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About The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.) 1891-1962 | View This Issue
The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.), 01 Nov. 1950, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053034/1950-11-01/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THE DILLON EXAMINER C L A S S I F I E D D E P A R T M E N T HELP WANTED—MEN Blacksmith and Welder $1.10 an hour, 10-hour day. A. H. KNIGHT, Claremont, South Dakota HELP WANTED—WOMEN Wanted: Companion bookkeeper for elderly lady. Contact: Mrs. D, E. McPherson, Jr.» Chinook, Mont. HELP WANTED—MEN, WOMEN Quick extra cash selling Christmas cards and gift novelties. Request free samples. ELMCBAFT, Dept. 292 6930 8. Western Ave. Chicago 36, Illinois HEAL ESTATE—MISC. J. W. RICHMOND REALTY CO. Farms—Ranches—City Property Borger, Texas DOGS, CATS, PETS. ETC. Beautiful collie puppies, eligible for registra tion. Show or working stock. E8VINQ L1PKE ____________ Hilger, Montana ___________ LIVESTOCK ___________ For 8ale: Outstanding rugged Shorthorn bulls, reds and roans, age 16 months, weight 900 lbs., all registered. OKMISTAN RANCH South of Judson, North pakota LIVE STOCK EXPOSITION 51sHntemational Live Stock Show Opens in Chicago Nov. 25 M ID PUZZLE U S I W O K ) A N S W I R ^ WANTED: 400 cows or 1000 ewes to run on shares. Have lots of hay, range and water. Do not have to be one brand. Herefords preferred. W. L. GERTISON, Box 756, Glendive, Mont. BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. Bar, buildings, licenses, large dwelling- lots $9,000 plus stock, part down. Box 165 Rlngllng, Montana Established auto repair and welding busi ness. Equipment and stock. $47,000. E. L. IRWIN 2551 W. Main Alhambra, California For Sale: 20-room steam heated hotel. 16 rentals outside, one store, apt. for owner. $25,000 down. G , H. AGRANOFF, Soap Lake, Washington For Sale: Popular make car agency and all equipment Including lease, located cen tral Montana. P. O. Box 985-HMP, Billings, Montana FOR SALE Ladles ready to wear shop for sale. Located in Chinook, Montana. IIARBOLT AGENCY Chinook, Montana MOTEL, 9 units, gas station, 2 dwellings brick construction. 318 ft. frontage on Lake Bemidjl and Highways 2, 71, 37L PAUL BUNYAN MOTEL 915 Midway Drive Bemidjl, Minnesota Theatre In eastern central town. Building and equipment only a few years old. Good territory to draw from. CLINTONV1LLE SALES CO. Cllntonville, Wisconsin Want to make money? Then learn to make perfume. Wholesale price list and instruc tions $1. G. T. Springs, Mgr. MID WESTERN LAB. 1124 E, Apache St. Phoenix, Arliona Five-Unit Apartment House in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Excellent location. Gross Income $250 per month. Sale price $18,000 terms. Owner, 1920 Fourth St. Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Opportunity for aggressive man to build a theater in Southwest Fargo, North Da kota, the fastest growing city In the north west. Population increased 40% in last 10 years. For Information write SOUTHWEST FARGO DEVELOPMENT ASSN. Southwest Fargo, N. D. INSTRUCTION ~ FOR A TRADE WITH A FUTURE write MOLER BARBER SCHOOL (G.I. Approved) 121? Facifio Ave. Tacoma, Washington All roads lead to Chicago every year when the International Live Stock Exposition is on in the in ternational amphitheatre at the Chi cago stock yards. And this year will be no exception when the big show, world’s leading event of its kind, begins its second half century, November 25 through December 2. Show window of America’s great est single industry—agriculture— the exposition attracts world-wide interest and attention. It not only brings approximately 200,000 farm folk to Chicago, but the greatest news and radio cover age in the world carries the story of the exposition to people around the globe. William E. Ogilvie, secretary- manager of the exposition since its revival after World War II, believes that the coming 51st edition should set new precedents in scope and quality. He points out that increased prize money for the show should help to encourage the exhibition of the very tops of livestock from both the United States and Canada. Espe cially outstanding are the increases subscribed in the cattle department which it is anticipated will attract record entries. Prizes for all cattle classes will be $61,370, the largest total ever offered. Many prize increases made in other breeds to mark the occa sion of the golden jubilee show are retained this year. Two years ago the horse show, which highlights the entertainment program with 13 performances, took on a western flavor with the addi tion of a “ cutting horse contest” for quarter horses, so named as being the fastest horse over a quar ter mile and ideally adapted to ranch work. This contest, in which the horses “ cut” a calf out of a drove of cattle, just as he is re quired to do in his work on the west ern range, proved so popular that it has been installed as a perma nent fixture, similar to the sheep dog act which is a perennial favor ite with all exposition audiences. MISCELLANEOUS ROLLS DEVELOPED, 25o * Reprints, 3c FOX 8TUDIOS Billings, Montana Granite Monuments Manufactured. Mention size, color, pattern, lettering: suggest price. GIBBINS Willlston, N. D. New FISCHER’S S A F E S Opening — Repairing Used BlUings, Montana FOR SALE 23 NEW STAMP VENDING MACHINES. P. O. Box 985-ILP, Billings, Montana SOUTH-WIND HEATERS Service and Parts R. B. FREEMAN Phone 2818 417 Lewis Ave. Billings, Montana Juke-Box-Amusement route. Unusual oppor tunity for financially responsible party. Good going business. Substantial income. Ample expansion potential. Write P. O. BOX 1847 GREAT FALLS, MONT. Sizes 1 to 12, AAAAAA to EEEEE. Send for free mall order catalog showing quality shoes for every purpose priced $9.95 to $15.95. SOLBY BAYES. Dept. CD 126 Tremont St. Boston 8, Mass. Hardware store, inventory and fixtures. Small investment. County seat, Idaho. Ex cellent opportunity for right party. Reason able rent for building. Write to— STORES DIVISION P, O. Box 2155 Spokane, Washington ATTENTION! We can supply you with re ligious merchandise for your home, Sunday School, church and pastor’s study. OPEN BIBLE BOOK STORE 632 N. Main Sheridan, Wyoming ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY 95 acres, partly timbered. Pine, fir and tamarack suitable for cabins. Cabin and two natural springs, on Alcan highway, 2 miles south of Eastport. $2,750 cash, DEANE FOWLER Box 348 Three Forks, Montana Used two row pickers, John Deer No. 21, McCormick-Deerlng No. 2P; Newldea No. 6. F30 Farmall tractors, Mpls.-Mollne R-47. Both new paint Jobs, good condition. FARMERS EXCHANGE, Inc. Lakefleld, Minnesota STAGE^SCREI By Inez Gerhard T HAT popular daytime serial, \Portia Faces Life” , has gained new importance through its new public service feature. Each Wednes day Lucille Wall, “ Portia” , salutes “ The Woman of the Week” , who may be a housewife, a career wom an, anyone who has contributed in an outstanding way to her com munity and country. Marguerite Higgins, the famous woman war correspondent, was the first one. The second was Mrs. Anne Green berg, a housewife who started the New York association for the help of retarded children. This is a move to give recognition to women from all over the country whose efforts have not received the nation-wide commendation they deserve. CBS has terminated its deal with “ Lum and Abner’’ and has made a settlement with the rural comedy team for the remaining four years of the six-year contract. An Illinois farm youth shown with his champion barrow at last year’s International Live Stock Exposition. Dr A. D. Weber, of Kansas State College, Manhattan, will return to judge the steers again this year. The only American to judge these class es since the exposition departed from the custom of having foreign judges two years ago, “Dad” Web er, as he is known among his stu dents, is one of the most popular cattle judges in the country. THE EIGHT DAYS of the exposi tion are packed with thrills for agricultural visitors. But the real high points of the show are when the grand champion steer is selec ted on Tuesday and when he is sold on Thursday. Last year’s champion, a hereford named Judge Roy Bean, was pur chased from his Pecos county, Tex as 4-H club owners at a record $11.50 per pound by Dearborn Mo tors of Detroit. Dearborn hauled the steer in a special plane on a 10,000 mile tour of the country. But the glamor of the steer show in the amphitheatre, which houses most of the livestock at the inter national, does not dim in the im portance of the great show of car loads of fat cattle, sheep and swine that goes on in nearby pens of the Chicago market. Says Dan D. Case ment, veteran Kansas cattleman, concerning the carlot fat stock show in the yards, “ It would be impossible to give too much credit to the magnificent show of fat car- lots that have invariably appeared at the international ^during my life time. It is undoubtedly the greatest fat stock show in the world.” Other features in connection with the international that have become familiar in the years since 1900 in clude the grain and hay show, which is recognized as the world’s largest competitive showing of farm crops, with exhibits from nearly every state and all provinces of Canada; and the interesting and educational meats show, first staged in 1924, which provides a display window for the ^inal phase of meat produc tion from packer to consumer’s table; and the national 4-H club congress held in conjunction with the exposition. Reviewing the first internation in 1900, an early day writer said, “ Scarcely a feature of this exposi tion missed the sensational. The union of elements which gave it birth, its magnitude, the charact er of its exhibitors, the outstanding quality of its stock, the contagious enthusiasm engendered at its auc tion sales, its record-breaking pri ces for bullocks, the overwhelming evidences of popular appreciation —in these features it has built an enduring monument. Great is the livestock industry, and the Interna tional Livestock Exposition is its prophet.” 1. 6 . 9- 10 . n . is . 15. 17. 18. 19. 21 . 22 . 25. 27. 29. 31. 34. 35. 37. 38. 40. 43. 45. 46. 48. ACROSS Mineral springs Large read» ingdesk, A little mound (Eng.) Biblical territory Latin epic poem by Vergil A son o f : Adam Frenzied Silkworm' Indefinite article Bacchanal cry Ahead Peruse Finishing A fleet and spirited horse Internal* combustion engines Diminutive of Helen Gold (Heraldry) Armor o f chains, rings River (Latvia) Mandate Releases Feminine name Performance of dancing girls (India) Flush Baseball team 49. Border 50. Asterisk, \■ DOWN 1. English v novelist ‘ 2. Mountain sickness (So. Am.) 3. Prayer ending 4. Malice 5. Part of “ to be’* 6. Flightless, extinct bird ¡7. Infant 8. King o f Fairies 11. At a distance (l2. Amusement ! 14. Codlike food fish ; 16. Studies with care 20. Paradise ; 23. Division of a play ¿24. Fate 26. Anger 28. River (Russ.) . 29. Burrowing animal 30. A fruit 32. Cavalry soldier 1 armed with a lance 33. Whip BEU U UQUQ □□□□ Dana QDD DQ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ GQCiaa □□□ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ bhhqd annuo □□an QQQ □□ □H Q □ □ □ □ □ □a □□□ □□□ Q Q Q D B □ □ □ O H □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □□□□ nano N O . 74 ' 36. Furnishes temporarily 39. Untamed 41. Petition 42. Spirit lamp 44. Household pet 47. Pronoun i z 5 4 5 4 7 s % 1 1 1 IO II IE '/ / S m i» ■a 10 e A n 17 IS m I •y 1 0 m Zi El U 24 m ze zo i1 17 ze iI Z» 5o 31 32 u 54 I 1* iI 37 U k i 40 44 41 41 44 m 45 44 47 y / / . 44 W A 1 eo 1 THE FICTION CORNER BILL SWEARS OFF By Richard H. Wilkinson B ILL Clifford is off women for life. Dagmar Fanchon is the reason. It happened this way, Carolyn, Bill’s sister, brought Dagmar up to the Clifford camp on Lake Winnepesaukee last June after school closed. The two girls had been roommates at Wellesley. Bill’s mother and father and Bill w e r e all pres- ' ent, Bill was up 3 * Minute from New York for his annual Fiction two weeks vaca. tion. As a rule women didn’t interest Bill very much. But this Dagmar female bowled him over: She was a brunette with dark brown eyes and a petite figure. Bill took one look at her and fell. Even so, Dagmar, who rather went for Bill also, had competition. For Bill was a man with a hobby. Fishing. He was nuts on it, and as usual had planned to spend his an nual two weeks frisking about in coves and inlets and bays with rod and line. It depressed him to think he’d have to divide his time be tween flirting with trout and flirt ing with Dagmar. But on the second day the situation was settled. For Dag mar, after listening to one of Bill’s fish stories, announced that she thought fishing must be fun and would Bill take her? They set out the next morning in Bill's outboard. BUI produced a couple of Whirling Duns and B R O A D W A Y A N D M A I N STREET Ineptness With Equalizer Even Found Among Gangsfers FOR SALE One O.K. Rubber Welders franchise and tire shop equipment. Excellent location at Ely, Nevada. For further details write— O. K. RUBBER WELDERS Ely, Nevada Located m the Heart ol Butte'» Business District LEGGA! RATES COMFORT BOTEI (175 and up COURTE8T Westward-Ho Motel Billings, Montana OPEN ALL YEAR On Highways 10 and 12 West By BILLY ROSE Because I sometimes tote around m ore than tw o dollars, and be cause m y house has demonstrated a tendency to get burgled, I have ' a license to carry a revolver— and sometimes do. I But I certainly hope I never get into a spot where I have to use it, ! because I doubt whether I could hit the back wall of a brewery if I were 20 feet avvsy. | And it isn’t because I haven’t practiced a-plenty. There’s a make shift pistol range back of my house up at Mt. Kisco, and over the years jl guess I’ve used up enough ammunition to keep a small Balkan war going. But no matter how carefully I sight and squeeze the baby gun with the short nose, I’ve never been , able to do much more to the bulls- eye than glare at it. And two will get you 20 that most of the Dead - eye D i c k s you read a b o u t can’t do much better. The U. S. army evidently a g r e e s with me abput the difficulty in hand ling this tricky bit of mechanism effec tively. Next time you see newsreel closeups of the kids who are doing the fighting in Korea, look closely and you’ll s^e they’re armed with rifles—Garands and Browning au tomatics—but about the only place you’ll see a six-gun,will be in the holster of a two-star generaL I FIRST LEARNED that expert shooting with a revolver is more bull than bullseye when I moseyed down to F t Worth 14 years ago to stage that city’s centennial expo sition. One of the whoopty-doos I put on, “ The Last Frontier,’’ was a wild west show, and the cast included the best hoss hands in the business—Galahad* in 10-gallon hats who bad won prize money In every rOdeo from Pendleton to Madison Billy Rose Square Garden. Naturally, I want* ed to include an exhibition of pis tol shooting, and as a charter mem ber of the Zane Grey club I fig ured that almost any one of my bronco busters could pop a clay pipe out of a girl’s mouth at 30 feet. Well, I figured wrong. There was no one in the cast who could hit the pipe without taking the mouth with it, and I wound up having to im port the national pistol champion— a skinny kid from Brooklyn who had learned marksmanship in a Coney Island shooting gallery. This ineptness with what Da mon Runyon used to call \the equalizer’’ is even more com mon among gangsters. Sure, the hoodlums of the ‘20's pis toled many a citizen, but almost invariably the victim was in a motor car, and the range a couple of inches from the nape of his neck. Whenever the corpse-to-be figured to be more than a few feet away, the kill ers used sawed-off shotguns with a tbree-foot spread, or tommyguns which produced a spray like a garden base. A few years back, an ex-bootleg ger—now vice president of a na tional whiskey company—told me a story about A1 Capone which illus trates my point. It seems A1 was tipped off that one of his body guards was playing footsie with a rival gang, so be threw a banquet for 200 of his hired help, and after the feed made some complimentary remarks about the double-crosser and asked him to get up on the table and take a bow. As the guest of honor was bowing, the 200 hood lums reached for their rods and let him have it. But when Capone— always the good bookkeeper—count ed the bullet holes, he found only 20 in the carcass—180 of the trig- germen had missed. YEARS AGO, I used to haunt the 42nd street shooting galleries, and got so handy with a .22 rifle that I could knock the dancing celluloid ball off the stream of water five times out of ten. And I was plenty cocky about my marksmanship un til one day when I went up to see Ben Hecht at his place in Nyack. Hecht, fed up with my big talk about small arms, suggested I shoot it out with Charlie Lederer, the screen writer, who was spending the weekend with him. \I’ve got nothing against Led erer,’’ l said modestly. \Let him live.” \The target will be a toma to can at 10 feet,” said Ben, \and you and Charlie can take turns with my .22 automatic pistol.\ We went out on the lawn and Led erer, sighting carefplly, hit the can two out ol three times. I didn’t even nick it. Last month while vacationing in Hollywood, 1 lunched with Hecht and reminded him of the debacle which ended my career as a marks man. “I might as well have *been shoot ing blanks,” I said. “ As a matter of fact,\ grinned Ben, \ y e * were.\ Very patiently Bill unsnarled her line from an overhanging bough and explained how the thing was done. proceeded to rig tackle. \Fish are sensitive to color,” he explained. “ On a day as bright as this a dull fly does the trick.\ They entered a cove, cut the mo tor and drifted. “ We’U be sure to land something here,” Bill ex plained. He cast and Dagmar cast. Very patiently Bill unsnarled her line from an overhanging bough and explained how the thing was done, Dagmar nodded and tried again. T HEY fished for an hour and failed to land the big one Bill promised. It grew cloudy and the sun disappeared, \Ah Bill said, \We’d better change to a bright fly.” Dagmar s u d d e n l y said: “ There’s something pulling on my lincl ” “ You’ve got a bite!” he yelled. “Start reeling in!’’ He got up and stumbled over a creel. When he looked up Dagmar was holding her line clear of the water, A ten-inch trout was dan gling on the hook. “No!” Bill yelled. “ That’s not the wayl You’ve got to play him!” But Dagmar didn't understand. She began swinging the fish like a pendulum. Presently she caught the line on the up swing and held it, the 10-incher squirming on the hook. « T OOK out!” Bill yelled. \YouTl “ lose him! Don’t do that! You’ve got to play him! Bring him in with a net!” But Dagmar said: \1 can’t see what’s wrong with this method. After all, the idea is to , catch fish, isn’t it?” And she dropped the trout, hook, line and all in the bottom of the boat. Bill made a lunge at her rod, but he tripped again, fell sidewise. The outboard wabbled. Dagmar, caught off balance, threw out her hands to brace herself, missed the gunwale and went sprawling over board. Bill was already in the water, and it wasn’t until he’d gone down and come up again splutter ing, that , he remembered he could not swim. He yelled, splashing around with his hands and ship ping a lot of water. He went down again and came up. Then suddenly he felt a pair of hands grabbing him underneath the shoulders. He clutched at the hands wildly, and something hit him a stunning blow on the jaw. When Bill opened his eyes he was lying on shore. Dagmar was close by, wringing out her dress. Bill sat up. “ What happened?\ Dagmar smiled: “ Y«u tell me.” Bill thought back, and the picture his memory conjured was most humiliating. Right then and there he made his resolve that he was off women for life. Unless, of course, he marries Dagmar Fanchon. 31 Now She Shops “ Cash and C a rry Without Painful Backache Aa we get older, «treat and strain, over- exertion, excessive smoking or exposure to i cold sometimes slows down kidney funo- Ition. This may lead many folks to com plain of nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness. Getting up nights or frequent passages may result from minor bladder irritations due to cold, dampness or dietary Indiscretions. If your discomforts are due to these causes, don’t wait, try Doan’s Pills, a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 60 years. While these symptoms may often otherwise occur, It’s amazing how many times Doan's give happy re lie f- help the 16 miles of kidney tubes and filters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills today! Pours P iu s WHEN SLEEP WON’T COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Use Chewing-Gum Laxative— REMOVES WASTE... NOT GOOD FOOD • W h e n you c a n 't sleep — feel Just aw ful because you need a laxative — do M m illio n s do — chew it e n - s - m i n t . r a N - i - M n r i Is wonderfully different! Doctors say m any o t h e r laxatives start their \flu s h in g ” action too s o o n . . . r i g h t In the sto m a c h . Large doses of such lax atives upset digestion, flush away nour ishing food you need for health and energy . you feel weak, worn out. But gentle vecn - a - m i n t , taken aa n o * om m e n d ed, works chiefly in the lowet bowel where It re m o v e s o n ly w a s t e , n o t r o o d fo o d I You avoid that weak, tired feeling. Use n m - i - u i N i and feel t n * line, full of Ufel 25c. 30*. or only I U * K f e e n - a - m i n t Iffl SAMOOS CHIWIHC-CUM LAXATIVI IF 'P e t e r 'R uin p u m m e l s y o u w ith FOR FAST RELIEF, rub in Ben-Gay. Contains up to 2 V % times more of those two famous pain- relieving agents, methyl salicylate and menthol, than five other widely offered rub-ins l Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM, MUSCULAR ACHES, HEADACHES and COLDS. Ask for Mild Ben-Gay for Children. « * «*• Q U I C K ! R U B I N THE ORIGINALRlôlNAL BAUMEAUME ANALGESIQUENALGESIQUE ^ O ^ r l t h t m » , bl That. Leming - B e n - G a u > B A W # Planning for the Future? Buy U.S. Savings Bonds! b . R p e s - I n R p e n s - B o t h W t y 8. t h e & v o r i t e i s B A . Ye o l M o r e n o n find greater sm o k ing Joy in the rich taste a n d natural fragrance o f P r ince A lb e r t than any other brand. I r s g s w i ' k i tobacco E . J . Beyneids T o b . O » » . N . a THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE - M x e M e n S r a d k e . * 2 X 0 0 6 l & a n a z t y c & e r - t o b a c c o Ä H 8 J M M M , . - J - ¿ A î i