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Image provided by: Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT
Newspaper Page Text
f 1 Sand Gravel For Concrete and Fill Immediate Delivery Top Soil and Fill Dirt c j Farm Roads Graveled ; KRUG BROS Phone 0302-J-4 The Outlook Says: Mr. and Mrs. Roy Green and daughter Patsy spent the week end as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Speare and family in Bozeman. J. H. ALBERTUS Contracting and Building PHONE 271-M Up SS VIE s « il Boy . . . what you can do with a good can of paint... so little does so much to add color, brightness and* beauty to your home. I —N THIS milCS FEATURE j IS 3T E « I REVIVES OLD BRUSHES QUICK, GENTLE I PAINT BRUSH I QUNI CLEANER 23c CLEANER P. 9c ■ 4«UNll| ' Box Box V." Combination Offer! One-Half Pint of SCREEN ENAMEL cmd Applicator Easy! Lovely! Thrifty! 29c only MIRACLE WALL FINISH THAT'S Best quality screen paint in block, green, or white with quick, non-clogging applicator. IRAOt 40,000,000 Rooms are decorated with Kern-Tone right over wallpaper, paint, plaster. 181 3 79 te PER GAL * paste form wal PRESSURE SPRAYER 10.50 DOES AN AVERAGE ROOM! xÿ*' T ' tiuoronte«!by Good Housekeeping ; J $ THERE'S ONLY ONE GENUINE HEM-TONE! ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTEt '„C> I AVALON 3 Ve-gal. capacity tank. Used for insecticides, cold water paints, white wash, etc. D-handle pump, leak proof tank and valve. Pres sure tested. Pjtïf.ï/hOliR. > IÜ COVERS MOS? Non-Crumbling READY-TO-USE "s . SPECIAL • V Wallpaper Cleaner /MumA K Special Price—Discontinued Colors, while they last, per gal... *2.95 15c SEE US FOR HARDWARE HARDWARE - PLUMBING - HEATING - PAINT APPLIANCES AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Laurel Trading Co "Established 1906" Laurel Montana Phone 5 Phone 5 Mr. and Mrs. Lester Tisor of Medora, N. D., visited here last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Tisor. Sgt. and Mrs. Edward Douglas Boyd, son-in-law and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Packard, are the parents of a daughter, born Monday, March 21, at the St. Vincent hospital in Billings. The baby has been named Susan Jo. Cut-Rate Sols Cut Costs Inflation-badgered Americans might seek relief in Peru where the dollar is king. According to Pe ruvian International airways, de valuation of the sol has resulted in such bargains as a shoe shine for three cents, American movies 26 cents, and an average taxi ride 16 cents. A room at Lima's Hotel Bolivar with three meals and five o'clock tea costs 60 sols about $4.00. Calendar of Coming Events Friday, March 25. "Three Little Women" will be presented by senior Girl Scouts at 7:30 p. m., high school audi torium. Saturday, March 26. A bingo party and pie social sponsored by the Byam P.T.A. will be held in the evening at the school. The ladies will bring pies, and the bingo prizes are to be furnished by Laurel business firms. Friday, April 1. The Cub Scout pack meeting has been postponed to the above date and will be at the Metho dist church. Monday, April 4. Laurel Federated club will j meet at the home of Mrs. Neil Baker with Mrs. Harold Priice as cohostess. The program, in charge of Mrs. F. E. Mayes, will be on "Montana Cities, W. G. LaFlesch will have charge of the music. Mrs. Sense of Bees Bees have a sense of smell. They can distinguish between various odors. Shipkey Becomes Grizzlies' Head Coach W i ir:; : 1 ■ / W'.i » / II I » i V 3 ...3, V % - . \ 8 jt ■i . I taafr fh Here are Ted Shipkey, recently appointed head football coach of the Montana State University Grizzlies, and members of his family. Left to right are Ton, Mrs. Shipkey and Jim, while up per left are Ted, Jr., and Ship key himself. Born in Great Falls but reared and educated in name ha California, Shipkey's been connected with western football several years. The new Grizzly coach is a ; former Stanford star and has j been end coach of the profes sional Los Angeles Dons since 1946. His war service was in the army air corps, which he joined in 1942 and where he rose to the rank of major. His coach ing career began at Sacramento Junior college in 1927, followed by moves to Tempe State col lege of Arizona in 1930 and later to the University of New Mex ico where he was head coach from 1937 to 1943. His training was of the double wing system under Glenn (Pop) Warner, although he has since coached the T system the past few years, with emphasis added on a spread formation as part of the offense. Clyde W. (Cac) Hubbard, former director of athletics and head coach at Denver university, ■ CLYDE W. (Cac) HUBBARD was recently appointed director of athletics at Montana State university. He has had exten sive experience in both coaching and athletic administration, is a graduate of Oregon State col lege, and has a wide acquaint ance in the Pacific Coast con ference, of which Montana is a member. Before going to Denver he was manager of athletics at Oregon State, head coach and director of physical education and athletics at the College of Puget Sound and director of adult, junior and juvenile physical education of the Olympic club in San Fran cisco. London Plans to Do Av/ay With Street Fire Alarms LONDON. — Since boys will be boys and pull street corner fire alarms just for the fun of it, Lon don is going to do away with them, it was announced by the leader of the London county council, I. J. Hayward. Fire calls like those for police and ambulance will be made instead by any telephone. "It was a shocking thing," Hay ward said in a press conference, "that from March 1 to Dec. 31 of last year more than 75 per cent of j all fire calls given by fire alarms ■ should have been false." False alarms over the telephone. [ he added, are less than a fifth of I those from street fire alarms. Removal of the street alarms | will be gradual and will be accom panied by an increase in street telephone booths. I I Bass Fiddle Player Ends Door-Passage Problems NEWARK, N. J. — Peter Rug- | giero, 30, a professional bass fid dle player, has been wrestling for years with the problem of how to carry his instrument through re volving doors. He came up with the solution, a bull fiddle that shrinks. He worked two and a half years to perfect his invention. The collapsible fiddle divides in to three parts and is made of ply wood. The sections fit together with the fingerboard Inside. Every thing goes into a case about the size of that used for a saxophone. ~~ In,....-'., r.,i,„ r> _ rr S B:?,,V Bo ° m . Z .°° mS Population to XI IMillion ! TOKYO.— Japan s amazing post " ar bab y boom has even the stalls ticians Rasping, ! Abettcd by a declining death ! ra * e- * bo bumper baby crop has hoI P ed up Japan's population to 80.800,000. This is a population gain of eight million since Japan's surrender. Repatriation of Japanese soldiers and civilians from abroad counted for slightly more than half 1 the gain. I I ac On the basis of present estimates by occupation experts. Japan has 568 persons per square mile. Previously statisticians figured Japan would have a population of 80 million by 1950. With that figure already exceeded ! by nearly one million, they now anticipate a population of 84 mil- ! Hon by 1950, more than 90 million ! by 1955 and more than 100 million by 1970. What has some Americans and Japanese thinking is that Japan is faced with a scarcity of everything —but babies. D00RBUSTERS at VA UGHN'S SAVE! SAVE! • SAVE! FLANNEL—Sizes 4-16 97 PAJAMAS Values to 2.25 AAAA^ÄAAAAÄAAAAA^AAA^A^A^AAAAAAAAiAAAAA^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^^M^V MEN'S 59 FINE KNIT * T-SHIRTS ■ GIRLS' 1.25 JEANS Were to 1.98 ^A^AAAA^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^AAA^^^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^AAA^^^^^^^^^^ GIRLS' 1.97 i DRESSES AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^AAAAAAAAAAAAAA^AA^^^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^^^^^^W^^^N MEN'S 4.00 DRESS SHOES Values to 7.95 ■ MEN'S 75* WORK SHIRTS Size 141/2 ^AA^A^AA^^AAAAAA^AAAAAAA^AAA^AA^SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^^^^^^^^^ GABARDINE SHIRTS 4.00 ^A^AAAA^^AA^A^A^AAAA^^AAAAAAAAAAAA^^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^^^AA^AAA^^^^^^V In Case of Fire Always be prepared for Are. When entering buildings, choose your nearest exit and alternate path of escape. Locked or ob structed exits or fire hazards | should be reported. If burned in a Sre, report for medical treatment. I Many burns or smoke inhalations i which do not at first seem serious | have fatal results. I f w w m NEW PRICES!! at FOR MIA ! - Blue Bell Bib Overall 2.49 Osh Kosh Bib Overall * 1.49 Chambray Shirts 1.29 Work Socks 29« ' Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllll FOR WOMEN ! ■ Western Girl Jeans 2.9» were 3.29 09c Brassieres Size 32-36 - Baby's Eyes Although attending physicians will discover any eye abnormality ii. a baby during treatment after birth, parents should be alert to notice troubles that may develop thereafter. Abnormalities to be looked for include inequality in the size of pupils, cloudiness, dis coloration, or deviation from the regular round shape of a pupil.