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About The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.) 1891-1962 | View This Issue
The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.), 23 Jan. 1957, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053034/1957-01-23/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
t . f I r t * » - 1 Picture of Di lion Couple Stirs Interest in Unusual Community A former Dillon couple, Mr. and'kept well stocked with'fish. There Mrs. Finley Watson of Phoenix, is a community club house com- Arizona, have caused unusual in terest in the article in “Arizona Highways,” the handsome maga plete with lounge, dining room and kitchen, where Women’s Club members meet ' once a week, zine published monthly, by the! where bingo and card parties are Arizona Highway Department. Mr. Watson was reared in Dil lon and was an | expert mechanic and automobile dealer here until the couple moved to Arizona sev eral years ago. Mrs. Watson was th e f o r m e r “Van” Lowther, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Park Lowther of Butte. A son-in-law and daughtei^^Mr. and. Mrs. William McFadden, and family, live in Dillon. held, where the home owner can entertain guests if his own house prove'sAoo small. The houses are small, too, but big enough. Surely, they are all that the average person of retire ment age wishes to maintain. They are of the two-bedroom variety with living room, bath, kitchen, closets, carport and stor age room. Each house is on a 60- j by 100-foot lot so there is room to Title of the article which at- i do a little gardening' and land- tracted interest here is “Young-j scaping. town, Arizona, U. S. A.”,” and ac-! “ . . . The houses are priced companying it is a picture of the: from $6,800 to $6,950, aimed at the former Dillon couple at a pot luck pensioner or the couple with a night dinner in the community small income. Monthly payment ciubhouse at Youngtown. — including principal and inter- Youngtown, the article ex- est and insurance — are about plains, is a brand new village 17 | $40. . . . ” miles northwest of Proenix, pop- A resident from Chicago, wife ulated with “as happy a group' of a retired salesman for Swift of retired and semi-retired folks , & Co., is quoted: “ . . . Why, there as one would wish to meet any- ! are several couples here who where.” j could buy and sell the whole lot To qualify as residents of this of us, but you’d never know it. unusual community, home own- Their children have grown up ers must be at least 50 years of ¡and married and they simply age. “Domesticated pets are al - 1 want to get away from the care lowed on the premises and chil-|of big homes and estates, dren may visit and stay \during: “But mostly we are a commu- vacations from school,” the article: nity of folks over fifty who have said. \But by and large, Young-j a lot in common.” town is void of confusion andj ---------------------------------- noise usually associated with the j Stockholders pf Credit “Youngtown is built around an | Association Will Elect artificial seven-acre lake which isj The Bozeman'Production Credit — ! Association will hold its 23rd an- | ) A | f t n i A N F W C ! nual stockholders’ meeting on r U L A K l O l Saturday, January.26,1957 at.the the association’s past year’s busi ness will be reviewed. The asso ciation loaned $4,251,081 on crops and livestock to its members in 1956. Leo Kolstad, head of the State Agricultural Conservation service will talk on the Soil Bank and Agricultural Conservation pro gram. An election will be held to fill the directorships of George B. Shaffnerof Dillon and George A. Carkeek of Cameron whose terms expire at this time. Other directors are Charles J. Kauff man of Livingston, Claude D. Cartwright of Townsend and Eugene Westlake of Bozeman. Wednesday, January 23, 1957 , — DILLON EXAMINER 7 MARCH OF DIM ES Special to the.Dillon Examiner; ern Montana. There will be a din ner at noon, entertainment, sou venirs and door prizes.' At the business session a full report of Student Union Building on Mon tana State College campus. o ,, _ . _ , , Several hundred members and Snow Four Feet Deep at Elkhora wjves are expected to attend from There is a good supply of snow, seven counties ir. southwest over the Grasshopper valley fol lowing several lively snow storms during the past week. There’s plenty ;of snow for feeding in sleighs and an abundance at Rainey Mountain for skiing. Last week’s report on snow depth at Elkhorn Springs was four feet. Hunters Use Snoplanes Elk hunting continues and sno planes are heard and seen scooting about the foothills and fields oc casionally. Jim Johnson was up from Dillon at the Circle S ranch with his snoplane and he and Ivan Remely enjoyed the sport. Briefing on Forms And Procedure For ASC Program i A meeting which* will include | Beaverhead county1 committee- l men and Office personnel will be held in Whitehall on Friday, Feb. 1, it has been announced by Leo S. Kolstad, State ASC administra tive officer. The meeting is one of a series , in the state to discuss the spring j wheat acreage reserve program. Kolstad said that the regulations, instructions and forms to be used in the spring wheat program will be the principal items discussed. Details of the program and the agreement forms for produceds will be available at county. ASC offices following the district gath erings. Eligible farmers will have until March 8 to sign agreements. Some time will also be devoted at the district meetings to a dis cussion of the 1957 Agricultural Conservation program, Kolstad said. In connection with the agree ments which the producer signs, Kolstad pointed oiit that the agreement constitutes the entire contract with the terms and con ditions set forth on the reverse side of the form. He advised pro ducers to read the agreement fully before signing so that they ■will know what their privileges ! and responsibilities are. DR. STEELE SPEAKER AT MEA UNIT DINNER . HERE LAST WEDNESDAY Several ways by which the Montana Education Association might extend future services in education and in the recruitment of teachers were enumerated by Dr. Herbert L. Steele, president of Western Montana College of Education, in a recent talk to \ members of the Beaverhead’ unit: The meeting was held in the home economics room at the high school following a pot luck last Wednesday evening. ; Dr. Steele also emphasized the; advantages and the importance! to the individuals of belonging to j active professional organizations. \ The meeting was well attended, with a total of 65 members and j guests present. I T h r e e M E A officials were; among the speakers: .President! Herbert Goetz, superintendent of! , schools at Ennis; Mrs. Josephine Gleed, Helena teacher and first | vice president of the \Southwest-.... ! ern District'; and Wallace Fors- j gren, district second vice presi- I dent and principal .at Bozeman. ■ The dinner was planned by Miss i Rosella M c Q u i l l a n and Miss I Emma Hawks of the county high | school faculty, assisted by unit j committee members, \Mrs. Helen j Andrus and Miss Betty Satter. ACCURATE RECORD OF GAS PURCHASES EXPEDITES REFUNDS Keep a careful record of your *. purchases of gasoline used in ; tractors, trucks and other- mech anized equipment on the farm ; or ranch so you will have an ac curate record when it comes time to apply for refunds of federal tax paid-on gas used for farming. The gas tax refunds are now , made on a yearly basis rather than for a six months period. - However, the government’s year; is the fiscal year running from; July 1 to June 30, instead of the calendar year. So the next refund payments will be made on gas used for farming purposes- b e -'• tween July 1, 1956 and June 30,. 1957. And you .will have a three- ! month period from July 1 to Oc- tover, 1957, to apply for the fed eral tax refund on gas. Application for the refund is : mane on Internal Revenue Ser- : vice Form No. 2240. You can get a copy of this form from the dis trict office of the Internal Rev enue Service at Helena when it : comes time to apply for your .re- ; fund. . Subscribe for THE DILLON EXAMINER IS M m ■ f e t i « T H E M I G H T Y C H R Y S L E R Most glamorous car in a generation Baling Hay for Shipment Wayne Blom'quist from Birch creek has accepted a contract to bale some choice hay at the Circle S. ranch. Ivan Remely has made preparations for the baling, hav ing plowed a road through the Pyle field to the stack he has chosen for beginning the work. The baled hay will be loaded on trucks for hauling to Dillon, from where it will be shipped to Cali fornia to be used as special feed. Skiers Buck Snow to Slide Even after the Grasshopper road snowed in again, after the Dillon patrol man worked Satur day, a nice crowd enjoyed ski ing Sunday at Rainey - Mountain. Russell Harrison visited in the J. D. Harrison home from Mis soula. J. D. Harrison and Sons have moved about 700 head of cows to the Beaverhead where they will remain until after calving at the Bud Harrison ranch. Y RILEY IN TION SKI-JUMP C A M P PENDLETON, Calif., (FHTNC)— Pfc. Ray E. Riley, son of Mrs. Bertha Riley of Argenta Star Route, Dillon, is participat ing in “Operation Ski-Jump” with the 1st Marine Division during the period Jan. 7-23. “Ski-Jump” is a large-scale maneuver utilizing land, sea and air forces of the Marine Corps and Navy, and is taking place at Camp Pendleton, Calif., and at sea, employing over 50,000 men and more than 100 ships. The 1st Marine Division, sup ported by the 3rd Marine .Aircraft Wing, has been storming the beaches of the Camp Pendleton reservation since Jan. 17 and will continue to maneuver ashore until Jan. 23. Both conventional landing craft and the Marine conception of “vertical envelopment” by the use of transport helicopters are being utilized. Practically all versions of mod ern warfare are being put into use: naval bombardment am phibious landing, close air sup port, seaplane-borne invasion, and mass evacuation and replace ment. « l sgpg¡ % Jgfg i§gi If you have believed the cost o f a Chrysler to be out of your reach, you owe it to your pocketbook to stop in and inquire about the new Chrysler Windsor illustrated above. Here is a cat which in beauty, brawn and engineering quality has always been compared with the most expensive cars made. Yet it is priced right smack with the medium-price cars. Remember, too, that this is all Chrysler . . . full size outside and in. It brings you all o f Chrysler’s triumphant new 1957 achievements . . . the new Torsion-Aire suspension that eliminates rock and roll . . . new’ TorqueFlite transmission . . . a 285-horsepower airplane-.type V -8 engine,. Total-Contact brakes and many others. When you compare these pace-setting advances with what the three other major cars in its.price class offer you for the same money . . . we think you’ll be satisfied with nothing less than the most glamorous car in a generation. Come in soon and drive it! See the Chrysler Windsor the only premium-class car that sells at a medium price! MONTANA AUTO SALES- -- Cor. Montana & Sebree — Phone 500 ' f !