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About The Mountaineer. (Big Sandy, Mont.) 1921-current | View This Issue
The Mountaineer. (Big Sandy, Mont.), 27 Oct. 1921, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036072/1921-10-27/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
AW, WHAT'S THE USE By L. F. Vart Zeim 115 Western Nevspoorr Urnon s totriny ON A PERFECT A HAT- IT LOOKS WONDERFUL L ....... ) v - i 1, /, c&-'' ...), DREAM Of TILL - YOu LEARN THE PRICE-. 90 YOu DEODE._ To MAKE orte. JusT LIKE IT - You Bust A FORM \\ • 4.. b .. •...... C' MARI , : ET> :AO 44 N To 455 V. mADAME i .. 4 4/ fi . i . ,y ili 1 ------ rat - ro.-4 s I / / LI 1 , 1 IN BANKRUPTCY NOTICE THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, that in the District Court of the United States for the District of Montana, Catherine McDon- ald of Big Sandy, Chouteau County, Montana, has been duly adjudged a Bankrupt upon her own petition; teat the pay- ment of any debts or the deliv- ery of any property belonging to said bankrupt, to her or for her use, and the transfer of any property by her is forbidden by law; that the first meeting of the Creditors of said Bankrupt . for the purpose of filing and proving claims and to choose one or more trustees, for the examination of B•inkrupt under oath, and to transact such other business as may properly come before said meeting, will be held at a Court of Bankrupt- cy, Room 1, Dunn block, Great Falls, Montana, on the 5th day of November, 1921, at 10 o'clock a. m. A. H. Gray, Referee. IN BANKRUPTCY NOTICE • THIS Is TO GIVE NoTteE: That In The District Court of the United States for the District of Montana, Guy L. McDonald of Big Sandy, Montana, has been duly adjudged a Bank- rupt, upon his own petition, that the payment of any debts or the delivery of any property belonging to said bankrupt to him or for his use, and the transfer of any property by him is forbidden by law; that the first meeting of Creditors of said Bankrupt, for the purpose of filing and proving claims, and to choose one or more Trustees for the examination of Bankrupt under oath, and to transact such other business as may properly come before said meeting, will be held at a Court ot Bankruptcy, to be holden before A. H. Gray, Referee in Bankruptcy, Room 1, Dunn Block, Great Falls, Montana, on the 5th day of November, 1921, at 10 o'clock, a. m. A. H. Gray, Referee. IN BANKRUPTCY NOTICE Tim 1$ Is To GIVE NOTICE: That in the District Court of the United States for the District of Montana, Edward 0. Settel of Kenilworth, Chouteau Coun- ty Montana, has been duly adjudged a Bankrupt upon his own petition, that the payment of any debts or the deiivery of any property belonging to said bankrupt, to him or for his use, and the transfer of any proper- ty by him is forbidden by law; that the first meeting of the Creditors of said Bankrupt for the purpose of filing and prov• ing claims and to choose one or more Trustees, for the examin- ation of Bankrupt under oath, and to transact such other busi- ness as may properly come be- fore said meeting, will be held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to be holden before A. H. Gray, Referee in Bankruptcy, Room 1, Dunn Block, Great Falls, Montana on the 5th day of Nov- ember, 1921, at 10 o'clock a. m. A. H. Gray, Referee. Corncob Chemicals. A new species of loteterium he. been found that does reniarkabit things to cortwobs. IVItett the ettlis are cooked with we tt•r in a closed receptacle. at a tem perature considertibly above boll III point. ItO extruet Is obtained fron them which, ulna) introduction of Mit \Inctoblicillus.\ rapidly fertm•nts. One ton of cobs treated In this wo; will yield, us a result of fertile:dodo 1100 pounds of acetic twirl and 82 , pounds of lactic acid, both of whIci are iI 1,11 tIe commercial product g.- Milwaukee Sentinel. Tanks as Fire Fighters. Military monks are being used tc cheek heath fires in England. At efforts to stop the flames near Alder shot foiled until a detachment 01 tanks crowled out find the tank crew* sprinkled water told chemicals on tht fire and cleared the way for the fire fighters HSI though they were deillim with machine gun nests in Flotteers -Scientific American. RED CROSS RESCUED 600,000 FROM DEATH Spent $1,200,000 for Relief of Famine Sufferc, , rs in China Last Year. To help overcome conditions of acute distress In five famine stzleken prov- inces of Northern China, where mil- lions of persons were affected by an unprecedented shortage of food, the American Red Cross during the last fiscal year spent more than $1,200,000. $1,000,000 id which was contributed reety by NatIonni Headquarters and the remainder by various groups In- terested In the welfare of China. Through the wide relief operations thus made possible it is estimated that more than 600,000 famine safferers were saved from starvation. To the end that at ruhin r prompt re- lief measures by the orgonization may always be possible the Red Cross Is asking continued support by the Amer- ican people by universal renewal of membership at the Annual Red Cross Roll rail. November 11 to 24. The method of relief employed by the American Red Cross In its opera- tions in China was particularly effec- tive, for in addition to saving hundreds of thousands of lives it provided China with more than 9t10 miles of permanent roads that are sorely heeded to pre. vent a recurrence of famine. At one time the fled Cross employed 74,000 Chinese workmen, paying them In food for themselves and dependents, this food being brought In from Manchuria and elsewhere. Pumpfng Plant for the Airplane. Ilerr Fokker's excellent airplanes are too well known to require .lab - oration here. However, we note In looking over the plans of his latest creatlim. the \Fokker F -Ill,\ a passim- ger-carrying m plane, that he IMO made use of a tiny power -driven pump whielt serves to transfer gasoline from the 1110110 oupply drums to the airnlane tanks. The pomp is mounted nenr the port side of the engine housing. From this pump n length if rubber tithing, molly coiled up inside the engine housing, van he taken outside the tan - Milne ond its free end inserted in a gasoline can or drum. A few strokes if the P 11111 P soon transfers the gaso- line to the alrplone tank, and the pump is ready for the next can or drum, and so on. The entire opera- tion of filling the airplane's tanks - and tdrplanes of such proportions seem to hove an Insatiable appetite for fuel -con be accomplished by one man in a few Initiates, mill there is no slop. ping ovor and spilling the gasoline all over the machine.-Selentille Atneri- eon. Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chester- field are of finer quality (and hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Chesterfield CIGARETTES of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended AND WORK FOR DAYS UNTIL 104.4 HAVE IT comPLE.TED .8 -IT HOME TO MOTHER What Usually Happens on Son's Brief Visit. But Thir Coesn't by Any Means Imply That the Reunion Is Not Thor- oughly Enjoyable. \Well I'm going home to see my mother,\ onnounced the man In the nest office. And everybody was delighted. It's so nice to hear of a grown, busy Man. all filled with business cares and interest, who pushes them aside roily Saturday morning and takes a long, stuffy train ride just to see his mother. And so the women In the office be- came till sentimental and touched be- cause this man was going ail that dis- tance to see his mother. he got back on Monday morn- ing they pounced on hitn to know whether lie had had a g 0 0 , 1 time. There was scarcely one of them who wasn't 111111011111g the soft -music by the- mchestra scenes which must have taken place at the reunion. \Yea. I saw- my mother,\ said the returned prodigal, \anti I hail a fine time -went fishing all Italy Snottily!\ By careful calculation it was discov- ered that out of the day and a half which lie spent at home he had spent most of the half day with his mother. Nine times ollt of tell this IS what happens when a boy comes home after it long absence. All the time he Is nut ay he wtoom to see his mother; his grentest hope Is the( vacation. short or Nam. whieli will give him a chance to get home. And home means mother. When it arrives. he catches the first train out, anti almost runs from the stotion to the house; he Is so crazy to see his mother. Having seen her. and heard all her news and told all ids, he eats the hest meal lie has had in ages, sleeps In Ills own Iasi in his own romn for the first time in ages, eats a huge breakfast the next morning -and goes out. Ile may go to attend to some Mild- ness, he may go to the movies, he tnay go to see his best girl -orbe may go fishing, But he goes out -and he stays out until time for the next meal. Unkind? Selfish? No, he doesn't Ito -am, to be. Contiog home, even for a short Hine, means just that to hint; lie loves to think Unit he's home now, and he can do anything Ile IlleaSeS. Ile has los mother right there where lie can see her anti talk to far any time he wants to. It Is a Very nlce, comforting feeling, 1111.1 all I1V heeds. till he has %visited for during the long weeks of Ills absence. Of course, It isn't all she wants or all she Deeds; she would like to have him every minute of the short time he 1).)s at lio4ne; and she tries to arrange things so that she can. Even if the visit Isn't very comfort - to her as far as sts•Ing her son ham enough is concerned, she knows that he has been as onsious to get home as she was to hove him come, „ And that the most important part of being hoint• is In being near mother, - Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger. Carry Photographs In Hats. Ever since the clistorn among oleo of carrying pictures of their wivea, sweethearts or children pasted on the dials of their watches died out nuttier- ous substitute receptacles have been used, hut practically none of these has arrived. Now, according to a young wOman in ellarge of the hat check room In a downtown hotel, a suitable piace for these pictures has been Mai -ovens' by some one and the tad is rapidly spreading among the men. \Lately.\ Pahl this young woman. \I've noticed that a good many of the hats checked Imre ha iv- pictures of girls, elderly women or children pasted Inside the crown just below the maker's name. Besides keeping tile photographs of their loved ones near, this new wrinkle enables 'the men to tell nt a glance whether or not I band them the correct bats in return for their checks.\ -New York Sun. !Explorers Disagree. Stefnnsson says he will take alons no food on his rnsh to the Pole, while his rival Amundsen has Just contract& for a seven -years' supply. Amundset, pays there is title animal life north of S. - % degrees, and the sleds must Is loaded with food If the explorer wouir not face starvation. Home Made Millinery THEN WHEN YOu FINALLY TRY IT cel - On LAWD , / - IT LOOK', UWE THE VER'Y OLD HARRY BUT HE BACKSLID Aunt Nancy's \Gorilla\ Forgot His Religion. Which Explained the Necessity for Takiog Up a Collection in the Camp Meeting. The camp at East Fork has not o nly developed some marvelous fisher- men, but it has brought some hitherto tmdreamed-of powers of linaginatimi among the staiki business men In the party. Some half dozen tents shelter tiw 1114.11 and wonten folks mind the children, and there is a special cook- ing tent for Aunt Nancy. They call It the studio, for there the real art work is done, Aunt Nancy haVing In - twilled her u,uusum,h capability from her mother, who lived and toiled on the old plantation until freedom came. Grouped about the camp fire the other night the members of the party told and listened to marvelous tales Of adventure and mystery. Nancy, the cook, an eager listener. sat back in the shadows until someone spoke up good naturedly: ''Now. Nuncy, its your turn. Can't you tell us a ghost story?\ The black woman got up and came • little closer to the fire. \it's pap's story,\ modestly explained Nancy. \I heard him tell it a dozen or eight times, I reckon: 'Long toward the end of the warthe %lir to free the slaves, you know -they %%1181101(1in' • hig camp meethe down on Sugar creek bottoms, in Randolph county. pap said. Folks was gentile awful tired of the shootlre and MUM' and steatite, and they Just nachurly took to' ligion. All the benches was full and big crowds standite up. Brother Jerry liardover, pap said, was doln' the exhortin' and you could a -heard him a mile the way the road runs. 'Towards midnight they was all worked up, some Minato', some shoutIn' and golf') on like they does when the Diunnykrats hold is county couvention up at the co't house. Then a tall, thin man with long hair and at white face gets up and walks forward. They said he was a gorilla-\ \A what,\ asked one of the nuilltors. \A gorilla. They said he'll been with Colonel Bill Anderson anti Frank and Jesse JaineS and Mr. Quantrill and them other gentlemen what rode so hard.\ \1 see.\ \And when tiffs gorilla gets In front where the preacher was he pulls out two tug guns and n butcher knife and lays 'em on the altar. \'Parson says he, 'Use been a awful bad man. I'd shoot mid kill and burn and steal anti do everything that %vas low down RIO Ble1111. Thell I got a bullet or two in me and had to go home till I gut Well. W11,11e the sick bed something said to me. \Jake you been a awful hod man, anti If you don't quit your cussedness you'll die anti go straight to h-1. I'll give you just one more chance. You go down to Parson Hordover's meetin', tell him how bad you been, and hand him your six shooters. Then maybe I'll forgive you.\' \The preacher held out his hand, but just about that time three tnen in uniform got up and started for the gorilla, with pistols In their hands.\ Salley paused. \What balm...nett then?\ was asked. \Well sighel Nancy. \otter the muss was over they sung a hytnn, and took up ii collection.\ \A collection? What did they do that for?\ \To pay for buryite the three soiers.\ replied Nancy composedly. \You see, the gorilla --he backslid.\-Kausas City Star, Doubted If She Could Make It. At a recent gathering of BillIsidartil Lieut. John Philip Sousa told the fol- lowing story: \We musicians have one thing, we give solsre or joy to those who listen.\ he said. \Sometimes possibly, we Mice ourseRes too seriously. I recall giving some concerts in St. Louts some years ago. and every morning I went tlown to ray breakfast at the hotel I saw n W01113111 scrubbing the steps anti working away very hard. Finally. thinking that possibly a concert would be very enlightening and elevating for her. I stopped tier on the stairs one morning and said. 'By the way. would you like to go to tt concert tomorrow nigher thinking, of course, she knew rte. However, she did not know me ethe looked up at me and said: that your only night off?' \-Musks) So WHAT'S 14E USE. %LIN 7Fl tet W. S. M. Says: \Being a morgue - keeper for dead bat- teries is a job I don't want. No siree! The Willard Battery for mine. Willard Threaded Rubber Insulation doesn't have to be re- newed. It insures you a long -life battery.\ Willard Servi.•.• :ran More miles of uninter- rupted service per dollar are yours if you use the Willard Threaded Rubber Battery, AUTO ELECTRIC SHOP AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS 107 Central Avenue, Great Faks, Montana Phone 6840 Thrii Service lie Grow - This trndern.irk, stistripeid in red on he case , identities the W illard Threadea Rubber Battery. Toy Makers Leaving Germany. More than eighty villages in Ger- many specinlize In toy making and this local industry has suffered n great deal on account of Insufficient foreign orders. while the expert toy makers are emigrating to F:ngland /UPI are also getting to America somehow. Nuremburg is the center of the toy Industry anti this clty is also suffering from lack of togEists, as toys and tourists are the t*o principal source, of prosperity by which the quaint ol Bavarian city exists. -Scientific Amer Ican. New Wheel Making Idea. The making of lightweight. boitless one-piece, an steel wheels by the drop- forging process is now a reality thanks to the Ingenuity of a Michigan Inventor. Designed especially for use on motor vehicles. the rims spokes hubs and brake drums are forged in tegrally. so that no bolts or rivets are required to liobl them together. It if claimed that they are as light as thc conventional wooden wheels and, of course, a great deal stronger, so)* Courier. Popular Mechonles Magazine. .Wv 4 `r A sui