{ title: 'The Dillon Daily Tribune (Dillon, Mont.) 1941-1962, October 11, 1950, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053041/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-4.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053041/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053041/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053041/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Dillon Daily Tribune (Dillon, Mont.) 1941-1962 | View This Issue
The Dillon Daily Tribune (Dillon, Mont.), 11 Oct. 1950, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053041/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
PAGE FOUR THE DILLON DAILY TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, OCT. II, 195C COLLEGE NOTES The Wescolite, student paper, made its first autumn quarter ap pearance Wednesday, Oct. 11. Florence Cray, Bozeman, is editor; Shirley Chaffin, Corvallis ,and Ed ward Monger, Belgrade, are busi ness managers. The reporters are Betty Austreng, Lois Ellwood, Jack Carriger, Beverly Grant, all of Butte; Claude Ankeny, Victor; Kermit Cole, Missoula; Margaret Lane, Three Forks; and Shirley Petersen, Lima. The faculty spon sor is Genevieve Albertson. The Journalism club, the president of which is Marva Eccleston, Ana conda, assists in the management of the paper. Students and faculty at Western observed the traditional “Go” at Torey Lodge in Birch Creek can yon Wednesday. Enrollment figures, as released by Miss Dorothy Gelhaus, regis trar, show that,250 students have registered for the autumn Quarter —117 men and 133- women. The freshman class totals 110. On several'occasions during the past weeks Prof. \Ralph McFadden ■ has been the accompanist for Billy Steck, 16-year-old violinist.-Tues day evening he appeared with the young artist in a concert at the Butte high school; on Friday they will be in Great Falls at a public recital sponsored by. the Tuesday Music club. Previously they have appeared in high school assem blies at Dillon, Deer Lodge and Anaconda; at Carroll College in Helena; and in a public concert at Kalispell. Billy Steck is returning to Philadelphia to continue his study of music and to prepare for a town hall recital in New York in the spring. During the past several days j students and faculty at Western j have been enrolling in the Crusade j for Freedom. The committee in charge is Ralph Kneeland, chair man; Mrs. Ruth Dillavou, Howard Leslie, and Dan Sweeney, repre-; senting the students. ! Ralph Kneeland of the Educa tion department is in Great Falls to attend the Social Welfare meeting. Mr. Kneeland is the leader of two panel discussions. \k r t club announces me follow ing officers, elected the past week —president, Hugh Simmons, Dil lon; vice president, Bill Holdorf, Butte; secretary, Marilyn War- burton, Cameron. The sponsor is Mrs. Stella Bierrum who is tak ing the work of Mrs. Mary Em- erick, absent on leave during the fall quarter. Miss Genevieve Albertson of the English department was in Alder Saturday, speaking at a meeting of the Federated Women’s Clubs of Madison county. The Women’s Athletic associa- | tion has planned a number of j social events for the coming year, j The group is sponsoring a recre- j ation program each Monday eve- j ning at 7 for all college women. Familiar Down Town Landmark Moved A familiar landmark on our downtown streets was removed this week when Myrtle Larson moved the hamburger shop across from Safeway Store to North Ida ho street where it will be con verted into a cabin. The hamburger shop has been a familiar landmark for the past 30 years. It was the hangout for lovers of chili when the late Fred Oliver and his son Ted were the owners. They operated it for many | years. ' j In recent years it has changed hands several times but always enjoyed a good trade from lovers of hamburger sandwiches and j chili. All successful individuals have become such by hard work; by im proving moments before they pass into hours, and hours that other people may occupy in the pursuit of pleasure —Mary Baker Eddy. See the finest Hohner solo har monica at $24. Others 95c up. Tribune, r : The bigaest selection in town Htnc.ir I cblols ,. Note boob . Cellophane Tape. I k Bookkeeping supplies, ledgers sales books, etc., at the Tribune 6et yours today ab ' T h e T R IB U N E a ® » mSHACKS - SAHVWimS they love its rich, mild cheddar cheese flavor N utritious ! D I G E S T I B L E A S M I L K Student Wives began their act ivities with a meeting at the home of Mrs. John McGee with Mrs. John Dunne as co-hostess. The group has a membership of about thirty. Gargoyles, the campus drama tics club, elected Jean Lay, Mis soula, vice president; Jackie Haines, Butte, treasurer; Shirley Chaffin, Corvallis, secretary; and Beverly Grant, Butte, recorder. The president, Robert Erickson of Corvallis, was elected at the close of the spring quarter. The sponsor is Dr. Selma Guttman. The group is busy selecting one-act plays for presentation later in the quarter. Tryouts are open to any student in college. After a week of election cam paigning, the freshman class in stalled Jack Carriger of Butte as president; Peggy Clark of Arlec as vice president, and Wilma Rich ards of Clinton as secretary-treas urer. Miss Evelyn Mikkelson and Mr. Walter McGuire were chosen sponsors. LITTLE GIANT—Georges Delcourt (right), five feet tall, lets his berobed, mustached attorney tell It to a Paris judge. Little Georges, who learned Judo because people made fun of his size, overpowered three policemen one after another when they tried to prevent him from riding his bicycle down a one-way street. Be Is charged not only with reckless driv ing, but with resisting arrest and assaulting an officer. Three officers. The faculty of WMCE and the three young women from Germ any, students on the Western cam pus sponsored by the Institute of International Education, were guests of the MEA local at a W e salute AMERICAN MEDICAL PROGRESS We are pleased to place our name betide those of other liberty-loving Americans who throughout the Nation today reaffirm their adherence to the principle of traditional American enterprise and initiative. We believe firmly that in all fields—from industry to the arU...from agriculture to medicine—America has proved to the world that... THE VOLUNTARY WAY IS THE AMERICAN WAY FIRST NATIONAL BANK L.D.S. Dinner And Bazaar Friday Eve The L. D. S. Relief Society din - 1 ner and bazaar will be held Friday evening at the church starting at 6:30. Dinner will be served until 8 p.m. Baked foods will be on sale throughout the evening. A free show will be held for the children starting at 8 p.m. The public is invited. Committees in charge are: Bazaar -Lillith Jones, Lavina Smith, Murial Bay, Elaine Swee ney- Food Sale Theda Smith, Myrtle Atkinson. Dinner Verla Boetticher, Bes sie Hubbard, Clara Payne. Serving—Emma Nygren, Ada coffee hour Tuesday. President Rush Jordan explained the plan under which students are sent to the various colleges and universi ties in the United States. Mr. Ber tram Gable, WMCE instructor in vocal music, furnished music for the occasion. The German stud ents responded briefly to the wel come given them. Dieterle, Elizabeth Lloyd. Dishes—Verla Lovell, Glenna Goodlellovv, Noreen Hubbard, Lp- | waine Lovell. \ The ladies say bring your family i and enjoy a pleasurable evening. ; The ultimate notion of right is : that which tends to the universal good; and when one’s acting in a certain manner has this tend ency he has a right thus to act.— 1 Francis Hutcheson. Doeskin deluxe dinner napkins, | Tribune. Over the years, behind our counters, we've sold many kinds of accepted- medicines and we've filled thousands of prescriptions for people of this community. We've helped measure out a lot of medical progress. We've seen new. treatments and new drugs turn illness into health, despair into hope. This progress is more than statistics— it's people! And the people we know don't want it tampered with! Free America has no place for a bureaucracy that stands between people and progress, between doctor and patient, between physician and pharmacist. FREE A M E R IC A HAS N O PLACE FOR SOCIALIZED MEDICINE! MITCHELL'S CITY DRUG Marva Ecleston, Anaconda, is president of the campus Journal ism club; Margaret Lane, Three Forks, is vice president and Betty Christensen, Great Falls, is secre tary-treasurer. Initiation will take place at the meeting tomorrow evening. Genevieve Albertson is the sponsor. RfR. O.S.MT,OYf. B R A N D Cellophane Tape T h e TRIBÜNE Blue Cross for hospital care - Blue Shield for medical cart Blue Shield - Blue Cross, Three North Main St., Helena, Montana - ___ . .. By Tent: nf Thousands . . . People Are Enrolling in Bine Cross and Blue Shield Every Wor^ne Day Because SMART PEOPLE KNOW A GOOD THING WHEN THEY SEE IT 1