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Churches | ——f 1 v & i REV. M. H. JUENGEL Pastor St. John's Lutheran church. ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH 402 Durland Ave. M. H. Juengel, Pastor Sunday school at 9 a. m. English service at 10 a. m. German Service at 11:05 a. m. Holy Communion will be célébrât ed Sunday, June 22. Registration on Saturday, afternoon, 2 to 5, and in the evening 7 to 9, in the school h° use - Sunday school teachers meet Thursday evening. • j Quarterly Voters' meeting, June ( 30, 7:30 p. m i The church service is not a poll- j tical convention. Do not send a delegate. Come and bring your family with you. * I CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Fifth at Penn. James H. Haueter, Pastor Sunday, June 22: Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m, N. Y. P. S., 7:15 p. m. Evangelistic service, 8 p. m. All other meetings are cancelled for the week because of the district camp meeting and assembly at Bil lings during the week. The Friendly Church with a Vital Message. OUR SAVIOUR'S LUTHERAN CHURCH and JOLIET LUTHERAN CHURCH « At Laurel: Bible classes and Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Services at 11:00 a. m. Last Testament to His Matt. 26:26-28. God's Church. The vacation Bible school will meet each day, except Saturday and Sunday, at 1:30 p. m. for the next I Concordia' our We welcome you to two weeks, send your children if they are four or over. The Bible camp opens at Red Lodge Sunday afternoon. Remember that the College Quartet will sing in church Saturday evening, the 21st. Liev Hanson, a student from Noi* way, who worked in the underground K ai e&y [f F A A « J 1 *rov i s? Ok iT* jÆ Your life is your own clay, so act Upon this real important fact— To build GOOD HEALTH, you should make sure You get our MILK, so fresh and pure. $ m YELLOWSTONE DAIRY All Dairy Products • & PASTEURIZED MILK * LA UREI, MOM T PHONE A liiiimiBitui * ■ The News 1 of LAUREL iaMMMKanrcBsinj A surprise party honoring the birthday of Miss Ethel Edwards was given by a group of friends at her home Tuesday evening. Attending were Mrs. Charles Staiger, Mrs. R. W. Easton, Mrs. Kenneth Olson, Mrs. Gaylord Easton, Mrs. Ralph Lumsdon, Mrs. Frank Heiser, Mrs. Fred Herman, Miss Jane Hemphill of Rapelje, Miss Eva Armstrong, Miss Lydia Michael, Miss Doris Ed wards and the honor guest, Miss Ethel Edwards. Announcement has been made that members of the Laurel Garden club and the Unity Garden club are to be guests at a meeting of the Park Citp Garden club in Har mony hall at Park City on Thurs day, June 26. All members are in vited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Anderson have had as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Don De Voe of Renton, Wash., who left Wednesday for a visit in Bismarck, N. D., and Mr. aand Mrs. James Tannehill of Tacoma, Wash. Mr. Tannehill was recently discharg ed from the army and the couple was en route to Glendive where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Anderson were guests Saturday at the wedding of their nepheW( Glen Starkweather, f- 0 Mi ss Betty Jo Evans, which took p j ace \ n the parsonage of the First Methodist church of Billings. Sun c j a y > Mr. and Mrs. Anderson were hosts at a breakfast for the couple, w jj 0 ] e ft on a honeymoon trip to Los Angeles. Mr and Mrs A> A> Edwards have returned after extended visits in Arkansas and California. They left Laurel in March. movement in Norway during the war will speak. The program starts at 8:00 p. m. A free-will offering will be taken. The boy's group will meet Thurs day at 6:30 p. m. At Joliet: Sunday school and Bible class at 7:15 p. m. each Sunday. Services at 8:00 p. m. • THE METHODIST CHURCH M. J. Wilcox, Pastor At Laurel: Sunday school at 9:45 a m. morning worship as pastor is at an nual conference. Calendar 'for this next week: Fri day, Circle meetings of the Woman's Society of Christian Service as fol lows: No. 1 at Mrs. Kenneth Walk No. 2 at Mrs. A. No er's at 1:30 p. m. Callahan's at 2 p. m. No. 3 at Mrs. T. S. Buford's at 2 p. m. No. 4 at Mrs John Dyer's at 2 p. m. No. 5 will have a picnic noon lunch eon at Mrs. Ted Webb's at Colum bus. parlor at 12:15 p. m. Bov Scouts at Scout hall at 7 p. m. At Park City: Sunday school at 10 a. m. No evening worship, as pastor is at annual conference. Calendar for this next week: Thursday (today) Woman's Society Tuesday, Rotary club at the Wednesday, of Christian Service at Harmony hall at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday, Boy Scouts at the school at 7:30 p. m. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ + + VETS MAIL BAG * ♦ ♦ + ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦ STUDENT VETERANS ADVISED ON LEAVE Leave applications from veterans attending summer school must be submitted 30 days in advance, in accordance with a new ruling by the veterans administration. Leave is earned at the rate of two and one-half days a month and subsistence allowances are paid dur ing the leave period. Veterans were told, however, that time taken as leave is deducted from their total amount of eligibility for training under G. I. Bill provisions. Veterans planning to take leave should apply to VA training officer at the school. FOUR MILLION MONTHLY PAID NORTHWEST VETS An average of $4,000,000 a month in pensions and compensation is be ing paid to veterans of all wars or peacetime service and their depend ants in the Pacific northwest, the veterans administrations reports. Of 16,000 dependents receiving checks at the rate of nearly $600,000 a month, 52 per cent are depend ents of deceased World war II vet erans. Living northwest veterans receiv ing disability compensation or pen sion number 72,000, approximately 76 per cent of whom are World war II veterans. total $3,400,000 each month. QUESTIONS OF THE WEEK Q. As a commissioned officer in the U. S. Public Health Service, I was assigned to duty with the army during the war. I have now return ed to the Public Health Service. Am j I eligible for G. I. Bill benefits? A. Yes, according to a recent Their benefit checks veterans administration ruling you are eligible. Q. Can I specify in my National Service Life Insurance policy that in event my wife remarries after my death, payment of the balance of insurance benefits shall be made to my mother? A.. No. Q. Is there any regulation re garding experience in obtaining a G. I. loan for business purposes? A. The law provides "that ability and experience of the veteran and the condition under which he pro poses to pursue such a business or occupation are such that there is reasonable likehood he will be suc cessful. Replace Warehouse On West Main Street A warehouse 30 by 60 feet on the N. P. right-of-way, West Main, is under construction this week for the Sherrow service station at Main and Second avenue. It replaces an older building that has been torn down. It is to be constructed of concrete pumice stone blocks and may be ready for occupancy by August 1. In the next block west and also on the railroad right-of-way the O. M. Wold company is demolishing and rebulding a warehouse on the south side of the street. The original is said to have been one of the oldest structures in Laurel. At one time it was located between tracks on the railroad wye. Around the Town Mrs. Bertha Jackson of Great Falls is visiting her sister, Mrs. R. B. Gannaway, mother of Mrs. M. J. Wilcox, at the Wilcox home this week. Na n Wilcox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Wilcox, returned home Monday morning from having com pleted her second year of study at Willamette University at Salem,! Ore. I I Arriving last week for a visit j j with Mr. and Mrs. Lou Franzen, j were Mr. Franzen's mother, Mrs. ! j Anna Franzen of Beaver Crossing, | j Neb., and his brother-in-law and sis I ter, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Jensen j j of Exeter, Neb. Mrs. Bertha Shively left last week to spend some time with her j J son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and j ! Mrs. D. Ray Shively and family of I Spokane, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Packard, | accompanied by their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rus- J j sell E. Packard of Forsyth, spent j j the past week enjoying a fishing i trip in Waterton Lakes, Alberta. They returned by way of Flathead and Ronan Lakes. Miss Marguerite Roscoe, science j and mathematics instructor at Lau- j rel high school for the past five j years, will attend Montana State i college at Bozeman next fall. She j will obtain her master's degree in mathematics there and will also in- ] struct. Miss Mary Mikel, who has been teaching at Belfry for the past three years, has been secured to teach in Laurel south school. is a graduate of the Eastern Mon tana State Normal school. She Waage Family Leaves For Norway June 20 Mr. and Mrs. Hilmar Waage and daughter Helen will leave June 20 for New York, where they will board the Norwegian liner "S. S. Stavang erfjord," bound for Bergen, Norway. On the return trip they will at tend the American Legion convention in New York and visit friends of They expect to be more than three Mr. Waage's. gone slightly months. Mrs. H. L. Moon was honor guest at a surprise birthday party when her family and friends entertained Saturday evening at her home. Pin ochle was played and a birthday lunch was served. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. John Laird, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wieber, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Gerard, Mrs. Helene Burke, the honor guest, Mrs. Moon, Mr. Moon, Darlene and Audrey Moon. High prizes for the men and for the women at pinochle went to Mr. Wieber, Mrs. Laird; and those receiving low were Mr. Gerard and Mrs. Moon. Mrs. Chet Eyer and Mrs. Mace Riddle were guests Saturday at the j luncheon and business session of ; the Montana Motor Transport aux iliary which met in the Commercial club at Billings. Members of the auxiliary took one of the tests given drivers applying for license which consisted of distance judging. The i meeting closed the group's activi- j ties until fall. Mrs. C. L. Starbard returned Sun- j day from a three weeks' visit at | Mr. h " d so '^ a Thomas of Columbus, Ohio, Starbard reports that a son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, May 27, and was named Larry Elbert. Mrs. There's a reserved seat for you at ROYSDON'S within reach of the beautiful new MRSlOt CH * \ \\ ■V. * 135 = & \ 4 \ a / Ms. I * ■- - : •V,: * l \ [i 1 i ' -X. \ \ \ \ jjî As advertised in the March 17 issue of LIFE. The whole wonderful world of music may now be yours to be directed from your favorite easy-chair ... at the instant command of your finger tips. You'll marvel at the realism with which the Farnsworth Chairsidc faithfully reproduces the most intricate passages of your favorite symphony. You'll be amazed at the simple, positive and dependable performance of its automatic record changer ... at the clear and brilliant tone of the radio. It's your key to the world of musical pleasure ... at a price that fits your budget. Cabinet available in walnut and blonde. Now proudly displayed at • • 9 Roysdon Furniture Store WEST MAIN STREET, LAUREL FARNSWORTH RADIO FOR IVIIT BOOM IN TOUI HOMI TNIRI'S A I tl||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||NIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi = NOTICE Of Closing S — ' — = — = SS == = The following Retail Grocery Stores will he closed _ = = = == ~ == ~ EE ~ EE — — zz: zzz = = == =: z= = == == __ ''RXh!^ii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiimii= FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY July 4 , 5 9 6 but will be open until 8 P. M. July 3. TUBMAN'S FOOD MART THE BOYS MARKET SCHESSLER & SONS H & L MARKET McCORMICK'S FOOD MART FRANK'S GROCERY Read Outlook Want>Ads .. • • •