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Prescriptions A Specialty Famous NUTRI-TONIC WAVING SECRET it's patented can't be copied Waves safely in little as 10 minutes due to patented OIL Creme base • • • No wonder Nutri-Tonic gives such soft naturalness and waves so much faster. There's this much patented OIL Creme base in every bottle. & You know what oil means in permanent waving and —- now you can get it for home use in professional Nutri Tonic... with patented OIL Creme base. Beauticians have given millions of lovely Nutri-Tonic perma nents at prices up to $20 and higher. Nothing like it. Prove it yourself. SAVE! BUY REFILL IF YOU HAVE PLASTIC CURLERS MX \ \\ // TO KEEP YOUR HAIR at its loveliest between permanents, ask for Nutri-Tonic Hair Luxury, triple-cremed dressing ... with Cholesterol. $/Z5 DELUXE — with 2 sizes professional plastic curlers • . $ 2.25 pricet plus tax WINGS Cigarettes, King size, per pack, 16c BABY FOODS VITAMINS lOcc. Natola .... 10 cc. Navitol 50 cc. Cecon (Vit. C) 10 cc. Super D Cone. .. 15 cc. Abdec Drops.... 4 oz. Homicebrin $1.21 85c $1.08 1 lb. S.M.A. 1 lb. Dextri Maltose, 67c 89c 75c 12 oz. Dexin >/|> lb. Pabena I/) lb. Pow. Goat's "Milk ..... $1.25 $1.41 23c $1.45 i/> lb. Protein " S.M.A. $1.26 69c $ 1.00 Breck Shampoo NEW METHOD GIVES INSTANT HELP! Say tens of thousands who have ex perienced the miraculous effect and relief from ASTHMA symptoms BREATHEASY has given. Try BREATHEASY Nebulizing Method on a money back arrangement that leaves no room for doubt. You are judge—you must be satisfied. No matter how many years you hav« Si? NK bäSWBmS* äi with 50c Trucene, both for the $ 1.00 NULLO Tablets, Nature's Deodorant, 30 days supply ..... $1.25 Hopalong Cassidy Lunch Kits (V 2 pt.) $2.69 Where your Drug Store Dollar goes farther. Price's Pharmacy Phone 35 14 First Avenue LAUREL, MONTANA Price's Pharmacy open all day next Sunday, Aug. 27th. Mrs. E. J. Helburg and two lit Laurel News Items tie daughters, Stephanie and Mi chelle, returned last week to their home at Alameda Air Base, Calif., after spending the summer with Mrs. Helburg's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Bliss. The Past Matron's club of Zi donian chapter, O. E. S., will meet at 1:30 Saturday, Aug. 26, for a Thank You, Friends! I take this means to ex press my appreciation to those Laurel friends who supported me in the re cent primary election and gave approval of my record in the sheriff's office by voting for my renomination. Î ülH f r : S;3 Very sincerely, ALBERT THOMAS dessert luncheon, with Mrs. J. F. MacDonald, Mrs. Elizabeth Clark and Mrs. Paul Wold as hostesses, There will be an important busi ness meeting. Complimenting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wheeler, nine couples gath ered at their new home on Trace j ane Monday evening. Mrs. Gay E aston and Mrs. Orville Boyle were hostesses at the event. Pi nochle provided entertainment and the guests of honor received gifts from the group. H RITES WILL BE HELD THURSDAY the First Congregational church, i Laurel, for Mrs. Katherine FelsingHenry Henry at 2 p. m. Thursday. The ; Rev. Haemmelmann will officiate. | Mrs. Henry, the wife of Jacob Henry of 403 East Fifth St., was born in Russia in 1871, and was married in 1893. The Henrys had resided in Laurel for eight years at the time of her death, which oc- ; curred at 10 p. m., Monday, in 1 a Columbus hospital. She had been hospitalized for two weeks. Surviving besides the husband are five sons and three daughters, The sons are Jake Henry, Bil lings; Henry Henry, Mt. Vernon, Funeral sendees will be held in Wash.; William Henry, overseas with the air corps; Lavine Henry, Columbus; and Raymond Henry, with the air corps in Spokane, Wash. Daughters surviving are Mrs. Peterson, Columbus; and Mrs. Katherine Propp, Worden. The body is at the Laurel Fu neral home. Burial will be in the Park City cemetery. News Notes Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hincha of Chanute, Kans., are visiting their daughter, Mrs. Add Reese and fam iiy. Arriving Sunday to visit Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Shay and Mrs. Cora Shoop were Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Summers, Mrs. Ethel Summers and Miss Yvonne Linster, all of Min-| nesota. Mrs. Ethel Summers re- ! mained in Laurel for a longer visit and the others 'went on Monday morning to Conrad to see relatives who reside there. Dr. and Mrs. Edward Hartley of San Antonio, Tex., arrived here by plane last week. They are guests of Dr. Hartley's brothers, J. A. Hartley and family in Laurel and William S. Hartley and family in Billings. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Shay drove to Byron, Wyo., Saturday night to spend the week end at the Floyd Marshall home Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Busby were Mr. and Mrs. William R. Davidson of Liv ingston. The group attended the Mustang baseball series in Billings. Fntortainin ttv;,. ,, 6 m Srz Hnntpv ti-iri -jj'c I . ETmS iS" 1 Æ to Mrs Clinton Anderson Mrs. MrS - MaUde V Members of circle 2. W. S. C. S., met Friday afternoon for a covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. P. A. Johnston. About 14 were present, including Rev. and Mrs. Spellman, who were guests. Mrs. Arthur Callahan led the devo tions and Mrs. Gus Carlson con ducted the business meeting. The circle decided to be hostess at a meeting of the general society on the third Friday in September. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brano and other relatives are Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Morey and daugh ter Sherrill of Maquon, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bliss, accom panied by Burton Armstrong, drove to Cody Wednesday to visit Miss Frances Fenton and Mrs. Jennie Gerard. Mrs. Victor Racki and son Don of Billings spent Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Racki in the Wold apartments. Mr. and Mrs. John Yost and daughter Carrol of Seattle came Sunday and are visiting Mr. Y'ost's mother, Mrs. Lewin Hergett. They plan to return to Seattle Satur day. Entertaining for Mr. and Mrs. Don Scheidecker, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Willis were hosts at a pic nic on their lawn Thursday eve ning. The guest list included local postal employees, their wives and husbands. Out-of-town guests were sisters of Mr. Willis, Mrs. F. H. Hartwig of Great Falls and Mrs. D. J. Brochier of Los Angeles, who spent the week end in Laurel. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hilpert and daughters, Diane, Evelyn and Jean, from Potter, Neb., called on Rev. and Mrs. M. H. Juengel Tuesday, Aug. 15. They were on their way to Yellowstone park and the Grand Tetons, going via Red Lodge and th Mn°and Mrs! M. H. Manning of Carrollton, Mo., accompanied by their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Haskings and son, were guests of Laurel friends from Thursday until Sunday. From here they went to Yellowstone park and J will return through the Black Hills to Missouri. Mr. Manning was at one time an operator in a switch tower in the Laurel railroad yards, lie and his family left 20 years ago for Missouri, where they bought a farm east of Kansas City and where they have since lived. On their way here they stopped at Lodge Grass to visit Mrs. May C. Crutcher, a former Laurel resi dent. Their trip to Laurel was their first since leaving here in 1930. While here they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Darham. RED LODGE CEREMONY UNITES LAUREL PAIR A ceremony performed in Red Lodge united Marjorie Wagner and Gratwohl in marriage, Sat urday. The rites were read by Nel son Lane, justice of the peace, in the presence of 20 guests. Mr. and Mrs. Gratwohl are both Laurel res idents. He is employed by the Northern Pacific railroad, and she works as a telephone operator. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. James Schutzman, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gratwohl, suit with blue accessories as her wedding garb, while her only at tendant, her sister Eileen, wore a blue gabardine suit with navy ac cessories. Both had corsages of red roses. Mrs. Gratwohl was given in marriage by her brother, Timothy Wagner. The groom's mother chose a flowered print dress for her son's The bride chose a pink gabardine wedding. of red roses. A reception for the guests was held at the Pollari home following the ceremony. The wedding dinner was held in Natali's cafe. Following a honeymoon in Yel lowstone park, the couple will make their home in the Hi-Way apart ments in Laurel. Petitions Nominate Smith Independent For County Coroner been filed to assure the nomination °f Lewis A. H. Smith as an inde pendent candidate for county coro The Yellowstone county clerk and recorder's office certified Aug. 17 that sufficient petitions had owns avenue, Billings, where he resides wife and two children, He has had Pathological and labo rator >' experience, and studied pre medicine at the University of Washington." He is a '»ember of the Billings HIT. In accepting the nomination, Smith said that "he is a veteran, his home at 529 Alderson Junl0 ,T Cba ™ ber °* ? If! P resident of th ? Weste , rn Wdd L fe League, president and co-founder °/ th . e IsaaC Walton League of ^ merlca * ha P ter " J* 11 "« 8 ' . be to the Sons of the American Revolutlon ; has been scoutmaster of troc P. s 1 andl0 ' al ^ellfwstonê ent active with the Yellowstone If elected, he said he pledges r th " t th : " ies ot . the j± d and efficie ncy and that the People of Yellowstone county are T .l^offke^ velo P'™ lts of th,S offlCe ' Two Steamboats for Sale Two SïeamDoaTs tor wie, But nO One Vvlll Buy Them CINCINNATI, O.—The days of the old steamboat are definitely gone. Two of them have been tied up at the Cincinnati wharf for some time with for sale signs tacked on them, but there have been no takers. They are the Chris Greene and Tom Greene, which had been gathering rust and dust in Louis ville, Kentucky, for several years. Coal and labor costs have about put the steamboats out of commis sion. Those operating today were built during World War II and screw propelled and burn oil. The last of the packets, small ones at that, have no one interested in them because like railroads, the boat lines have found the diesel engines more economical. The Greene Line, which owns the boats, runs two excursion steam ers, the Gordon Greene and the Delta Queen. They haul no freight and are not properly packets, al though once used as such. Drunk Falls on Tracks; Unharmed by Passing Train NEWARK, N. J.— Two worried policemen Patrick Nicholl 1 Communists Order Actresses T° Cover 'Upper Thighs' ..... newspaper, printed a picture of an American girl in a bathing suit with the caption: "What our ac tresses should not become." Americans measure the artistic worth of their entertainers by the measurement of their bust and the circumference of their upper thighs. stagger into the Pennsylvania rail road yards, fall between a set of tracks and lay there as a long string of freight cars sped over him. He got up, nonchalantly dusted off his clothes and weaved into the arms of the waiting patrolmen. He was booked on a charge of loitering while under the influence of intoxi cating beverages. BERLIN—East German Commu nists have informed actresses in their zone to cover up the "upper thighs" and their busts. German Week, a communist edi the newspaper said. Frozen Fish Frozen fish should be thawed slowly in a refrigerator or other cool place before it is cooked, and once thawed should never be frozen a second time. m QUALITY FOODS ? ,\Ti a 777777 i r/j f A J Thursday, Friday and Saturday, August 24, 25 and 26 Wilderness Triple Pie Mix, Wild Blueberries, Cherries and Red Raspberries, No. 2 cans, 3 for. M. J. B. Long- Grain Rice, 2-lb. pkg. 37 c *1 00 Miracle-Whip Salad Dressing, qt. jars. 59 c Libby's Sliced Pineapple, No. 2i/ 2 cans 39 c Swift's All Sweet, 1-lb. pkg. 35 C Bronko Freestone Peaches, No. 2 1 / 2 cans, 2 for. Rich Sudsy Trend, 2 pkgs. 35 69 C C Kraft Dinners, 2 pkgs. 25 Snider's Catsup, 14-oz. botles, 2 for 39 C C Swift's Peanut Butter, 12-oz. jar. Shurfine Peas, Sieve 3, No. 2 cans, 2 for. 32 39 c c Wold 's Grocery PHONES 170 and 171 Local News Items Re\. J. E. Schatz, pastor fjj® T? V ? g f i S' . ® s n , . ° l ' ' Wph' Cleveland Ohio, arrived here Wed nesday of last week and left the following day for Washington and California. He was accompanied on the vacation trip by Mrs. Schatz and while here they were guests of fnends. Rev. Schatz was pastor of the First Congregational church Laurel, m 19-1, 22 and -L e past 17 years he has beer i m Cleve land. After visiting brothers, sis -1 ters and other relatlves residing in the Pacific coast stateSi and former pastorates in Nebraska and Montana, he will return to Cleve | i and the first of September. | Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Small re turned to their home in Helena Monday after visiting their son-in law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Laird. Miss Patricia Small of Helena was complimented on two occasions when Mrs. M. O. Roysdon enter miscellaneous bridal tained at showers at her home Friday after and Friday evening. Bouquets of gladioli decorated the rooms of the Roysdon home and entertain ment was carried out in the form of an audience participation broad Mrs. Sam Bliss furnished and Mrs. I cast. background music Matthew Calvert was mistress of ceremonies. Mrs. D. H. MacCauley and Mrs. Fred Scheidecker received prizes. Mrs. R. L. Blair and children, Richard, Janis and Tom, of Cali fornia are visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Bequette. Democrats To Meet In Billings Aug. 30 Executive officers of Yellow stone county Democratic central committee recently met in Billings to map plans for the state conven tion to be held Aug. 30 in Billings, j Officers are: Clem Cormier, chairman; Mrs. H. Lee Ham lett of Laurel, vice chairman; Mar- j vin Fraser, secretary and George Prouty, treasurer. Facts About Rabies Rabies is a virus disease that j affects the brain and central nerv ous system. It is transmitted by direct contact, nearly always ! through the bite of an infected ani- j mal. Human beings and all warm- ! blooded animals are susceptible to j it. There are ways of preventing I it, by vaccination before exposure or by treatment immediately after j exposure to the virus, but once an animal or person actually develops | rabies, there is nothing that can be j done to prevent death—no medical j treatment of any kind. Dairy Herds The most common deficiency in ; dairy herds is lack of water, says j the Journal of the American Veter- j inary Medical association. Civil Service Has Jobs For Linemen The jj. eivil service examiners for the bureau of reclamation re g' on 6 have announced the opening £ etitive examinations for e , ectrica , Uneman forema n, line and lineman he i pers> accord . ^ j H McLuskie> board exec utiye secret Billings, Pergons emp | oyed as a result of thg examinations will be assigned on|y Jn the bureau > 3 re g io n 6, which cove rs Montana east of the con tinental divide> the nor thern half () £ w yom ing east of the divide, and North and South Dakota. Work will be confined primarily to ac tivities on the Missouri river basin project—a program for the con servation, control and use of the water resources of the Missouri river drainage basin. Hourly wages for helpers range from $1.18 to $1.60; linemen, $1.74* ( Nothing Has Happened to Moke Thrift Out-of-Date #5 Big changes have taken place in the past few years —but thrift is never out-dated. Who is going to give you the money for luxuries, security and leisure, if you do not provide it yourself? Lay aside a regular part of your earnings now in this bank, and later you will be glad that you did. The Yellowstone Bank ÇMBER '-FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION « to $2.40; and foremen, $1.99 to $2.65. Applicants will be rated on the extent and quality of their ex perience and training révélant to the duties of the position. Written tests will not be required, McLuskie said. The examination announcement, covering qualifications and other pertinent information, and applica tion forms may be obtained from the board of examiners in Bil lings, any first or second-class post office in the area, or from the Eleventh U. S. Civil Service Region at Seattle, Wash. t Gecko Lizard The tongue of the gecko lizard is long that the reptile can use it to wash its eyes. should be destroyed by burning. so Bedding for Animals Bedding used by animals that have died of infectious disease