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About The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925-1973 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.), 06 Feb. 1925, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075229/1925-02-06/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
4 1 More Than 6,000 Readers Every Week. la ws ....3• 41 ' ..10 0 \ 6 HIT Te)RetAt. SC/TASTY JION (ANA, tiELANA . THE HARD/N TRIBUNE -HERALD Advertise -H i e n the THE THE HARDIN 7111BU E AND THE HARDIN HERALD VOLUME XVIII, NO. 0 HARDIN, DIG 11011114 COUNTY, M)NT THREE DRAW FINES w ° 17:4jS t iZ D LO I A I I4 ( 2.70. SCHEDULE MADE UP FOR \MOONING\ * BONDSMAN SURRENDERS ANOTHER --CASES DISMISSED ( In a brief session of the dis- trict court yesterday, with Judg: Robert C. Stung of Billings pre- siding, the following proceed- ings were had: The injunction against Percy Rohirai n, grlwing out i.f a liquor charge, was modified to permit his removing from the building he has been, occupying, his fix- tures, so long as they are nob removed from the county. They were immediately removed to the M & M block 4. where they were stored. Frank Brown and Frank Alex- ander of Lodge Grass entered utea , waity ta pos!-es-aon of a moonshine still and were fined $100 each. They were repre sented by Attorney Louis E. Haven. - Floyd A. Tandy entered a plea of guilty to a charge of manu- facturing liquor and was given a sentence of $200 fine and 00 days in jail. A plea of not guilty ef vio- lating the prohibition law was made by J. L. Weaver, and he was released on $500 bond. He was represented by Guinn & Maddox. On motion of County Attorney T. H. Burke, the following crimi- nal actions were dismissed: State against Lawrence Robin - eon, rape, two charges; State vs. Mike Youngswallow, rape: Mate vs. F. W. Loomis, fraudu- lent check charge; State vs. William Orser, assault second degree; State vs. L. E. Newman, grand larceny of wheat. E. Mainwaring, charged with violation of the prohibtion law, was surrendered by his bonds man and now languish - . :n the aounty basti le . At, Worden last Saturday night . the Hardin high school boys' and girls' basketball quints tried conclusions with the Hunt- ley project basketeers, with di- vided results. The boys won their game 29 to 18, but the girls were not,. „so !fortunate, losing by a score of 21 to 4. The trip to and from Worden was made by automobile. Re- turn games will be played at the high school gym of the Hardin high tomorrow night, when a double header will be staged. EireryhOcTf turn out and root. This evening, on the local floor, a return game was played with Park City, the score being 14-7 in Hardin's favor. SHERIDAN HOOPSTF,RS 8 ammumanniMmlailINImmimsa A, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1925 VOLUME V, NO. 32 FOR 11001) TOURNEY 2 ATTEND SHORT COURSE SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL QUINTS ARE S PLACED FOR DISTRICT ELIMINATION PLAY Drawings for the Yellowstone district interscholastic basketball tournament to be ,held lings Feb. 19; 20 and 21 at which h entrants in the state tournament will be determined by elimination s were made at the Billings high J school Satsirday afteraoon . by p officers of the interscholastic as- sociation in the presence of rep- resentatives of many of the 15 Learns entered fur play, says Sun- day's Gazette. Twenty-eigle games will con- stitute the tournament. Belfry will play Billings; Hardin will play Worden and Big Timber MEET FIRST DEFEAT will play Rapelje on the Morn- ing of the first day, Thursday, Feb. 19; Red Lodge will play Park City; Roberts will play Golumbns and Fromberg will play Edgar on the afternoon of the first day; Bridger will play a bye and the winners of the BelfryaBillings and •Har- din-Wprden games will play on the evening, of the first The Hardin high school bas- ket ball quint on Tuesday even- ing at Sheridan, Wyo., gave to the high school team of that city its first defeat of the season, winning over them by a 32 to 12 score. The following write-. up of the game from the pen of W. S. Sopris, sport editor of the Sheridan Post -Enterprise, is taken from Wednesday's issue of that journal: 'Sheridan high school's bas- day, Fridey, Feb. 20; three in ketball quintet suffered its first, the afternoon and four in the seb-back of the current season, evening. Tuesday night, meeting defeat Four games will be played at the hands of the speedy Har- on the morning of Saturday, din, Montana, squad of cagers. Feb. 21; two in the afternoon The score was 32-12. The larg- and three in the evening. est crowd of the year turned mit Four seven -minute quarters for the hoop event, which was and ten minutes between halves marked by a large Lion's club will constitute a game. attendance, and a showing of basket tossing, on the part of the winners that was the best of the year. \Sheridan was outplayed from the outset. Coach Ostergren's Orange and Black broke into an early lead, enjoying a ten -point I margin, 15-5, at the half, and HARDIN WOMAN'S CLUB imaintained the relative edke throughout the final two periods. FAVORS WORLD COURT \A sad lack of 'basket -eye' and failure to count on many made- to-order shots under the bas- ket in the first half forced 'Stub' Barbour and his associates to trail from the beginning. On the other hand, the two Rankin brothers exhibited an uncanny knack of ringing the basket from all angles. As a result the game was never in doubt.\ The line-up: Hardin (32) Sheridan (12) Gilliland (1) lg Pierce Miller (4) rg Duncan Ross (2) c Wartensleben Buzzetti If Barbour (8) C. Rankin (13) rf Hummel) (2) J. Rankin (12) sub. Redhair (2) Subs—Hardin: J. Rankin for Buz- zetti, second half: Graf for C. Ran- kin, last quarter. Sheridan I Davis, Condon, Wren, Mathis. The Woman's Club held an open meeting Tuesday, Febru- ary 3, at the library. About fifty men and women of Hardin and vicinity were in attendance, including representatives from various organizations. The sub- ject of discussion was \The World Court\ with Mrs. W. A. Russell as chairman. Miss Dorothy Herman, Edwin Bullis and Fred Roush, of the Hardin high school, presented the topic, Miss Herman taking the af- firmative side in which she emphasized the necessity of the U. S. entering the World Court at once. Messrs. Rullis and Roush presented arguments against the advisability of the U. S. entering the Court. At the close of the discussion, Mr. Roush, in a very convincing manner, answered many ques- tion a pertaining to both sides of the question. A motion was made and car- ried that the Woman's Club send a resolution at once to our U. S. senators, favoring our entrance into the court in some ferm. The president, Mrs. C. F. Gillette, appointed a committee: Mrs. W A. Russell, Mrs. Stanley Yergey and Miss Nellie Brown to draft the reso- lution. 47 NINE MONTHS OLD HOGS BRING OVER $1100 Hubert' Hobson, who is 1, 1- ing hogs for the Omaha market, shipped another car yesterday. He states that during the morth of January he paid out tor porkers approxi ately $10,000. One farmer, J. A. Perry of Mas- shetah, sold 47 hogs, fattened on corn of his own raising, bhe oldest of which was nine months old and the heaviest of which weighed over a00 -pounds. ,He received for the 47 porker -1 a check for $1,105.17, an av- erage of a little better than 11231,0 per hog. Pretty good returns fir nine months part Hardin Camp No. 85'7, W. 0. W., gave another one of its enjoyable invitation dances On Wednesday evening, in the city hall. Excellent music was furnished for the occasion by HI orchestra composed of Doc. C. T. DeVore on the iolin, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Dick on the ban- jo and piano. There were 150 In attendance and each and every one of them had the time of their lives, as they al- ways do at a Woodmen dance. • • Homer S. Allen was in the city Wednesday from his farm on Spring creek, near Maschetah, with a ton -load of alfalfa seed from the farm of Frank Neu - hold, who came along to Hardin with him. He reports that the road between Hardin and his place, 27 miles out, is perfecily dry about half the distance— with just an occasional wet place here and there, wher! the snow had drifted. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cool, their s o n, D. Co'ol, and wife and child, and a Mrs. McCurdy ar- rived Sunday by automobile from near St. Helena, Cedar county, Neb. They were on the road six days. When they left Nebraska t h e snow was 18 inches deep on the level and they were agreeably surprised to find practically no snow at all here. They ar farmers in day. Three games will be played_ on the morning of the second CESSFUL 5 -DAY TERM ENDED SATURDAY AFTERNOON he School of Go -operation, ich ended a five days ses- n last Saturday afternoon, d a very successful session. ere were three out-of-town eskers on the program. Prof. H. Underwood was on the ogram during the . first., two ys, and Prof. J. M. Hamilton as on the lsat three days of e school. Theodore Barrett, 4ecretary of the Yellowstone ieet Growers, was the main peaker of the Beet Growers' eeting, which was held Wed- esday , afternoon. The 1as,t two days or the chool in co-operation were lvell attended and the programs vere very interesting. Prof. lamina!'\ talked on the neces- - ity of contract if products re to be handle cl co-opera- .ively, as it is necessary that all members of the association deliver their products as agreed. Neither can a market be found for a product if the amount that is to be marketed cannot be at, least estimated. ' ntracts make it possible for he association to make ade- quate arrangement f o r th e handling of the product. - Following Prof. Hamilton, L. T. Winslow talked on \Practi- cal Points in Co-operative Live- stock Marketing.\ He showed that b y marketing co-opera- tively the producer gets the full value of his product, less The drawings Saturday were ithe expense of marketing. If made in the presence of - Fred the farmer's hogs are worth 10 W. Graff, superintendent . o f cents on the market', he will the Laurel high school; Merrill get 10 cents, less the expense B. Dilley, coach of the Bridg- of marketing, for the hogs that er high school; E. S. Ostergred, he nzarkota through the asso- coach of the Hardin high school; ciatiCn. Co-operative market- s. S. Bliss, coach of the Belfry jag of livestock opens the way high school; Eugene Corrie, to put your livestock on the principal of the Billings high market when it is ready, and school; J. F. Lennon, coach of not when a buyer is ready to the Edgar high school; B. A. buy it. It also makes it . pos- Burdick, superintendent of the Sible for more farmer i to raise Fromberg high school. livestock, as it gives a ready Explaining the schedule for market for the stock. the tournament's 28 games: The Mrs. W. A. Sawyer gave a schedules are drawn up i n very instructive talk on the such a manner that a teamlosing its first game could still place secoRd. With one exception, a Vara-which loses two games will drop out. In that par- ticular case the team will not marketing of turkeys—what hard time they had in finding iii — atittfmn. - A husking bee was in order. Rawdon Crawley, a market in the early days, a who had escaped from pris^r. and while the conditions are much improved at the present came to Rose for aid. Miss time, there still is an Oppor- CALLED EAST BY THE ILLNESS OF FATHER $40,000 PAID FOR Mrs. Tom Hart and little daugh- ter Eleanor left Thursday for Rochester, Minn., in response to a message announcing that her father, Peter Houser, of Eat Grand Forks, Minn. was criticail; ill and had been taken to P.oches- ter for an operation. She will leave her little daughaer at hi? old home in East Grand 1 ,1 irks to complete this school )eor and will remain with her father until he is able to return home, v%.hen she will make an extended visit wh her parents. Mr. 'and Mrs. Houser made a number of ac- eliaaitences in Hardin, daring their -visit here a - couple e I years ago, who , hope for his speedy recovery.' HOME TALENT PUTS OVER \DEACON DUBBS\ A large crowd of enthusiastic school patrons and students saw the play, \Deacon Dubbs,\ given by the Finlayson Commu- nity at the high school auditor- ium last Wednesday evening. The rise of the curtain dis- closed the front yard of the Rose Raliegh cottage with Miss Philipena Popover, Rose's house- keeper, churning. It was an atfernoon in sen, the Sw wanted to borr and decided to man, Deuteronom 12 CARS OF BEANS OVER THREE -FOURTHS OF MILLION POUNDS OUT BY ONE MAN B. H. McCarty, who — deals in grain and all kinds of seeds and conducts a feed grinding asta!i- lishment at the 0.K. barn stead on Cheyenne avenue and Third street, spent . Friday at Garry - Owen, loading 'a car with Great Northern beans for shipment to Billings. - This makes twelve ears of Great Northern beans that, Mr. McCarty has shipped from the Hardin terrikwy with- in the past couple of months The cars ranged in weight from 60,000 to 80,000 pounds, the a v e r age being about ---'05.004 pounds. While most of the beans brought $5.25 perhundrecl_... pounds, the average price paid was about $5.10. This means that the past year's bean crop of this section has thus far brought to the growers in round figures $40,000 for the more than three-quarters of a million pounds marketed, and Mr. Mc- Carty expects to ship several more cars within the next few weeks, having on hand at' the present time nearly enough beans for another shipment of two cars. Great Northern beans are prov- ing to be one of the most prof- itable crops that can be grown auction that afternaon,„ -Alen in this section. The yield on Miss Rose's place was to be irrigated land runs from 700 to sold under foreclosure of mort- as high as 1600 pounds to the gage. Deacon Dubbs arrived very thirsty, and helped Rose buy back the place by keeping Rawdon Crawley, agent of. the Empire State Trust company, in the well. .Act II took place in the same yard on a morning two month; later. This day had been set for the wedding of Rose R-1- une Yennie Yen- 'sh hired girl, w some \yumps\ buy the hired Jones, at the acre, the average being around 1,000 pounds, while on dry land the yield ranges from 500 to 000 pounds to the acre. This means, at five cents a pound, that the bean grower can be reasonably sure of receiving from $25 to $50 per acre for his crop, owing to whether it is growa on ir- rigated or non -irrigated land. leigh to Amos Coleman, nephew of the deacon. Rawdon Craw- ley, her husband, who was TRUCK PASSES OVER _thought to have been killed in a drunken brawl, appeared and stopped the wedding. He was What might have been a very arrested by the deacon !or serious accident happened last drawing a knife on Amos Cole- Sunday to \Buddy the six - man, and was sent to prison, year -old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Act III took place a year la- W. Watts, in front of their home on Choutean avenue. Hughes Moncure, who operates a motor truck, is in the habit of filling the radiator with water at the Philipena and the hired man Watts home. Sunday \Buddy were kicked by a fractious cow. his elder brother, Junior, and (Continued on Last Pace) (Continued on Page Six) The deacon and Miss Philipena William Torske saw him corn - VALLEY CENTER DRAIN SPARK INTERFIRENCE i l turn from New York. act two .older boys climbed on the become engaged after his re- ing and went to meet him. The NEARLY COMPLETED RILES LOCAL RADIO FANS 'bnded with the dancing of the truck and \Buddy\ got on the Virginia reel, during which the running board. As the car - R. S. Byrnes, who the past A long distance call was made death of Rawdon---Crawley was moved over the rutty road, the two years has been operating from Hardin recently to the ra- announced and all ended well little' fellow lost his balance a dragline dredging machine dio supervisor of the Seventh for Rose and Amos. and fell off, going partly under i ' n the Valley Center Drain Dis- District concerning spark coil Members of the high school the truck, one hind wheel pass - orchestra furnished music and ing over the lit•tle chap's left around $40 was taken in. This. leg, between the knee and ankle. after expenses are paid. w ill Dr. Baker was summoned and after a thorough examination net the Finlayson school a neat found no bonesubroken, though the limb was badly bruised and the aknle sprained. S u n day surely was \Buddy's\ lucky day. BOY—LUCKY ESCAPE Irma down the valley, for the interference which has been Barnard -Curtis Co., left Wed- playing havoc with broadcast nesday by Dodge auto for Che- programs the past ten days. The raw, near La Juanta, C o 1 0.,, interference is particularly bad' where he will do similar work at a certain wave length, but BM ' for the same company, which has a drainage contract them. is noticeable through the whole rate of Characters One of the draglines that have Deacon Dubbs, from Sorghum broadcast range. It s thought been in use here was shipped that some school boys who are Center ...... ...... Dewey Walker yesterday to La Juanta. J.- pit experimenting •with a spark coil Amos Coleman, his nephew, _ Barnard, senior member of th, '\iiity fit are resp — diiiible for the Ralirdiin t'rawley, Ragenssen.tllorDanielson - CAFES ARE RESTLESS ..e THESE WINTER DAYS firm, who has been personally Empire Trust Co. and Rose annoyance and anyone knowng Raliegh's husband, Willard Walker in charge of the work here, and of the operation of such con - who is spending the winter trivances should warn the oper- Major McNutt, auctioneer H. Rockey J. months at his home in Minnea- ators of the damage they are De m utro a n nomy Jones, the hired pohs, is expected here within i doing to radio programs. Thou- L. I. Kingston couple of weeks to resume work sands of dollars are now invest- Rose Rallegh, the brave little on the Valley Center drainage ed in radio apparatus in Hardin Miss Philipena Popover, with schoolma'am .. Rachel Walker as Jack's Little cafe, recently job, which it is expected, will and from 100 to 200 people Lulu Clark are both eyes on the Deacon. Iclosed. This move is necessi- be completed in about two listening in every good night. Tr Ern t ix o l i w Grace\Rockev i:n Dale, the richest girl In months. Some people have invested as city council prohibiting women tated by the recent order of the much as $400.00 in their radio ' ' Mrs. Dewey Walk\ from conducting or working in TERRY GOES ANOTHER TEN outfits but this interference af- Colman full of mischief cafes in pool halls. Mr. and fects all alike. Tennie Tensen, Swedish hired girl Miss Eudora Sawyer Mrs .Earl Eastabrook are pre - NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC paring to move into the Willcutt block recently vacated by Percy Helena, Jan. 29, 1025—A Dep- Robinson. Two other cafes are uty Collector -.of Internal Rev- in the making it appears, so enue will be at Hardin, Mon - Hardin will be well provided in tana at the Becker Hotel on Feb. the eats line, for the future, as 10-11-12, 1925 for the purpose of in the past. assisting taxpayers in filing • their, income tax returns for A. P. MacDonald and sons, the year 1924. This- service is Archie. and John, y air% e r d al rendered gratis to those who shipped to the Omaha market a tax returns for the year 1924. carload of hogs, fattened on are required to file income their ranch on Grapevine, 40 —C. A. Rasmusson. miles south of Hardin. It took Collecbor b) f Internal Rare- four s to •r Terry Mitchell and Joe Curcv returned Monday from Glendiv where, last Saturday night, the former fought' a ten -round draw with Battling Krause of North Dakota. Terry knocked his op- ponent down three times and the opinion of spectators was that he won seven of the ten rounds, but the referee thought draw wss shout right. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McCarthy, returned Friday evening from a couple of weeks' v is ib with their daughters in Denver and BOUND TO BE PROSPEROUS Charles M. Bair of Billings was a welcome business visitor Wednesday. Mr. Bair did' great deal in the development of town and country properties during the pioneer days of this community and still has sub- stantial property interests here. He states that Hardin is bound tb be one of the bright spots of Montana as we have the re- sources to make wonderful ad - Cafes seem to be on the move these days. Mr. and Mrs. Ma- hon are preparing to move their cafe from the Big Horn pool hall to the place formerly known