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About The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925-1973 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.), 27 March 1925, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075229/1925-03-27/ed-1/seq-11/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Friday, March 27, 1925. THE HARDIN TRIBUNE -HERALD Page baeven. • • I CLASSIFLEpj TO SAVE TIMBER WARNS -ADVERTLS M TS bAur;ATAtti -aeruou FARM LAELIMI MUM Improved cattle ranch in Sonora, Mexico, with about 44.111 head of blooded cattle, al/ miler of good fence; plenty of water; cat- tle graze all year. Juius the B. IL station and shipping yards. A cattleman's para- dise. Write for price aud terms. W. 1.. Cocliraue. !lox RH, Tuesou, Arts. bieVEILAL IMPROVED FARMS for sale - Write Chait. Pearsou, Camden, Wash. NEW OFVeltiNGS CUTOeblit LANDS, easy to clear, ell to $20 per acre in East- ern Washiuston; 25 miles north of Spo- kane on paved highway, near Great Nor - therm and Milwaukee railways. Excellent chance to get started in the dairying aud Stock raising business in a couutry with a delightful climate the year round; ample rainfall; all modern advantages of actioola. churches aud community centers; easy terms; free lumber tor building. Write for literature. MILAN FARMS DEVELOP- MICNT COMPANY, 1:f10 Old National Bank Bldg., Spokane, Wimbingtou. FOR BALE-14-scre farm, of which 5 are irrigable, for ;MO. near large coal mine, three wiles west of Roundup. Half cash, balance on easy terms. Mrs. H. lit- selmueller, Wiatioue Montana. TILS tert/KANE COUNTEI toir WASH INUTON-Vi here the climate is fine and Industiloua meti can wake good. Saud for kiteclal Bargain List of Dairy, Stock and Diveratfied karma. Prices ue%er lower or easier terms. Becher k Thompson, 214 Hutton Bldg., Spokane, Washington. I'I1I SMELl kV!' SALE SEED COILS, s3..5o bu.; Turkeys, Poultry, Eggs, Baby Poultry, Wolf Hounds, Po- -Hos dogs.- Would buy car ewes. Write. Envilla Farms, Cogswell, No. flak. LADINO CLOVER -2 -Unexcelled for past- _ tire. Seed $1.5a per lb. net; State test 9970. Geo. A. Reed, Burley, Idaho. SEED CORN- N. W. Deut; Yellow Dent; Vehu Flint; Rustler White Dent, Bur - Reel County Mixed. Sample on request. Price $4.00 per bushel Ybelled. Sack 25c. J. E. Chesak, Bismarck, No. flak. VTR SALL-Choice Idaho state Tested Al- falfa Seed. For samples and prices write F. B. Fashbuogh, Box 424, Jerome, Idaho. NURSERY STOCK BERRY PLANTS at reasonable Blackberries, raspberries, loganberries, strawberries, gooseberries, currants, rhu- barb and asparagus. Write for price list. Rosecroft Nurseries, Sumner, Wash. EGGS WANTED I IP Etirr s---- Teir -- rtr --- ) J. L. Duraie Butte, MouL POULTitt roll *Alai FOR SALE -Having raised Pure Bred Bar- red Plymouth Rocks tor 28 years, have some lu%ely cockereta. Mrs. C. W. Box 1452, Lewtstowu, Mont. Phone 1-1e-2 or write. CONAS-11 - eat flock in northwest, hatch- ing eggs, lietiLlig. 4450, *3.50. Jean Jor- dan, 21)111 Aberdeen, Butte. liAlltWAS I:AL:Lib/a WHIlE leghorue, the big, loppeu-couth type; weight 4 1-2 to 7 lbs.; descendants of Keystone Maid, official record, 306 eggs; eggs prepaid. la, $2.041; 50, Well; 100, elle Fayette Davis, Parma,. Idaho. 0. A. C. 4t LAULLIWOOD CHIA:. from high producing hens, cockerels; record 21,0 egg* or better. 14e and up; 10 per cent duwu, balance when delivered; booklet on request.. Twin City Poultry Farm, kieune- V1 lek_ Washington BABY CHICKS -Book your order now for spring delivery. Low prices on all popu- lar breeds. Send for price list. Lager s Hatchery, Helena, Mont. Bè.BICIILX-S. C. White Leghorize. 12 years breeding for heavy layers of large white eggs. luu tier cent. guaranteed alive. 316.(M per 101.1 tot March dethery. Allen's Hatchery, big Timber, Mont. WHITE 1: - .Etikl - ORN - CIIICK8-414 per 100; $130 per 1,00,1; May and June chicks $120.00 per lame; guarauteed strong vig- orous chicks trum our healthy range raised trapnested breeders. Good dates still open, Order at once. Pullets for sale. CLOVERDALE POULTRY FARM Corvallis, Oregon. BARRED Buhl( AND WHITE RUCles, Beds, Buff Usplugtvus, White Legiturus, White Wyaudottes. Chick* 1$15 per Imo postpaid, live delivery guaranteed. Hatch twice a week. Order eirect.. Nuttorf Baby Chick Co., Lewistown, Montana. BABY C1i11.-12 breeds. Circular. Central Poultry Farms Hatchery, Norfolk, Ne- braska. LII EDT 0 l'AGIOUlAktORTION - Preveutlou and care positively guaranteed. Write for folder. Suuuyside Farms, Bucktall. Ne. betake. rut, 4. 1 at er Art KU 1NThiR\1eYer Live chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese Highest market price* paid according to quality on day of arrival. Montana Meat and Concelemon Co., Butte, Hunt rune isaresssio. an-tansa, ;DRS REPAIRED. Reellued, cleaued and made over. Satisfactiun guaranteed. Homick's Fur House, Butte, Montana. KODAK Mi.te mallet* elcture Mug. NMI Howard, Spokane, WartUudttru. AnaA k Site. ellealltilrel. MTV. 1-11 --- : -. 4;e - i WALKER, assayers, chemists. lue N. Wiuultsig, butte, Awn., Bea 114 KW& miALS-Milast:kil.L.ANNOIJ b BEST made; ingenious; no sunk; drowns; caught 15 lu oue baru; directions; clubs of ten, one address, 31.01). Address, 910 Second Street., Newberg, Oregon. 110it SALE - Avery 12-25 iu first class shape, 3850; new \Little Jap\ corn culti- vator, abso check row curu planter. May be wen on raucb 18 miles north of Shelby. Horton B. U. AbeAl, Kalispell, Mont. Terms. ti8ED INCUBATORS good as new for sale, reasonable. Emil Peterson, lugumar, Montana. WOOL isCOURINII AND CAJAVIN WOOL SCOURIN(i AND CARDING Your own wool wade into Batts, Comfort- ers, Pads or Mattresses. Old used wool bedding re -carded. Wool Blankets, Batts and Comforters for sale. Write for cata- logue, tuferuiatiou aud shippleg tags. Crescent Batt A Bedding Co., ritaytou, Oregon. ZOOS WANTED El AIM IN 'ficirillitieleT at all times for fresh eggs. Let us refer you to others who take advantage of our quick and fair method of settlement. Mellor Produce Co., OW Utah Avenue, Butts, Hogan& PUKE MUSD lialles 111.9381AN WULF. iiiitYNths-a ammo* ola, itaieull up; pedigrMb. Puppies ha spring delivery. Russians, V.1.5.1.10 up; Stag gray and ktuisslau cross, $15.01) each; pair i25.00. Pierce. Gage,' Mont. ' USED cAlto *DE NAL& BARGAINS INUSED CARS Packard Twin Six Touring, Cadillac Eight Touring; Jensen -Johnson Motor Co.. Great Falls, Mont. IIZAISTIT0411240 CLASS HEMSTITZIIINGons covered; butt em holes. Mall orders given special attention. The Heanstitcbing Shop, Fifth St. and Central Ave., Great Falls, Montana. 114.14001%Al MARRY -Thousands wealthy tuembdrs every wbere; quickest. most ilatiafactory results; write, be convinced. goefidential Interesting list FREE. Mrs/ Budd; Box The ti. San Frtitivilwo orallt S. 0. HU SETH 411111111141AP 111021TAINIA - end Ovarian NT - 17 7 0711 - 7i -21)-2b OFFICIALLY DESIGNATES APRIL 97 TO MAY 3 \AMERICAN FOREST WEEK\ President Says We Have Too Freely Spent the Magnificent Gift That Nature Bestowed on Us; Says To- morrow's Forest Should Start Now President Coolidge has called national attention to the serious- ness of the timber depletion in the United States, and issued a procla- mation designating April 27 to May 3 as 'American Forest Week.' Too long, he declared, has the country gone ahead cutting down its primitive forests and taking no steps to renew them. There ii still time, he said, to remedy the situation be- fore real calamity overtakes the country, and he appealed to the na- tion at large to encourage conserva- tion and re -growth. The proclamation follows: \In proclaiming American Forest week, I desire to bring to the atten- tion of all our people the danger that comes from the neglect of our forests. Forests Stripped _ \For several years the nation has observed Forest Protection week. It is fitting that the observance be en- larged. We have too freely spent the rich and magnificent gift that na- ture bestowed on us. \In our eagerness to use that gift we have stripped our forests; we have permitted fires to lay waste and devour them; we have all too often destroyed the young growth and the seed from which new forests might spring. \And though we already feel the first grip of timber shortage, we have barely begun to save and restore. Passed Pioneer Stage. \We have passed o the pioneer stage and are no longer excusable for con- tinuing this unwise dissipation of a great resource. To the nation, it means a lack of an elemental neces- sity and the waste of keeping idle or only partly productive nearly one- fourth of our soil. To our forest - using industries it means unstable in- vestments, the depletion of forest capital, the disbanding of established enterprises, and the decline of one of our most important industrial groups. \Our forests ought to be put to work and kept at work. I do not minimize the obstacles that have been met, nor the difficalty of chang- ing old ideas and practices. We must all put our hands to this common ilia. IT tunar mono tnat -- tbe - feder- al, state and local governments take the lead. There must be a change in our national attitude. Our industries, our land -owners, our farmers, all our citizens must learn to treat our for- ests as crops, to be used, but also to be renewed. We must learn to tend our woodlands as carefully as we tend our farms. Start Forests of Future. \Let us apply to this creative task the boundless energy and skill we have so long spent in harvesting the free gifts of nature. The forests of the future must be atarted today. Our children are dependent on our course. We are bound by solemn ob- ligation from which no evasion and no subterfuge will relieve us. Unless we fulfil our sacred responsibility to unborn generations, unless we use with gratitude and with restraint the generous and kindly gifts of Di- vine Providence, we shall prove our- selves unworthy guardians of a heri- tage we hold in trust. \Now therefore, I, Calvin Cool- idge, president of the United States, do recommend to the governors of the various states to designate and set apart the week of April 27 May 3, inclusive, as American Forest week, and, wherever practicable and mit in conflict with state law or ac- cepted cusioin, - fo Observe Arbor Day within that week. And I urge public officials, public and business associa- tions, industrial leaders, forest own- ers, editors, educators and all pa- triotic citizens to unite in the com- mon task of forest conservation and renewal. TILE -BRICK PLANT AT ROUNDUP OPENS TILE WILL BE MARKETED IN YELLOWSTONE VALLEY FOR IRRIGATION PROJECTS. Work preparatory to the installa- tion of a tile making plant at the old Mike Klein coal mine, west of Roundup, has been begun and it is expected that enough clay for the be- ginning of operations will have been extracted and seasoned by June 1. The tile will be marketed in the Yel- lowstone valley and used to drain Irrigation projects. Through J. A. Liggett a lease was negotiajed by J. A. Hamilton, W. D. Slagle and H. G. Stevens of Billings and by its terms payment will be made in toyalties on all products marketed. Mr. Hamilton is an ex- perienced brick and tile manufactur- er and has been in the business for 40 years. His attention was called to the quality of the clay which oc- curs with the coal deposit in the old Klein property and after an extend- ed invaptigation, he pronounced it as superior to other eastern Montana districts where brick making has be- come an established industry. Milk Fed Legislature. In a sense it was a milk -fed legis- lature which closed a few weeks ago in Helena. The Phillips dairy, which for several years has had a regular route at the Capitol, will bear this out. During the recent session this concern delivered more than 20 pints of milk a day to the members of the legislature and attaches. In addi- tion, several of the legislators had milk delivered to theft homes. the loseat.inauxural aCireits _wait that of William nenty Ilarriomit;rwho served the shortest term of any one of the presidents. State Retains Title to Fair Grounds Property Despite the Death of The Annual Eposition Rumor had it that when the state fair at Helena waa suspended the land would revert to the prior owner. But the fact seems to be that the state's tide to the tract is absolute and that the common- wealth if it has a mind to Can use the fair grounds for raising tur- keys, pigs, chickens, cabbages, cattle, turnips, sheep, hay, dande- lions, or a lot of that substance which Sherman said war was. Title to the fair grounds was pro- cured for the state in 1903 by the now Associate Justice Albert J. Galen. But the fact that the legislature failed to appropriate money to main- tain the fa.ir many mean that the Helena Light and Power company will abandon its street railway tracks to the exposition grounds. The mat- ter will be taken up by A. T. Schultz, manager, with the board of directors of the operating company in New York. Mr. Schultz says that about $8,600 worth of rails can be salvaged from the fair grounds line. This steel would be used on other Helena lines. The company's investment in the fair grounds system is around/$45,000. Have \Reducing\ Parties Reducing parties are the latest fad in society circles in Melstone. The guests at these parties are not confined to women of superabund- ant averdupois, but include slender and super -slender ones, all of whom claim that not only do the exercises afford gymnastics to which they are not accustomed at home, buf that they are Working wonders in the way of making of fat ones Blender, and the slender ones fleshier. Husbands have been heard to remark that they think the same results might be ob- tained at home, but the women as- sert that doing dishes and sweeping floors to phonograph music at home lacks the thrill that is provided by these popular social affairs, where a number of the fair sex reduce music- ally and gracefully in concert. lir211r7r7r21111r71711 1 Cuticura Talcum Unadulterated Exquisitely Scented MCMIONEMCIIIIMIGNE:211110111 - ,,wayr CCOPAM! .111.1 1 , 44. II Men DO YOU OPERATE A TRACTOR? It you operate any kind of a kero- sene engine you will want to take advantage of this saving. We can save you 25 per rent on your fuel costs and give you a feel that will do all the work of higher prieed kerosene end give more power. Send us your name and address for further particulars about Powerised Tractor Fuel and how wo can cut your fuel costs. SUNBURST REFINING COMPANY 50Z 11115 Great Falls, Mont Your Name Address MINING SUPPLIES ¶ Station Pumps ¶ Sinking Pumps ¶ Electric Hoists Reapuano Gelatine Powder ¶ Drills ¶ Compressors ¶ Sirocco Ventilating Fans Anything and Everything you May Need for Mining Mail Orders Solicited A. C. M. HARDWARE HOUSE Butte Montana d=11' KALLSPELL RESIDENTS WILL HONOR MEMORY OF PIONEER TRAPPER A fitting monument may be erected in Glacier national park to the memory of Trapper Kline, who died about two years ago. He was one of the last of the pioneer fur men of the west. This man walked and \snow - shoed\ over that Rocky moun- tain region known as Glacier na- tional park long before the Blackfeet Indians ceded their great natural big -game area to Uncle tiam for summer tourists to view, Kline probably brought more valuable furs out of this section than any other white man. Rif- les, pistols and cub bears were his favorite \pets.\ In the last years of his life he rnjoyed wealth from this \fur -seeking\ life and he lived in Kalispell with all the comforts of civiliza- tion, although never quite sp happy, he said, as when \in the brush.\ The monument move- 'rnent has been started by Kalis- pell residents and permission for its erection will be taken up with the bureau of national parks, in , Washington. • STATE DREIEFS Former Governor Sam V. Stewart has been elected president of the Helena Com- mercial club. * • 0 The demand for butter at the Roundup creamery is so great that plans are being made to enlarge the creamery. • 0 The business block in Roundup which was burned down in December will be re- built at once, it is announced. 4> 0 4> Hunters recently captured two lion cubs alive in the Canyon Creek country near Helena after killing the mother lion and one other cub. !WHEELER'S TRIAL SET FOR APRIL 16 JUDGE F. S. DIETRICH OF IDAHO WILL 7.1RESIDE AT CASE IY GREAT FALLS Both Judges Pray and Bourquoin Themselves; Senator T. J. Walsh, S. C. Ford and J. B. Baldwin to be Wheeler's Counsel. The case of the Unite41. States against Senator Burton K. Wheel- er of Montana, charged in a grand jury indictment with having ac- cepted employment in a matter in which the United States held inter- est after his election as United States senator has been set by Judge C. N. Pray for trial in the United States court at Great Falls April 16. The trial will be before Judge Frank S. Dietrich of the district court of Idaho, and Judge Pray wired him of the date set, the Idaho judge having wired Judge Play that any date from the middle of April until the first of May would be satisfac- tory to him. Judges Disqualify. Judge C. N. Pray and Judge -George M. Bourqoin, federal judges of Montana district, both disquali- fied themselves in the Wheeler trial. the former because of alleged state- ments of Senator Wheeler following the appointment of Judge Pray to the bench last spring and the latter because of his former connection with Wheeler while the latter was United States district attorney for Montana and because of a personal communication from him read by Wheeler in the open senate. Because of the disqualification of both judges on their own motion, Judge Dietrich was named by the presiding judge of the United States circuit court to pre- side in tbg case. O 0 Julius Lehfeldt, pioneer merchant of Chinook, recently underwent an operation in Rochester, Minn., for the amputation of a leg just below the knee. O 0 0 Machine shops costing $150,000 are to be constructed at Gardiner, at the entrance of Yellowstone park, by the Yellowstone Park Transportation company. 0 0 0 The Koehler Ranch company at Twodot recently sold 327 head of range cattle to Tinch liannon and Elding Hanson of Mel- ville for an average of $55 a head. 0 0 0 .C. E. Clemmons has discontinued the Columbian at Columbia Fails and moved his equipment to Whitefish where he will publish the Whitefish Independent. O 0 0 Members of the board of education of tineary - association - recent ly visited Missoula where they inspected the library at the University of Montana. • • 0 . The Baptist church at Great Fella, er- ected 313 years ago recently was destroyed for worship by fire which originated in the basement from an overheated furnace. • 0 * The town council of Harlem is negotiat- ing with the Montana Power company to get the latter concern to extend its lines from Chinook to Harlem and take over Harlem's lighting system. 49 4> A section of the city of Chinook is to have a new electric lighting system if property owners do not protest the city council's move to create a special imprcfve- ment district for that purpose. 0 0 The Stanford Rod and Gun club has been formed at Stanford with more than 50 members from the beginning. H. II. Galt was elected president; J. D. Snyder, .vice president, and E. U. Bisson, secretary - treasurer. * 0 As a result of the advertising campaign conducted in the east by the railway sys- tems crossing Montana, a number of Il- linois men have been in southeastern Mon- tana looking over agricultural land that is for sale. al* • * Jacob Hart rano came to Helena in 1865 died there recently._ After prospecting for gold at Diamond City and other placer districts, Mr. Hart took up stockraislag near Canyon Ferry. tie retired from ranch- ing and moved to Helena in 1907. • 49 With the idea of developing the Mis- souri river into a fishing stream which will rival the famous Madison rivs that portion of the stream between Oren Falls and Helena is to be stocked with about 900,000 Lock Leven trout fingerlings. O * With Montana wheat !eliding the world for cash premiums, Richland county has the reputation for leading the state in producing wheat that is especially desired by millers, according to the chief chemist of the Russell -Miller Milling company of Minneapolis. • * Permission has been asked by the Great Northern railway to close nine stations: Floweree, Dunkirk, Fort Union. Fort Shaw, Simms, Tampico, Archer, Franklin and Marino. The Soo line wishes to close the station of McElroy. Insufficient earn-, Inge is the plea of the companies. • A 49 John Dietrich. superintendent of the schools of Helena, said on his return front attending the convention of the nationals. educational association in Cincinnatti the& one of the innovations being established' in some of the larger Reboot systems t \sight -saving classes** for the preventio of blindness. 41 , 40 Chief Justice hew L. Callaway, speak. Mg before the Helena Rotary club, recen ly told the story of some of the most rail membered events in the pioneer history of,, Montana in the contest between the. Vieth... antes and the road agents to see wheth.AD order or lawlessness would be supreme Id the territory. • When two young penman, members him congregation, were haled into poll court on the charge of being drunk an creating a disturbance in a public dap hall, the Rev. George Mecklenburg, past of the Methodist Episcopal church of Great Falls, appeared in court as their 'Morn., and obtained their acquittal. • 49 41 Thee Montana supreme court has 11(.14 the act of the 18th legislative assemble, relating to banks accepting deposits af c ter insolvency to be constiutional. Several bank directors, indicted in rergus County, must therefore stand trial on the charm of accepting deposits in bight* which th , should hare known were insolvent_ 49 • Money met amide by the United RUH government foy use as federal aid in the construction of !lighten:re in Montana, bet which has been turned down by the Attire legislature in refusing te properly finance the state highway commission, will be used by the federal gevernment co-ope sting with Idaho and Oregon to but tourist road' that will dllert traffic fro Montana, the U. S. bureau of public roa has announced. Farmers Learn Rig Business. Farmers' co-operative marketing or- ganizations in Montana last year di. more than $600,000 worth of bush newt, according to a summary of sue ed work carri on recently in count.14 where extension agents are engage There were 24 co-operative societi in theltate,not counting a state-wi traMitittitrir (Tritantsattou w last year, did a business amounting to several million dollars. The cases against Gordon Camp- bell, the man alleged to have em- ployed Wheeler, who was indicted on two counts by the same grand jury which indicted Wheeler, both counts charging using the mails to defraud, have been set for April 10. In the first count he is joined with C. F. Bloomhuff and E. J. Daley, and in the second with L. C. Stevenson, head of the Sunburst company, and assoc- iated with Campbell for a brief time before the opening of the Kevin -Sun- burst field and who divided the field with Campbell about the time that the latter struck the first oil in the field. Has Three Attorneys. S. C. Ford, former attorney gener- a! Montana, attocaey-for- Wheel- er, was present when the Wheeler case was set and stated that the only attorneys of record for the defendant, Wheeler, were himself, Senator T. J. Walsh and J. H. Baldwin, the latter a law partner of Wheeler in Butte, and that so far as he was aware there would be no other attorneys. It is figured by court officials in Great Falls that the Wheeler case will take at least one week, probably BIGGES T'BOXI NG BOUT (Bantamweight) EVER STAGED IN MONTANA Under Auspices Great Fails American Legion Athletic Association Saturday, March 28, 1925 it Rounds -lie Pounds. h1cDERMOT'r vs. O'DOWD Jimmie McDermott of Terre Haute, Ind., vs. Eddie O'Dowd of Columbus. Ohio. These are fast men of national fame and It is seldom, in recent years, that men of their class have fought in this state. Other events will he: 6 Rounds -135 Pounds. Kid Leo of Great Falls vs. Young Test- ed° of Havre. 4 Rounds-te5 Pounds. Eddie Shelton of Penderoe vs. Harold Bethune of Canada. 3 Rounds -175 Pounds Eddie Munn of Belt vs. Kayo Dwyei of Great Falls. 3 Rounds -112 Pounds. Dark Mystery of Great Fails vs. Dyna- mite Smith of Great Falls. PRICES -Ringside. $4.50: Emierwed Sesta (downstairs). $3.50 and $3.00; DaleolaY. $2.50 and $2.00; Gallery, $1.56 and 111.66. Program starts at 3:30 sharp. GRAND OPERA HOUSE, GREAT FALLS Make Reservations after March 23. much longer, and a special trial jury venire of at least 40 names will be called later from the Great Falls dis- trict to report in court April 1, with a view to supplementing the fin* venire of 70 names which will be can- ed to report in court the morning of March 24. The regular criminal cal- endar was set down, the first cases for March 25, running until April 23. Washington, D. C. will entertain the thirtieth annual meeting of Me Chamber of Commerce of the United States during the three days begin- ning May 20. STH MA There is no \cure but the wheezy breathing that prevents sleep may oftentimes be relieved by inhaling the soothing medicated vapors of- ICKS VAPORUIll 0~17 Manes Jar* Used Yearip TO -FORD OWNERS SURE SHOT TIMER Will start your Ford car, track or trac- tor easier than any other device. No oiling, cleaning or adjustment neces- sary. Guaranteed to last the LIFE of the motor and give satisfaction or inouey refunded. PRICE $3.00. POSTPAID Dealers write for territory. This timer is selling like hot cakes. S. 0. HUSETH SIT Central Avenue Great Falls, Moat, BATTERIES for All Car: All electrical parts, carburetors, Ford Ignition systems, etc. We repair all starters, generators, mag- netos. Shipment same day order received. Write for our prices. Great Falls Starter and Battery Co. GREAT FALLS, MONTANA A Money Saver Our new 1925 catalogue, listing a com- plete line of garden sad field seeds, poul- try feeds and supplies, now ready. Write for free. copy. QUALITY GOODS PRICED RIGHT GRAHAM & ROSS Great Fails, Montana. MAIL ORDERS FOR taaaries-lave-iirds-Parreis GUARANTEED SINGERS vie .12.1...cia stare o i MODEL Rs PHARMACY 312 Central Avenue Great Falls, Mend. RADIATORS Auto, Truck and Tractor Radiators Built, Rebuilt and Repaired Gas Tanks, Fenders and Beale* Repaired Great Falls Auto Radiator Works 20 Second St. No. Galeat Fails, Host. - VULCANIZING REPAIR YOUR OLD TIRES AND TUBES ONE -DAY SERVICE We Pay Charges Otte Way Brut Falls Vulcanizing Co. II Sixth Street South Great Falls. NewFinlenv:itan- with T hi an; L outaide lBsiate l rooms. Bates $2.00 and up. T HE Northwestern Mutual Life Is. St - MANCE Co., of M11.WATTKEI%: i r -T an ed Policyholder.' Company.\ hie agents waisted. For information write SAM D. GOZA, Gen. Asa, BELZWA, MEMORIALS Write for Prices. GROVER & LEUCHARS Great Falls, Montana. Beautiful Sets of Teeth Our Specialty IF YOU REQUIRE ARTIFICIAL TEETH GET THE BEST - MADE BY A SPECIALIST Dr. Frank J. Carmody of New York City who has charge of my workroom for the past five years has made over 3,000 sets for my Butte patients, besides my office has made over 7,000 sets, 10,000 sets in all. Practice makes perfect -if our sets of teeth were not exceptionally satisfactory they would not be in such demand. Teeth Extracted Free When First Set Is Ordered Finest Gold Crowns Gold and Porcelain Bridge Work References by the Thousand All Work Receives My Personal Attention Dr. F. A. Ironside, Painless Dentist 16 N. Main St., Butte Largest and Best Equipped Dental 0 f f ice in Montana