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About Tribune-Examiner (Dillon, Mont.) 1973-1982 | View This Issue
Tribune-Examiner (Dillon, Mont.), 28 Dec. 1973, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053037/1973-12-28/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
CLASSIFIED BILLBOARD $2.00 per inch box Thank You •vtryon* who donate) Robarta d lih coupona tor tha Sr. Cltliana. We atlll nwd about 2500 by Jan. 10. Call M3- 2490 or 410 So. Atlantic. Beaverhead Senior Citizens Monuments & Markers Cemetery monuments and markers. Leonard . L. Mashino. Phone 683-2015. For Your Dancing and Listening Pleasure Joan Wilson will be playing the organ at the STAIRCASE LOUNGE New Year's Eve Send a smile With a \Billboard Greeting\ For Sale 1 pr. “ HEAD” Standard 185 Cm., Solomon Bindings & Euroflex Poles Inc. Phone 683-2855. Wanted To Rent WANTED TO RENT: 2 or 3 bedroom house, garage is desirable. No children or pets. 683-4335. Personals l-N-V-E-N -T-l-O-N -S $$ IDEAS WANTED $$ IM P E R IA L 2250 E. Devon Des Plaines, 111.60018 Call M r Bell Collect 312-297 1750 Help Wanted WANTED: MANAGER GRAZING ASSOCIATION - ASSOCIATION RUNS 4500 PAIRS - MUST BE AVAILABLE TO BEGIN WORK APRIL 1, 1974. INTERVIEWS TO BE HELD AT THE STATE BANK HOSPITALITY ROOM ON JANUARY 8, 1974 IN DILLON, MONTANA AT 7:30 P.M. SEND RESUME TO SNOWLINE GRAZING ASSOCIATION, BOX 1281, DILLON, MONTANA 59725. TELEPHONE 683-2791. ^ - IF IT’S BETTER PAY YOU WANT write me. Opening in Dillon area. No experience necessary. Age not im portant. Good character a must. We train. Air mail B. P. Dickerson, Pres., South western Petroleum Corp., Ft. Worth, Tex. Miscellaneous JOIN Outdoors Unlimited to insure multiple use of our public lands. Ph. 683-5511 or 4420. IF CARPETS look dull and drear, remove spots as they appear with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Eliel’s. For Rent FURNISHED one bedroom apartment downtown. Laundry facilities. Phone 683-5511 or 683- 4748. FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer. Phone 683-2215 after 5 p.m. Mobile Homes ONE NEW two bedroom 64x14 trailer for sale. 683-5541. 1969 DOUBLE WIDE three bdrm mobile home with property. Call 683-4966 or 683- 2889. Wanted To Buy SERVICEABLE pr. Skis abt. 68 inches long. Call Janice Hand 683-4746 or 683-4420. WANTED to buy, lease, or rent: Good summer pasture for approx. 400 pair. 683-4824. WANTED TO BUY: Standing Timber. Bill Hand 683-4746. Wanted BABY SITTING in my home. Phone 683-2756. For Sale— Homes FOR SALE: Four bedroom older home. Very good condition. 683- 4507. FOR SALE: Two Bedroom Home, 683-5541. Machinery & Tools JONSEREDS & POULAN Chain saws. Sales & Service. Co-Op Supply, Dillon. 683-2308. McCULLOCH and JOHN DEERE Chain Saws. SALES and SER VICE. Rolandson Equipment, 683-4281. Lost & Found LOST: One pair tinted bifocal glasses in black case. $5.00 reward, 683-2794. Business Opportunity DR. JEKYLL’S AND MR. HYDE’S National Restaurant-Tavern chain is placing an outlet in your area. High profit potential. We train. Size determines CASH investment of $15,000 to $25,000, plus good credit. TYiis is not a franchise. You own 100 per cent of the business. Why pay for blue sky? Sebastian’s Intn’l, Inc. 312 Bank o f Washington Bldg. Spokane, Washington 99201 (509) 838-4761 Automobiles RAMBLER 1966, new tires, rebuilt engine, good con dition. Also color console TV., Stereo, Minnox camera. All excellent condition V4 price. 683-2817. WINTER SALE! PRICES REDUCED on all new & used cars to clear lot. College Motors. Husky Service 1959 Chev. V, T. $595.1947 Jeep 292 V-8, $450, 1953 Chev. % T. $195. 230 N. Mont. 683-2811. For Sale— Real Estate e x c e l l e n t ’71 Ford Pickup , for sale, low mileage. See Wade Hansen or call 683-4828. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 2 acres plus, behind Ford Garage. Also I‘/4s acres north end of Lcggct Ave. next to Ibey Ad dition. Call or Write A-l Monarch Upholstery, 115 Cherry St., Ph. 563-6126, Anaconda, Mont. CHOICE LOTS in town, acres out oi town. Houses and financing available, any price range. Call 683-5541. Services Offered WATER WELLS Pumps-Installation-Service Briggs Drilling & Pump . ,Ph.683-5732 Dillon, Morit. HAY HAULING. Call 683-4342. SMALL APPLIANCES - Power tools - Repaired. All service guaranteed. Free estimates. 1013 E. Glendale. Phone 683-5570. DENNY’S BACKHOE & Dump- truck Serv. Ditches, Pipeline, Septic Tanks, Gravel & Topsoil. 683-4472. Livestock— Poultry HORSESHOEING ~ EdBlanchi Ph. 683-5323 FOR SALE: Weaner p in. Good (die. 683*2831. 1947 FORD Pickup Vi T. Ex cellent cond. it McCullock chain saw. 683-4921. Aviation LEARN TO FLY In a Cessna 172. Charters. Dillon Flying Service. . 683-9969. Supermarket burgled VAN BUREN, Ark. (AP) - Police are amazed at the au dacity o f thieves who burglar ized a supermarket here. The thieves stole a truck, backed it into the store, hauled out two safes Joined in concrete, dragged the load three blocks through town, paused at a church parking lot to hoist it onto the truck, drove to a utility plant and then cut open one of the safes in the utility offices. The safe was found at the Ar- kansas-Louisiana Gas Co. plant sin Fort Smith some hours after the burglary early Christmas ■ Day. Classified Advertising Rates TriAsianttiKlBuiintuDiractary Consecutive insertions — Minimum Ad 3 Lines 3 Lines 4 Lines 5 Lines 6 Lines 7 Lines in $ .90 1.20 1.50 1.50 2.10 3X $1.65 2.20 2.50 3.00 3.50 3x $2.40 3.00 3.75 4.50 5.25 Sx Monthly 3.00 $13.20 4.00 5.00 . 6.00 7.00 17.40 22.00 24.40 30.80 Blind Box Ads require 75 cents exlre handling charge, and mailing. Deadline is NOON day batora ad Is r u n . . Cancellation deadline is 9:00 a.m. tha day ad is running. C A R D O F TH A N K S Flat Rate... .................. $2.00 Hal Boyle Car designers must all be bachelors. Or at least not parents. Or at least not parents who travel in cars with children. The modem motor car may be a marvel of engineering and advertising may boast of it as a family vehicle, but any father with children under 16 understands that it lacks many family facilities. For instance, where do you put the garbage? Granted that a garbage disposer might be a bit tough to fit in amidst the automatic windows, air conditioning, pollutant controls and what not. Still, the mechanical geniuses who can predict almost to the hour of warranty expiration when the fan belt will give way should be able to come tq> with some solution. Maybe a compactor would. That at least could convert half-eaten hot dogs, used soda cans, broken balloons, leftover popcorn ball, stray shards of com chip and mashed clam shell from last summer’s vacation into neat sanitary bricks that could be stacked easily. Even a built in wastebasket would be an improvement. Every car with kids already has (or, it sometimes seems, is) a waste basket o f sorts. It may be a pink plastic bucket straddling the hump in the floor or a plastic sack dangling forlornly from a window knob, but if a car has kids, it has to have a place for debris. Since car designers don’t build in trash containers, it follows that they don’t have kids. Parents may not know engineering, but they understand the equation that children equal rubble. And the amount o f garbage compounds with each additional kid. A two-week vacation with three small boys might give car makers lots of better ideas. Does any car have a place to hang wet bathing suits? Does any car have facilities for eating in the car? Does any car have a sound barrier that can be raised to in sulate mom and pop in the front seat from the rumble of childhood in back? Does any car have windows that no kid under the age of 13 can lower at will? Does any car have built into momma’s side a compartment for spare diapers? Or a holder for crayons, coloring books, games, puzzles and other entertainment? Does any car have luggage space able to cope with fishing rods, basketballs, baby strollers and still accommodate suitcases with at least two changes per child? Obviously, Detroit (at least the car-making part of it) needs a lesson in parenthood. One approach might be to require the president of each car- maker to spend one three-week vacation with at least two chil dren under the age of nine. Each day traveled ought to inspire at least one improvement. Somebody might even figure out how to put a bathroom into the far corner. Library Corner “ Forerunner Foray,” by Andre Norton. Ziantha was a highly skilled sensitive who had been trained in many areas of mind- touch, but she was totally un prepared for her contact with the strange, throbbing green stone that I took her out-of-body into the an- ! dent Forerunner worlds of hidden treasure and wisdom. Repelled, horrified by what she sensed was possible, still Ziantha was drawn inexorably to the stone and un willingly found herself trapped in the past, in another’s identity, with only the help of an unknown sen sitive for guidance. Together they learn that the only way they can return to their true selves is by finding the lost mate to the Focus stone. , Pursued by vengeful enemies, trapped by the increasing physical weakness that threatens to overtake them, they discover the clue to the missing stone. Then Ziantha must face a harrowing transport even farther back into another identity and, in a desperate race against time, struggle to save herself and her valiant male companion. “ The Paladin,” by George Ship way. The dark, bloody, voluptuous ground of eleventh-century England and Normandy was no place for the timid and weak. To make his way, a young nobleman needed strength, courage, charm, and not least, raw ambition. Walter Tirel had all of these. It was a time of change. William the Conqueror, for so long ruler of much of France and finally of England had three ambitious sons—Robert Curthose, the eldest and heir, William Rufus, and the crafty Henry. At first, in the role of faithful liege, Walter earns the friendship of Rufus and Curthose. But after the Conqueror’s death when the brothers begin to com pete for power, Rufus's homosexuality causes Tirel to turn away, toward Curthose, through whom he achieves stature and wealth. Thai colonel seeks asylum SEOUL (AP) - Col. Narong Kittikachom of Thailand said today he plans to become a Buddhist monk if he fails to ob tain asylum abroad. Narong, who fled his home land after the overthrow of his father's military government, told newsmen he had applied for asylum in both Portugal and Switzerland and was awaiting the responses. The Thai defense ministry has recommended that Narong; his father, former Premier Thanom Kittikachom; and his father-in-law, former Deputy Premier Pralhas Charusathien, be tried in connection with the killing o f several hundred people during the student-led uprising in Thailand in October. “ The Fabulous Fondas,” by James Brough. “ A great story with an all-star cast.” Henry Fonda, the boy from Nebraska who rose to fame on Broadway and in Hollywood, beloved for his performances in “ Mister Roberts,” “ The Grapes of Wrath,” and scores of other hit plays and movies. Jane Fonda, the sex kitten of “ Barbarella,” and “ Cat Ballou,” the unhappy hooker of “ They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” , Oscar winner for her role in “ Klute,” presently a moving force in radical causes. Peter Fonda, counterculture super-star for his “ The Wild Angels and “ Easy Rider.” Vandals cause power outages GREAT FALLS (AP) - Van dals who shoot insulators on Montana Power Co. trans mission lines have caused a series of severe power outages in recent weeks, a company of ficial said. Lewis G. Brewer, district manager, said the most recent occurred early Christmas Day when rifle shots destroyed in sulators on a 69,000-volt line in the vicinity of hydroelectric dams east of Great Falls. He said the damage caused a I o b s of electricity to a number o f ru ral areas as far north as Ches ter. Brewer said a similar in cident occurred last week, causing a two-hour power out age on a 50,000-volt line serving Ifim and rural areas of Mille- gan, Smith River and Riv- erdale. Brewer said many insulators have been shot off transmission lines which carry electrical energy to Helena. In each case, Brewer said, it takes up to 50 man-hours to lo cate and repair the damage. Keep the change RICHMOND, Va. (A P ) - \Keep the change,” a buyer said to the man selling news papers in die lobby of an apart ment building. The vendor passed over two papers and accepted a quarter — a nickel tip. The seller was Gov. Linwood Holton, who was helping his 14- year-old son, Woody, deUver his newspapers on the last day of Ns Richmond Times-Dispatch route Christmas morning. DAILY TRIBUNE-EXAMINER, FYiday, December 28,1973 Highlights In History i * j By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Today is Friday, Dec. 28, the 362nd day of 1973. There are three days left in the year. Today's highlight in history: On this date in 1836, Spain recognized the independence of Mexico. In 1846, Iowa w b b admitted to the Union as the 29th state. In 1856, the 28th American president, Woodrow .Wilson, was born in Staunton, Va? In 1869, William Semple of Mount Vernon, Ohio was granted a patent on chewing gum. In-1942, Japanese planes bombed Calcutta, India in World War II. In 1962, President John Kennedy flew to Miami, Fla., to greet the first Cuban prisoners released by Fidel Castro in exchange for American ransom. In 1966, China detonated its fifth atomic bomb. Ten years ago: New fighting broke out between Greek and Turkish Cypriots on Cyprus despite intense British efforts to settle disputes which had torn the island for one week. Five years ago: Israeli com mandos carried out a raid at the Beirut airport in Lebanon, destroying 13 Arab aircraft. One year ago: Former President Harry Truman was buried at the Truman Library in Independence, Mo. Today’s birthdays: Pianist and songwriter Earl Hines is 68. Comedian Sam Levenson is 62. Thought for today: The im: portant thing is to know how to take all things quietly—Michael Faraday, English scientist, 1791- 1867. Senator Jackson terrorist target SEATTLE (AP) — Sen. Hai ry M. Jackson says his strong support o f Israel has made him a target of Arab terrorists. “ I’ve been threatened\ by Arab terrorists, the Washington Democrat told a news confer ence Thursday. But he refused to elaborate, except to say: “ I am an obvious target.” A spokesman for the Seattle FBI office said, “ We know about it, but we can’t comment about it. It’s a matter under in vestigation.” A Jackson aide said the sena tor’s staff had been warned to “ watch suspicious mail for let ter bombs.” Jackson said, “ The whole world will respect us” for standing behind Israel during the Arab oil embargo. “ We’re in a crisis, but it’s a manageable crisis.” 90th birthday for millionaire CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - Multimillionaire Cyrus S. Ea ton, celebrating his 90th birth day, received telegrams from several dignitaries. One from Soviet leaders Leonid I. Brezhnev, Alexei N. Kosygin and Nikolai V. Podgor- ny conveyed “ best wishes and warmest regards” from the So viet people. Eaton and three generations of his family had a private cel ebration Thursday at the indus trialist’s Acadia Farms in Northfield, Ohio, followed by a reception at City Hall in Cleve land. Fewer since oil Associated Press Writer Fewer tankers have been ply ing the seas since the Arab oil embargo began in October, and those with cargoes have been slowing down to save fuel, ship ping authorities say. Business was booming before the em b a rgo, but industry sources and a survey of a half- dozen major oil ports in the United States point to a slow down since October. By what extent the embargo has been offset by imports from non-Arab countries is difficult to assess. But the level of tanker traffic may indicate how suc cessful the United States has been in making up the dif ference. Tankers are the nation’s chief means of bringing in foreign oil. Imports normally account for eight million of the 17 million barrels of oil the nation needs, daily. The Arab embargo should have reduced imports by about half. Government figures show av erage daily imports for the four- week period ending Dec. 14 were 6.2 million barrels of crude and refined oil. Projected needs in that period were 7.4 million barrels. An Associated Press survey showed tanker traffic was off 1972 levels in some areas, most noticeably New York and Phila delphia, between the start of the embargo Oct. 17 and Dec. 26. The survey showed oil was being brought in from the Ca ribbean, West Africa, Indonesia and South America. How much could not be determined. Tanker brokers, who find ships for those with oil to trans port, say there is less cargo to carry and less fuel to move it since October. Frank DeSalvo of Poten & Partners, Inc., in New York said that, after October, \car goes dried up, rates (for char tering tankers) dropped off and prices o f fuel for operating ships took off.” Dillon, Montana Page 7 tankers embargo As a result, he said: “ A num ber o f ships are idled. Some by design and some because they have to.” Brokers say the tanker busi ness is used to volatile changes in supply and demand. They say the embargo would have to last another six months to cripple the industry. “ The spot market, ships free for one trip, has gone down con s id e r a b ly ,” said another leading broker. “ The decrease 4n activity has led to reduced rates. For example, the rate from the Persian Gulf to Europe is down about 75 per cent.” Single-haul carriers make up 10 to 20 per cent of the m arket. They are the first to be affected by a shortage of oil because they pick up cargoes on only a few weeks notice. But brokers say few longterm lease agreements or contracts for building new ships have been signed since the Arab embargo. This could hurt in time, they say. Major oil companies own more than one-third of the world’s 5,500 tankers and lease many of the rest. Most refused to comment on the amount of their imports or where they originate. Trudeau baby named OTTAWA (AP) - Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau says his new son will be named Al exandre Emmanuel after the saint, the czar or the pope, “ take the one you want \ Emmanuel was the prime minister’s choice. His wife Margaret, chose Alexandre The baby, born Christmas Day, will be nicknamed Sacha The Trudeaus’ other son. Jus tin, was born on Christmas Day two years ago. i • H c f / f j ( M w ( j j ^ c Let there be music and merrymaking as we welcome another New Year' CLUB ROYAL