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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-5/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11, 195C THE DILLON DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE FTM i OUT OF THE ROUGH — Bobby Jones, Mr. Golf him self. strolls over the lawn of his Atlanta home while re cuperating from a back in jury. Jones, who headlined the tee pastime during the 1920s, has been suffering with a bad back for many years. LOCAL NEWS Past Noble Grand club will meet at the home of Mrs. John Sanner, Saturday evening at 7:30. Those unable to attend are asked to call 559-W in the evenings. Women’s Christian Fellowship of the Baptist church will meet Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Esther Comfort with Mrs- M. M. Comfort hostess. as eo- The monthly pot-luck supper and social hour of the Methodist church will be held Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Choir practice at 7:30. D. C. Wampler of Wisdom was a visitor in the city Tuesday, bringing in a box of relics for the museum. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stallings spent the early part of the week in Butte- Forest H. Anderson, candidate for associate justice of the Sup reme Court was visiting in Dillon yesterday. His home is at Helena. He was formerly county attorney there. Royal Neighbors will have a regular meeting Thursday night at 8 o’clock at the IOOF hall. Dillon Assembly, No. 13, Order of the Rainbow for Girls will hold a regular meeting tonight at 7 :30 at the Masonic hall. Lutheran W.M.F. will meet a t , the home of Mrs. Howard Hansen j on Medicine Lodge Friday at 2:30.; There will be a program. Mission barrels are due at this meeting. Those wishing rides call Theo Bay or Myrtle Pewe. t t S Y Phone 510 Regular Weekly trip* To Armstead, DeB and Lima HUSKY STATION 1 WISDOM WOMAN'S : CLUB RAISES !$300 WITH DANCE By Mary Cottrell i The dance . and ‘ baskqt social I given by the Wisdom Woman’s - Club Saturday night to raise funds I for the construction of the Wis- I dom Community Center, was a l real success from both social and 1 financial standpoints. A big crowd ! enjoyed dancing to the music of ! Joe Smith’s prehestra of Dillon until midnight. Then many very i pretty baskets were auctioned off i bringing from $5 to ,?20 each. A i beautiful lace table cloth made : and given by Mrs, Harold Nelson went to Clarence Helming. When all expenses are paid the proceeds - of the evening will be over $300. The Wisdom' Woman’s Club deeply appreciated the support ! given to this project by Big Hole Mr .and Mrs. Wendell Jardine and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carroll and son Billy from Jackson, attended the bull sale over the week-end and were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wenger. people and others. The club is also very grateful for the generous space given by the Tribune to aticles and news items published in its columns,,while preparations were being made for the dance' and basket social. College Students Join Church Clubs College students at Western will find many church organizations in viting. them to participate. Movement is' underway to or ganize a Newman club, an organ ization of Catholic students meet ing together for religious, cultural and social'activities under the guidance of a chaplain. ' The Canterbury club at S t.: James Episcopal church is also to I be organized, time and place of! meeting to-be announced later. ; The Lutheran students associ- i ation will meet Sunday, with a ! group from the campus at Boze- ! man to assist in the organization. The Methodist Student Fellow ship meets each SundaWafternoon at 5:00- Try to do to others as you For several years there has been would have them do to you, and on the campus an active chapter do not be discouraged if they fail of .the Inter-Varsity Christian Fel- sometimes. -Dickens. lowship. Underwood Funeral i To Be Held Thursday Funeral services for the late j Franklin T. Underwood, former | Dillon resident, who died Monday j in Butte, will be held Thursday j afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Brim- j dage chapel under the auspices of j ! the L-D.S. Church. | Interment will be made in tlie? i | cemetery at Mountain View be-1 ; side the body of his wife, Annie, ! who preceded him in death. with FREEDOM? What’s O u r business Is selling merchan dise— th<? best we can buy—at the most economical price to you. It’s & good/tmsiness, and we like it. But being in business in America is more than skillful buying and1 selling. It’s the exercise of a fundamental right—freedom to venture, freedom to plan, freedom to succeed by serving best. All freedoms stand or fall together. That’s why we take our stand today, with the doctors of America, for the Voluntary System. At home and abroad, It’s worth defending! PADDOCK & TYRO u m the Congress? the President? Off YOU AND THE MAN NEXT DOOR? .U N N IN G AM E R ICA is the joint job o f 150,000,000 people. I t f s the biggest job in the world today —keeping it funning for liberty and for freedom. And the whole world*s watching to see vhether Americans can do it! j N M U C H OF THE W O R L D today, the people have resigned from running their own countries . Others have been quick to step in—first with promises of “security” —and then with whips and guns—to run things their way. The evidence is on every front page in the world, every day. ¿EEDOM COMES UNDER ATTACK. The reality of war has made every American think hard about the things he’s w illing to work and fight for—and freedom leads the list. 3ut that freedom has been attacked here recently— just as it has been attacked in other parts of the world. One of the most serious threats to individual freedom has been the threat of Government-dominated Compulsory Health Insurance, falsely presented as a new guarantee of health \security\ for everybody. THE PEOPLE WEIGH THE FACTS. In the American manner, the people studied the case for Socialized M edicine-and the case against it. They found that Government domination of the people’s medical affairs under Compulsory H e a lth Insurance means lower standards of medical care, higher payroll, taxes, loss of incentive, damage to research, penalties for the provident, rewards for the improvident. They found that no country on earth can surpass Amer- lea's leadership in medical care and progress. They found that able doctors, teachers, nurses and scientists —working in laboratories where Science, not Politics, is master—are blazing dramatic new trails to health for Americans-and for the world. THE \GRASS ROOTS\ SIGNALS CONGRESS. In every com munity in the Nation, people stood up to be counted on this im portant issue. Thousands of local w o m en’s dubs, civic groups, farm, business, religious, taxpayer, medical, educational and patriotic organ izations spoke out—giving the great United States Congress its unmistakable Grass Roots signal from home! And ever watchful, ever sensitive to an alert people, The Congress saw that signal, and heard the people speak out, loud and plain. That's democracy in action. That's the American way! Today among the 10,000 great organizations on militant public record against \Compulsory Health Insurance” are: General Federation of Women's Clubs American Farm Bureau Federation National Grange Veterans of Foreign Wars National Conference of Catholic Charities American Protestant \ Hospital Association American Legion National Association of Small Business Men United States Chamber of’ Commerce National Association of Retail Grocers National Retail Dry Goods Association American Bar Association • Doctors of this Nation are grateful that the people xpfused to be wooed by the fantastic promises of this un-American excursion into State Socialism. • Doctors of America are dedicated to serve their fellow citizens at home and their comrades in uniform# wherever serv ice to this Nation m a y take them, e And the thing they stand ready to fight f o r -t o sacrifice for—to die for—is not the alien w a y of life of Socialism, but the prideful security of a free and self-reliant people! THE VOLUNTARY WAY IS THE AMERICAN WAY! • Throughout the Nation, free men and'women, working and planning together, are finding the American answer to every question of medical service, care and cost. Hundreds of Voluntary Health Insurance Plans are ini healthy competition-sponsored by doctors, insurance companies, hos pitals, fraternal organizations—by industry, agriculture and labor. • Today in America-70 million people are protected by Voluntary Health Insur ance! • Throughout the Nation, families are insuring themselves against the major costs of illness—at reasonable, budget-basis prices. Voluntary Health Insurance takes the economic shock out of illness. Protea your family now. • For information, ask your doaor—or your insurance m.n An American’s greatest heritage is the right to learn the facts—and to speak his mind. Maintained with honor and used with sincerity—that right will guarantee forever that I f m k - PHYSICIANS OF THIS COMMUNITY PARTICIPATED :1N PAYING FOR THIS SPACI AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION • NATIONAL EDUCATION CAMPAIGN ONE NORTH LA SAW STRUT, CHICAGO, ILUNOIS É Ü