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FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1934 LOCAL ITEMS Maternity cases. MRS. ELLA GILMORE. ts 0 B. B. Page of Garrison, N. D., stopped oft at Hardin, Wednesday to look the country over. 0 Mrs. Chas. C. Guinn will con tinue her music classes during the summer months. Pupils desiring to study may enroll now. 24-2 p 0 Mrs. Stanley B. Novark was able to return to her home, Tues day, after a ten days’ illness fol lowing the removal of her tonsils, which were infected. The Farm Women’s Market is moving from their location in Eder Hardware store and on and after June 30 will have their goods on display in the Bean Block. 0 Mrs. Elizabeth Hathaway is car rying her left arm in a sling, the result of slipping in her back yard, after a rain, and in the fall fracturing the left arm between the wrist and elbow. 0 Mr. and Mrs. Chas. S. Eder and son Charles returned Thursday of last week from Billings, where they met Miss Dorothea, a stu dent at the Montana University at Missoula, who is home for the summer vacation. , o Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Vandervoort and Billy Burchette of Livingston were week-end guests at the Matt Larkin home. Sunday, accompan ied by Mrs. Earl Burchette (nee Cecilia Larkin) and baby daugh ter, Esther Marlene, who have been visiting at the parental home, they returned to their homes at Livingston. — — Mr. and Mrs. Glen Oliver and family arrived the first of the week from Fargo, No. Dak., on a visit to his step father and moth er, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lawlor. Thursday morning, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawlor they left by auto for the Cut Bank oil field where Mr. Lawlor is heavily in terested. They expect to return Saturday. 0 Fred Wilmarth, who for the past couple of years has been residing at Midwest, Wyo., where he has been employed on the L.D. Scott sheep ranch, came in on Wednesday evening’s train No. 41, and is a guest at the R.A. Vickers home. Fred is an all round printer and has worked at this trade nearly fifty years, serving on the Hardin Tribune- Herald staff off and on during the past 20 years. When he gets tired “printing” he takes a job on the ranch. He has a host of friends here who are always glad to see him. I NOT I JUST ft I RODEO I YOU FL I FR.I ENDS I TO BEL I MT I HftRDIN pOT S. S. Hathaway and Otto Jensen, Pryor merchants, transacted busi ness in Hardin, Tuesday. 0 Mrs. Mary Gwynne is visiting friends in Hardin and vicinity af ter an absence of several months in California. 0 Miss Lora Del Nordholm of Shenandoah, lowa, arrived in Har din, Thursday evening, and will spend several weeks here with her aunt, Mrs. Lora Del Peden. 0 Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Dyckman and sons, Robert and Herbert, left by auto, Tuesday morning for Missoula, where they will visit Mr. Dyckman’s mother and sister. 0 (Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Fuhrman, missionaries in Guatemala, Cen tral America, are paying a visit to the former’s brother, W. H. Furhman and Mrs. Furhman at Kirby. 0 Mrs. Pearl Kellams, aunt of Mrs. D. L. Egnew, daughter Miss Louise Kellams and nephew, J. A. Alexander, motored down from Bozeman, Wednesday, for a visit at the Egnew home here. 0 Miss Myrtle Peterson arrived Sunday from Minneapolis, where she is employed in the offices of the White Eagle Oil Corporation, for a two weeks’ visit at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Peterson. Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Egnew re turned Friday night of last week from a motor trip to Helena, with their son Charles, who is a stu dent at the Intermountain Union College, and will spend the sum mer vacation at the parental home here. ~ 0- “ Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Pfau, pa rents of Mrs. J. Russell Vickers, former residents of the valley, now residing on their own farm near Stevensville, in the Bitter root valley, accompanied by their neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fetter, motored here Wednesday and will remain till Sunday, vis iting relatives and friends. They report crops in the western part of the state in better condition than here. 0 The outstanding social event of the week was the double Silver Wedding anniversary party of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Bowman and Mr. and Mrs. L. S. McAllister, at Pine Lodge, Tuesday evening, when eighty guests were enter tained at twenty tables of bridge. The decorations were spring flowers. Misses June and Har riette McAllister, Alice Knowles, Kathleen Powers of Hardin and Winnifred Sibley Redding of Great Falls, who is visiting rela tives here, served. Each of the honored couples was given a set of silver salad forks. Gen Days Until the Bardin Stampede The Rodeo That’ll Be a Natural Greatest Show of Cowboy and Indian Horsemanship in Southern Montana Junior Spear and his famous bucking string will be here Big Carnival Organization on the Grounds DANCINC JULY 2, 3 & 4 THE HARDIN TRIBUNE-HERALD It is reported that George W. Williams, U. S. commissioner at Pryor, has been appointed acting postmaster of that village. 0 Mrs. Charles Endicott of Custer, S. D., leaves next Tuesday for home, after a fortnight's visit here with her sister, Mrs. J. A. Putnam. 0 W. B. Saunders of Gillette, Wyo., father of Robert B. Saunders of the Saunders Lumber Co., was on Tuesday elected grand high priest of the Royal Arch Masons of Wyoming at the annual meeting of the grand chapter at Green River, Wyo. 0 Sister Francis Regis and Sister Ann Veronica of Leavenworth, Kas., have been here the past three weeks in charge of the va cation school at St. Joseph’s Cath olic church. The school, which has had an average attendance of fifty, will close Sunday, July 1, after which the sisters will go to Helena to remain the rest of the summer. 0 Chris Ramich, aged 45, who recently came here from Monarch, Wyo., to work on the Burlington railroad section crew, died at a local hospital, Thursday night of last week, following a collapse while working his first shift. He had been a sufferer from uraemic poisoning, and working in the hot sun, it is believed, brought about his collapse. The only rela tive he had in this country is a sister, Mrs. Nick George, residing at Monarch, Wyo., to which point the body was sent Friday, for burial. J. Ernest Weinberg, prominent dryland farmer of the Iron Springs section of the Sarpy country, was in Hardin, Wednes day. What crops were not burned up by the long dry, hot weather, have been consumed by grass hoppers. He states there will be no crop of any kind harvested in the immediate vicinity of his ranch, though about six miles north of his place the grasshop pers have not showed up serious ly, and there will be some wheat harvested. Mr. Weinberg raises quite a number of turkeys. A few days ago, in a roundup to get the turkeys in out of a threatened storm, one turkey hen was missing. In a search for her they found a curlew with two small turkeys, which she was mothering. The Weinberg child ren picked up the turkeys and carried them to the house, The curlew followed nearly to the house, making a fuss and trying to get the children to liberate the little turks. Later, the old turkey hen was found with a large brood of little turks. The curlew evidently had taken the two little turks she had away from the turkey hen. ! CELEBRATE THE FOURTH AT THE HARDIN STAMPEDE Arrangements have about been completed for the big Lions Club Stampede to be pulled off at the Big Horn county fair grounds in Hardin, July 3-4. The rodeo will be under the direction of Junior Spear, noted as one of the lead ing rodeo managers of the west. He will have a string of some of the best buckers ever leaving a chute, and there will be wild horses and wild steers galore. There will also be horse races, wild cow-milking contests and many other features to keep the crowd pepped up. One of the mu sical organizations on the ground will be the Sheridan, Wyoming, High School Band, on July 3rd There will be all kinds of con cessions on the grounds and danc ing in the pavilion win be carried on the evenings of July 2, 3 and 4 Watch next week’s paper for detailed program of events. Lovers of baseball win get their fill of the national sport during Hardin Stampede week. Sunday afternoon at two o’clock there wHI be a game on the Hardin diamond at the county fair grounds, and after the rodeo program on July 3rd and 4th, there win be a game each afternoon beginning at five o'clock. Watch this paper next week for the line-tips. Bom—At .the Hardin hospital, Wednesday, June 20, 1934. to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Plaisted of Wyola, a nine-pound daughter. 0 Anyone wishing to buy recipe served at American Legion tea, call at Calderwoods’ Price, Ip 0 There will be no baseball game at Hardin Sunday, the local team playing the Fort Mackenzie team at Sheridan, Wyo. 0- FOR SALE—Four room furnish ed house and garage. Right price for quick sale. MRS. FRANK KOPRIVA. 25-1 Born—ln Hardin. Mont., on Wednesday, June 20. 1934, to Mr. and Mrs. Everett Morse, an 8 ! 4- pound son, the third child. The two others are girls. 0 Mrs. Gertie M. Terpening of Billings, who has been quite ill, was on Sunday brought to the home of her son, Lee Terpening, manager of the Hardin Sawyer store, and win make an indefinite visit at the home of her son. 0 J. Porter Kennedy, the Lodge Grass stockman, was in Hardin on business, yesterday. He re ports the grasshoppers so numer uss on the upper Rotten Grass that the chickens refuse to leave their coops, even for water. They are afraid the hoppers will get them. Note for “Wm “The better an Idea la, the quicker it Is copied—a fact which must be kept in mind when the idea Is eon ceived." —Joseph P. Day. ♦ 1 Chinese and Japanese Chinese civilization and culture is several thousands of years older than that of Japan and. in addition, the Chinese have shown themselves to have an initiative and creative power superior to that of the Japanese, whose facility In methods and adaptation, in turn, is superior to that of the Chi nese. FOR RENT, FOR SALE, ETC WANTED—Horses to pasture. Good feed, water, shade. Box 154, Hardin. 2tp. FOR SALE—Clover and alfalfa huller in good condition. Address L. L. SMITH, Laurel, Mont. Itpd. FOR SALE—I Black team geld ings, weight 2,800, well matched; Suitable for beet hauling. X Har din Tribune-Herald. 25-4 NowYouCan Wear False TeethWlthßealCoinfort Fasteeth. a new pleasant powder keeps teeth firinlv set. Deodorizes. No guinmv. eooev taste or feeling. To eat and laugh in comfort sprinkle a little Fasteeth on vour plates. Get it today from Sibley Drue Co. or vour drug gist. Three sizes. NOTICE OF DELINQUENT TAX SALE Notice is hereby given that on Fri day. July 13. 1934. in front of the county treasurer's office in Hardin. Bic Horn County. Montana, all prop erty upon which delinquent taxes for the vear 1933 are a lien will be sold at public auction, unless prior to said time said delinquent taxes, together with interest, penalties and costs due thereon are naid. A complete delinquent list of all persons and property in the countv now owing taxes is on file in the of fice of the countv treasurer. WALTER HAMMER. Countv Treasurer. Pub. June 15. 22. 29. July 6. 1934. CALL FOR WARRANTS Notice is hereby elven that the foliowine Bic Horn Countv. Montana, registered warrants are called for payment July 2. 1934. on which date interest thereon ceases: Countv General Fund warrants reg istered from Nov. 10 to Dec. 10. 1932. inclusive. Road Fund warrants Nos. 10630 to 10712. Inclusive, and All Road Fund warrants registered on and after Dec. 12. 1933. to June 15. 1934. Bridge Fund warrants Nos. 2792 to 2810. inclusive, and School District No. 29 registered warrants, as follows: Nos. 197. 196. 203. 207. 194. 195 and 200. Dated June 14. 1934. WALTER HAMMER, „ . _ _ Countv Treasurer. Pub. June 16. 22. 29. 1024. KITTENBALL SCHEDULE FOR THE COMING WEEK Following is the schedule for the Kittenball league during the coming week: Friday—C ric ke t Killers vs. Grease Hounds. Monday—P rune Peddlers vs. Legion. Tuesday—High School vs. B. B. B. B. Wednesday—Railroad vs. Fire men. Thursday—Open date for all comers. Friday—High School vs. Profes sors. Last Sunday, the Hardin base ball nine lost to the Moose nine of Billings, on the local diamond, by a score of 9 to 6 in a ten-inn ing game. 0 The Montana supreme court on Wednesday rendered a decision that A. H. Stafford, appointed to succeed himself as commissioner of agriculture by Governor J. E. Erickson just before the governor resigned, is entitled to hold his office for another term. Mr. Hansmeir of the Montana Pure Seed Growers* association, with headquarters at Bozeman, spent a few days in the county inspecting the registered alfalfa fields. This work is done through the office of the county agent in co-operation with seed growers of the county. Mr. Hansmeier reports about a 50% production of pure seed, this year and the- quality of the very best. Drought and grasshoppers have done serious damage to many of the fields of the county. SUNDAY SERVICES AT THE: METHODIST CHURCH Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, II a. m. We are glad to endorse the concert at the Congregational church, Sunday night Miss Mon tana: comes highly recommended and we bespeak: for her a good audlience;. REV. E. H. WENDLAND, Pastor. FOURSQUARE CHURCH Mrs. Aimee Semple McPherson will be in Mlles City, Sunday and Monday, June 24 and 25. Many of the members and friends are going up. to> Miles City to hear her; Sunday. Mt; and' Mrs. Fred Johnson, Foursquare evangelists and grad uates of Angelus Temple, are coming to Hardin to conduct re vival services in the Foursquare church. Rev. and Mrs. Johnson are gifted speakers and singers. A great treat Is in store for all. The campaign will start Sunday, July 8. The services are as fol lows: Sunday school, 10:00; classes for all. Morning worship. 11:00; sub ject, “The Valley of Dry Bones.” Sunday evening, 7:45; evan gelistic service, the subject be ing, “The Gospel Call.” Tuesday evening, 7:45, deeper teaching. Friday evening. June 29, will be question box night. We will answer many perplexing ques tions. If you have some ques tion that you would like to have answered, bring your question In and we will be glad to answer any Bible question you may send in. Come to the church where ev ery one is welcome. RYAN TWINS, Pastors. FRIED CHICKEN DINNERS With All the Trimmings— •• • • WHEN IN LODGE GRASS EAT AT THE NELSON CAFE Citizens of Big Horn County —Are You Interested? On a recent trip to the western part of the state I had submitted to me what I consider to be a very attractive business opportunity. After spending four days of thor ough investigation as to the merits this opportunity holds for the investor, I have myself become financially inter ested in a substantial way in same. Before returning to Hardin, I requested from my associates, in this adventure, permission to give to my friends and associates of Hardin and Big Horn county the first opportunity to participate with me in the proposition. My request was granted and I am now ready to sub mit my plans to anybody who is sufficiently interested to make inquiry, and I would like to suggest that any body who is interested in making some money for himself, see me. ED LAWLOR, Hardin, Mont. H. D. KENYON: FAMILY ARE HURT IN. AUTO WRECK Front Tire Blows Out, Car Goes Into Ditch When Near Blue Earth; Minn. Loren P. Kenyon Tuesday ev ening received a message from Wabasha, Minn., stating that his parents, Mr. and. Mrs. H. D. Ken yon and granddaughter, Betty Jane Mikel, aged. 14;. were serious ly injured about noon that day, in an auto accident near Blue Earth, Minn.,.. 170) niilfes south of Wabasha, where- they had been visiting at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Mikel’. They had only that morning' started on the return trip to Hardin. While de tails are lacking, it' appears that the right front tire blirtr out, throwing the car out of control and that it landed in a ditch and was totally wrecked. All three occupants of the- car were found in an unconscious condition by a motorist and taken to a hospital, where it was found' Mrs. Kenyon had suffered a fractured limb and her face was crushed: The ex tent of the injuries to the young girl had not bben determined. Mr. Kenyon escaped with mihor injur ies. Bobby Kenyon, who accom panied his grandparents east re mained at the home of his aunt and uncle in Wabasha and es caped the wreck. The message stated the family were being tak en back to Wabasha by ambu lance and that particulars would follow by mail. Further details are anxiously awaited here. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH SERVICES NEXT SUNDAY During the absence of Rev. and Mrs. Hannant' of the Congrega tional church' at the General Conference of Congregational and Christian churches at Oberlin, Ohio, June 2F to 27; Rev. (X A. Bentley of Crow Agency will fill the pulpit both Sunday mornings during Rev. Hannant’s absence. 11 a.m., Morning worship ser vice. The -choir will furnish spec ial music. Next Sunday morning Rev. Bentley’s sermon subject will be: “The Bread That Satisfies;” 10 a.m. Sunday school; There win* be Sunday school sessions until" the middle of July, when the church takes a month of vacation.- Sunday morning, July r, he will preach on the subject, “Above the Average-.”" We carefully clean and Demoth your heavy garments and deliver them in sealed, Moth-proof bags. FISCHBACH TAILOR SHOP, Phone 161 W. ts U amiHnatifm causes you Gas, Indigestion. Headaches. Bad ' Steep, Pimply Skin, get quick raitet with ADLKRIKA. Thor- I ongb action, yet gentle, safe. Beiseiesi SIBLEY DRUG CO. HAIL INSURANCE WILL AS SURE AN INCOME FROM HAILED GRAIN Grain growers may obtain hail insurance from any county assessor. Full infor j mation may be obtained from ; any assessor or from the State Board ot Hail lasurance Helena, Montana PAGE SEVEN