PAGE EIGHT
Happy
New Year
The Montana Power Co.
HARDIN, MONTANA
BILLINGS SUGAR FACTORY
MAY NOT OPERATE IN 1935
Strikers and Officials Fail to
Iron Out Differences at
Conference Tuesday.
Representatives of the striking
Great Western Sugar Co. em
ployes and officials of the com
pany failed to settle their dif
ferences at a conference held
Monday and Tuesday of this week,
according to latest information
from Billings where the strike for
higher pay at the Billings beet
sugar factory has been in effect
the past three weeks. The fac
tory, immediately following the
strike, was closed down for the
season and the remaining 70,000
Safeway Stores
PRICES EFFECTIVE FRI. AND SAT., DEC. 28 &29
COFFEE—Airway ft 20 c
White King 28c
Green Beans no. 2 can
Green Gold CEREAL sft 35 c
" 100% WHOLE WHEAT
SUGAR 25-lb. bag 1.43
PINEAPPLE “S io»MN63e
Hour ! 3 4S
SMOKE SALT ’ M » 77 c
MILK 4 tall cans 25c
Jam DELICIOUS sft pail 45c
Vaneties
SYRUP = 10 lb. 57c
SOAP CHIPS X* 51 m 3O C
Tomatoes“ 2 -25 c
ORANGES EXTRA , ARGE MZ- 35 c
LEMONS FANC¥ doz. 29 c
CABBAGE REAL SOLID »2 C
ONIONS YELLOWSWEET 9ft 25c
tons of sugar beets were shipped
to the company’s factory at Lov
ell, Wyo., where they were pro
cessed into sugar.
The officials of the company, in
a statement Tuesday, expressed
doubt that the factory would
operate in 1935.
Wednesday morning picketing
of the factory was resumed by
the strikers and when a party of
factory employes, led by Supt.
Doherty, entered the factory
grounds, they were assaulted and
one employe suffered a broken
jaw.
*
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. S. Bailey
celebrated their twenty-second
wedding anniversary at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Walker on Crawford avenue.
the HARDIN TRIBUNE-HERALD
Register Your
Baby—Results
Over 4,000 Babies Born During
the Past Year Have So Far
Been Registered.
Helena, Dec. 26—At the expira
tion of the first month following
the distribution of birth census
cards in the Montana ‘’Register
Your Baby” campaign, 5,208 cards
had been received by the bureau
of vital statistics, state board of
health, from Montana parents.
Of this number of cards 955
did not apply to the 12-months
covered by the census, viz, Oct. 1,
1933. to Sept. 30, 1934, and their
elimination left 4233 coming with
in the scope of the survey.
Taking for a preliminary basis
the Montana registration for the
year 1933. or 8950, the reports
received so far cover slightly less
than one-half of the known births
for the year.
In the course of the survey, up
to the present, reports have been
received for 175 babies of whose
births no record was on file with
the bureau. In a 1! of these cases
more complete information is be
ing sought in order that the regis
tration of those babies may be
effected
Although the publicity cam
paign in Montana is being closed
it is expected that several hun
dred cards will subsequently be
r(X . e ived and the returns made
mor? nearlv complete.
One result of the
campaign has been that the in
creased three times over the
terest of th» public to birth reg
istration has been aroused, as Is
evidenced bv the fact that the
number of inquiries received by
th? board of health regarding
earlier registrations have in
numbers in periods prior to the
opening of the compaign.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
SERVICES NEXT SUNDAY
10 a. m. Sunday school. This
is Missionary Sunday. Members
who want to hear the story should
come early.
11 a. m. Morning worship. This
will be a New Year’s service with
inspiration for beginning another
year with its lessons to be learned,
tasks to be performed and joys
and sorrows to be met. The
church desires to be a help to ail
in the days as they come and go.
There will be a special number by
the choir and a violin offertory
solo bv George Marquisee. whom
all will be glad to hear again. The
pastor will speak on a New Year’s
theme. All are welcome to attend
who have no other church home.
6 p. m. Senior C. E. Rev. N. E.
Hannant will lead the devotionals
and Margaret Swindle will pre
sent the lesson study in the
theme, “How To Make Our
Dreams Come True,” a New Year’s
lesson. All members and friends
who are still in town are urged
to be present.
7:15 p. m. Adult discussion
group. Chapters 12 and 13 of the
book of Mark will be considered,
those attending being asked to
read the lesson at home. Come
and enjoy the exchange of ideas
in these studies. The meetings
are very informal.
4 p. m. Monday. Junior C. E.
Thursday afternoon, Jan 3, the
regular meeting of the Ladles’
Kev. N. E. HANNANT.
Pastor.
FOURSQUARE GOSPEL CHURCH
You are invited to the services
of the Foursquare church, a
church where everyone is welcome
and the Bible is preached from
cover to cover.
New Year’s Eve we will have a
“watch service.” Four of our young
neople will be preaching on the
Foursquare Gospel. l-” Jesus the
Savior,” Ravmond Morissette: 2-
“ Jesus. the Baptizer with the Holy
Suirit.” Margaret Denton: 3-
“ Jesus. the Healer.” Ida Doane:
4-“ J esu s, the Coming King.”
Genevieve Denton. We will have
a special musical program and
lots of good old-fashioned sing
ing. There will be an illustrated
message. There will be two kings,
one. “King 1934,” Raymond Mor
issette, and he will give "King
1935” good, sound advice: “King
1935” will be Jack Barnette. A
song will be sung after each part
of the advice is given. Come and
join us in the “watch service.”
The week's services are as fol
lows:
Sunday school, 10 a m., classes
for all.
Morning worship. 11 a.m.
Sunday evening. 6:45. crusader's
service.
Sunday evening, 7:30. evangelis
tic service and special musical
nr ©gram. Subject, "TOiat Will
You Do With Jesus.”
Monday evening, 8. ‘“Watch
night” service. A special pro
gram is being planned.
There will be no Tuesday night
service on account of "watch
night” service.
Friday evening, 7:30, evangelis
tic service.
Come one and alt
RYAN TWINS.
Pastors.
george a. marquisee
CHRISTMASING AT HOME
George A. Marquisee, only son
of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Marquisee,
a sophomore at Syracuse Univers
ity, New York, majoring in pub
lic school music and nunoring in
violin, arrived Saturday evening
to spend the holiday vacation
with ills parents, Mr. and Mrs.
S. J. Marquisee. This is George’s
first visit home in a year and a
half.
George was chosen by the Chi
Mu Alpha fraternity to represent
the fraternity at the national
convention in Milwaukee, W 13.,
Dec. 26 and 27, but declined the
honor, as to accept would have
prevented him being with his par
ents at Christmas time. He will
visit here until January 3, when
he will leave for Syracuse to re
sume his studies, Jan. 7.
George makes his home with
his uncle, Jacob Marquisee, who
for eight years following the
World war was a resident of Har
din. being engaged in the cloth
ing and gents’ furnishing goods
business here with ’ his nephew,
S. J. Marquisee of the Model
Clothes Shop. Jacob Marquisee
also took an active part in the
civic life of Hardin, serving as
president of the Hardin Chamber
of Commerce and in 1926 was
chairman of the committee hav
ing charge of the observance of
the fiftieth anniversary of the
Custer battle.
George is a product of the Har
din public schools, having started
in the grades and was graduated
from Hardin high school with the
class of 1933. He specialized on
the violin, on which instrument
he is unusually proficient, and
Christmas morning by invitation
played at St. Joseph’s Catholic
church. He is making splendid
progress in his studies at Syra
cuse University. He is being
cordially greeted by his host of
Hardin friends, who are glad to
see him again.
SAWYER’S r
PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MON„ DECEMBER 28-29 & 31
STORE CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY
rm Direct from California. Let us help you with
ANOTHER CAR FRESH VEGETABLES your NEW YEAR’S Dinner. Large assort
* ment of FRESH. GREEN VEGETABLES
Lettuce 2 for 13c 4 heads 25c
CAULIFLOW’R | CARROTS j CUCUMBERS ! BEETS ; ONIONS
Snowball I O'" ! H.th.us. I ' Yellow
• Bunches | ; Green Tops J
1O c LB ' ' Bunch 5 C * Each 1O C ! Bunch 5 C • 7ft 1
PARSLEY | TURNIPS । RADISHES I CABBAGE ; POTATOES
i i ! J
Fresh j Green Tops j Fresh • Solid ! „ , _
i J | । Netted Gem
Bunch g C ♦ Bunch g C } Bunch g C ! LB. 21/ 2 C • 13ft 25 C
r» • ARIZONAS m p
Grapefruit 12 for 45c 5 tor Uc
PEANUTS : CANDY > CHOCOLATES i CORN . COFFEE
£?££ : : 5 lbs ’ 89c
1 2ft 19c • 49* ; i » 19 c
CAI 'T' New Car of Salt 1 /YQ
kJ /A I 1 ALL KINDS 100 POUNDS >•
MEN'S FURNISHINGS
Canvas GLOVES I
medium weight । underwear
PAIR lAC I MEDIUM WEIGHT QQc
rAln । io% Wool, $1.25. IFO
। Men Trousers
Live Gum Rubber 7 Oft I REAL VALUE V 7ft
| CORDUROYS, $2.98
GOOD LINE OF OVERALLS, JACKETS, SHEEP-LINED COATS, SHIRTS, WOOL
UNDERWEAR, SHOES, .MITTENS, GLOVES AND GOOD ASSORTMENT OF BLAN
KETS. Come in! Check your need with these items—Start the New Year right and
SAVE WITH SAWYER’S.
THE COST OF WAR
-In view of the growth of war
sentiment, Dr. Nicholas Murray
Butler of the Carnegie Endow
ment for Universal Peace, has
chosen a timely moment to bring
forward a solemn warning against
those who plot war as well as an
exhibit of how directly the loss,
the suffering and the distress
which nations are now suffering
are the effect of the World War.
Dr. Butler shows that according
to the best statistics obtainable
the World War cost 30,000,000
lives j and $400,000,000,000 in prop
erty. If that four hundred bil
lions had been put to constructive
use it would have built a $2,500
house and furnished this house
with SI,OOO worth of furniture,
and placed it on five acres of
land worth SIOO an acre and given
all this to each and every family
in the United States, Canada,
Australia, England, Wales. Ire
land, Scotland. France, Belgium,
Germany and Russia.
After doing this there would
have been enough money left to
give to each city of 20.000 inhabi
tants and over in all the countries
named a $5,000,000 librar- and a
$10,000,000 university.
And then out of the balance
we would still have sufficient
money to set aside a sum at 5 per
cent interest which would pay
for all time to come a SI,OOO
yearly salary each for an army
of 125.000 teachers, and in addi
tion to this pay the same salary
to each of an army of 125,000
nurses.
And after having done all this,
we could still have enough left
out of our $400,000,000,000 to buy
up all of France and Belgium,
and everything of value that
France and Belgium possess; that
is, every French and Belgian farm
home, factory, church, railroad,
street car—in fact, everything of
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1934.
of value in those two countries
in 1914.
Dr. Butler regrets that these
figures even do not tell the whole
story. He says they take no ac
count of the stupendous addition
to these losses which have been
and are the result of the economic
international war which is raging
today with great violence. Unless
the world’s leadership and the
world’s statesmanship can bring
that economic war to a quick end,
it must result and can only result
in happenings which in effect
constitute both national and in
ternational ecooomic suicide. —Ex-
cerpt from the Akron, 0., Bea
con-Journal.
♦ —
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Larkin and
children motored over from Miles
City where he is employed in the
Safeway store, and spent Christ
mas with the former’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James Matthew
Larkin.
SHERIFF’S SALK
MARY RAPPER. Plaintiff,
vs.
SUMNER L. DAHL and ANNA DAHL.
Defendants.
TO BE SOLD AT SHERIFF’S
SALE. On the 31st dav of January.
A. D. 1935. at two o’clock n. m.. at
the front door of the court house in
Hardin. County of Bi? Horn. State of
Montana, the following described
real Drooertv. to-wit:
The South Half of the Northeast
Quarter (S’ANE’zl). the Southeast
Quarter of the Northwest Quarter
(SEUNWU). the Southeast Quarter
and the East Half of the
Southwest Quarter (EUSWU). and
Lots Numbered Two. Three, and Four
(2. 3. 4) in Section Thirty (30). and
Ncrth Half of the .Northeast Quarter
the Northeast Quarter
of the Northwest Quarter (NE%-
NW*4). and Lot Numbered One (1)
in Section Thirtv-one (31). all in
Township Seven South (7). Ranee
Forty (40) East, of the Montana
Principal Meridian, in Bie Horn
County. Montana, containing 634.74
acres, according to the government
survey thereof, together with and in
cluding anv and all improvements
and appurtenances situate on or be
lonerine thereto. 4
H. E. VANCE.
Sheriff. Bier Horn County. Montana.
Dated December 22. A. D. 1934.
D. L. EGNEW. Hardin. Montana.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Pub. Dec. 28. Jan. 4. 11. 18. 1934.