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About The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925-1973 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.), 19 June 1925, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075229/1925-06-19/ed-1/seq-11/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Friday, June 19, 1 9 25 THE HARDIN TRIBUNE -HERALD • •••110 Page Eleven ell L CLASSIFIE12] . ADVERTISEMENTS VAN LANDS FOE sAL AN D VELO FED LAN - 15 to 25 tulles N. E. Spokane; on paved h ighways; extra good soil; spring brooks; grows grain. segetables, hay. fruits; sev- eral developed ranches; few stock ranches with adjoining free range; $11 to $20 per acre; 10 years time; 6 per cent Interest; free lumber. Write owners far free book, Edwards & Bradford Lumber Co„ Elk. WeshIngton. RANCH PROPERTY &i1 acres, S miles from Great Falls. 750 acres cultivated. • A. timber, splendid buildings, fine creek runs throu'rh fume. Splendid proposition for diversified farming. Attractive price and terms Full particulars on request. No. 3337. 5. J. Lander & Co., Grand Forks, S. D., Owners. 160 ACRE DAIRY RANCH, 125 inches de- creed water. 81 improved. Machinery. 12 cows and calves. $50 an acre. 10 per cent off for cash. J. S. Harper, Darling- ton. Idaho. ISIPEOVED COLORADO RANCHES $3 to $8 per acre, to close estate. S. Brown, Florence, Colo. REAL ESTATE 1000 REAL Egi'ATE EXCHANGES every- where. Land and property for sales or trade. Let us help you with your prob- lem Platt inveetment Co.. Butte: Mont. FOR SALE -SMALL LODGING HOUSE - iu Dillon. Will take automobile in trade. Box 122. Dillon. Montana. WANTED -REAL ESTATE WANTED; TO HEAR FROM PARTIES owning Florida Land and property. Will buy; send particulars first letter. Platt Investment Co.. Butte, Montana. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR .SALE -21 Room Hotel. Doing Fine. In a good business town in Montana. A bargain if taken at once Address Box 533, Miles City. Montana. TWELVE PER CENT NET ON $11,000 THREE DUPLEX HOUSES on one lot, located in exclusive residential section of thriving Montana City. $7,000 cash will handle deal Apply Box 867, Great Falls, Montana. - LIVESTOCK uii1EO7ERNS1YSOR8ALE- Two E- Two three -year -olds. freell; two two- yeer-olds to freshen this fall; two spring calves. Theme are all well bred and are priced right. Write or see Paul Fitzpat- rick, Cottonwood Farm. Tillamook. Ore. A FEW GOOD DUROC GILTS for June farrow. Large type. Paleed reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. T. N, Johnson, Sterling. N. D. COWS -Fence jumpers* and crawlers easily cured. Full information $L Sandelm Stock Farm Mitchell, S. D. 18 HEAD BIG BONED, 2 -YEAR -OLD Shorthorn bulls and 10 yearlings. Herd accredited. Henry Delaney, Starbuck, Wash. POULTRY FOR SALE CHIX-THOROUGHBRED- Bred to lay, 100 $15.25. Prepaid. C. A. Muths, Rt. 1, SOM. Oregon. ROSE COMB WITiaTE LEGIIORN Cock- erels. March bitch for July delivery; Rigler & Chase strains. Six for $4. Bel- mont Leghorn Farm, Belmont. Montana. POULTRY AND PRODUCE WANTED. WILL BUY YOUR FOUL'Ilii AND EGGS -one or it thousand. Gooch Poultry Company, Butte. Montana. WE ARE IN THE MARKET every day for live chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese. Highest market prices paid according_ to quality on day of arrival. Montana Meat and Commission Co.. Butte, Montana. FUER REPAIRED. RE -LINED JAMS REPAIRED. Re -lined, cleaned and made over. Satisfaction guaranteed. Hoenck's Fur House, Butte, Montana. ASSAYERS, CHEMISTS. RTC LEWIS & WALKER, assayers, chemists, 108 N. Wyoming, Butte Mont., Box 114. SILVER FOXES (51TVI1T Y ALA SK A N Priced to sell. E-3121 1801 Spokane, Wash. EDUCATIONAL LEARN ELECTRICITY! Big opportun- ities for trained men. Big -pay positions open everywhere. Learn at Los Angeles in America's foremost Electrical School. Short courses. Guaranteed training. Send for FREE BOOK, \Your Opportunities in Electricity.\ National Electrical School, Figueroa ar Santa Barbara St., Dept. 565, Los Angeles. DO YOU WANT A GOOD JOB AT BIG PAY? Learn an Auto trade. Auto ex- perts earn eight to twelve dollars a day. National trains you in three months. Send for FREE BOOK, \Your Future Assured.\ NATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE, Dept. 113, Los Angeles - MEDICAL PERSONS PRONOUNCED INCURABLE from rheumatism, neuritis, desiring immediate relief and guaranteed re- covery write Prof. Guha, Huntington College Chemist Box M-166, Hunting- ton, Ind. Complete Treatment $1.50 Satisfaction or Money Back. Sample 50 cents. WORLD'S GREATEST BLOOD PURIFI- ER and System builder. If really ail- ing send for Bonafide proof in printed lit- erature. Guaranteed results or money re- funded. Herb Compound only. Sent par- cel post. Natski Medicine Co., Moweaqua, Illinois. IF YOU have enlarged or diseased ton- sils avoid operation by the use of Ton- sol; guaranteed to cure or money refund- ed; testimonials and descriptive circular free. E. J. McCann, Dept M, 803 Charles at., Elmira, N. Y. DOGS FOR SALE FOR SALE -Pedigreed Collie pups. Very best of breeding. $10.00 each, R. L. Ste- venson. Claremont. S. D. FOR SALE, 25 LIGHT AND SILVER gray German police pups of Kritninalpo- lisle blood line, same as Strongheart, sired by Jorg Von Soothed; price $30 and up; on approval. Thomas Dailey, Hannaford, N. D. PEDIGREED POINTER AND SETTER puppies. A. E. Crouse, Rosalie, Wash. TENTS AND AWNINGS BP TE TENT & AWNING CO., Butte, Mont. Anything In canvass. KODAK FINISHING FRE SAM1WODAK PRINT -Send negative, Anson Williams, Kansas City, Mo. FILMS DEVELOPED -Special advertis- ing offer. Roll developed and six Dura- tone prints 2$c or six prints from negatives 20e. Klinkner Film Service, Dyersville, • VELUM DRYFLOPND FIME--xtt.0130, Picture King, N110 Howard, Spokane. Washington. FOR SALE-MISCELLANEOUS F. SCHUMACHER, MA - N - WPACTURER of glass eyes for taxidermists. Taxi demists' supplies, 285 Ilailaday St., Jersey Citv, N. J. COLLECT STAMPS! 500 all different, 25e: 1,000 all different, $1.00 to approv- al applicants. Old stamps purchased. pdgewood Stamp Co., Milford, Conn. IF' YOU MANE ANYTHING Y01/ WAN1 to pen or buy, write us and we will tell you how to get In touch with the people you can do busbies\' with. Write M N. A.. Box VI, Great Falls, Mont. TOftIICCO 10 -POUND - FINE OLD - KENTOICKY TO- baeco, sweet with age. at following prices plus postage: Hand picked chewing, $3.00; Selected Smoking. $2.00; Mild Sweet Smok- ing, $1.50. Your first order means more orders. Let us prove It. Vansant Leaf To - ham° Asenelation. J. W. Sarver, Agt., Van. rant,. Kentneky. Wi F R w uid you like to know/ Send Birth date and 10c for full information, H. F. Walker, 1910 Austin. Tessa. • MAStitY1 1 i:ouman4a weatlby members everywhere: quickest. most satisfactory resifts; write, be convinced. Confidential ttpg list /Mr.. Mrs. Build, Boa 7M litas Pravehro. Calif. LORILY was widow, tireg itvs atone, Very wealthy. I dare YOU write! M. H. Club, Box 305, 1201. Ban Francisco, Calif. STATE BROUS] Custer county is to rebuild its bridie over Powder river at the old site In the event that the bond election to be held on June 20 carries. s• ta 41I • Lieut.. Governor W. S. McCormack be- came acting governor of Montana when Governor J. E. Erickson left on a week's trip to Minneapolis. Governor Erickson spoke at the Norse Centennial celebratiou on June 8th. • • • Seven counties were represented at the annual meeting of the Eastern Montana Threahernien's association. Threshiug price,* will be the same this year as last. according to the decision, five cents for oats, eight for wheat anti twelve for flax. • • * Four delegates from liana Rotary club are attending the sixteenth annual Rotary convention now being held in Cleveland. They are B. A. Benton, president of the club; F. R. Venable, secretary: Tom J, Davis. third vice president of Rotary In- ternational, and Charles W. Goodale, past president. • • The fires in the national forests .of the Montana -Idaho district so far have cost the forest service but one pet cent of the total expended for the same purpose by June 1. 1924. In May of last year the government spent $603100 for fire fight- ing purposes and this year so far it has spent but $600 in the district. • Sh Theresa M. Rieehle and Muzetta Wil- liams. members of the English faculty of the Butte high school, have left for Man- illa, to take up work as teachers under the government bureau' of education in the Philippines. The Butte school board re- cently granted both instructors a two - years' leave of absence. • * The graduating exercises for Fallatin county high school were held in Bozeman reeently, the commencement address being given by, Dr. E. J. Klenime of Helena, president of Intermountain Union col- lege. Diplomas were presented to 73 young men and women by E. A. Stelfel of Belgrade, chairman of the board of trus- tees. • 0 4> One of the largest mortgages on record in Beaverhead county was filed a few days ago by tbe Boston-Montana Mining corporation. It is made out to the New England Trust colapany and is in the sum of $2,500,000, covering all the mines and practically all of the improvements belonging to the company. The recording lee amounted to $53. • • * Construction work on the pipe line which is being built trent the Ilepp and Modrell wells in the Lake Basin section north of Laurel, to Coombs siding has started - . At the present time approxi- mately 17,000 barrels of crude oil are stor- ed in the tanks at these wells and this oil will be carried in the pipe line to Coombs, where it will be loaded and ship- ed to a refinery. Carl Sim 12 -year -old son of William Sieg, farmer and rancher living 14 miles southwest of Ryegate, was killed while playing with his brothers and sisters on the top of a rim rock on the home ranch. As he leaned over the edge of the rim rock, it gave way, throwing him. to the ground below, a piece of the rock coming down after him, crushing his head. Death followed in about six hours. • 0 • David Johnson, a coal miner was killed a few days ago in the Cottonwood Coal cmpany's mine No. 5 near Great Falls, by a fall of rock. Robert Oliver who was working with him, also was caught by the rock, but escaped with a crushed leg. The men were working some distance from other miners, and Oliver lay pinned under the coal until found by a miner who chanc- ed to pass that way. Johnson died In- stantly. • • I * Proposed paving of the so-called Lawlor section of the Butte -to -Anaconda highway will not be submitted to the electors of the county on August 5. the day f the city - the county on Aug. 5 the day of the city - an opinion given to the county commis- sioners by the county attorney, Holding the election on the same day as the mer- ger election, the county attorney points out, would result in confusion and there- fore is not advisable. • • * The price of butter and butterfat has been advanced one cent in Great Falls. This will make the wholesale price of top grade butter in quarters at 41 cents. A failing off in production as compared -with a year ago and the high rate of butter consumption is acconunted for the Increase in price which is termed unrea- sonable. The price of butter fat to pro- ducera is now 35 cents, two cents above last year's price at the same period, * A group of Biackfeet Indians were in St. Paul recently to attend the Northwest Industrial conference as a means of add- ing to their own course of five years train- ing they are undergoing on the Glacier Park reeervation, While their course is combined with agriculture, they will carry back to Montana with them a composite picture of the white man's achievement In indtistry that ought to add impetus to the efforts of their tribe, government of- ficials believe. • 0 • A stupendous pageant, \The Spirit of America,' representing the great charac- tera and notable events in national his- tory, as well as outstanding events in Mon- tana history, is one of the assured fea- tures of the Fourth of July celebration In Butte. The work of putting on this ze- markabie and gorgeous spectacle is in the hands of J. W. Evans, internationally 2 Grazing Tracts Bordering LOLO NATIONAL FOREST 25,000 ACRES and 10,000 ACRES AT l'ER ACRE Splendid grass, water, brouse and sliade. Has a southern slope giving early pasture. Railroad iipur touches the land. Terms: 10 per cent down, balance divided Into 10 yearly payments. BLACKFOOT LAND DEVELOPMENT CO. Drawer 1590, Missoula, Mont. S. 0. HUSiTH . AD MEAT RAWL MONTANA Osphowsserlat sod Ortainsa i. N. 1. Jesting 7. Expresses in- completeness (prefix) 8. Either 9. North East (ab.) 10. Obadiah (ab.) 12, Equipoise 18. First note of musical scale I. Group of edifices 2. Anonymous (ab.) Your Cross Word Puzzle HOW TO SOLVE THE CROSSWORD ISIZZLE The way to solve the crossword puaxle is to fill in the obit* squares of the dia- gram with the words which agree with the secowYmnYing dotiuttious. The definitions are numbered to correspond with the numbers on the diagram. Any word defined in the text under \HORIZONTAL\ will begin at its number, shown on the diagram, and will extend all the way ACROSS to the FIRST BLACK SPACE to the RIGHT of that number. That is. the surd must begin la the (aware that contains its identifying number, and extend as tar as the white squares csntinue uutnterruptedly. Any word defined under \VERTICAL\ will also begin in the white space that con- tains its number, but will extend DOWNWARD as far as the white spaces remain un interruptedir. - 1 3 sw, 74 It 13 /$ 2.8 /4 . o' 7.1 HORIZONTAL 17. North Dakota (ab.) 18. Gab's attention 23. Gulf In West- ern Siberia 24. Virginia (ab.) 25. General Order (ab.) 27. Indefinite article 23. Those who shingle VERTICAL one's child 9. New Brunswick (ab.) 11. Bismuth (ab,) 3. Row in a series 1 of things placed 1 one above 15. another 1 4. Disturbance 2i) caused by mob 2 5. North (ab.) 2 6. The sons of 3. Ionic (ab.) 4, Atmosphere Ontario (ab.) 9. Toward . Very Black 1. Sinful 2. South America (ab.) 28. Exclamation 27. Arabia (ab.) tiontitioN OF LAST WEEK'S PUZZLI TRAG/C H MR J'AD NEN 1, 1 ,511ERNI MAN pOU OM N 4 / 1 3 A/MED MfiN SP= P/M W I NNE M GET M BMD i L./QMUML 0 MMM 0 fa m 6 r - .4 MGIEH2 c taG1 FACIAE LAffi NOL/C NM /T NEM 8015 DO M MAP RAM a ED/TEffi.ANGEWS Copyright 1925, George Matthew Adams known for his connection with affairs of this kind, and William Foy of Los An- geles, 4,. Dr. Chow Young, Chinese herb doctor, pleaded guilty in the federal district couurt at Billings to a charge of selling and possesing narcotic drugs and was sen- tenced by Judge Charles N. Pray to serve 70 days in the county jail and pay a fine of $250. Dr. Chow Young was arrested on December 20 in Billings when the federal narcotic agents conducted a raid on the three IBillings Chinese quarters. Several weeks later he was found nearly asphyx- iated from gas with indications that he had attempted suicide. He bas been under $1,500 bonds for several months pending the hearing. Plans for the Queen of Montana con- test, by which every county in the state will have an opportunity to send a prin- cess to the state fair at Helena, have been mailed to newspapers by Secretary W. G. Ferguson. This is the fourth year the con- test has been conducted in Helena. Last year 46 were entered and it is hoped that all 56 will be represented this year. The queen to be selected by the princesses will be the American Legion's guest at its Na- tional convention in Omaha in October. She will also represent Montana at the Tulsa, Okla., oil exposition. STATE CAPITOL NEWS Petroleum county, created by vote, out of the eastern end of Fergus county, at the last general election, remains Intact in the opinion of Attorney General Foot, de- spite confusion raised by the passage, by the 1925 legislature, of an act restating the old boundary -of -Fe -ma* ecatuty _as. lts. _pres- ent boundary. The legislature's purpose. It is assumed, was to revise the border line between Fergus and Judith Basin counties taking two county townships in- to Judith Basin county and its purpose was stated in the title of the act. However, the question arose as to whether, by re- stating the old eastern boundary of Fergus county, the legislature had abolished Pe- troleum county. Attorney General Foot gives his opinion that the legislature had no such intention, for to have made Its ae constitutional in that respect it would have been necessary to clearly state that purpose in its title, • • * Albert Gatley, superintendent of the Re- public Coal Mining company at Roundup has been appointed by the state industrial accident commission a member of the state board of coal mine inspectors. Mr. Galley, whose term is for one year. was named in the place of Thomas Good. who was unable to qualify because of illness. • • • Two deputy state scale inspectors have been named by A. II. Bowman, state com- missioner of agircultuure, under whose de- partment this work Is handled. They are J. O'Connor of Butte and George T. Bax- ter of Helena. • 41, • Montana's auto license plates for 1926 will- be black with white letters. A con- tract for their manufacture has beer let to the Automobile Tag Manufacturing company of St. Paul, for 12.45 per set. The order was for 57,000 ,paid, whicli is an in- ertia - se - o'T 5,000 -sets over the estimated registratitin -for 1925. r .-- * Montanas fish and game fund realized more than $1,200 one morning rs , .-taly when State (lame Warden Robert Il, lull. conducted an auction sale of confiscated furs and hides at the capitol building Hen- ry Miller of BIllinge left $1,200 with the state for the beaver hides. He Aid $ 100 for a lot of nine, and $1,010 for a bunch of 119. Leo Goldberg. representing the Gold- berg Fur and Wool company of Helena. bought 77 muskrat skins for $9S, a badger hide for $1.73. two deer «tine for Ws° and an elk skin for $2. The beaver, muskrat and badger skins were confiscated at St. 1.0111s, where they had been shipped lir a trapper using an assumed name from Bill- ings. Before leaving fo• r Minneapolis to n.Filet in observing the Norse Centennial. Gover- nor J, E. Erickson signed an uncolldional pardon for an overseas veteran and saved Oliver D. Russell, of illeaverhead county from serving a two-year term at Deer Lodge, and losing his arniy service corn- pencuition. The state board of pardons will kohl a hearing Jone 23 before approv- ing the art of the stnte's chief executive. Russell was convicted of criminal nssault August 13, 1924, in Bearecheadxounty and sentenced to serve not less than two years and not more' than four, Re lost s 'hand In action overseas and *sustained frOUrles in the lower pert of the chest. spensilltig eight months in an army hospital, at Fort Harrison. Before conviction he bore a good reputation. • 4 0 • • Montana citisena continued their auto- mobile purchases through may to the same extent as during April„ records of • the motor registration bureau .show. A total of 2,101 new passenger automobiles were registered last month, while the to- tal registration of passenger cars reached 67.750. as compared with 54.300 at the end of May. 1924. The number of new cars registered during the year now stands at 6,300, which represents almost 9% per cent of the total registrations. The figures for other registrations with comparative figures for May 31, 11124, follow: 1925. 1924. Trucks ________9,800 7,200 Motorcycles _______ 167 192 Chauffeurs - 284 134 Auto Dealers__ 336 275 Accessory Dealers_________ 136 142 • • Meeting with the Montana State High- way commission, C. H. Purcell, chief of the United States Bureau of Public Roads for the district including Montana, ex- pressed his approval of the plans of the state commission for co-operating with the counties in the maintenance of federal aid projects. Thirty-four of the 38 counties within which there are federal aid projects have accepted the commission's co-oper- ative proposal, The federal bureau has indicated that it will approve the co-op- erative project outlined for participation by the city of Great Foals, the county of Cascade and the government, except for three blocks in the city which contain too many houses to come within scope of the bureau's field. This would end the high- way at Twenty -Ninth street instead of Twenty -Sixth as the ontline of the pro- ject contemplated. Petroleum's Debt To Fergus The debt owing Fergus county by Petroletim county is fixed by the commission appointed by Governor Dixon last year is $291,478.20, ac- cording to a report filed in Lewis- town. ll'ergus ties were ascertained as being $2,- 758,937.55, while its total assets are $1,871,163.14, making the net liabil- ities,' $887,774.41. Members of tike commission were J. A. Wilson of Judith Basin county, E. K. Cheadle, Jr., of Fergus county and J.Otis Mudd of Petroleum county. Bull Lake Road Finished The Bull Lake project, between Noxon and Troy in Lincoln county has been completed. This road, five and a half miles long, has been com- pleted by Contractor George Suther- land and a crew of 10 men at a coat of $43,000, being 'surfaced with crushed rock. Lincoln county con- tributed $7,500, the government the remainder. Previously this route has been impassable in winter, rough and swampy the rest of the year. It is built along the east shore of Bull Lake. Box 954 SPENT A FORTUNE IN TAXES; BROKE PIONEER WOMAN, AGE 95, VIS- ITS HELENA WITH ONLY 40 CENTS TO NAME Came to Montana Before Civil War Anti Believes She Will Live to be More Than 100; Remembers the Gold Rushes and Indan Wars. After paying $52,000 in taxes to Lewis and Clark county during her residence in Helena of 50 years or more, Mrs. Owen Doyle, who will be 95 hey 'text birthday, re- cently arrived in the capital city with her son, Eugene Doyle, 45, with but 40 cents between them, to continue their journey to Sand- point, Ida. Mrs. Doyle, who came to the state before the Civil war began, has a memory scintillating with experi- ences of adventurous days. She is able to recall seven blood curdling Indian battles. Mrs. Doyle and her von were busy during the day visiting with friends they have known fur years. \We had a heap of fun at the courthouse,\ said Mrs. Doyle, \where we visited with the commissioners and other officers we knew, and looked over some of the records.\ A trifle bent but spry enough to walk Helena's hilly streets without assistance, Mrs. Doyle is quick of wit. She uses as much subtle humor as the best of them. In answer to the question about her age she replied: \Oh I'm 25, of that I'm sure and I'm going to live to be 100, yes *lime. There's a bet of $7,000 on at.\ She explained -- th - at a doctor in Conrad had made the bet she would live to be at least 100. Mrs. Doyle recalls Indian troubles in Helena, the days when she cooked for military camps stationed in Mon- tana territory to quell Indian dis- orders and consequent massacres and bloody battles. \Young man,\ she flashed, \if you could write as fast as I talk your fortune would be made because of the history I, know.\ She remembers the gold rushes, the time when \hell broke loose\ at Fort Laramie, Wyoming, when angered by \12 bull headed sol- diers,\ some 15,000 Sioux Indians went on the war path, of the ram- pages the Crows took in the Mussel- shell valley, M bloody battles at Fort Shaw near Great Falls when soldiers froze their hands and feet in terrible battles with the Indians. \But I never was afraid of an Indian, no sir, and they never dared touch me.\ Mrs. Doyle, with her husband, op- erated a bakery for many years on Culter street in Helena, and owned much other property in the city. Her husband died several years ago as did several of her children, the son traveling with her being the only one alive. \But these newspapers,\ she ex- claimed \they never tell anything right. Sitting Bull was not killed by General Miles. His own men killed him.\ Mrs. Doyle has been in most of the western states and was in South America in 1912 with ason who was circulation manager of the \Mobile Item,\ a newspaper. Mrs. Doyle was born in Illinois December 12, 1830. \The Lord is merciful and will provide,\ she sighed, as they de- parted to call on friends. They were guests of the Salvation Army while in Helena. Crossword puzzles are now being included in packages of British cig- arettes instead of picture cards. 0 T E L R AINBOW GREAT A..1.Breitenstein FALLSManager MONTANA'S DISTINCTIVE HOSTELRY Profits from Sugar in Montana for 9 24 More Than Milliod In 1924 the gross business of the Great Wc%tern Sugar company in MonUttia mats $5,100,209, it re- ports to the secretary of state is filing its annual statement. The statement gives its investment in Montana an $2,033,341, its expen- ditures in Montana $3,90$,115 and Its profits from Montana business $1,1914,154. All foreign corporations are re- quired to tile an annual statement at this time, accompanied by a $5 fee. Domestic corporations file their statements with the county clerk and recorder of the home county. Before June 15, if the corpora- tions calendas. year coincides with the calendar Tear, otherwise within 90 days from the close of its fiscal year each corporation operating in Montana must also file with the state board of equalization a report upon which is based a tax on its net in- come. About 650 Montana's 5,000 cor- porations are subject to the 1 per cent tax on net income and the re- turns from this source in 1924 brought $217,457,48 to the state treasury. The board looks for a total of a quarter of a million dollars this year. A. O. U. W. FULL LEGAL RESERVE STANDARD PROVISIONS LOW COST BYRON YATES State Manager Box 9417 Groot Falls TIRES POSTPAID EXTRA SPECIAL 30x3 Cord ..... ... ...........,_$ 7-00 20x3% Cord 7.75 3ix4.40 Clincher Balloon ......12,75 SoxS1A- Fisk Tube 1.15 Fully Guaranteed FISK MASSASOIT CORD 30x3% $ 7.75 30x3 Cord 7.00 30x3% S. S. 10.25 31x4 12.75 32x4 13.75 33x4 14.50 82x4 % 1000 33x4% 19.50 31x4.40 Clincher Balloon 12.75 \BUY YOUR TIRES FROM TILIC TIRE EXPERTS\ Expert Repair Work INSTANT SERVICE We have the only BALLOON and truck molds in Northern Montana. Insist on having your repair work done with proper equipmeat. ABRAMS TIRE SALES 00. Great Falls :-: Montana GREAT FALLS DYE HOUSE Practical Dyers and Cleaners 16 STEELE BLDG. GREAT FALLS, MONT NeWF1 • HOTEL, Butte, 111011 Montana, fireproof 10 \ with all outside rooms. Bates $2.00 and up. -, s il ,...,,,.., ,,. culooL oy, PEANUT BUTTER FOR SPRINGTIME ZEST AGENTS WANTED To Write HAIL INSL T RANCE for the Ranchers Hail and Fire Insurance Company The only Montana Farmers Mutual Writing Hail Insurance Write the Home Office, today. • Great Falls, Wotan's. \ IMP .1•1a MM. a I T 0 1:11... 1 ISEASED TEETH - jai Upset I Your Whole System -- Your physician will tell you that such cases are not for him. He cannot remove the poison from your body by the administration of drugs because the diseased teeth will continue to do their destructive work. REMOVE THE CAUSE AND YOU EFFECT A CURE Have Those Diseased Teeth Attended to Now! BRING YOUR TOOTH TROUBLES HERE The Edmondson Dental Office being the best equipped in the state. can give prompt and efficient service at very small cost. All Modern Methods X-Rity Nerve Blocking Trained Lady Attendants DR. E. E. EDMONSON, Dentist Great Falls, Montana Over Lanpyre's Drug Store Entrance on Third Street South 4 1 111MIRMINIENIIMINID MIMIIII•••••••S Complete ?C -Ray CD Equipment CIL IMINIMINIIIIM131111111111•1111111•=0.••••=iri NNW • •