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The Herald-news. (Wolf Point, Mont.) 1940-current, December 16, 1954, Image 2

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

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86075271/1954-12-16/ed-1/seq-2/

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Viola Leona Crause
Weds Wilbur Marshall
Viola LOMU Crause, daughter of
Mr*. sva Crause of Wolf Point,
became the bride of Wilbur John
Man&all at 3 p.m. Sunday, De
cember 13, in the Trinity Lutheran
church with Rev. Walter Luedtke
performing the double-ring cere
mony.
Tbe groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. W- J. Marshall, also of Wolf
Point •
Given- in marriage by her
brother-in-law, Albert Sergent, the
bride w)u attired in a white faille
two-piece street-length dress with
full skirt, fitted bodice, three-quar
ter length sleeves, and trimmed in
black. Her hat was of black vel
vet with sequins and' her cor
sage of.pink and white carnations.
She was attended by her sis
ter, Mrs. Barbara McFarlane, who
wore an aqua street-length dress
with white trimmings with a cor
sage of pink carnations.
Serving as best man was James
POINT
THEATRE
SHOW STARTS AT 8:00 P. M.
WITH SHORTS SHOWN BE
FORE AND AFTER THE FEA
TURE.
Friday - Saturday
Dec. 17-18
MATINEE BAT. 2:30 P. M.
— ■
POPEYfc CARTOON and
.FOLLIES
Sun. - JMon. - Tues.
Dec 19-20-21
SHORTS and CARTOON
Wed. - Thurs.
Dec. 22-23
|BATH —VABBPI
CARTOON and
EDGAR KENNEDY COMEDY
o^l
I \ WHITE STAR LAUNDRY’S careful,
\ VV/f speedy laundry service is tops! Tops
A Ui in quality and tops in giving Mother
I extra time during the holidays now
S' with us—when she uses our low-
cost service.
lx \\ Jußt Call 290
I v\\a *For Our Pick-up and*
Delivery Service
YOU’LL MARVEL AT OUR
jWfTV U-SAN-0 DRY CLEANING!
WHITE STAR
"’fT" 7 LAUNDRY
Marshall, brother of the groom,
and as ushers, Rudolph Schultz and
Ray Olson, all of Wolf Point.
Ninety relatives and friends at
tended the reception which fol
lowed in the church basement
which was decorated with pink
and white streamers and a large
pink bow and white bell at the
center.
The bride’s table was also dec
orated with pink and white and
was centered by double candles
and a wedding cake frosted in
white and topped by pink, yellow
and white roses and a miniature
bride and groom.
The reception luncheon was serv
ed by members of the Ladies Aid
and Altar Guild of the church.
Out of town guests included Mrs.
Elmer Harris of Wheeler, Mon
tana.
The bride is a graduate of Wolf
Point high school, attended Car
roll College and Sisters of Charity
School of Nursing, both in Helena.
Following a wedding trip to
Great Falls, the newlyweds will
make their home at 405 3rd Ave.
South.
LIBERTY
THEATRE
SHOW STARTS AT 8 P. M.
WITH SHORTS SHOWN BE
FORE AND AFTER THE
FEATURE.
Thurs. - Fri. - Sat.
Dec. 16-17-18
-^TrnTirrs"
Lu Phyllt*
BARKER *KIRK
ITT) IVAKHE^COLOK,
CARTOON AND SHORTS
, Sunday -\fitonday
&ec. 19-20
MATINEE SUN. 2:30 P. M.
WORLD NEWS and CARTOON
Tues. - Wed.
Dec. 21-22
CASH NITE TUESDAY
®JXB"
ShKEJONES
VARIETY VIEWS
CARTOON and NEWS
SEND US ALL^X
YOUR WASHABLES^
SITTIN’ AND
ROCKIN'
By JOHN F. KIDDER
Ronan, Montana
Now that the summer ^6ork i?
well done, it is as good a time as
any to leave the farm or shop with
the hired man and take that real
African safari you have been
dreaming about so long. You may
protest that you don’t care to go
to Africa, but way down deep in
side you must feel the lure of the
untamed jungle,, and the fascina
tion of the greatest and most sav
age of wild animals running free
and untrammeled by civilization.
Those of you looking for complete
and authoritative information on
the subject have come to the right
place, for it so happens that I just
finished reading a two-page article
concerning African safaris in a re
cent edition of Sports Illustrated.
Before we go ony further, so
that you will not worry about be
ing torn away from mamma and.
the kiddies during Christmas sea
son, this safari of yours can’t be
a spur of the moment affair. If
you want to be able to leave next
year, you will have to get on it
right now to make sure that you
will be ready. To avoid the rainy
season, you will have to arrive in
Africa in July, August or Febru
ary, which are the driest months.
With the winter wheat to harvest
in July, and the second cutting of
alfalfa to put up in August, maybe
you’d better plan on February.
At this point we really should
consider expenses, but we sports
men never let anything so earthy
as a few grubby dollars stand in
the way of high adventure, do we?
Besides, if we talk about money
right here you may not finish the
column.
If you have any doubts as to how
well you will be able to bear up
under the hardships of safari life,
you can set your mind at ease.
There will be nothing second late
about the exposition. You will
travel to the big game country by
way of specially-built cars and
trucks with all the comforts of
home. You will enjoy multi
course dinners, foam rubber mat
tresses, linen sheets, and so many
other luxuries that you may be re
luctant to return to the discomforts
of civilized living. As far as haz
ards are concerned, your guide, or
white hunter, as we old safari
hands call him, is insurance against
undue danger. You probably take
more risks every day when you
step off the curb on Main Street,
even though a ten-ton truck wears
a kinder expression than a ten
ton bull elephant.
Your safari will leave from Nia
robi, in Kenya Colony, and head
for any one of five special areas
recommended for hunting, depend
ing upon what trophies you are
most anxious to bag. Lion, buffalo,
eland and plains game are to be
found in the Masai Reserve in Ken
ya. The Garissa area is a good bet
for an elephant and also furnishes
lesser kudu and gerenuk—what
ever on earth they are. Isiolo will
provide cheetah, - waterbuck and
greater kudu, while Northern Tan
ganyika supplies rhino, roan ante
lope, and fringe-eared oryx—not
to be confused with the surrey
with the fringe on top.
The Northern Province District
of Kenya provides prize specimens
of rhino, buffalo, leopard, oryx,
wildebeeste and impala. The North
ern Province District of Kenya al
so provides a good supply of the
Mau-Mau terrorists of the Kiku
yu -tribe, who may be just as in
terested in making a trophy out of
you. All the more sporting, what?
This expedition will take from
30 days to 10 weeks. You can us
ually manage a complete assort
ment of trophies in 30 days, but
as long as you are there you might
as well take a few side trips, so
you can toss off casual references
to Kilimanjaro or the Mountains
of the Moon to the boys back home.
Guns come in handy on a trip
like this and you can either rent
them or bring your own. The best
general advice for big, dangerous
game is to use the largest caliber
weapon you can hold —it says here
“handle accurately!” Suggested
light-caliber rifles are the 30.06
Springfield or Winchester or .300
Magnum; medium-caliber, .375
Holland & Holland Magnum or .318
Westly Richards; or heavy-caliber
.465 Holland and Holland, or .470
Evans. If you really want to play
it safe, you might take along a
rocket battery in case of emergency.
According to our information,
your safari organization will pro
vide everything you need on the
actual expedition except liquor,
“of which one case per person per
month is suggested for moderate
CARD OF THANKS
With deepest gratitude we ex
tend this word of thanks for the
many kind acts of sympathy, ex
pressed by thoughtful friends. A
special thank you to Rev. Ralph
Okland. These kindnesses have
meant much to us.
Mr. and Mrs. Sig Hove and
family
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hove
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Hove
Mabel Hove
Stanley Hove
Mr. and Mrs. Lee DeCorte
Removes Burnt-On Grease
Without Rubbing!
WIPE
wash JVugßni
OFF '
ODORLESS
tasy-Aid
Coast-to-Coast Store
I
THE HERALD-NEWS, Wolf Point, Roosevelt County, Montana
drinkers.” I’ve always suspected
that there were no such animals as
the kudu (greater or leaser), ge
renuk or wildebeeste, and now I
know where they come from. Right
from the bottom of a bottle of Old
Overshot. However you feel about
liquor,^you had better have an ade
quate supply, for your White Hunt
er will expect his share, and you
want to be sure he is at ypur side
when you find yourself counting
the adenoids of a charging lion.
Then, too, there might be snakes!
Just picture yourself a year from
now as you line in your sights and,
"Whoomp”! Another elephant bites
the dust. What a thrill! And picture
yourself two years from now as
you sit proudly in your own cozy
living room, with the trophies of
your hunt hung on the walls about
you. Junior, I’Ve told you a thou
sand times, quit swinging on that
elephant’s trunk. Where are you,
Mother —is that you over there
behind the fringe-eared oryx? Come
out where I can see you, but mind
you don’t trip over the water buf
falo.
That’s just the way -it can be.
Of course, your expenses will run
between $7,000 and SIO,OOO, but af
ter all, it’s only money and the
jungle is calling!
"LET'S GO TO
THE LIBRARY"
When I was a child our village
library was open only Saturday af
ternoons and evenings. And it
would generally be after Aturday
night baked beans and brown bread
that my brother and I collected
last week’s books, and took the
mile walk “over- Schoolhouse Hill
and down to the Cove” for a fresh
load.
A limited and hit-or-miss collec
tion awaited us, but it didn’t seem
so then. The horizon stretched a
little wider, the sky arched higher
after every library trip. I had
progressed from Little Prudy books
through Alcott, Mary P. Wells-
Smith’s (even today enchanting)
stories of Old Deerfield, and G. A.
Henty, to such still remembered
titles as “When Knighthood Was
in Flower,” or "When Patty Went
to College,” before high school days
made the Carnegie Library in town
easily available.
Today, with movies, radio, tele
vision, and comic books, on all
sides, libraries may appear both
less glamorous and less essential.
But this is a false assumption, and
the child deprived of a chance to
read according to his individual
interests has lost some part of the
American heritage.
In the first place, reading implies
a shared effort Experience, know
ledge, pleasure, Adventure, are ac
quired 1 from the ^printed page only
by active and wjUing participation?
on the? part of the reader. '
And secondly, movies and other
mass-appeal media cannot offer
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FRONTIER AIRLINES
reports
Weekly Departures and Arrivals
Nam< and Addreu Destination
Mr. Harry Shennum. Scobey, Mont. Miles City
Mr. McCann, Wolf Point Billings
Mr. C. Stratton, Frazer Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bernard, Scobey Minneapolis
Mr. R. Ralph, Glasgow Casper, Wyo.
Mr. K. E. Youglund, Wolf Point Cheyenne, Wyo.
Mr. L. Dyk, Glasgow Denver, Colo.
Mrs. Vern Dunson, Wolf Point Cortez, Colo.
Mrs. Fred Miller, Scobey ' Denver, Colo.
Mr. C. D. Hosfield, Wolf Point ' Billings
Mr. R. Richardson, Wolf Point Casper, Wyo.
Mrs. C. W. White, Poplar . Riverton, Wyo.
Mrs. L. Anderson, Sidney 1 Los Angeles, Calif.
Miss Linda Anderson, Sidney Los Angeles, Calif.
Mr. B. Sherman, Wolf Point Billings
Mr. J. Ginger, Fort Peck Glendive
Mr. J. Powell, Poplar Billings
Mr. H. Milam, Poplar •_ Billings
Mr. G. Kirby, Poplar . Billings
Mrs. Dorothy Wright, Wolf Point . Los Angeles
Mr. J. Turland, Wolf Point . Billings
Mr. and Mrs. Hoversland, Wolf Point Minneapolis
Passengers boarded on Frontier Flights between Dec. 1 and Dec. 13.
AROUND The TOWN
PHONE 100 whenever you have Items of local Interest
Your courtesy will be appreciated by The Herald-News. News
mailed In must bear signature of sender.
CHILDREN, GRANDCHILDREN
HONOR FATHER ON BIRTHDAY
Children and grandchildren of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Olson gather
ed in Wolf Point Sunday to nonor
the "former on his 90th birthday an
niversary.
Those present included Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Olsen and children,
John, Joanne and Jimmy, Mr. and
Mrs. Peter. Olsen and their young
sters, Agnes and Ruth, all of Vida.
Mr. and Mrs. James Turnland and
Evelyn and Clair of Glasgow and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Toch, Fran
ces and Scotty of Brockway. Otbei
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Percy
Peterson and Rachel Strand.
either to children or adults, a bal
anced diet You won’t find poetry
on the screen, whether A Child’s
Garden of Verses, or Shakespeare's
Sonnets. Nor journals, nor letters,
nor delicate phantasy. Alice in
Wonderland, or The Wind in the
Willows are a great deal more than
a Walter Disney production. Look
ing at pictures and listening to ra
dio programs may be additions to
but not substitutes for reading.
In a big state like Montana, with
its small population and scattered
communities, library buildings may
be hard come by. But modern fa
cilities such as Bookmobiles and
our excellent Library Extension
Service can, make good books avail
able anywhere. And there should
be no Montana resident, child or
grown-up, who can’t say in effect:
“Let’s go to the Library.”—Naomi
Lane Babson.
The Gift of the Year I i
1 I ■ jtaam I
I J Men'S Set W I
$ noj « *
* Contains Tawn De Luxe After Shave r
Lotion and Tawn Hair Creme /
W plastic bottles. In center of set /
W handsome gold-finish tie clasp (avail- £
W able in 6 styles) mounted on a re-' /
movable pad, leaving the small tray
as a receptacle for smaller pieces of /
jewelry. Very attractive, con
strutted velour lined gift box /
padded top in black and gold. Ideal
Jor re-use as a man’s jewelry case. /
* EA PL US 3* /
>3.50 KDJAX ✓
PUBLIC DRUG \
GORDON MONTGOMERY WOLF POINT, MONT.^
Gifts he'll really enjoy..,
BY YARDLEY
i -
Yardley’s Shaving Bowl is a favorite L ‘
with men ... because it gives such 7^ - '
weent of deep, rich lather, and because a J 1^-
it lasts so long. Yardley’s After-Shaving \ JT T/ !
Lotion Is cooling, soothing, and ;
refreshing. What a welcome combination ft r ■
they make In this Inexpensive gift set A. II \ !
Other Yardley gift sets to choooe from, - \ l I
$2.65, plus tax. JBM 1
Vurdloy products for America ore creattd In Enp- ’I w \ 1 1 I
load and finished In the U.S.A, from the original I I \ / 1 t
English formulae, combining Imported and domesile I B X II i
Mredlentg, 1 I \ | I
PUBLIC DRUG j
GORDON MONTGOMERY WOLF POINT, MONT.!
FAREWELL BUPPER HONORS
TWO LEAVING FOR AIR FORCE
A farewell supper was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Baker Wednesday evening in hon
or of Gerald Baker and Bud Alex
ander who left’ for the Air Force
that night.
Those present were Lawrence
and Dwight Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Baker and family, Mr. and Mrs,
Eugene Baker and boys and Mr.
and Mrs. Deverette Baker, Bar
bara Schumaker and Jane Olson.
Each was presented a farewell
gift from the group.
RIVERSIDE 0.E.8. SETS
CHRISTMAS PARTY
Riverside Chapter 84 of O.E.S.
will hold their annual Christmas
party on December 22 with pot
luck lunch and an exchange of
gifts.
Members are asked to bring
gifts for the Masonic home and
also used clothing or food for
the needy.
HOLD BABY SHOWER t
A baby shower was held Mon
day afternoon, Dec. 13, honoring
Lynn Faith Fachner, three-weeks
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ern
est Fachner. Hostesses were Mrs.
Lyle Pickthorn and Mrs. Willie
Kalien.
Games were played for enter
tainment. Lunch was served to
about 25 ladies. Lynn Faith re
ceived many nice gifts.
FETED ON ANNIVERSARY
Mil |. and Mrs. Lars Stensland
wfer4'R°P ored on their 29th wed
dini, anniversary with a dinner
pa^ty h^ld at th| home of Mn
and Mrs. Don Nelson. Other guests
were Mr. and Mrs. William Ahrens,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Stenlsand, Mr.
and Mrs. George Stensland and
Mrs. William Nykolayow.
Honored On Birthday
Mrs. Sarah Bushman was the
guest of honor at a birthday party
held at her home Monday evening
Dec. 6. Hostess was Mrs. Wayne
Parsley. After a social evening,
lunch was served to the following
guests: Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Bush
man, Mr. and Mrs. John Bush
man, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bush
man, Mr. and Mrs. Don Bushman,
and Wayne Parsley. Mrs. Bush
man received many nice gifts.
Celebrate Birthdays
Mrs. Clayton Long entertained
at a birthday party Friday, Dec.
3, honoring her two sons. Jay, 1,
and Rocky, 2. Guests present were
Mrs. Alice Flaten, Mrs. Archie
Campbell, Mrs. Mike Campbell
and Clay, Mrs. Paul Green and
Paulie and Mrsc Kermit? Tjjon,
Leta and Barry?
Local Briefs—
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bridges left
Wednesday morning for Mt. Ver
non, 111., where they will spend
Christmas with Mrs. Bridges’
mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Good and
Linda, Mrs. George Good and Mel
vin Good were supper guests at
the Elmer Hoch home Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Doornek, Mr.
and Mrs. Muriel Doornek and
Chuck Doornek were supper guests
at the Bud Doornek home Satur
day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reichert re
turned to their home in Missoula I
after a weeks visit at the home of
their sen, William Reichert, and
other friends in Wolf Point.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hoch and
Loran, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Doornek
and Wayne and Melvin Good were
supper guests at the George Good
home Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howe en
tertained at a dinner party Sun
day. Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Reichert of Missoula, Mont.,
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 19M
Mr. and Mrs. William Reichert awl
family, Mr. and Mrs. Lea Hudi
□urgh and family, Mr._and Mrs.
Eugene Swanson and Mrs. Mar
garet Dewane.
Balmorhea State Park, southwest
of Balmorhea, Texas, has the
world's largest walled swimming
pool—fed by natural springs at
the rate of 26,000,000 gallons per
day.
Tortoises on the Galapagos Is
lands are believed to be the oldest
living creatures on earth.
The battle between the Monitor
and the Merrimack took place at
Hampton Roads, Va.
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