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About Sanders County Ledger (Thompson Falls, Mont.) 1959-current | View This Issue
Sanders County Ledger (Thompson Falls, Mont.), 17 Sept. 1959, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075283/1959-09-17/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Trout Creek PTA Appropriates $25 To Each School Class for Books By Mrs. S. J. Stonehocker TROUT CREEK—The first meeting of the PTA was held Wednesday evening with the pre- sident, Bob Jopling, presiding. Committees were appointed and matters of business discussed. Members decided to produce a play in the near future. An appropriation of $25 per grade to purchase library books was made to the school. The PTA voted also to start the card par- ties with the first one scheduled Oct. 2. Room mothers were chos- en. A baby sitter for children at the PTA meetings will be avail- able. Mrs. Martin's room won the attendance prize. The benefit auction held Sat- urday at the church went over very good with a large crowd at- tending. The auction netted about $90. The Willing Workers held their regular meeting at the home of Mrs. Dave Hale. Mr. and Mrs. John Enos of Oakland, Calif. spent the week- end at the home of Mr. and John Cernik. Mrs. Enos is a sis- ter of Mrs. Cernik. They had been sightseeing in Canada at Banff, Lake Louise and then to Glacier park and plan to go through Yellowstone park and the Black Hills before returning home. Myron Lewis was home for a week and returned to his work at Moses Lake Saturday. Glenn Smith and Miss June Wyckoff were married Saturday in Coeur d'Alene. They are mak- ing their home at the former Attends Funeral . County Supt. Orin P. Kendall returned last weekend from San- ta Cruz, Calif., where he had been called by the death of his brother-in-law, Henry Turnbull, Funeral services were held Tues- day of last week. Townsley residence. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Smith visited in Trout Creek Sunday. Miss Janice Fuller was an overnight guest Sunday night of Miss Cherry. Lou Kirschbaurn. Cherry Lou spent Monday night with Miss Twila Brown. SC Residents Entertain Guests By Mrs. Leonard Dickson SWAMP CREEK—A number of homes in the Swamp Creek area had guests over the holiday weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Krenzler and family of Billings were holi- days guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Dickson. Other re- cent visitors at the Dickson home have included Mr. and Mrs. Forest Chenowith of Word - en, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Krun and daughter of Huntley and Mr. and Mrs. Dee Cleveland of Ballantine. Mr. anw Mrs. Gene Claybrook of Kennewick were weekend visitors at the Gravin Taylor home. Miss Emily Hightower of Spokane spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sloan Hightower. The Swamp Creek Homemak- ers club met Sept. 3 at the home of Mrs. Ruth Birdwell with eight members and one guest present. The next meeting will be Oct. 1 at the home of Mrs. Warren Kirschbaum. Members will work on a quilt at the Grange hall Sept. 18. Members are asked to bring a sack lunch. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evans are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Dickson. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McLind- en and family of Spokane were weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Pat McLinden Sr. DR. R. G. STANSBERRY OPTOMETRIST EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED I will be in THOMPSON FALLS THURSDAY, SEPT. 17th Office hours from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Offices in Dr. Isbister's offices, 103 Columbia. Phone TAylor 7-3311 sometimes it's TO PUT ALL YOUR EGGS IN ONE BASKET HOME MODERNIZING NEW HOME PLANS Right here at . . . PYATT LUMBER CO. You can find all these facilities under one roof. Everything you need for the complete handling of new home construction, remodeling, repairing or Do -It -Yourself projects. Our com- plete facilities will save you time... save you money • • • save you incon- venience.. .. Yes, it's Smart to \put all your eggs in our basket.\ EASY BUDGET TERMS... NO MONEY DOWN ON MAJOR REPAIR AND REMODELING PROJECTS PYATT LUMBER COMPANY Phone TA 7-3432 Quality Building Materials at Reasonable Prices Dayton; Mrs. Lulu Huse, Kalis- pell; Mrs. Stella Johnson, Plains; Mrs. Emma Sheppard, Hot Spr- ings. Dismissed — Sept. 2-8—Eldon Holland, Steven Lucas, Connie King, Mrs. Carol Mickelson, Mrs. Mary Mc- Donald, Hot Springs; Mrs. Pat- ricia Cleveland, Eddy; Finley Jenkins, Frank Mackie, Noxon; Mrs. Marion Schwartz, Mrs. Cleo Blanchard, Plains; Mrs. Eileen Weldon and baby, Henry Mikkel- son, Mrs. Elizabeth Neumiller, Adolph Anderson, Mrs. M. J. Sul- livan, Mrs. Mary Maxheimer, Mrs. Anna Perry, J. W. Tex Graham, Mrs. Beatrice Jonas Thompson Falls; Joseph Muster, Perma; Cynthia Antiste, Elmo; Leonard Slawson, Seattle; And- rew Pankratz, Missoula; Joseph Garrison, Belknap. Births — To Mr. and Mrs. Milton Max- heimer, Thompson Falls, a son, Stephen John, 7 lbs. 11 Jr'2 ozs., Sept. 4. BEFORE THE MILK CONTROL BOARD OF THE STATE OF MONTANA In the Matter of July 30, 1959 Public Hearing for the Establishment of the Natural Milk Marketing Area To be known as Area Number I. To the members of the Dairy Industry and to the Consuming Public within the proposed Milk Marketing Area Number I, which includes the counties of: Beaverhead, Madison, Jefferson, Gallatin, Park, Meagher, Broad - water, all of Lewis & Clark County except that part lying north of township line 20N and East of Range 7 West, Deer Lodge, Silver Bow, Powell, Gran- ite, Ravalli, Missoula, Mineral, Sanders and that part of Lake county lying south of the south line of township 22N. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 4, Chapter 192, of laws of the State of Montana for 1959, and pursuant to order of the Milk Control Board's hear- ing officer heretofore made. Notice is hereby given by the Montana Milk Control Board of public hearing to be held in the Courtroom of the Silver Bow County Courthouse, in Butte, Montana at 11 a.m. on the 15th day of October, 1959, which hearing will be a continuation of the July 30, 1959 hearing. To obtain evidence from which the Montana Milk Control Board, in the lawful exercise of its deligated authority, can pro- mulgate orders establishing a Natural Milk Marketing Area, the boundaries of which may in- clude all or any number of the above specified counties or any specified geographical or legal subdivisions thereof. For this purpose the Board will consider but not be limited to the following considerations set forth in the notice of the said July 30th public hearing. Be it remembered that the said July 30, 1959, hearing was ordered continued in order to allow the Milk Control Board and interested members of the fluid milk industry of the State of Montana time in which to prepare useful evidence of the actual marketing structure of the industry within the geo- graphical boundaries of said pro- posed marketing area, as mea- sured by actual quantities of milk sold. Dated: September 11, 1959 (s) T. P. McNulty Executive Secretary talking's more relaxed on a bedroom extension phone nine new colors ... to order, call any business office of Mountain States Telephone Hospital Notes I Fish & Game Dept. Tentatively Plans Admitted — Sept. 4—Edmund Mathias, Experimental Season on Pheasant Hens The Montana Fish and Game Dept. tentatively is planning an experimental pheasant season which would allow hunters to shoot a limited number of hens. Past evperience N%ith some other game species indicates that shooting some hens probably would not have much effect on the pheasant population. When either sex deer seasons were started in Montana, there were predictions that the deer would soon be annihilated. In- stead, deer remained as numer- ous as ever. In fact, they appear- ed to increase in some areas. In 1948, under the old \buck law,\ only 37 ( Ye of the hunters were able to bag a deer. Ten years later, after general either sex seasons had been in effect for several years, nearly every hunter who took to the field was certain to bag a deer. From an ethical standpoint, shooting hens should be no more objectionable than shooting fe- male ducks, geese, grouse or partridge, which has been done for years. From a biological standpoint, also, shooting fe- males is a sound practice. Ap- proximately 70 per cent of the pheasants hatched each year die before they are a year old wheth- er they are hunted or not. When cocks are hunted, a portion of this \surplus\ is harvested rat- her than letting nature harvest all of it. However, half of these surplus birds are hens, most of which do not live long enough to raise a brood. At least part of these could be taken by hunters without affecting pheasant pop- ulations of future years. Some states have already tak- en the leap and have made hen pheasants legal targets along with the cocks, while some other states are planning to follow this example during the com- ing season. Tentative plans under consid- eration by the Montana depart- ment call for allowing the shoot- ing of some hens in an area where pheasants are abundant. This area should be large en- ough to accommodate a large number of hunters without un- due crowding. Another area of similar size, having similar bird populations and hunting pres- sure and separated by at least several miles from the first would be used as a check area for evaluating the effect to shooting hens in the first area. The hunting season in the check area would consit of the customary season on cocks only. The pheasant harvest by hunt- ers, and pheasant populations and production of young follow- ing the hunting season would be measured by standard methods on each area. The findings from both areas would then be com- pared to show whether or not hen shooting had affected the population of the experimental area. No areas have been definitely selected as yet but several pos- sibilities are under considera- tion, the division reported. If the results of this experiment show that hens can be shot without de- pleting the pheasant popula- tion, Montana hunters stand to benefit by the greater number of legal targets that either sex pheasant shooting will make available to them. If it is found that hen -shooting does deplete the bird population, little harm will be done since the area would quickly repopulate with pheas- ants after the experiment is end- ed. Bird hunters stand to gain more than they could lose by such an experiment. Burglar Begins Prison Sentence Frank D. Roberts was taken to Deer Lodge Monday by Sheriff Wally Britton and 0. J. Murray to begin a five-year term in the state prison for first degree bur- glary. Roberts pleaded guilty Friday before Judge Gardner Brownlee to the burglary charge in con- nection with the theft of checks and an adding machine from the office of the Morgan Electric Co. at the Noxon Rapids darn site. He was arrested in Salt Lake City. SANDERS COUNTY LEDGER Letter to Editor T. Judd Praises Road Boosters Spokane 43. Wash. Dear Doc: I had the pleasure of sitting in at the meeting of Helen Weis- mandel, Don Saint, Bud Moore and John Britt with the Inland Empire committee of the Spo- kane C. of C. I was very pleas- ed to see these Thompson Falls people and had hoped to see you with them. They very ably presented in- formation on the proposed Thompson pass highway and brought everyone up to date. Some present hadn't previous- ly known much about it. The T. F. group made a good impression upon the members of the Inland Empire committee. I feel they did an outstanding job and greatly furthered the cause. Since Feb. 1 I have been very busy working with Walter Wood- ward, consulting engineer, here Thursday, Sept., 17, 1959-3 in Spokane. Looks like I'll be with him for some time to come. Best regards to yourself and family and other fine people in Sanders county. Sincerely, Tom Judd FOR INSURANCE CALL Barry Benson In Thompson Falls Each Wednesday Contact at Martha Cross residence Ph. TA 7-3663 Slate Farm Mutual Automobde laserarKo Ci Stale Farm Its Insuraoca Co Stale Farm Fire 1114 Casualty CO. PIOASE OPFICIE — OLOOPAINOTON ILI-2.40111 MISSOULA BREWING CO., MISSOULA, MONTANA -.44 -2 Z711411*.fCw.. 41'3WA8 THAT DO 'THE WInNgt..%\. #S70 PAVING EVERVilak0 AI AMERICM Imagine a truck ride so smooth and cushioned that fragile loads can travel the worst \wash- board\ roads with ease. Imagine a truck ride that virtually eliminates shimmy and wheel fight, cuts side sway on curves, makes steering far steadier and easier, keeps drivers far fresher. Imagine a truck ride that permits higher safe cruising speeds, more trips per day with all kinds of cargo over every type of road surface. Imagine a ride that keeps up to 78(,*; of all objection- able road shock and vibration from ever reaching the driver and cargo, a design that sharply reduces twisting and fatigue forces on chassis, cabs and bodies, that keeps trucks young for extra thousands of miles. / Soon you won't have to just imagine such a ride. You can try it for yourself in the trucks that do the next best thing to paving every road in America—new Chevrolet trucks for 1960. You'll see what happens when Chevy's truck engineers design a whole new line of trucks around a whole new kind of torsion -spring suspension. These trucks are new from the ride on up—with wonderfully roomier cabs, brawnier frames, style that's fresh as ) 9ixty and more! Don't decide on any new truck till you see the newest of all. See them soon at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's. Arizglor GILL - ADAMS, INC. Phone TA 7-3522 Thompson Falls --