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About The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925-1973 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.), 21 Aug. 1925, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075229/1925-08-21/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
1tale Historical Library I Be sure to see TOM MIX in \THE TROUBLE SHOOTER,\ 4P t t.c ) I‘ C) -0` LIBERIXY,T-heatre, tit • S . Next Tuet sj aY and Wednesda • 42v:e:r:RE71 THE HARDIN TRIBUNE-HERAL C 1 ONTIN LING ,THIL HA RDI PI MID V NU AND T H E HARDIN HZKALD OLUME XVIII, NO. 34 HARDIN, BIG HORN COUNTY. MONTANA, FRIO Al, AUGUST 21, 1952 BODY OF JOHN WEBB RECOVERED AUG.19 Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Weir, Miss Harriet Weir and Webb Weir motored to Meyers yesterday morning to attend the funeral of Mrs. Weir's nephew, John Webb, the 15 -year -old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Webb who was drowned Sunday, August 9, while swimming in the Yellow- stone river with some other boys. The body was recovered Wednesday aft•ernoon, the 11th day after the drowning. The funeral was held at Meyer - Rev. Marshall, the Presbyterian minister at Forsyth. officiating. The young lad WAS the eldest e three children, a brother a n d skier, besides the parents sur- viving. A few years ago the family resided in Hardin, Mrs. Webb being employed it th Golden Flule store, while Mr Webb was employed on the W. E. Reno farm. They have many friends here whose sympathy goes out to them in their sad affliction. GOES OFF BRIDGE WITH TRUCK LOAD OF WHEAT While coming into Hardin Monday evening with a truck load of wheab for the Campbell Farming Corporation, Casey Joslin, who came here a few days ago from Winnett, ran off the grade just south of the rail- road track and tipped over. lie was thrown heavily to the ground and temporarily stunned. H e was picked up by a fellow trucker, who was close behind him, anpl brought to town, where he waetreated tty Dr. L. E. Hay- erfield. Luckily, no bones were broken and aside from a bedly bruised shoulder and leg, he was 11111 the worse for his experi- ence, going to work the tonna ing day. RETURNS TO TOPEKA •••••=1•111 , Rev. B. V. Edworthy, a former pastor of the Hardin Methodist church, who with Mrs. Ed - worthy has been visiting at the W. A. Peden farm home in the Little II o r n valley bhe past fortnight, left Monday by auto for their home at Topeka, Kas., where Rev. Edworthy is en- gaged in Y. M. C. A. work for boys. Their many Hardin friends were pleased to greet them again and hope that their visits here may be frequent REAL ESTATE DEAL A real estate deal was con- summated in Hardin Tuesday whereby the Tony Imholte five - room and lull basement bunga- low on North Cody avenue, which for the past two or three years has been occupied b y Attorney and Mrs. C. C. Guinn, was purchased by ahem from John Boyum of Denver. It is one of the most desirable homes in the dly. BUYS KIRBY STORE A deal was made in Hardin Thursday whereby C R. Foley became the owner of the Charlotte M. Carter property in Kirby, which includes the stone store building an - a - hinillari of the stock of general merchan- dise. Mr. Foley has been con- ducting the store, of which he is now sole owner, the past several years. • BIG HORN HONORED Big Horn county was honored Pt the annual convention of the American Legion, Friday a n d Raktrday of 'est week at Dillon, Rev. C. A. Bentley of Crow Agency, post commander olf Hardin Post No. 8, being elected chaplain of the state depart- ment. • If. E. SERVICES SUNDAY The pastor will preach at the II o'dock morning service; subject \Life's Harness.\ The Rev. I. P. Kaiser, pastor of the Hardin Evangelical church, will be the preacher at The event!'\ leer** at 8 ebbe& SECOND WARD WINS CITY CHAMPIONSHIP At a very interesting game of indoor baseball Monday even- ing, the Second Ward team won the championship of the last series of the city league by defeating the Ford team by a score of 4 to 2. The champion- ship of the first series was won by the Third Warders. T h e rubber for the undisputed championship will be played off in the near future. 11032UUSIUStUUUUU 3 : LOCAL AND PERSONAL tg antonnstititssinn New goods daily at the Golden Rule. Harris Dyvig a n d family spent Sunday with friends at Billings. 0 - Betty Labbitt had her tonsils and adenoids removed at the Labbitt hospital, Wednesday. 0 _ On Wednesday, at the Lab - hilt hospital, Aifred Bowmen s edenoids aril tonsils were - moved. PROPOSED PARK GAIN- ING SERIOUS ATTENTION equate -is, rivalling in ruggedness 111 d depth the famous early. I. of Estes and Glacier parks. Black canyon, Devils ;Lnyon and Elk canyon were among the deep gorge s which cross the area. Aiedieine Mountain, with its etependous view of 100 miles of country in each direction, and its historic shrine, Medicine Wheel, mysterious relic of an ancient Indian civilization, is an- ' soine of interest included in the proposed park. Those in the party are U. S. Senator John B. Kendrick of aVyoming, President J. M. Kib- hen of the Sheridan Commer- eial Club: R. E. McNally, chalr-__ man of ahe , rlub's national park BACK FROM VACATION IN SPANKING NEW CAR .1. Knowles, manager of tl local branch of the Moliati. Power Co. with Mrs. Knowles, and their daughters, Misses Patricia a n d Alice, returned Sunday from a three weeks' vacation at their former home in Big Timber. While there Mr. Knowles disposed of their home in that city, taking in as part of the consideration, a 1926 Nash sedan. 4 - it it it U U Si SS U U 13 it :2 :2 33 LOCAL AND PERSONAL tt 0133UUUUU1213UUNUN See the New Dresses and Hats at the Golden Rule. ----I Mrs. R. P. Gilmore is expecaed home Saturday evening from Casper. -- Mrs. - Lee Huss, who has been committee: H. D. Loucks. She. ' Ill le •ili' is repotted as con - Wen photographer: C. H. As- Nal • escing. bury, supt. of the Crow Ind . reservation: Co!. Allen S. Peck MI'S. Ed Fisk of Cutbank ar- of Denver. U. S district forester; to the family of her sister, Mrs. rived this morning on a visit D. C. Pensfermaker. represent - ins , the North & South railroad: W. A. Ransier. _ 0 _ mining the feasibility of having Ed Peterson. of Roberts Brothers Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Campbell ' Mrs. M. L. Wright of Billings this area set apart as a national Pete.renn. Shirley & Gunther. and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fearis was a firsb of the week visitor park. eontrnetors: Robert Peter enn, returned Sunday evening from at the home of her sister, Mrs. T h section was originally Carl Rankin. secretary of the a motor trip to Sheridan, Wyo. J. J. Ping. noticed by members of the Naelfaedin Chamber of Commerce. firma! Parks Committee for it' The party expe - cts to return to After a week's visit here with number of wild and beautiful Sheridan Sunday. her friend, Margueribe P i n g, Miss Helen Holder, a former Hardin resident, returned to her home at Sheridan, Wyo. 0 _ Claude Thompson, who i s operating a grain hauling truck for the Campbell Farming Cor- poration, has moved his familN here from Sheridan, Wyo. Ad' srtitil e is th e Till \'Herald 4 t'd• re -suit & 0 .40 MIMI aE,fp$t14 Nrk 'BILLINGS iferit#1 TEAM HER{ Si Under the auspices of the Sheridan (Wyoming) Commer- cial Club an expedition left Sher- idan Wednesday morning to ex - 'Jere the canyons anti peeks of --the proposed Big Horn national rk, the nearest point of which lie* to the southeast of Hardin, some fifty miles. The party was conducted in cars to a paint on the Sheridan -Lovell road on top o! the range, where thy were met by Ileebeit H. Thompson of Wyola with a string of saddle. and pack horses, and the re- mainder of the journey over the urea of the proposed park will be made on horseback, as some • r she eounts,e - hey will ex- plore i3 too wild and inaccessittle for cars to penetrate and is de- seribed as being one of the most picturesque sections of mountain scenery in the United States. The purpose of the trip is to investigate with a view to deter - Robert\ Duncan of San Diego, Calif., formerly of Carbon county, is spending a few days in this vicinity looking after his ranch interests neer Crow Agency. __ 0 After subbing for a week in the Hardin Bakery while her sister. Mrs. %idle Trussell, took her annual vacation, Miss Sylvia Elarth has returned to her Sheridan, Wyo., home. C. E. Ford,at the Har- din high school building. ha, moved his family from the Base cottage on Crow avenue to the Bunston dwelling on Crawford avenue, opposite the city park. Ben W. Moore, one of the progressive farmers of th e North Bench community, this week threshed an average of 25 bushels from an 80 -acre field of spring wheat. The Tom G. Duncan family, who left here by automobile about a month ago for Califor- nia, arrived at Los Angeles last Sunday. En route they stopped over at several places to visit relatives and friends. • Russell Proctor, a nephew of ; J. Ping, accompanied by his wife and two children, arrived Monday from Winchester, Ken- tucky, and were guests at the evening, when they departed for their Kentucky home. Mr. and Mrs. John Landon and children were in town Tuesday from their farm on the east side of the river, about a dozen miles north of Hardin. They report that owing to lack of nioisture at the right time their wheat crop is only fair. Mrs. ()oldie Trussell returned Sunday from a fortnight's out- ing at the William V. Johnson summer sheep camp in the Big Horn mountains, and is again on duty behind the counters of t h e Hardin Bakery. She re- ports having had a most en- joyable vacation. Mrs. Herman Rich and two sons drove up from their home In Nebraska bhis week and are visiting a few days at the home of Mrs. Rich's sisters, Misses Hannah and Lucy Batty. They brought with them a sample of the \corn grown on their ,farm In 14braska, the stalks of which measure more than nine feet l In length and which was raised from seed furnished by the ex- perimental farm in that state. IlYSIGIN LOCATES NUPTIALS OF G. N. AT LODGE GRASS HARRIS, FAYE TIBER apolis arrived Saturday on a l'he following account of the visit to her parents, Mr. and Mr. Koch is an engineer in the of months at. Salt Creek, where Mrs. J. farm. Water of the War-- einploj of the Intermountain Dr. Thomas B. Marquis, for fruit - we r dding of George M. Harris, Water & Power company, a merly of Whitehall, who has principal of the Hardin high Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Calahan couple of years. Mrs. Koch's — 0 _ position he has held the past recently located in Lodge Grass . Manager Tom . . i Hardin baseball amt,es that he has arran t fe.Lbc American Legion nies hugs, the best basebaii or the Sugar City, to crob tau i with Hardin on the loca, mond next Sunday afternool. :it !three o'clock. Terry Mitch', will pitch for the Legion boys. lie has been doing some excel- lent mound work recently and there is no doubt he will give a good account of himself next Sunday, if he has a catcher who can hold him, as he doubtlese will have. Our own Jim Denton will be on the mound for which is a guarantee that there will be some pitchers' duel. If !you want to witness a real, 'honest to goodri‘ess exemplifica- tion of the national game, be at the local ball park Sunday. • F. E. Williams, deputy skite examiner, is spending several days in the city examining tee county and city offices. BACK ON SHORT VISE Mr. and Mrs. A. W. F. Koch County Clerk Carl Rankin and City Aatorney D. L. Egnew and their better halves spent Sun- day angling for trout in Black canyon. Miss Ruth Ruth Walker o f Minne- motored up from the oil fields at Salt Creek, Wyo., tryst even- ing. Mra. Koch, who with her brother-in-law, Ralph B. Peck s conducts the Basket Grocery in Hardin, spent the past couple.. school, and Miss Faye Taber, and their daughter, Mrs. Carl ' son, Edgar Reeder, a student for the practice of his P ra e s- s .e i roln or several years head of the Bowman, were week -end guests ' at the state university at Mis- sion, was in Hardin Tu • estic science department of at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. I soula, is spending his vacation accompanied b y M. Woodall, the liar din high, which took E. Graham at Clearmont, Wyo. working in Ma conssisissary of also a recent arrival in Lodge 'place at Pitasburg, Kas., Wed- Notwithstanding the fact that . the Midwest Refining Co., atlaalt U r a s s. The doctor and Mr. nesday, August 12, is taken from Creek. After a brief visit here - Woodall were neighbors in the , a Pittsburg, Kan., paper. Shields River valley some years' \The marriage of Miss Faye ago. Dr. Marquis, when a Taber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. young man, was employed as a F. L. Taber, to Mr. George M. typesetter on th e Anaconda 1 Harris took place Wednesday Standard, the Helena lndepend- imorning at 7 o'clock at the ent, and other Montana news— home of the bride's parents, papers. This was back in the i 721 West Fourth Street. Rev. late eighties and early nineties. Charles J. Armentrout officiated More than a quarter of a cen-!in the ring service. Only the tury ago he forsook the \art immediate relatives and friends of the bride and groom were present. Just before the cere- mony, Mrs. Clyde Crumb sang, \At Dawning,\ and the wedding march was played by a sister of the bride Miss Iris Taber. T h e bride wore an orchid ness matters. georgette frock, and_ carried an arm bouquet of pink rosebuds. A wedding breakfast was served immediately after the ceremony. t Mr. and Mrs. Harris left by motor for Hardin, Mont., where Mr. Harris is principal of Shp high school. They will be at home there after September 1.\ preservative of all arts\ for the pm actice of medicine, and for several years was located in the Madison valley, near Vir- ginia City, where he and the writer became well acquainted. The doctor devotes a consider- able portion of his time to liter- ary work and several of his stories on Indian life have been published in the leading maga- zines of the country. His main reason for locating on the Crow Indian reservation is that he will he in closer touch with Indian life. GIVE BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR THEIR MOTHER For the pleasure of their mother, Mrs. 0. C. Bunston. Mrs. II. W. Bunston and Mrs. W. A. Sawyer entertained at a Kensington at the Bunston home on Fourth street Thursday af- ternoon. The affair was in the nature of a surprise and, it be- ing her birthday, she was showered with gifts. The ladies Cy Calhoun pit•ehed a splendid game for Hardin, striking out 16 men, the Hardin team was defeated at Laurel Sunday by a score of 14 to 5. Miss Irma Bohan, cousin to Mrs. C. A. Pattison of the Savoy Cafe, is again serving the Mr. Koch will return to his duties at Salt Creek. BROTHER OIE!; Mrs. Percy Wilcox and Mrs. Lyle E. Haverfield left Sunday evening for Nampa, Idaho, to attend the funeral of their 18 - public in this up-to-date eating year -old brother, Ted R u s e, place after , . several weeks ab- who died following an opera- sence in Miles City and Forsyth. talon for appendicitis, performed while in y. ding to busi- days ago to be at the bedside toa;:alt7efnri several days previous. H i s mother, Mrs. Ida Ruse, who was visiting her daughters in Har- many H ends today din, was called home several of her son when the operation was erformed Hon. Fred E. Gordon and wit of the upper Little Horn valle. were shaking hank with their Fred E. Hilton, --a few years ago one of the steam engineers at the old Hardin Light & Power company plant, now an engi- neer in a flour mill at Billings, spent the week -end visiting old friends in Hardin. Miss Alma Frazer of Sarpy is a guest at' the Geo. H. Miller home. Next Tuesday, accom- panied by Mr. Miller, she will leave for Sioux City, Iowa, the latter to visit his mother and the former to visit a cousin. cious watermelons grown on his — ranch in the Masehetah neigh- borhood. These 'were the first melons of any quanti4 to he brought in this summer. Mr. Hubbard says he will have wagon loads of them in a few days more. invited were Mrs. H:A. Shaw, COLLAR BONE BROKEN Mrs. Ben MaGee and Mrs. C. A. Wort of Nine Mile, and Mrs. L. S. McAllister, Mrs. Frank Lewis, Mrs. Ernest Adler, Mrs A. E. Calahan, Mrs. C E. Bow- man and Mrs. Fenner of Hardin. NORTH BENCH LOCALS Margaret and Lois Moore were on the sick list last week. Harry Schoer finished thresh- ing on North Bench Tuesday. The rain last Monday night delayed threshing for half a day. Sol Miller has been trucking wheat for some of the North Benchers. Mrs. M. E. Morrison arrived last Sunday for a two weeks' visit at the home of her son, J. E. Morrison. • Dr. John W. Orogen left last evening for a few days visit in Sheridan, Wyo. BRINGS IN FIRST LOAD OF' WATERMELONS _ A. E. Hubbard was in ttewn yesterday with a load of Ins - Gr. F. Corwin, one of the pioneer stockmen of the Pine Ridge section, was thrown from his horse last Tuesday and suf- fered the fracture of a collar bone. The fracture was re- duced at the Labbitt hospital and he was able to return home yesterday. \SCOTTY\ IN SPOKANE Word has been received from George D. Adams, familiarly known as \Scotty\ Adams, an- nouncing that he, his wife and five childrtn, who left Hardin several weeks ago, art now eicely located at Spokane, Wash., Where he is employed in t h e iron works. • Postern°. Inspector J. N. Fitz- gerald of Spokane Is in Hardin to -day making a periodical check-np of the local post office. Mrs. A. C. Walker and two daughters, Misses Birdie anti Ruth, of Texarkana, Texas, left Wednesday night for home after a ten-day visit with the family of the former's brother, S. L. Weir, manager of the Golden Rule store. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Foley, accompanied by Mrs. Foley's sister, Miss Patty Buchanan, motored over from Kirby, Thursday. Miss Buchanan has just returned from Minneapolis and Chicago, where she has been taking a master course in piano and pipe organ. Dan Wilson Vickers, his son Robert, his son-in-law a n d daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller, and their little son Ger- ald, arrived in Hardin from Sterling, Colo., on Tuesday, and are guests at the home of the former's cousin, R. A. Vickers. For fifty years Mr. Vickers was a resident of Monroe township, Platte county, Nebraska, leaving there a little over a year ago for Colorado, and with his fan:l- ily Is now enroute by auto- mobile for Oregon, where they expect to locate. i\ AT GRAND LODGE The Hamlin Masonic lodge is - represented at the grand lodge meeting at Missoula this week by Ray C. Thompson, W. A, Lloyd Snyder, S. , W.; and Al Koehler, J. W. The Eastern Star chapter is represented by Mrs. J. J. Ping, W. M.; Mrs. Ray C. Thompson, proxy for W. P., and Mrs. W. A. Ransier, A. M. Mrs. Lloyd Snyder accompanied her husband. • TO TEACH AT COMMUNITY Miss Minnie Blevan of Sheri- dan, Wyo., who has been visit- ing at the home of her sister, Mrs. J. J. Ping, left Sunday for Sheridan to attend teachers' in- stitufe, at he concIutlen of which she will return to Hardin, having signed a contract k) teach in the Community school of dis- trict No. 16, down the valley, the coming year. RETURNS ROME W. R. Tanner, who since July 1st has been visiting at the home of his son, Attorney Frank D. Tanner, left Tuesday mo i rning for his home at Medina, Ohio. He. will stop en route at the home of a sister, Mrs. Hattie Tanner, living at Mitchell, S. D. HARDIN GRAIN MARKET (Friday, August 21, 1220 Dark Northern Spring L47 Northern Spring 1.111 Dark Hard Winter 1.40 Hard Winter Flax LII nete, per cwt. • ••••••••