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Laurel outlook. [volume] (Laurel, Mont.) 1909-current, August 31, 1949, Image 2

Image and text provided by Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86075258/1949-08-31/ed-1/seq-2/

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Prescriptions A Specialty
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MOBO Hobby Horse Tickets at Price's
1 Ticket with each dollar purchase
y'y
LAUREL
LOCOMOTIVE
COMPLETE UNE OF THE MEWEST
Parker Pens
$
Pencils
Thin lead....
1.00
NEW V
PARKER 21
SCHOOL BAGS
98c
Precision-made by Par
.5 ker from tip to cap ... a
remarkable pen value.
The only pen besides the
^ "51" which satisfactorily
* > * uses Superchrome Ink
that dries as you write. Uses other
inks, too.
Octanium point. Colors: blue , red,
green, black. Stain
less caps ... your
choice of point sizes.
ZIPPER PENCIL
BAGS
30c
Fast-action filler . . .
ELECTRIC RAZORS
$CJ00
$
15 t,.*23.50
(Sets, $8.75)
Schick, Sunbeam,
Rejnington
Q/Lw-meÂio
Parker 51
yyitet//
NEW
M
SEAFORTH
Shaving Bowl
$
1.10
Outstanding for beauty
and precision. Offers 14
remarkable advances ...
new filling ease . . . spe
cial safeguards against leaking ...
metered ink supply • • • many
others. Choose from 7 smart colors
and black. Lustraloy or gold-filled
caps. ..custom points.
(Sets, from $19.75)
Refills, 65c
CLOVIA DOLLS
*5.95
$1350
She cries, coos, drinks,
wets and sleeps
AND or
SURGICAL
ELASTIC
STOCKINGS
PUPPY PIPES
25c
and
*4.50
Chocolate flavored
rubber
up
OHIO NON-SKID SPOT PAD TRUSSES
For that tired, anemic feeling
BEXEL HIGH POTENCY Capsules with liver and iron,
100 for $5.95
Where your Drug Store Dollar goes farther.
PRICES PHARMACY
TME REXALLDRUG STORE
— LAU(Z£L,MONTANA 36 —
SANDE DRUG CO.
Price's Pharmacy open all day next Sunday, Sept. 4
Open a short time only. Labor Day mornins?
«
The News
of LAUREL


I
Complimenting Mrs. John Wold
on her birthday, a group of 14
friends and relatives surprised her
Friday afternoon. Mrs. Wold re
ceived many gifts and after an
afternoon of bingo, refreshments
featuring a birthday cake were
served.
Visitors at the J. W. Baldwin
home last week were Rev. and
Mrs. Donald BaMwin and family
of Merced, Calif.
:<iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiii»iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu
Insurance
20% Discount or More on Car, Fire,
Liability and General Coverage.
Why pay more when you can get it for less?
For your insurance needs at Lowest Rates see
A. A. MOSER
Phone 781
= 209 Second Avenue
ÜiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiu;
Charlotte and Darlene Decker,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Decker, are spending their vaca
tion visiting their grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. John Coyer, at Au
burn, Wash.
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Wold were Mrs.
Wold's aunt, Miss Pauline Drol
linger of Cheyenne, Wyo., and her
sister, Mrs. Ward Pope and son
Christopher of Allentown, Pa. On
Saturday morning the visitors left
to tour Yellowstone park.
Mrs. Ray Stevens and two chil
dren left Monday morning to drive
to Miles City where they will
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
L. A. Jacobsen. In Forsyth they
will be guests of Mr. Stevens'
mother, Mrs. Anne Stevens, and
will return to Laurel next week.
Says Some Firms
Violate State Law
On Eight-Hour Day
Robert C. Brown, chief of the
labor division of the Montana de
partment of agriculture, labor and
industry has requested the pub
lishing of the following:
I "A partial survey recently con-l
ducted by the labor division of
the Montana state department of
agriculture, labor and industry, in
a number of Montana cities dis
closes that a number of employ
ers of labor are occasionally, and
in a , few cases frequently, violât
ing the provisions of the state
eight hour law.
"The survey also shows that
most such violations occur in the
smaller establishments, i.e.
employing from one or two to 20
or 25 workers. Very few. viola
tions have been uncovered among
the larger concerns
UT ^ ,
"In most cases it appears that
• i , . r
the employer is not fully cogni
zant of the provisions of the Mon
tana labor code. Many employ
ers seem to think that it is ail
right to work employees in ex
cess of eight hours per day if
they pay overtime for the excess
hours; this is not so. The consti
tution of the state of Montana
" 'A period of eight hours shall
I constitute a day's work in all in
dustries, occupations, undertakings
1 and employments, except farming
those
.
states:
and stock raising; provided, how
ever, that the legislative assem
bly may by law reduce the num
ber of hours constituting a day's
work whenever in its opinion a
reduction will better promote the
general welfare, but it shall ha\'e
no authority to increase the num
ber of hours constituting a day's
work beyond that herein provid
ed.'
"In some occupations the work
j week is limited to not more than
! 48 hours. Among these are work
I in retail stores, restaurants, cafes,
lunch counters and other commer-,
cial eating establishments. Vio
lations of the section relating to
hours of labor in retail stores
are punishable by a fine of not
less than $50 or more than $600-,
or by imprisonment in the countv
jail for not less than 30 day^,
or more than seven months, or j
by both fine and imprisonment.
"The division of labor of the I
department of agriculture labor I
and industry, is charged with the i
- . , , , , »
enforcement of the labor laws of |
The department does
Montana.
not wish to persecute anyone but
their duties and responsibilities |
plain. They will appreciate
the full cooperation of all em-|
ployers that come under these pro
visions, in order that they may be J
saved the unpleasant duty of in-1
yoking the penalties that apply J
and the employer be saved em- j
are
barrassment and unnecessary ex
pense.
"Unless full cooperation is rea- j
lized it will become necessary to
take proper action to enforce the
law."
. - . - -
I r\ra I No\A/C lfc>mc
^ V« Q I I ' C vT j IICIII9
-
Mrs. J. J. Stahley was hostess
to a group of former classmates
Those present
Friday evening,
were Roberta Speare Ambrose of
Oakland, Calif., Georgia Richards
Meng of Oregon, Ila Easton Olson,
Lenore Combs Waddell, Leila Ba
ker Harris, Lillian Batt Sorg and
Kay Green LaPrath. The eve-
ning was spent in conversation,
and refreshments were served by
the hostess.
Fred Huntington celebrated his
tenth birthday by entertaining a
! group of his friends last Thurs-1
day evening. The group enjoyed
a wiener roast at his home, fol
lowed by a theater party. Those!
. rv • * J D 1 j •
present were David Baldwin,!..
Douglas Wold. Carl Dahl. Jack
and Donald Sekora, Pat Giblin)
David Alfers, Dick Egnew, Dick
Nolte and Don Nottingham.
Miss Shirley Wilson visited
friends here from Sunday until
Tuesday. She will also spend
some time in Billings before go
ing to Great Falls where she will
teach this year in the primary
department.
Thursday of last week Mrs. H.
A. Bundy, Mrs. Dominic Phelan,
Mrs. J. B. Heebner, Mrs. C. H.
Barney, Joan Greening and Patsy
Bundy drove beyond Red Lodge.
At the Evert cabin they joined
Mrs. Theodore Evert and Mrs.
Ray Finley and children for a
picnic. Mrs. Evert, Mrs. Barney
and Mrs. Heebner remained at the|'
cabins for the rest of the week
and were joined Saturday by their
husbands. Sunday the group cele
brated Mr. Heebner's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Price and
son Clyde and Mrs. Hugh Dickson
spent Thursday visiting relatives
in Billings. They were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Dickson.
Picnicking above Red Lodge
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Gruhlke, Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Barney
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dean and.
son Tommy. Mr. and Mrs. Dean
are from Marshall, Mich., and
have been visiting relatives here
the past month.
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Fountain i
of Spokane are visiting their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. !
Robert Harris. '

Laurel News Items
News was received here last
week that R. E. Schuett has been
i transferred to Duluth.
Mrs. Schuett and two daughters
have been living in Bismark and
( *'*0 soon move to Duluth. Mrs.
^ huet I t " a daughter of Mr. and
i Mr T V' ^ Heebner
Juban Maetzker of Lake Wood,
V f V' &
® 1 u , e 0 . ec hnology, S>
1^. has been a guest at the P
A - ^hnston home Last week he
£ as J? med bere by h,a . ™ ^
* rs ' . ' ' " Naetzker, j np „j nv
by plane ' Tbey lett Wednesday
to retu ™ to their home
by car '
. , .. .
But ' girls ' you d better not read
this because it might make you
^ al
madder than maybe you are al
reac jy
Dr . ' WaIter c . AIvar ez-to get
the worst out first _ says that wom .
en " m ake a mess of their lives be
cause they cons tantly blow in $10
worth of energy on a 10-cent prob
i e m.''
Dr. Alvarez, hero of the day that
he was, went on to declare that
women also "wear themselves out
trying to make over an ordinary,
good, kind, prosaic husband into
a Charles Boyer."
Mr. and
Exptrl Claims Woman Wasta
Too Much Tima on Triflat
ST. PAUL, MINN.—FeUas. gath
er 'round!
The doctor is senior consultant
of the division of medicine at the
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. He
gave the ideas above—and below
—at Ramsey county's (St. Paul's)
first health day program,
"shop too long and then take back
what they buy."
Now for the "below" part—
Dr. Alvarez claims that women
"Many women cannot make up
their minds quickly enough"—
1 h e doctor talking—"and
when they do reach a decision
they reopen
Some women
the matter again. )
court trouble for
themselves by trying to make a
L? a * n t^y little Lord Fauntleroy out
°* t a n °rmal noisy and active boy. I
Andl concluded Dr. Alvarez, |
women love to get themselves ;
ad upset havmg P° st rnortems
°, sorrows, tragedies and
Pleasantnesses "
, .? a VICe 0 tbe .. * Learn
A? ,. m ° re sensibly and com - I
0 ° y ' v ..
dT Al ~ *
Qlt . ,
unharmed. But—a mere male wrote
over
un
was
u-»L a _ u C k
I* « nMIlllHIl—
And So Is Her Daughter!
CHENEY, WASH.—Mother Is a
freshman—and so is daughter
Mrs. Fred McDaniel has enrolled
in the education department of
Eastern Washington college,
Her daughter, Mary Lou, is
freshman in business administra
tion.
a
--
West Coast Town Has
] REDWOOD CITY, CALIF.—There
was a stagecoach robbery in this
mue West Coast town recently.
a 50-year-old stagecoach was re-
[ ported stolen from a parking lot.
It had been brought here as a part
°f the 49'er roaco celebration.
I _
I
W
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4 i
£.
n
Found In
A Pocket . .
* HOWDY FOLKS:
1
Do y0U S " PP ° S ® f 16 ,® nn
i name "iron horse to the loconio
. t
tlve . ' n . the hopes f that
, would become a stable business.
. . ... . ...
* n J"* s now J 1 8
1°™*. ,n ' b The h # lo S , "2^
R ° on y smo es u .
„ ., , _ '
. .. ' b en . j° Ug ,. ^ 0U C f n -iv n , Pfm
£ acks ' f doe " n 4 necessarily mean
tbat a train has J ust passed -
v . . . ... j
ou , ave ? „„m.i,
P e °P e c 1 • ey
? pe t n f tbe P 1 u " n,an .
e * 1 air
era '
„ .. „
Frequently you can open a
Poker pot on anything, but it takes
jack . s °. r better to open a Pullman .
vindow '
-, ,
j, arria . R fA I
. ut ber * 8 a !
,n 1 ulIman cars -
„ ,
C ^tomer s are made with good.
\' 0r a P P easing service,
do our ^ to supply both '
Be Thrifty—Phone Three-fifty
I
I
i

t
SCOTT'S
Cleaners & Laundry
à
l
USE OUTLOOK WANT ADS
7%) O tocf
n
ylim
I
^7
J,
/
Friday and Saturday, Sept. 2 and 3
14-oz. bottle
Bronko
Fancy Catsup..
Bronko Home Style
Sliced Peaches, fancy,
heavy syrup,
No. 21/2 can....
16 «
33
C
No. 2 can Bronko
Small Whole
Green Beans, each
31
Scot Towels,
household size,
2 for.
C
33
C
Plee-Zing
Tomato Soup,
4 cans.
39«
M. C. P. Jam and
Jelly Pectin,
3 pkgs..
37
e
Pur-A-Dor Buds,
ice box
purifiers, each.
33
c
Pinafore
Half-Chicken,
21b. tin..
*143
Hills Bros.
Coffee
2 lbs.
ITT»,
No. 2 1 /£tin
Bronko Bartlett
Pear Halves.
43
c
•HO
Y
No. 303 cans
Del Maize Fancy
Cream Golden
Corn, 2 for.
Soft-Weve
Toilet Tissue,
2 rolls for. j..
23
39
c
c
Wold*s Grocery
PHONES 170 and 171
The Outlook Says*
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shay and
daughter Gail Ann, and Mr Mel
Ruder, owner and editor of the
Hungry Horse News at Columbia
Falls, visited in Laurel last week.
Mr, Ruder attended the meeting
of the Montana State Press asso
elation in Red Lodge, Aug. 20 and
Mrs. R. L. Scribner and two sons
left Thursday morning for San
Francisco. Sept. 7 they will sail
for Guam to join Mr. Scribner,
who is in the navy. Mrs. Scribner
had been in Laurel since Febr
uary at the home of Mr. Scrib
ner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.
D. Scribner. She was accompanied
as far as San Francisco by her
brother, George Wagner.
21.
Mrs. Fred Hilgert returned
Tuesday from a Billings hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Marshall
and son of Dayton, Wash., were
overnight guests Saturday of Mr.
Mrs.
and Mrs. Ray Stevens.
Stevens and Mrs. Marshall are sis-
ters. The Washington people had
been through Glacier national park
and had visited relatives in Miles
Carter,
Mrs. Ralph Bailey.
Mrs - Harold VanNice entertain
Friday evening at a shower in
honor of Mrs. Thomas Everett.
Games were played with prizes
bd awarded and the remainder
of the evehing was devoted to
hand work.
served by the hostess and the
gifts were presented on a table
decorated in pink and blue crepe
paper bows. Those invited to at
tend were Mesdames R. C. Col- j
son, Frank Bartholf, Clyde Deck- ;
^ Wes i ey Freeberg, Dewey Ha-,
f Harris, Tom Mathais,
LaMar Omdorff, Albert Leuthold,
'Frank Platz, Kenneth Shay, Mer
ritt Williams, Charles George, O. j
C. Cooper, Clem Fry, Hazel Har-:
den and the honor guest,
City. They stopped here en route
to their home.
Mrs. Clinton Anderson was hos
tess to her bridge club Friday
afternoon. Mrs. E. M. Kucera was
a guest. Dessert luncheon was
served by the hostess and scoring
awards went to Mrs. Howard
Mrs. Eddie Burke and
Refreshments were
i
i
USE OUTLOOK WANT ADS. '

o
t WHEN IN NEED OF
Good Top Soil,
Fill or Concrete Gravel,
or Sand

<•
3i

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< I
<»;
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Call O-302-J-4
... ,
For immediate delivery jj
KRUG BROS.
«■i
l
<<•
-i i
.. .
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Batt were
dinner hosts Thursday evening
when their guests were Rev. Theo
dore Strobel of Portland, Ore.,
R ev an( j Mrs. Harry Pfeiff and
family of Billings and Rev. and
Mrs. Herbert Haemmelmann and
famfly.
Mrs. C, G. Scott and daughters,
Betty and Nancy, spent last week
at the home of Mrs. Scott's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bullis, in
Hardin. Saturday evening they
were joined by Mr. Scott and Low
Bullis and the group returned
home Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Hageman
jwere hosts at their cabin at Camp
Senia to a group of young people
last week end. Those making the
trip were Linda Johnston, Kenneth
1 h
P

f
I
OF
\
m
■:A
Y
V
i
Labor Day means much more to us
than a pleasant holiday and an oppor
tunity to relax. It is a day to reflect on
the American Way —where employer
and employee meet on equal terms.
More than ever, we are proud of our
American heritage.
But do not forget that your working
conditions in the next few years will
also depend upon the reserve you are
able to build out of your earnings.
Work for the future as well as for today.

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The Yellowstone Bank
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT
NSURANCE CORPORATION
\ •
Johnston, Joyce Bradford, Mar
lene Freeman, Donald Bradford
and Wayne Hageman, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Hageman and sons Ronald
Richard and Gary,
'V YOU TIME
WORK and
MONEY/ d
s~
>* •: ~ n
VS Ü
s
Jam «Jelly jJ
np/VI as
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