Newspaper Page Text
NOW! TONI HOME PERMANENT TWICE AS IASV-TWICE AS FAST % New Toni Refill Kit. New Photo Method Directions show how Toni now waves many types of hair in as little as 30 minutes. qoo MEW/ X hi \5PINCur/ers\ h Complete Set New Toni SPIN Curlers. No more rubber bands —all plastic - all - in - one ! Grips ... spins... locks with a flick of the finger. *|20 M ($2 when bought separately) :/ We might as well get 'em all in here at the same time. Richard Hudnut Home Permanent Refills . ... $2.75 $1.50 $ 2.00 $ 1.00 Rayve Home Permanent . Refills ... Portrait Home Permanent $2.00 Kit, Closeout for . ■. Toni Gold Stripe Kit .-. Refills . . 59c $2.75 $1.50 : M z ri s O for P*** m fcfinotis ,r On* Deluxe Set Plus Ref ill... Both for I ^ * h . ' » $ INK iX younXMfa . 4. • ,1 $ 2 25 . y ■4 32 g in focfory-packed combination unit DELUXE SET including 52 professional plastic curlers Regular price $2.25 prices plus lax REFILL Complete except for curler» Regular price $1.25 During introductory, get Deluxe Set and one extra permanent for $2.25. Use one permanent. If not finer than any given yourself at home previously, return Deluxe Set complete with empty bottle and purchase price will be refunded. But you will be delighted. You will then have one permanent to give to another member of the family — or a friend. Where your Drug Store Dollar goes farther. PRICES PHARMACY THE REXALLDRUG STORE SANDE DRUG CO. — LAU/Z£L.MONTANA 3 <ê> Chapman Pharmacy open all day next Sunday, July 10 El-Merchant Prince Dies With Only $6,176 LONDON.—Harry Gordon Self ridge, American-born merchant prince of London who once enter tained Kings, died with only 1,544 pounds ($6,176) to his The size of his estate was dis closed when his will for probate. Selfridge died in May 1947. name. was filed Selfridge made and lost two for tunes. At the height of his he was a confidant of European royalty and nobility and enter tained lavishly on his English tales. He founded the London store that still bears his name after he had worked in Chicago with Marshall Field, who taught him department-store operation. The London store encountered financial troubles during the depression. Selfridge retired in 1939 with a con tinuing salary of 2,000 pounds ($8 000) a year. He was born in Ripon. Wis., and spent his boyhood in Jackson, Mich. career es A Billion Dollars Two thousand years is the time required to spend a billion dollars —if you spend it at the rate of one dollar a minute. i j j • l i ' ; j ; 1 I : I JI'tir f ! ' • B. ,UI ÏÏ \ FRISCH CUB ... Frankie Frisch, newly appointed manager of the Chicago Cubs, buttons his shirt in I dressing room at Wrigley Field, i Frisch succeeds Charley Grim who became a club vice-president in the Wrigley organization. m, Care of Gloves Gloves should never be washed I if they have been dry cleaned. I New 'Electric Brain Will Solve Problems, Translate Tongues LOS ANGELES.—A new type of ma calculating j "electric-brain" ! chine, capable not only of perform : ing complex mathematical prob , lems, but even of translating for j eign languages, is under construc I tion at the U.S. bureau of standards laboratory at the University of California's institute of numerical analysis here. While the exact scope which the machine will be given in the trans lating field has not been decided, the scientists working on it say it would be quite possible to make it encompass all the 60,000 words in the Webster Collegiate Dictionary, with equivalents for each word in as many as three foreign languages. The machine, tentatively dubbed the "Zephyr," involves two basic advances in design over the pre vious the Eniac, Edvac, and Univac ma chines. "electric brains"—notably Its "memory" for numbers and "commands" fed into it, instead of being based on vacuum tubes or containers of mercury in which electric impulses are stored, will be based on a cathode-ray tube of the same sort as is used in tele vision. This will increase its scope and speed and greatly simplify its design. This "short-term" memory will be supplemented by a magnetic drum, which is just an elaboration of the magnetized wire or tape now used for record broadcasts and other sounds. It is on this drum that the ma chine's vocabulary can be stored. Words are converted into the same sort of electrical symbols by which the machine assimilates numbers for calculation. When a foreign word for trans lation is fed into the machine in the form of an electro-mathemati cal symbol on a tape or a card, the machine will run through its "mem ory," and if it finds that symbol on record, will emit automatically a predetermined equivalent— thé English word. Food Leader One of the rising young giants in the field of canned foods is frozen orange juice concentrate. The pack for this year is expected by food processors to be around 9 million gallons or 192 million six ounce cans. Air Minded Arizona Practically every community in Arizona now has its own landing field for airplanes. In addition, many winter resorts, hotels and ranches in the Valley of the Sun around Phoenix have their own private landing strips. j m Found In A Pocket ... HOWDY FOLKS: Well here we are back again after a couple weeks of relief for you. Hope you missed us. The boss man was in for re pairs and alterations and wasn't in the mood for thinking up corny palaver. It is rumored that every time a nurse came into his room he queried "a friend or ennema?" On the thought of surgery we recall a recent article about the wonders of face lifting by a certain plastic surgeon. Face lifting may be all right for women, but if a man is at all patient his will grow right up thru his hair. Of course the Vigilanties had their own method of lifting faces—with a rope. We have a notion that the face that is lifted by these plastic surgeons falls again when it sees the bill. I ia 0 Some men have such long faces their barbers should charge them double for a shave. I E Speaking of charges, we will let you down easier than you think. Try one of our nice cool and crisp shirt jobs at 23c. l' I' A lot of folks around here will tell you it's a good value, and Mom will save a lot of fretting over a hot ironing board. E 1' SCOTT'S Cleaners & Laundry il il He Thrifty—Phone Three-fifty a 11 ! ' | «Kr: üï y d ASSIS! ilfj if( if I PHILADELPHIA.—"I am inno cent!" Lawyer Herbert L. Maris hears that plea almost daily from men behind prison bars. Sometimes they say they didn't commit the crime for which they were convicted. Sometimes they insist the sentence was unjust and illegal. In nearly 400 such cases, span ning 43 years, Maris has proved the prisoner was right, their freedom—or terms. His work started out as a hobby. Today it is a full-time job. necessi tating employment of three investi gators. Maris began as a corporation lawyer. Now 68. his hair gray and thin, he spends little time on his civil practice. Maris is bespectacled, heavy-set. His brown eyes twinkle as he peers at you from a desk top cluttered with papers. A five-cent tablet serves as his appointment book. Voice Carries Authority He is a conservative dresser, favoring gray and brown suits. His mellow voice carries authority and conviction. He once was in politics and served several years on Phila delphia's city council. Maris first heard the cry "I'm innocent" in 1906. The son of a Methodist minister was convicted of forgery. Maris proved the youth was the victim of a prank and won his release. Since then he has gained freedom for several accused of murder. Maris never takes a case as the defense attorney at a trial. He steps in after sentencing and only if he's convinced justice was not done. "Somebody must send for me." Maris says. "Then I check up on the case. If I believe there has been injustice I step in. I send investigators to the place where the crime occurred. We start from scratch. "The first thing—the most im portant thing—is to learn if every body in the case told the truth in court." Maris, born a Quaker but now a member of the Christian Science church, is critical of "overzealous" police officials. "When a serious crime is com mitted some one usually goes to jail, even if it's the wrong person. Authorities want the crime marked 'solved.' " He has won shorter jail Avoids Publicity Maris shies from personal pub licity. He prefers to remain behind scenes, insisting he works better without newspaper headlines. "I guess my work can't remain anonymous, but I can," he says. That's why he refuses to pose for newspaper pictures. Generally, he gets little money in fees from clients—prisoner clients, that is. "I try to get the prisoner to pay expenses of the investigation. I can't afford to pay the money out of my own pocket. Of course, if a man has no money and I'm cer tain he's innocent I take his case just the same." Maris visits penitentiaries in the Philadelphia area two and three times a week. He interviews pris oners—usually 10 a week—and checks their stories. If he's con vinced a man is telling the truth he'll help. ISTS. '1 STATEMENT OF CONDITION 0 I I The Yellowstone Banks 9 1) i I June 30, 1949 il I Columbus, Montana $ 597,604.06 10 , 000.00 • 3,750.00 Combined Statement $1,474,858.85 10 , 001.00 7,500.00 Laurel, Montana $ 877,254.79 RESOURCES Loans and Discounts. Bank Building . Stock in Fed. Res. Bank Bonds and Warrants . $ 107,373.54 U. S. Government Bonds . 1,476,880.36 Cash and Due from Banks. I 1.00 3,750.00 $ 334,004.70 3,331,663.36 907,911.42 2,989,225.58 1,695,460.85 5,361,028.91 $ 226,631.16 1,854,683.00 I 787,549.43 2,371,803.33 $3,600,579.64 $6,853,388.76 5 $3,252,809.12 Totals. LIABILITIES Capital Stock Surplus. Undivided Profits Deposits . i $ 100,000.00 150.000.00 74,407.54 $ 324,407.54 6,528,981.22 50,000.00 75,000.00 48,827.85 $ 173,827.85 3,426,751.79 $ $ 50,000.00 75,000.00 25,579.69 $ 150,579.69 3,102,229.43 $3,600,579.64 $6,853,388.76 $3,252,809.12 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS B. M. HARRIS, President B. MEYER HARRIS, Vice President J. W. CORWIN, Vice President M. E. SLAYTON, Director Totals I il IRVIN M. BLACK, Cashier E. M. BLACK, Auditor R. F. STEVENS, Cashier H. S. BARROW, Assistant Cashier WALTER REITER, Assistant Cashier i AT YOUR SERVICE Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I i t 7 - < A < A / < 7 ' <> <» < > < I # J [ < • < > J [ < > J [ <> . < J ♦ \\ < > {[ < > 4 J [ 4 J [ <> \ | < • — * < i < > ' [ < > J [ <, 4 % < > Friday and Saturday, July 8 and 9 ;; Charmin Toilet Tissue, o facial tissue ;; soft, 4 rolls. No. 2 cans Shurfine size 3 Peas, 2 for. :i» 39 c c No. 2V 2 can Old Yellowstone Pork and Beans 24-oz. jar Nalley's Dill Pickles 19 23 < > c c ♦ 4 Van Camp's Spaghetti I with Meat, i 2 jars. No. 2 y 2 can Bronko Freestone Peaches... 33 33 c c il Super Suds a Price Sale 2 picas. 43c No. 2V 2 can Libby's Fruit Cocktail. I 37 c o ♦ 14-oz. bottles Hunt's Catsup, 2 for. U 33 i c * ;il Lipton Tea, 14 -lb. pkg. 33 C Folger's Mountain Grown Coffee, 1-lb. can.. <> 33 31 c c 16 Tea Bags. • 1.09 I.V Realm Tomato Soup, 2 cans 2-Ib. can. O Wold's Grocery ♦ <> <> o o ♦ ♦ 0 PHONES 170 and 171 o ♦ ! ♦ Clean Milk Pre-rinsing ef milk and cream cans immediately before they are used with pure clean water is recommended as a means of re ducing bacterial counts and pre venting sediment contamination. Hooded covers placed over the can lids will also help in keeping sedi ment out of the milk or cream. Pinus Ponderosa Pinus ponderosa is the botanical name for ponderosa pine, one of the most widely used building ma terials in use today. I Farm Wealth More than three million farms— well over half the nation's total— now gross less than $1,500 a year. Per capita income of persons on farms amounted to a little over $900, as compared with $1,569 for non-farm persons. Eat a Good Breakfast It has been proven that hus bands who eat nourishing break fasts do better work in their jobs, and children who eat good break fasts get better grades in school and lose less time in sickness. > ••• - \ r YOU TIME v WORK and MONEY/ a} an ß M.C.P. Jam «Jelly ft PECTIN