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PAGE FOUR :: HARRIET THEATRE :: FRIDAY AND SATU RDAY. APRIL 27-2 S GEORGE BURNS - GRACIE ALLEN CHARLIE RUGGIES In “SIX OF A KIND 13 SUNDAY AND MONDAY. APRIL 29 & :50 WARNER BAXTER - MYRNA LOY in "PENTHOUSE” TI ES.. WED.. THI'RS.. MAY 1-2-’, MARION DAVIES in 'GOING HOLLYWOOD' COMING SOON- .“ Tshe Hardin Tribune - Herald l*u till flit'll ivirj Friday ami entered April 4, MtoLgjßjsigji at the l*o.-tnlTice at Hardin, Montana, for trans- mission through the mails as Second-Class mutter under Act of Congress of Match .1, 1 *7II. SOUTH BENCH 88888888888888 Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Quarnburg motored to Hardin, Saturday. Adolph Schaak was in town, Monday, transacting business. Mrs. Logan Kingston and Betty came in to church. Sunday morn ing. Mrs. S. D. Onstine visited. Tues day evening at the J. Y. Ferguson home. Mrs. Carl Quarnburg and daugh ter Edna paid Hardin a visit, Monday. Mrs. Lula SCnaak visited Sun day afternoon with her sister. Mrs. Mark Ferguson. Mrs. C. C. Corbin, Mary Sue and Dorothy Ann Corbin shopped in Hardin, Saturday. Mrs. Della Pope of Dunmore visited last Saturday with Mother Ferguson and Stella. Mrs. James Plummer and daugh ters. Marion and Betty Joyce. HF.PORT OF THE CONDITION OF Hardin Building and Loan Association At Har.lin, ;>t the ulos«' ot' business l>ec. SO, 1033 RESOURCES ne.nl Kstato Loans ? 17.2*0.00 Heal Owned ... 3.100.00 Furniture and Fixtures . * 17 2.63 insurance and Taxes Advance*! ... 2 1.00 « 'ash on Hand and in Hanks . .".339.03 TOTAL $26.1 $6.56 LIABILITIES Stockholders Investment and Farnii gs Credited. Installment Stock. 'Mass ‘'i;** $ S.o6n.!«*i Full Paid Stock "A” l"».60o.0<> Total 2 :> .660.90 Contingent Fund 1.."50.00 Net Fndivided Burnings 97 5.66 T* 1. $26.1 S 6.5 6 STATE OF MONTANA, County of Ilig Horn. ss. I. E. L. Kelley. Jr.. S.eirtaiy of the above-iaimed Association. do solemnly swear that the above stab no iit is true to th»- b.-st of my knowledge and belief. E. L. KELLEY, Jr Secretary. Subscribed and ■ worn to b* or. m* this 2 Ith da> of April. 193 1. (Seal) j*. i’. I toss. Notary Public in and for 11 •• * State of Montana. Lesiditig at Hardin, Mont. My commission expires Jim*- 6. 19"6. Correct Attest: n. v. loss. \\\ E. WAKKEV, H. W. I'.l NSTON, 1 >i rectors. Earn more M n II MONEY 0 U can learn Bookkeeping, Banking. Shorthand and ■ Typewriting at home in half the time, and at one-fifth the cost of attending a business college. You can complete the course in bookkeeping or banking, and receive your di ploma in two months. You can learn to write over 100 words a minute in shorthand in less than two months, and you can become an expert, rapid typist in six weeks. A small down-payment and easy monthly terms w ill get you started immediately. Complete satisfaction and a good position guaranteed, or your tuition will be refunded in full. Send ten cents in coin or stamps for complete descriptive literature of the courses in which you are interested. Do it today. AMERICAN CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL 1850 Downing St. Denver, Colo. Coven the ENTIRE United States i were Hardin visitors, Tuesday. | Geo. Kent, a pioneer homestead ! er, but who now farms near Crow Agency with E. L. Kelley of Har din, was transacting business in Hardin Saturday. Mrs. A. V. Kent, formerly of this i community, but now of Hardin, I has recently been on the sick list. | Gary Gene Ferguson spent last i Friday aTTernoon with his adopt | ed grandmother and aunt in Har ' din. j Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ferguson ! have their little nephew, Duane ! Schaak, visiting them since Thurs : day of last week. Mrs. Aciolph Schaak and Mrs. i Alice Pope and children visited I Monday afternoon with Mother i Ferguson . [ Mrs. H. W. Clark of St. Xavier came to Hardin. Monday, with | some neighbors and was a dinner ' guest at the reporter's home. | Maxine Prine and Genevieve ] Barnett visited last week after school with” THIS'S Hazel Pope of Dunmore. at the reporter’s home. the haroin TRIBUNE-HERALD Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ferguson’s little n. phew. Bobbie Schaak, will celebrate his sth month’s birth day, May Ist C. E. Astrope and daughter, Miss Amy Astrope and Mrs. Paul son and children were in Hardin, Saturday doing their week's shop ping. Seveial families have been liv ing on the Geo. Dimbleby place, w.th Mr. Ator. While the CWA was functioning the men of these families were employed. A seven-pasenger. 4-c ylin de r Studebaker was the first car in this community. For many years Hardin boasted of only one car. How many are there now? Miss Elizabeth Koebbe, daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Jake Koebbe, who reside on the old Jack Candee place, has been attending school in Great Falls, this winter . Mr. and Mrs. Uriel King, who live northeast of Hardin, had Richard Walker as one of their guests at an early breakfast given by them, one morning recently. John Stewart Thompson, who has been working at the Big Horn garage for some time, goes back and forth each morning and ev ening to work, from his home on the Gordon Brown farm. The lowa winds and dust •torms that are blowing the grain out of the ground there, are cer tainty being felt here, arriving in our community in the form of clouds of heavy, settled dust. The honey bees of the South Bench community are certainly making good use of the new wild plum blooms in the reporter’s front yard. The sweet perfume is too much of a temptation for them to stay away. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Clark came down from St. Xavier, last Thurs day. taking dinner with their daughter Lula. Mrs. Adolph Schaak, also spending the after noon with their other daughter, Mrs. Mark Ferguson. Miss Marian Plummer, who has been in nurse's training at a Bill ings hospital, the past several years, is at home at present, vis iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Plummer and brother and sisters. The news notes of this farming community, past, present and fu ture. are written for the benefit of the farmers here and people in this community and for all readers to enjoy. Nothing but the truth is written or reported. Mrs. Lyle McDonah. niece-in law of the Fergusons, here, writes from Washington that it is very hot and dry there, twenty-five miles from Sookane. The farmers here can still live in optimistic hopes of rain and moisture. Richard Walker was one of the guests of the party given in the recreation rooms of the Baptist church at Hardin, a week ago last Saturday evening, by Miss Ruth King and Madelyn Phillips for members of the B. Y. P. U. The sugar beet growers in this farm community are anxiously waiting the settlement and deci sion of the C<sstigan-Jones bill by the U. S. senate. The delay in the passage of this measure Is a mat ter of grave concern to sugar beet growers in this section. The social diversion of the South Bench younger set in early days was long auto pleasure trips, taken on Sundays to the Black Canyon. Sarpy hills. Pine Ridge and Little horn canyon. On these trios the time was snent picnicking, sight seeing and picttTre taking. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ferguson and Patricia O’Brien of Halfway made a short call at the reporter’s home in Hardin. Saturday morn ing. Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson were enroute to Buffalo, to visit their daughter, Erlise—Mrs. Dale Phil lips. Miss O’Brien stopped off at Billings to visit friends and rela tives. Lyle McDonah. grandson of the Senior Fergusons, who are retired farmers from here, and nephew of Mark and Charlie Ferguson, who now reside here, has recently undergone a nasal operation at the Veterans’ hospital at Walla Walla. Washington. Lyle. Brother 1 gkfc it — H Budweiser 1 j||l KING OF BOTTLED BEER 118 §gjS ANHEUSER-BUSCH • ST. LOUIS SmJk NASH-FINCH COMPANY, Distributors HII.UNGB, MONTANA Bud, John, and sister Gladys Mc- Donah, now departed, came here witn their grandparents in 1910. Lyle and John McDonah served over seas from here, during the World war. The McDonah brothers and families now reside on tim ber land in Washington, near Spokane. Speaking of flowers, in a botani cal sentence this community would be a poor place for a botanist to come to study flowers. Flowers, both tame and wild are very, very scarce, with just a few species of which perhaps a botanist might find just what he was looking for among our rare assortment of flowers. Mrs. A. H. Gustafson and Mrs. Cecil Holland, were joint hostes sess, a week ago last Thursday afternoon at the recreation room of the Baptist church in Hardin for the Ladies’ Aid and Mission ary Society of the Baptist church. Mrs. Logan Kingston was elected president and Mrs. Frank Dun ham. ex-South Benchite, secre tary. The first South Bench school teacher. Mrs. Josephine Doane, nee Josephine Eder. resides in Los Angeles. Calif. She taught in the one-room homestead shack, that Grandma Hansen, mother of Mrs. Weldon Clark, lived in on her homestead, while she was proving up. Mrs. Doane rode horseback back and forth to school from Hardin through some of the cold est of winter weather, while she taught here. There were only a few pupils then, among them the two Clark girls. The shack was later added to the Weldon Clark farm dwelling, serving as a kitch en for the Weldon Clark family first, now the C. C. Corbin family, the present renters. Mrs. Mary E. Lane and little daughter Pamela, of Cleveland, Ohio, was a passenger on last Fri day evening’s westbound train for Billings and stopped over here for a couple of days’ visit with friends. ‘‘Hello Mother!” •• • • If distance separates you, exchange Mothers Day greetings by tele p h o n e, on Sunday, May 13. It’s a pleasure to en joy at little cost. •• • • l.ow >tatinii-to-station night rates begin at 8:30 p. m. . . . The long tlislantr op erator will be glad to tell you the rates to any points. + The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. RAISING GOOD HORSES IS PROFITABLE ST. PAUL, YOUNG GRADE STALLION is standing; at the Amanda Spray Ranch in Hardin, two blocks east of county machinery sheds. Service, $5 at time of service. l.">-4p PAUL MICHEL. CHAMBEP|C; CASH GROCCRY4O EVERYTHING IN GROCERIES -o ADDITIONAL SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, APRIL 28 FRESH STRAWBERRIES BOX |g c ORANGES EXTRA LARGE 32 c DOZGN GRAPEFRUIT LARGE SIZE EACH age PHONE 30 FREE DELIVERY MRS. ROWLAND'S SISTER DIES Mrs. John W. Rowland was call ed to Sheridan, Wyo„ last Friday evening, to the bedside of her sis ter, Mrs. Irene B. Chambers, whe had been ill some time and took a sudden change for the worse She parsed away before Mrs Rowland's arrival. Mrs. Chamber: was in her 58th year and hac been a resident of southeaster! Montana and northeastern Wy oming many years. Funeral ser vices were held at Sheridan, Mon day afternoon. Rev. Oliver Reed pastor of the Baptist church al Sheridan officiating. Near relative: attending the funeral were Mrs Rowland and a brother, Charles W. Hutton, of Hardin, and a sis ter, Mrs. R. L. Hutsell of Sheridan Wyo. Other surviving brother: Volunteer Stores INDEPENDENTLY OWNED - PERSONALLY OPERATED SALE ITEMS FOR SAT. AND MON, APRIL 28 & 30 SPECIAL COFFEE s „ 39 FREE 1 SsTl APPLE BUTTER JUMBO With each 1 lb. cau of . T n , ~ ' Half-Gallon Can THOMPSON'S CHOCOLATE MALTED 4*l 39 c APPLES REALFRU.T NO. 10 CAN gUj BAKING POWDER CALUMET 1 POUND CAN mt m r nD KI FAIRCO CROSBY WUKN 2FOR 21 c NO. 2 CANS mtm. R |O E FANCY BLUE ROSE :! POUNDS FOR 32® BROOMS M,ss MONTANA ~ EACH OO ITALIAN PRUNES REAL ™” NO. 10 CAN MOTHER'S OATS 55-OUNCE — CHINA OR CRYSTAL . SCRATCH FEED BABY CHI “~ lO POUND sack Hardin Marc. Ga. Chambers Cask Gracery FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934 RHUBARB 2 lb 15 c BUNCH CARROTS 3 FOR J 4« BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE 3 lb 20® j and sisters are Curt W. Hutton of | Tacoma, Ray Hutton of Seattle, and J. C. Hutton of Portland, Ore, | Mrs. W. C. Rhodes of Winterset, la, and Mrs. John Kutter, of Washington, Ind. Victor Chick Feeds. Sawyer Stores, Inc. BRUSH INJURES EYE Frank Starina, deputy fish and game warden for this district, re turned Sunday from the Deaconess hospital in Billings, where he spent eleven days taking treat ment for an. infection in the left eye, following an injury to the eyelid when hit by a willow as he was passing Through the brush. I His eye is now about well. * [ Glasses repaired at Strand’s. 3t