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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 22
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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 22

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
22
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22 Montana Standard. Friday, fune 24, 1955. IAFF A DAY SALlVrSALUB Gen. Taylor, New Army Chief, Takes Up Post WASHES'GTON iff Gen Maxwell D. Taylor, arriving in Wash- iouju "') 6w moniously Thursday by top level ffiHl.

of thP Armv Outline im. Wrotan- RnKPrt Stvons and the outgoing chief of staff, Russia Appears Busy With Internal Rows Editor's Note: There is a big field for speculation as to the reason for what undoubtedly is an important revamping of Russian foreign policy. The following assessment of Russia's position is given by an expert on Soviet thought and policies. By W. A.

RYSER LONDON (U K) Russia needs time in order to deal with some pressing problems of its own. This fact emerges after an extensive survey of recent internal developments in the Soviet Union by experts here. These experts believe that the current switch in Soviet foreign policy is due as much to difficul WANTED 1 FEMALE HELP TOOKO WOUAX TO WORX lea cream store, state ag- experience, eta. In first reply. Write Boi 125.

Poet. WANTED SALESMAN 5 Salesman A well known midwestern company has opening for a salesman to travel this territory in state. (Week ends and holidays off.) This is a pleasant and dignified position coupled with above average income. This is not a "one over get rich-quick" offer, but one that is permanent with one of the fastest growing companies in its field. Publicity and also a protected territory with complete training given to our salesmen.

If you are bondable and can furnish reference, are 21 or over and under 47, a personal Interview can be arranged by calling. DONALD FREEMAN FINLEN HOTEL, BUTTE Monday, June 21. Between 13:46 and 7:49 P.M. Tuesday, June 28, Between 4 AM. and 5 00 P.M.

Sales position open to qualified man capable of selling and traveling this part of state. $475 average per Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, were on me omer S1UC-toduded. Nehru, confronted by a clear Taylor told newsmen the prob- of glass, can look through lems with which he expected to without seeing anything on the deal included determination of the other Slde which he does DOt wish "proper role and contribution of t0 see the Army" to national defense.

I Me Molotov was making his Taylor said he just heard by speech at the anniversary meet-radio while flying here Thursday ing of the United Nations in San morning of the resignation of Francisco, Nehru and Bulganin Stevens and the nomination of Wil-' were drawing up a new "peace" ber M. Brucker to succeed him. communique in Moscow. 'xmov rr- i TttMAT 1 my? won st I He said he regretted the depar-1 Both pronouncements were of "my old and respected ed "sweetness and light." Both friend" Ridgway. He also said that "I regret the departure of Mr.

fj. itv ki "That was excellent service, excellent!" Bob Stevens, my friend, but wel-j Indeed, observers were some-come the opportunity of working what surprised at Molotov. Prior with Mr. Brucker." his speech he had been oozing The Army turned out a full dress goodwill. He had accepted a 10- ties at home as to the firmness of the West.

1 Soviet government leaders seem to be confronted by a series of formidable internal problems which they need time to settle. These problems may be listed as: 1. The unresolved struggle for power. The main thing about the Russian Communist party is that it has remained unpurged after the downfall of Premier Georgi M. Malenkov.

This is attributed to the moderating influence of the army, which is now more power- I iL I 1 uian 5ver Deiore' ana idiiui ui any uuc man supremacy, ine present penoa o( government by committee is likelv t0 continue until some can- Die-Hard Japanese Soldiers Are Still Hiding Out in the Pacific ceremonial reception for arrival gallon American hat He attended of the new chief. a dinner and proposed a toast to Taylor came here from his for- his Allied hosts, mer command in the Far East! But then he got up on the ros-over a route which took trum where everybody has been him through the Middle East and talking nothing but peace this week Spain. went through his well-worn Ridgway, approaching retire- rote. TaMt I many of the original holdout died o' trPlc ceases Many were killed, some in evad ing capture, others by native tribesmen and a few by other anese holdouts Most of the survivors were in good physical condition when cap- or Stalin's mantle emerges red Many had shown remark sia's nterpreting the News By J. M.

ROBERTS AP News Analyst There's a certain kinship between V. M. Molotov, revolution- Russia-s -hammer and Ja- waharlal Nehru, Molotov. confronted by a moun- tain of facts, can look through it to see whatever he wishes to see revived and re-emphasized the ma jor issues of the cold war. The gist of it was that the Allies started the cold war and intended to turn it into a hot war.

He re-! peated the various formulas by wnicn nussia nas saia tne wona coma nave peace, lormuias wnich everyone recognizes would mean a peace consolidating Russia's hold on the fruits of her conquests and leaving the road open for more He didn't use his normal bitter phraseology, or call names, but most delegates were quick to as- sess his efforts as damaging to Russian peace offensive. He outlined a Russian program which, if pursued at Geneva, practically guaranteed the failure of those con- ferences. In addition, he had used the an- niversary meeting as a forum for 'political charges and was con- sidered in bad taste. Molotov ap peared to be almost back to normal. Nehru picked a number of cold war issues on which to side with Russia.

In particular, he agreed with Bulganin on three which are particularly touchy fosathe United States. They are Russia's proposed is ine Associated tress reporter in Moscow put it, it wasn't anything new for the two men, but it was the first time they had said it together. Nehru, who has been accepting large amounts of economic aid from the United States and working for more, got, in return for his docility on other matters, a promise of aid from Russia. Any country which ever counted on "aid" from Russia can tell him how that works, or doesn't work. Electronic Siren Puts Blast on Speeders CHICAGO (U.R)-An electronic vt; mai -uuuua a all wain- int, A ZLZu" lts nas een deve oped for school too emu tuir Jjfted section, the American Pub- timed to work at certain fixed intervals each day.

ment age, was not chosen by Presi- dent Eisenhower lor a second two- year term as commander of the Army. The general's views about we neea tor a continuing Dig Army conflicted witn tnose or Lisennower and Secretary of Defense Wilson. The President and defense chief decided to continue reduction in Army manpower. Ridgway made1 speeches insisting that the advent of atomic age weapons required more, not fewer soldiers. TIME TO RETIRE STEWARTVILLE, Minn CUR) Claude Bentley retired in Janu- ary after serving as a rural mail carrier since 1905.

He served un- der nine presidents and five postmasters. He started out in the borse and buggy days, used 30 horses, 1 Savon car and 36 Fords. His total mileage was 650,000 or 26 times around the world. Butte Death Notices MURPHY-The funeral of the la Ai Dan Mnrrthv will ta nlarp from Duggan's Merrill Mortuary 1 Saturday morning at 9:30 o'clock, I ban on nuclear weapons, the sur-proceeding to the Immaculate lender of Formosa to the Chinese Conception Church for celebration Reds- and seat in the U. N.

for rwitiipm hish mass at Peiping regime. able adaptability to primitive con- ditions One who walked out of the jungles of southeast Luzon two years ago was a mental case. But he had made his own clothes with Manila hemp and coconut buttons. Two shabby stragglers walked out of the Guam jungle in April 1948. They were clean shaven and their clothest were patched.

On Sept. 27, 1951, a Japanese sauntered out of another Guam jungle and hailed a military bus. He was dressed in a loin cloth, carried a small bundle of posses sions and appeared in fine condi tion. Available figures show 10 hold outs captured in the Philippines since the war, 10 more on Guam, 6 on Anatahan, 4 in New Guinea and 2 on Saipan. One was killed on Guam and another in the Philippines.

Those still hiding out appear to be concentrated in Guam. New Guinea and Mindanao and Lubang in the Philippines. Most have kept to themselves and avoided clashes with the natives. Two Guamanians were killed mysteriously in December, 1950 and a Filipino farmer on Lubang was slain last Feb. 11 but neither a 1 1 a was definitely pinned on Japanese holdouts.

Officials say that jungle tribes are peaceful in New Guinea and the Philippines and many of the stragglers may have taken native wives and settled down. Before the war there were large Japanese settlements on Mindanao in the Philippines. During the war Japanese troops scoured the island for guerrilla units and learned the terrain well. If the holdouts prefer that kind of life to the shape of the world outside they can hide out there for the rest of their lives. There is very little the world outside can do about them.

Business Concerns Move It's Quiet, Peaceful and of o'clock. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Duggan's Merrill Mortuaries JOHN P. DUGGAN. Lessee Butte, Montana Phone J239 213 North Montana STOREY The remains of May-nard Storey Sr.

are in the Sherman Reed Mortuary, where funeral services will be conducted at 2 o'clock this (Friday) afternoon. The Reverend William R. Lindsay, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Interment will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. T- PITKANEN Herman Pitkanen 1 1 i Tt i iv 7 a a local Hospital Wednesday eve ning.

Em MoW XJio -t. in fho By ROY ESSOYAN HONOLULU Iff Some nf the soldiers who tnok to various Pacific hills during World War II are still there From the looks of things, they know the 1 war is 0Ver but still prefer the hills. Since 1945 an estimated 32 anese army stragglers have been; flushed out of jungle hideouts in the Philippines, New Guinea, Guam, Saipan and Anatahan in the Mariannas. Most of them claimed they didn't know the war was over. Japanese government officials in Tokyo believe about 50 more are still hiding out, in the Philippines, Guam and New Guinea.

But the belief is growing that these remaining holdouts know full well the war is over. They must know, too, that they have little to fear in the way of punishment or reprisals. "Maybe they've heard too much about the world outside," a Navy official at Pearl Harbor theorized. "Maybe they prefer the jungle to civilization in the atomic age." Japanese welfare ministry officials working through U. S.

military commanders have scattered thousands of leaflets telling stragglers throughout the Pacific the war is over. In one operation In Guam alone 15,000 handbills were dropped from planes and distributed by foot par ties in possible holdout areas in 1953. The Philippine air force is about to drop another 10,000 leaflets, books and letters asking holdouts on Lubang Island to surrender. In the Philippines and Guam a holdout would have to be deaf, blind and exceptionally stubborn to miss the evidences of bustling peacetime activity. "The lack of gunfire alone over 10 long years should convince any die-hard the war is over," an official on Guam said.

The first two Japanese stragglers who came out of hiding on Guam in April, 1948 waved a November, 1947 copy of an American magazine as they hailed a passing patrol jeep. The magazine carried a picture of Emperor Hirohito parading under guard of American MPs. In 1951 eight stragglers were flushed out of the hills of Guam. One of them said he had found a U. S.

magazine in a dump. It showed a map of Korea with U.S. and Allied flags on one side and the sickle and hammer on the other. There are no available estimates on the number of Japanese soldiers who took to the hills after jVJ day. Reports from captured stragglers, however, indicate that 1 Those who met Louis in the ring, as Tony had, may find this a little haid to believe, but he looked the part.

Tony was sweating. He was pacing the floor. He was mumbling. "Never had any trouble remembering lines," he said. He mentioned an incident involving the painting career of Mickey Walker, another member of the boxing fraternity who turned artist.

"A guy sez to me," commented Galento, "tell him (Walker) his perspective is distorted in subordination of the motif. I said it, but I still don't know what it means. month while training, car is necessary. Five days a week required in the territory (home on week ends and hoi-days). Interview will be arranged.

Write Division Manager, Employment 2-C, P. O. Box458, Billings, Montana. 3 neat appearing men between 1 9 and 40. to work with salesmanager.

Should have car. Permanent work, little traveling. Excellent opportunity. 341 SOUTH ARIZONA WANTED SITUATIONS 6 TREES PULLED PrT4749OR 3-4397. IRONING, PICKUP, DELIVER PH 6040, I AwnC bullt wltn "Crinkling system Lavylli Installed complete for per ft.

All work guaranteed. J. Trevorrow. Phone 2-5357 Day Nl irCPrv E- Ornlte Ph. i i jci jg Cpen SOIL AND MANURE, ANY SIZE" LOAD Ph 4749 or 1-4397 RUBBISH HAULED.

PHONE 427 BLACK TOP GUARANTEED. BONDEDi drive way, walks. garage.Ph. 1-1154. PLOWING AND ROTORTILLINO PS 4749 or t4397.

HEDGES TRIMMED BEAUTIFUL. HIM, IRONING. PHONE 7672. IRONING. PHONE-2-986T BABY SITTING, DAY OR NIOHT.

PlI 2-0679 or 528 Garden. SEWING. ALTERATIONS. PH. 3-2091.

Trees Expertly Removed Trimming, excavating, lawn bulldlnt and seeding Ph 2-6061 or 2-SM1. rRUCKINO PH s-4397 OR 74t LADY WANTS HOUSEWORK. PH. 7401 BLACK DIRT. YD 1S SHEEP MA cure for flowers.

$2 per sack. 6 yds rotted manure. 110. We deliver. Ph 2-9729.

ANT BABY SITTINO. PH. EXCAVATIONS FOR DITCHES. 8EPtT2 tanks, post holes. Also loading sane and soil Ph.

2-1195. SCREEN 8ACK7 ITdO; ground cow manure, $1 50; sheep, 12 per sack; rich soil, 4 yd. load, 110 We deliver. Ph. 2-1195.

Black Dirt Manure $5 load dayi Ph. 3-823 WANTED TO RENT II NAVY WIFE AND 3 CHILDREN WAN1 3 or 4 room furnished house or flat; on Flat preferred. Ph. 2-1624. RESPONSIBLE LOCAL BUSINESSMAN desires 3 bedroom unfurnished homi on Flat or West Side.

Ph. 2-7407. 2-BEDROOM UNFURNISHED HOUSj or apartment, near school. 2 smai chlidren. Ph.

2-9076. NAVY WIFE AND 3 CHILDREN WAN! partly furnished 2-bedroom house wlU yard. Prefer flat or edge of town. Ph 2-9063 WANTED SMALL UNFURNISHEt house with a few acres of ground foi chickens; near Butte. Ph.

2-6963. BURR STORE MANAGER DESIRES i bedroom unfurnished house preferably west aide, by July 17 No small chll dren. Will lease. Phone 2-7722. 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME WITH YARI or acreage, 4 children.

1953 Walnut 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME ON FLAT Ph. 9398 after 9 p.m. CHRISTIAN PAMTL AFFILIATEI with School of Mines needs 3-bedroon unfurnished house. Flat location. Ph 2-9715.

2-BEDROOM HOUSE WITH YARD Have 2 small children. References 1 needed. Ph. 2-5032. WANTEDJTO BUY1 2 WANTED TO BUY-BABY PLAY PE1 reasonable.

Ph. 2-9958. GENTLE HORSE FOR CHILDREN wood cook stove. Ph. 2-3295 SMALL CEMENT MIXER, REASON able.

Phone 2-0835. WANTED CARS OR TRUCKS Regardless of Make Model Condition RUSSELL MOTORS CONOCO GAS STATION Front and Arizona Sts. USED FURNITURE 331 PARK. I ceA Di-io lze- onyder USeCJ ripe Bacon. 640 C.

Platinum Phone 4876 WILL AY CASH FOR UNFINISHXl oousea Write Box 37. Post CASH FOR ANTIQUES.PHONE2-S86 48 CROSLEY CAR OR PARTS. RUK nlng or wrecked. 209 E. Park.

HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS minus FITDNTRHTrr). rOMPLETR 1 I Acute Phone 3593. 1 LARGE FRONT ROOM. COOKING TA cllltles. refrigerator, complete.

21 Washington. FOR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS SINGLE ROOM IN FIREPROOF AN first-class bulldingSS W. Quarts. LOVELYLEEPINO BOOM WITH BATI The Concord, 120 N. Montana.

ROOM THAT YOU WILL ENJOY. TR Apex Hotel Phone 9983. FOR RENT 1 FURNISHED HOUSES FOR RENT 2( UNFURN ISHED HOUSES 4 ROOM3 WITH GARAOE NO CHI dren Inquire 950 Evans. FOR RENT 21 FURNISHED APARTMENT! 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMBN" garage. Adults, no pets.

Ph. 2-7034. rROOMs. refrToeratorTutiTjt paid Adults. $9 73 weekly.

423 1 Oranlte 1 LARGE FRONT ROOM. COOKINi facilities, refrigerator, complete 2: Washington. 4 ROOMS. CLEAN. HEATED.

PH. 379 APARTMENT AVAILABLE AT TH Mueller, 501 W. Granite. Reference 2100 MS339e7 BROADWAY. 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMEN' utilities paid.

AdulU. 182 W. Oranlt 2-ROOM. BEDDING FURNISHED. 1 W.

Park, want to ride the skis!" LECALS NOTICE OF SALE TO PAY COST OF STORAGE AND REPAIRS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, HARRY E. HARDING, will expose lor sale al public auction, and will seU to the highest bidder, lor cash, on June 25. 1955, at 11 00 A.M. of said dale al 1405 Dewey Boulevard. Butte, Montana, the following described auto- mobile 1940 BU1CK Super 4-Door Sedan Motor No.

51U7721S Serial No. 25002KD7 License None. Deposited with me prior to March 19, 1955. due tnereon lor storage and repairs cosu to dale. $215 81.

Term of sale shall be cash In full at lime of sale. Dated at Butte, Montana, this 1st day of June, 1955. (Signed) HARRY Buitc. Montana. HARDINO J.

E. MANNING. Administrator. NOTICE OP APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE. Notice la hereby given that on this Tini day of June.

1955. one BERNARDO OREIOO AND JULIA FJERMESTAD filed with the Montana Liquor Control Board an application for transfer of a retail liquor license from MARY BASTIDOS. to be used at NEW MEXICO BAR. 24 EAST PARK STREET, BUTTE, MUfllAnA, ana protests, ii any were oe. against the Issuance of auch license will De neara ai tne nour oi cioca A.M., on the 21st day of JULY.

1955. at the office of the Montana Liquor Con trol Board In Helena. Montana. Dated JUNE 22. 1953.

(Signed:) J. X. MANNING. Administrator. WANTED MISC.

1 Evje Rest Home Sll 8 Dakota. Phone 2-3072 Enjoy your vacation. Place your elderly folks with us. Special summer rates. Three vacancies only.

AL'S TV SERVICE ANT TIME DAY OR NIOHT Qualified technicians Pta 1-M44 Night T. V. Service Call Olien. Ph. 2-7780 WANTED PERSONS TO RENT PERM-anent parking spaces adjacent to downtown business district per month In advance Call 5491, ask tor Burrows HOMES TOR 1 KITTE Ns7TPlT7iB2.

WANTED MALE HELP 2 SALESMEN EXPERIENCED. GOOD sales opportunity with R. L. Polk It the largest In Its field. Men accustomed to earning SS.OOO to $10,000 per year.

Salary while training. A permanent and progressive future for any who qualify. Apply R. L. Polk 616 Metals Bank Bldg.

MARRIED COUPLE WITHOUT CHIL-dren for steady Job as cook and chore man on large ranch. Regular crew 12 men. Modern conveniences. Good quarters. No woman boss.

No drinkers. Telephone 5421, extension 266, between 9 a. m. and 4:30 p. m.

ELDERLY HA YM AN 540 W. BDWY VETERANS 20-23, neat appearing, must be free to travel, no experience necessary earning $75 week and up. Transportation furnished, expenses advanced. Apply Mr. R.

K. Wood. Acoma Hotel, 10 to 12 mornings. 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday.

No phone calls. BOY TO CUT GRASS. 3526 HARRISON. NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY pays part tuition for limited number men to train as telegraphers-agents; start July 11; also Gl approved; get details. SPOKANE TELEGRAPH SCHOOL, 119 N.

Post. Spokane, Wash. WANTED 2 EXPERIENCED FURNACE Installers. Pay over union scale. Contact ua Immediately by phoning 802-R, Dillon.

WANTED FEMALE HELP MAKE APPOINTMENT EARLY FOR $5 Special Permanent Mrfarmll BetutT 8cho01 Leonr1 ivicvdrrun Hotel Ph 2-1503 WOMEN TO WORK 4 DAYS A WEEK. 9 to 11:30 a 1 to 4 p.m. No previous experience required but must be neat and have pleasant personality. Write Box 123, Post WE TEACH YOU HOW TO SELL 8UC-cessfully. If you are ambitious you can have Interesting career with above average earnings with Avon.

Openings In Butte and Anaconda. Write Box 413. Butte, for appointment. RANCH COOKSWESTERN EMPLOY-ment Agency. Ph.

2-3178. Experienced stenographer for office work. Must be good at shorthand and typing. Excellent salary for right person. BOX 117.

POST TRAVEL CALIFORNIA. YOUNG LADIES 18 to 25. No experience necessary. Must have neat appearance. 850 week to start Assist supervisor in order dept.

Transportation furnished, expenses advanced. Apply Mr. R. K. Wood, Hotel Acoma.

10 to 12 a.m., 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday 82 00 HOURLY POSSIBLE DOING LIGHT assembly work at home. No experience necessary. Write BANCO Mfg. 7159 Beverly Los Angeles 36.

Calif. WANTED Girl for General Office Work and Machine Posting Write Box 124 Post, giving education, marital status, wages desired, experience and 3ge. WANT TO BUY. RENT OR BELL? BUTTE STANDARD WANT AOS OCT RESULTS. "Let's change now; I CHICAGO POTATOES Arrivals old stock new stock 156; on iraclt 4.

old slock. 452 new stock, total shipments 990. Old slock supplies insufficient to quote a market and no carlo! track sales reported New slock w.iites steady to tirm; reds slightly weaker. Calil long whiles $3 25-3 45. S.

extras 13 80-3 85. round reds S3 Ant. round reds 3m75 CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Wheat: No 1 red 2 Amnl ffrfiri ife.d only) 158 Corn No 1 yellow 1 so; No i yellow 150; Oats: No 1 heavy nuxed 73-74. No 1 while 701-73. Barley nominal: Malting choice 1 3552; feed 95-1 16.No3 malting 1 00 (sale).

LECALS NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE. Notice Is hereby given that on this 22nd day of June. 1955, one LLOYD H. PATTERSON AND JEAN PATTERSON filed with the Montana Liquor Control Board an application for transfer of a retail liquor license from JOHN D. QU1NN AND LLOYD H.

PATTERSON, to be used at WHITE SWAN. 3220 HARRISON AVENUE. BUTTE. MONTANA, and protests, if any there be. against the ls- suance of such license will be heard at the hour of 9:15 o'clock A.M..

on the 21st day of JULY. 1955. at the office of the Montana Liquor Control Board In Helena. Montana. Dated JUNE 22, 195J (Signed.) in THF H19TTJIPT rnnBT nF TWIT SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA.

IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SILVER BOW. No 4760 EDWARD WARD. Plaintiff. Tl. AR- LISS WARD.

Defendant. The Stale of Montana Sends Oreetlnfi to the Above Named Defendant: You are hereby lummoned to answer the complaint In this action, which Is tiled in the office of the Clerk of this Court, a copy of which Is herewith I served upon you, and to file your answer and serve a copy thereof upon the plaintiff's attorney within twenty days after the service of this slum-mons, exclusive of the day of service; and In case of your failure to appear or answer. Judgment will ba taken against you by default for tha relief I demanded In the complaint. Plaintiff alleges that tha Plaintiff and Defendant Intermarried In the City of Butte. County of Silver Bow.

8tata of Montana, on or about the 6th day of July. 1952. and ever since have been and now are, husband and wife; that there were no children born as issue of this marriage; that the Plaintiff Is an actual and bona fide resident of the State of Montana, and has resided con- tlnuously In said State for mora than one year Immediately preceding the commencement of this action; that the 'Defendant has been guilty of extreme I cruelty toward this Plaintiff In that she has Inflicted grievous mental suf fering upon this Plaintiff by reason of a course of conduct which has existed land been persisted In for a period of i more than one year before the com-; mencement of this action, and which Knlrl rnnriurl ix nf Rilrh m. nnturit and character, as to destroy, and which has destroyed, the peace of mind and happiness of this Plaintiff, and It defeats, and has defeated, the proper and legitimate objects of the marriage relation, and it renders a continuation of marriage relationships between the Plaintiff and Defendant perpetually unreasonable and Intolerable to this plaintiff. WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays Judgment against the Defendant as follows: That the Plaintiff be granted an absolute decree of divorce and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem Just and equitable In the premises.

WITNESS my hand and the seal of said Court this 8th day of June. A D. 1955. FRANK J. OABSE.

Clerk. By FILMORE J. MAEMPA, Deputy Clerk. McCAFFERY, ROE A KIELY. Attorney for Plaintiff.

Law Building 55 West Broadway Butte. Montana. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR TAX DEED Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, on the 25th day of August, 1955, will apply to the County Treasurer of the County of Silver Bow. State of Montana, for a tax deed to the following described property, to-wlt: Lots one 11), two 2 1 three (31, four (4). nine (91.

ten (101. eleven ill) and twelve (12), In Block fifty-four (54) of the Atherton Place, Silver Bow County, State of Montana. The above described property was sold for delinquent taxes on the 24th day of July. 1945; the amount of property sold was all thereof as above described; the amount for which it was sold Is $20 01; i the amount of subsequent taxes paid by the applicant upon such land with Interest thereon at the rate of eight 87 rar fan nor annnttl frntfl fh Hal ftf such payment $1,133 62; the amount due Is $1,153 63; the rime when the right of redemption will expire Is the said 25th day of August, 1955. Dated the 23rd day of June, 1955.

CHESTER W. JOHNSON, MATILDA L. JOHNSON Applicants. 3215 Keokuk, Butte Montana. SUMMONS In the Justice's Court Township of South Butte.

County of Silver Bow. State of Montana Before Evan Thlbodeau. JusUce of. the Peace CHARLES ELIASSON, Plaintiff va. CARL ZIMMERMAN.

Defendant The State of Montana sends greetings to Carl Zimmerman, Defendant, above named. YOU ARE HEREBY DIRECTED to appear and answer before me at my of fice 1st 911 E. Front St Butte. Montana. Township of South Butte, County of Silver Bow, and State of Montana, and file your answer, and If your answer be In writing file the same ana serve a copy thereof, upon the plaintiff, or his attor ney, within six days after service of this summons, exclusive of the day or service; and In case of your failure to appear or answer.

Judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. A statement of the plaintiff's cause of action In general terms Is as follows This action Is brought for the purpose of recovering by plaintiff from you the sum of $80.00 for board and room fur nished you at your special Instance and reouest. For further particulars, see complaint on file herein, a copy of wnicn la hereto attached, and hereby served upon you Given under my hand this 1st day of June. 1955. (Copy) EVAN THIBODEAU.

Justice of the Peace H. MALONEY Attorney for plaintiff Butte, Montana with the backing of both the Corn- munist party and the army. 2. The agriculural crisis. Rus-, difficulties in producing enough food, publicly admitted! by Communist party frist secretary Nikita S.

Khrushchev, have not been overcome. Grandiose schemes including vast land reclamation projects have failed to bring victory in the fight for more grain and more cattle. 3. The industrial lag. The recent conferences which industrial bosses have held in Moscow have shown that Russia is falling be-1 hind in new techniques and sci-! entific invention.

Productivity in 1 industry remains low. Low pro ductivity is becomng a major national problem because of the shortage of labor. As the result the conferences, Lazar M. Ka-ganovich has been named labor and wages boss and Vyacheslav Malyshev has been named head of a committee on new industrial techniques. 4.

The coordination of economic plans and help for Red China. There are indications that the Kremlin plans to integrate its ii ii utiu ua tviiitv vwiuiiiit. terns in such a way as to give maximum aid to Red China in its industrialization campaign. The most immediate of the four problems is the sniggle for power within the Communist party. This struggle may be resolved before the next meeting of the all-Soviet Union Communist party, due sometime next year.

The agricultural problem is a long range one. The latest time limit for the fulfillment of a target of 165,000,000 tons of grain is 1960. The problem of reorganizing Soviet science also is a long-term one. As for the industrialization of Communist China, the needs of that country are limitless. DENVEK BEANS General bids to growers on 1954 crop plntos, Denver rate basis selling generally 6 50 for U.S.

No 1 and 6 25 for U.S. No 2: Great Northern Nebraska rate basis selling generally 7.60-7 65 for U.S. No 1 and 7.35-7.40 for U.S. No 2. to the Suburbs Where Prettily-Landscaped in a tract originally plot.

renter a tract. Borders of parking areas as well as front lawns must be landscaped. Are the firms happy? Sunset Magazine's people keep busy guiding tours of readers through their building ana grounds, They look like the modern ramh ling manor of a mogul with the fortune and taste to afford the ultimate in western living. The managing executives glow about personnel morale and low job turnover. Prudential's regional manager, Willard Hansen, said his office had virtually 100 per cent turnover annually in San Francisco's financial district.

"But not here. About the only girls we lose are those getting married and starting a family." President Bob Chambers of Magna said his young company wanted "beauty and quiet in an atmosphere for creative thinking" to keep ahead in the power tool business. How do the Jane Does on the payrolls like it? Sheilah McClelland, phone operator and receptionist at Prudential, commutes by car from San Francisco, where she and Janet Tar-nello still like to live. Sheilah turned down a receptionist job in another Prudential office in San Francisco. "I guess I'm mixed up," she says.

"I like living in the city and working in the country. "When we moved in here, you know what? Jean Stasser, the receptionist girl at Magna, came right over to say hello and asked me to coffee at their place. where funeral services will be a conducted at 2 o'clock Monday JSfioeW'" be at afternoon. The Reverend Fred D.I extremiUes of speed zones so Dommer, pastor of Gold Hill sf edinS vehleS Wf Sfu the Evangelical Lutheran Church, will aIaIm when thev enter the zones, officiate. Interment will be in' The warning serves three pur-Mountain View Cemetery.

Friends the association said. It lets are requested to please not call Pedestrians know there is a vehicle at the mortuary to pay their on at an excessive speed, pects before Saturday aerts drivers to the fact that they're speeding and it draws at- LOZANO The remains of John 'ention to traffic violators and thus Lozano are in the Sherman helps law enforcement officials. Reed Mortuary. Funeral services The system can be automatic- By LEIF iJRICKSON I Northern California mortgage loan MENLO PARK, Calif, (ffl office. How would you like an office Under construction now is a building going up in the block regional headquarters for Hard-where you had bought a new ware Mutual Insurance of Min-suburban home? nesota.

K'f Teslion- -In Four similarly zoned sites re- Menlo Park the home-owning in mnr.a Mi.niaii nfhbrs of Pru of Magna Engineering, and of Sunset Magazine like having them, mL next door ne zone ordinance requires that Their style" office each firm Provide adequate park-buildings harmonize architectural-sPace for lts employes Build-ly with the neighborhood's homes. inSs can cver no more than 40 Tony Galento, Headsman for King's English, Plays in Summer Stock as Stage Performer will be conducted next week at a time to be announced later. Sherman Reed Mortuary LARGE FUNERAL CHAPEL J. R. REED.

Mgr. Broadway at Arizona Street Since 1900 Telephone 3221 NARVAEZ-The funeral for the late Mary L. (Mae) Narvaez will take place from the Daly- Shea Chapel tomorrow (Satur-; day) morning at 9:30 o'clock. Re- quiem high mass will be cele-, brated in St. Patrick's Church at 10 o'clock.

Interment in Patrick's Cemetery. Daly-Shea Mortuary TWO FUNERAL CHAPELS For Wakes and Funerals 101 South Idaho Phone 3981 Francis X. Dotan, Mgr. Thpn Tnnv rerallerl he had "a'lo Park needed and wanted sub- MILLER-The remains of Fred debut of Tony Galento, wrestler Miller are in White's Funeral of octopuses and bears, heavy-Home, from where the funeral weight title challenger, barkeeper will take place Saturday morning butcher of the king's English, at 8:30 o'clock, proceeding to "Gees," said Two-ton in his Patrick's Church, where requiem dressing room before the opening high mass will be celebrated at act. "This is tougher than meeting And their landscaping will match a country club's.

The companies' lawns, and their shrub and flower layouts, are a tough "keeping up with the Joneses" challenge for nearby house- holders. The companies can afford high-priced gardeners. The DeoDle of Menlo Park, a peninsula suburb 30 miles south of San Francisco, are imDressed with the way their "garden office building zoning" is turning out. And, says Menlo Park's mayor, Charles P. (Chuck) Burgess, the companies make important and helpful taxpayers.

Like fast-g rowing suburban home communities anywhere, Men- Istantial business taxpayers: It wanted its cake of attractive neighborhood living with a frosting of sweet business tax money. The zone ordinance "an invitation to large companies to build their offices in the country" was enacted in April 1949. Allstate Insurance a Sears Roebuck subsidiary, accepted first, moving into its quarters in December 1950. Next came the Lane Publishing settling in its show-place headquarters for Sunset Magazine in August 1951. Magna Engineering, makers of an all-in-one power tool for home craftsmen, put in their shrubs and designing desk in September 1951.

Since then have come the American Insurance Group; the U. S. Geological Survey in the first unit of an eventual Pacific Coast survey center; A. C. Nielson market analysts who measure radio and TV audiences; and I Prudential Insurance, with its VALLEY FORCE, Fa.

UrWThe 'aisle-consuming, square-cut man with the face like a benevolent gorilla stomped onto the stage and the audience sippled ap preciauveiy. "There he is," said a man, el- bowing the portly blonde next to him. "That's Two-ton Tony." The forceful identification was unneeded. Scarcely a man in the over-sized tent, pitched on a muddy hillside near the Valley Forge Revolutionary War camping ground, was unaware of the thes-pian's name. This was the serious theatrical Joe Louis.

Anaconda Deaths PARA Funeral services for the late Mrs. Catherine Para of 616 E. Commercial St. will be held from the- Finnegan Co. Funeral Home this (Friday) morning at 8:45, proceeding to St.

Peter's Church, where solemn requiem mass will be celebrated at 9 o'clock. Interment will be in the family plot in Mount Carmel Cemetery. Finnegan Company MORTICIANS Distinctive Funeral Service A. A. Longfellow T.

D. Savage 107 Oak SL Pnont 29-W momnrv lilro an aolpnhant Hp hflrf seen the show in question "Guys and Dolls" several times in New York and elsewhere, he said. "So 1 already got a headstart memorizing the lines All I got to do is rehearse two, three days, and I got it cold." But Tony had the usual misgivings before the curtain went up at the Valley Forge Music Fair. But when the orchestra struck up the opening number and the house lights were dimmed, Two-ton Tony was John Barrymore with a black forest of hair on his chest and mammoth arms, a king-sized Edwin Booth with a slightly used ccigar in the corner of his more than slightly used mouth. A story of Broadway characters against a backdrop of floating crap games, the musical was.

well received. And tony Galento, as big Jule, guiding light of Broadway's best known dice maneuver, was given hii thart of applause. 9. Interment in Holv Cross Ceme- tery. Attention: Silver Bow Post No.

1, American Legion. Attention: Butte Pioneers Club. Richards Funeral Home lVlt South Montana Street Telephone 7282 ArU T. Axelson, Mgr..

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Years Available:
1928-2024