **L line service which is noW being 1 given to them. | The city of Jamestown last week m voted 1,647 to 723 to construct a i ^ municipal plant, calling for am ex penditme of about $600,000. The fu city will seek to obtain this money 1 from the Reconstruction Finance i corporation. | In Leeds recently that citv voted 133 to 29 in favor of the i municipal plant. $50,000 will be ' • expended for this plant and the ! government will also be asked to ! . loan the money to the city for this purpose. ' I Devils Lake and Crosby will also i vote on municipal plants, the elec-1 tions in the^e cities having both : been set for Mondav November S 27 e . 6 j 11-year-old an an (?ev was mar CARLOAD TURKEYS SHIPPED FORM CO. A week ago J. L. Sorem, acting as agent for Fox and Co., of Chi cage. shipped 33,685 pounds gross weight of poultry from Plenty wood. The price paid at Chicago for turkeys is reported at 17% cents for No. 1, old toms and hens at 14 cents, and No. 2 at 10% cents. It is planned to load another car at Plentywood Dec. 11 and 12. Bride, 11, Freed From a Gay Groom of 67 Oklahoma City, Okla., Nov. 19. — Dorothy Halsell. bride, today was granted nulment of her marriage to T. J. Halsell. _ 67-year-old farmed. She now is i'T a children's home here. She was married fo Halsell eral months ago in Tulsa at the same time her father, J. E. Tay lor. who since has died, ried to Halsells' 15-year-old daugh teiT. it Coffee an When Noah sailed the waters bine He had his. troubles, same as you. For forty days he drove the Ark, Before he found a place to park. And England is considering the Prince of Wales over here for a visit as part payment on their war debt. And in the hospital the doctor asked the patient: "Is the night nurse giving you proper atten tion?" And the patient said: "Not exactly, but I am perfectly satisfied." And when the beer bill was passed it was broadcast over a na tional hiccup. And the crank eating at the Elgin said: "If this is chicken then I am a fool." And the waiter said: "You are right, sir, it is chicken." And some divorce lawyers like their job because they can get so many women free. And don't always take it for granted that a person has died be cause somebody speaks well of 1 him. And some people think noodle soup is used for scalp treatment. And in the summer time you can see a lot of the girls at the swim ming pool. And Lauris Was all set to pro pose to his girl, hut then he lost Great Northern :* . > r , - <\'V h Pullman Sleeping Car fares Reduced One Third On and After Dec. 1 si makes drastic reduction in fares NOW PER MILE GOOD ANY WHERE, EVERY DAY in Coaches in all Trains, and in modern Tourist Sleeping Cars on the Empire Builder. Dec. Island Thereafter PER MILE ROUND TRIP GOOD IN STANDARD SLEEPING AND PARLOR CARS on payment of berth or seat fare. 10-