Page 6 of the Hardin tribune-herald (Hardin, Mont.), July 5, 1951
of 1
- Title
- Page 6 of the Hardin tribune-herald (Hardin, Mont.), July 5, 1951
- Description
- A page of the Hardin Tribune-Herald that talks about Korean peace proposal
- Date Issued
- 5 July, 1951
- Format
- image/pdf
- Publisher
- Hardin, Montana
- Subject
- Korean War
- Language
- English
- Source
- https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn86075229/1951-07-05/ed-1/?sp=6&q=korean+war&r=-0.487,-0.033,1.985,0.961,0
- Provenance
-
Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925 to 1973
Library of Congress
- extracted text
-
nity protection
demnity act of
under
1951
must
active
been
ordered
into
service for a period in excess of
30 days. This would include vetordered into such service
erans
June
on
who were in service
those
27, 1950, and
entering
have
MailM
of Mo/n Street
In-
the
and
service
The
need
on
not
and after that date.
said
these
veterans
in
the
have
served
post-service term inprovided under the In-
new
surance
of 1951, according
to the Veterans administration.
To be eligible, veterans
must
entitled to indemhave been
Rl'' Hl
America
WB' '
in his proposed
but of one
in Korea
thing the people
timing was perfect.
sure—the
were
cease-fire
number 73,600 and he
strained the nation’s
even
more
gers
of
inflation
move
Russians
of the start
niversary
western
realized
of the Korean
conditions
admission
previously
of Communist
set
China
and
no
the Soviet
by
to the United
PLUMBS
//It
"RE IN
S. A.
a
-
NO
SHTY
OUD
FIT
DAY/
Nations,
CM. TIUCEMAtKS. Im
Mrs.
Dan
ities of
time.
The
sia
is
throughout
ing and dying goes
their earlier
was'
The U.S.
in bringing
PLUMBING & HERTING
century as an instrument for high society drawin
and
rooms
ing
England
for U.N.
in
Korean
to
can
for
hope
if the Chinese
However,
demands
a
Main Street
on
himself
peace.
on.
and
than in
making
or
of For-
control
that Malik
then the suspicion
making propaganda
ig-
whole business,
the
membership
settlement,
the U.S.
proposal
willact
At the moment that
the
the
towners
home
has
department
indicated
peace
willbe
play
its part
than
may
concrete
some
to
willingness
a
if Malik’s offer “is
end to the hostilities in Korea
But until there is
propaganda.”
sheet
would
planned
the
sensible
only
find best
the
credit
side
to adopt.
attitude
It is
of the
and tested
techniques,
have
lost
(1) The
ledger:
battle force
first U.N.
much of the enemy’s
it will not abandon
the small nations
and
Europe;
WHMHMwSg?
A convenient
<
/
19 ¦<
-
nations (approximately
352,500); (2) most of the west’s miliworld-wide imof secondary
tary strength has been hobbled to a peninsula
(3) the Russians have lost only one known combat man in batportance;
A
Kt'"
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/
W
size
and last
summer
went to $25.50
hundred
a
pounds.
higher than
*
start
production
of the
ran
When
war.
a year ago
$6 a hundred pounds
20 per cent above
the 12 months preceding the
the war broke out, steers
were
selling downward
Currently they are topping at $38.50.
production has changed slightly,
from $31.50.
us
and
M
putla.
Polished finish.
F
but
B
G
• 999
Outing
:;
forks
ACT NOW!—Save Real
Money
and Get
Ready
for Winter Ahead of the Rush!
his Offer Good
Only
Till
July 3 Is*
CLARENCE BECK, Owner
Co.
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1951 EBBI-5 REFRIGERATOR
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The Home
Front
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Battle
-
bn the home front the battle
CASTING
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Aluminum reel
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friction
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Always useful a«
sale
special
price.
Rubber compound a fabric.
Pure
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the
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revenue
Set
a¦¦
pink. Elastic
edges. 7,9, & U'.
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Colored
—
After 16 weeks
Britain,
spray
the
France
the
and Russia
large
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Famous
deputy foreign
off their
broke
freezer
zone
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5-Year
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MEAT TRAY
y
with
possibly
®eed
nil
is
a
—
of
experiments with
meleic hydrazide
keeps
—
potatoes,
other vegetables
more,
NATIONALLY
ORGANIZED
--
of futile talks,
j -
MSI—l
Thriftmaster
jBV?
Fresh
Spray Keeps Vegetables
Albeit
-
the bill,
. ,
¦'¦
TALL BOTTLE
$245,000,000.
was
onions
and
fresh for
reported
a
a new
which
several
year
-
down. Flavor
tained
for
so
ly
The spray arrests growth. Growth
that the
so
slow after spraying
fail even to die at the
vegetables
sprayed
rapid
rate
normal
during
storage.
does
used
ions,
and
Year
firmness
are
B"
long time,
apparently
reported
experiments
they “could hard-
before
not affect
possible.”
gathering.
Crops
are
The spray
the yield. It has been
on
successfully
potatoes,
carrots,
beets,
parsnips
X ¦
V Ju
year.
them
1
cT
re*
B
vz
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ON THIS 1951 8-CU. FT. MODEL
DFrnTPrnziTCD
successful
believe
Gentleman.
a
a
Scientists
were
a
_
for about
or
by The Country
Is
LOCALLY
to approve
committee
f
~-
STARTLING EXPERIMENT
Owner
XSTORES/
the finance
.
-
|KV
CARO
smoothjst fUjrj. A
on
where
program of a big four conference to ease world tension.
But they left the door open for their governments to make one last atwhich has
tempt to arrange a meeting of the big four foreign ministers,
been suggested
for July 23 in Washington.
No one in the diplomatic world believed that the Russians would accept
efforts to write
Results
safety
160, the house apincluding a 12% per
¦ ¦
•,
A
RUGS
for
to
super
taxes.
the senate
is expected
of the United States,
the invitation.
Graduated sizes
blue, green, a
Fashionably
laws,
PARIS TALKS END
KBaA
Plastic
is now before
measure
ministers
BOWL COVERS
‘Flaming.
•Hunters Preen
increase,
Here is where the government would collect the additional money;
income and excess
Individuals, $2,847,000,000;
corporate
profits taxes,
and miscellaneous
$2,855,000,000; excise taxes, $1,252,000,000;
changes in
998
In
3-Piece
F
of 233
tax
|<L
¦
rubber. 1 Inch
brush with
flat handle.
•Chartreuse
vote
holding hearings. The senate
a few minor changes.
Chino Bristles
Bristles
k
a
record-breaking $7,200,000,000
tape
PAINT BRUSH
/
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\
a
The
13 Ft.
Width,
to keep down prices
was the
issue of
the fray by launching a drive for tighter
RECORD-BREAKING TAX—By
proved
cent boost In individual income
H-ta.
v
special groups. The CIO entered
anti-inflation controls.
y&r
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'
Flexible Action, Biea
*
Payments
iLISSiI
.
M.
OWNED
Low Down
AUTOS,
& Glass
QftC
v
IASY TERMS!
'
Woastin< fork,
wiener rods tor,
f
hamburger fryer. JBi f KA.
-
Burgundy
Easy Installation —No Base,
ment. No Ducts, No Toarin ß Up
Your House.
«Wi
'
o'
—
YOUR CHOICE
’B®&SUM®a*Whlte
4.
prices
x
link
JR| >EA.
Styles
fl
Extra. Comfort "Warm.Floors*
Heat.
TABLE TOPS, ETC.
have developed much higher. Best lambs are about $34.50 now, down from $42.50
in March, but compared
with $28.50 a year ago. Ewes are topping at $17.50
with $10.50 a year ago.
now, down from 25 in February,
compared
>|QL
fBB
drawer
"V.
J-W'
Clean Heat.
3.
Styl«s Chroma
—
-
Automatic Heat,
now.
fa Semite
GLASS FOR
1.
2.
Ww
A 45c value in
entile deer ar
'X
damage.
clean
repair your radiator
Sec
in
now and help us ease
our
Fall rush of business.
Do it
now!—save money and get:
Hardin Radiator
and lamb
Sheep
result
installed during this sale!
We’re offering this, to make
it worth your while to install
DOOR PULLS
/>
f
although
can
motor
serious
40,
T9~91'
<>nl*i>.
9/
’
clogged
radiator
leaking
or
PAN
for use every day.
Sun ray inside
/
lift}
Repairing
Yes, 15% off the price of any
floor furnace bought and
Aluminum
sauce
Bf<9
B
and
(5)
—
|iw
FURNACE
for peaceful
The cattle trade is about
IIH
fv£X’??V
"'OU FLOOR
army has been mangled and the Chinese have had starestimated
in all at 1,162,500
casualties.
losses,
tling
On the other side of the ledger:
(1) Allied casualties have been heavy
$23.50,
5/8-Quart
n
in Hardin!
the North Korean
THE YEAR OF INFLATION Since the Korean war began on June 25,
1950, livestock prices in this country have increased $3 to $lO a hundred
pounds. At the same time, livestock production was much greater during
the past 12 months than the preceding twelve.
A year ago hogs were no higher than $20.50. Today they are selling at
H2
rV*yi\\\lsgL
was
(4) the west has
strategy;
of Asia and
d>s cO
a
2 TBSR3BE.
NW-Sec.
June
United
States
to
19,
John Schaak:
NENW, sy2 NW%,
NESW-12
TBSR37E.
Let
LAST2DAYS?
to
Adolph
sy2
S’/2 -21; NJ/2 -28; NE-29 T6SR2BE.
June
States
to
14, United
Campbell
Farming
Corp.:
NENy2SE-20 TSSR3IE.
June
States
to
18, United
Chas.
L. Young:
SW
NW, wy2 SW, Lots 6,7, 8, Sec.
36 T7SR3BE;
Lots 3,4, 5, SW
in their
the first round
-
?
PATENTS
United
States
Schaak:
sy2 SE-20;
13,
Cleaning
tle; (4) conflict has hastened the financial drain and made inflation more
dangerous in the west; (5) Communists still retain the initiative, in Korea
f
and throughout the world.
.
France.
IS.
one
to follow.
Communists
REBUILT
AND GUARANTEED. SOME AS
more
integrated in the initial bloody weeks; (2) the U.S. and her
(3)
dynamited into world-wide alertness and rearmament;
military forces have learned valuable military lessons, developed
American
ALL MAKES. SOME
June
14, School Dist. 17H to
Clara Whiteman:
Lot 3, Blk. 14,
Town of Crow Agency.
June
to
14, Clara Whiteman
Amelia
Passes:
Same
last
as
above.
June
Wm.
J.
18,
Condon,
to
Catholic
Big Horn
Bishop
Cemetery Dist. No. 1: NESESESec.
16 TISR33E.
June
18, Big Horn County to
J. A. Tritschler:
Lot 1, Sec. 14,
TSSR32E.
aggression.
On the
'
indicate
SETTE'S. USED MACHINES OF
with caution.
seems
!?
FOOT COMBINES AT MORIS-
of sincerity in the
evidence
IF
O
ceptions.
Shop
THE BALANCE SHEET— As the first year of conflict ended in Korea,
fighting was as bloody and dirty as the day it began. But the balance
new
eighteenth
state
an
and
barrel
or
hurdyorgan
gurdy, known to an older generation because
of its use
by
in the
street musicians,
started
the world, the fight-
for
in
change
a
confirmed.
were
The
price
interested
more
proved
HOLMES
the
as
mosa,
raised
picnic.
the man
nore
restate
Malik’s prop-
on
indicate what he said
allow
/TO
din.
June 13, Dorothy L. Johnson to
Marvin P. Carpenter etux: Lot 2,
Blk 1, First Add. to Hardin.
June 13, Mahlon W. Reid etux
to W. F. Barnett & Ralph Brees:
Lot 2, Blk 9, First Add. to Hardin.
A. Schoner,
June
14, Chas.
etux:
etux
to James
Faught
with exT6SR3SE,
N%NW-13
June
who have made
policy and a desire to end the fighting, then
Rain and mud have taken over the batKorea as the silent enemy of
the foot soldiers.
And while peace rumors
circulate
in the
their Korean
tlefields of
12, Wayne Beary etux to
Timothy F. Hurley etux: Lot 10,
N% of Lot 9, Blk. 16, O. T. Har-
step
actually reflects
Enemy
re-
is up to
Communists.
If
next
Chinese
osition,
The Silent
the
that Rus-
officially
not
comment
no
of
well to
do
however,
The
at this
towners
would
member,
allies
the Custer celemet
with several
afterwards
for a
also be
move
peace
home
nation
family attended
Wyola people
a
to Har-
Addn.
din.
June
x
withdrawal of
But it could
aluminum.
'
recognized the
potentialpropaganda
great
bration
and
an-
that the Soviet
Jess
Eggart and
the dan-
Formosa,
on
and
the Chinese,
who returned to their home in
Great Falls.
Miss Mary Ellis of Portland,
Ore., who has been visiting the
past few weeks with her grandmother, Mrs. F. M. Ripley, returned home Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Cox and
visited
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wayne
Ed Benzel
Tuesday evening.
Mrs.
Tony Berger and sons
spent Tuesday in Billings.
Mr. and
Mrs. Paul
Gamble
and family and Mr. and
Mrs.
Tony Berger and family spent
Sunday in Hardin.
Mr. and
deal
a
sincere.
Kovis
and
son
Jerry
spent
Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Hardie
Redding.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Redding
went to Billings Wednesday
to
take Mrs. Jerry Kovis and son,
INC.
KUCHERA’S
an
cause
troops from Korea.
It could be that the Soviet is
Gamble.
Mrs.
in your bed.
now
foreign
Mrs. Burl Hodges
and
sons,
Dwight and Duane, have been
a
few days with her
spending
a
of
de-
the -first
picked
bloc:
the
Mrs.
that
towns
for their peace move. But the
reference
to any of the Korean
war
Sarpy Creek
Okay! Okay! We’ll put
King Koil Mattress
home
A.
world.
facts
these
unusual in that Malik made
was
peace
the
throughout
the
war.
and
question
a
and brothers home;
bipartisan foreign policy and threatens to
internal split; (3) and the war has increased
serious
Perhaps
OF
Mr.
Jacob
(2) The war has
is considercourse
respondence
ed an integral part of your onthe-job training course.
parents,
is
in the
wants his sons
course
correspondence
along
with my job training. May Ido
the
the
fact
that
so
despite
cut-off date will have passed?
A. Yes,
so
long as the cor-
kytewHb
Russia’s
not
or
The average
man in the small towns
of the country has a sincere
sire for peace.
He is sure of a number of things: (1) U.S. casualties
THE WEEK
trainan on-the-job
under the G. I. Bill. I undee
erstand that next fall I will be
required to take a supplemental
Hi
I
s
QUESTION
Q. I am
sincere
was
time will answer,
only
in 120 days after their separation from service.
No* medical
examination
is required.
Korea
veterans
obtain
can
rates
and
other inpremium
formation about the new insurfrom any VA office.
ance
Act
surance
Malik
Whether
of
ore
Derby.
Lot 3, Blk. 4, O. T. Hardin.
to
June 11, Edward Schroeder
Antler Land Co.: NE&, EY2 NW,
NESW, NWSE-17 T9SR34E.
June 11, Geo. W. Smith etux to
Lot 7, Blk.
Robert G. Stockwell:
6, Highland Park
THE TIMING WAS PERFECT—
the
itself;
service
in
anywhere
required
VETERANS ELIGIBLE
the world will meet this eligibwho served
of the law.
Eligible veterans
ility requirement
the
forces
since
in the armed
The other requirement
is that
campaign
start
of the Korean
they must apply in writing to
for
may apply after discharge
the VA for this insurance withthe
DEEDS
June 9, Eric C. Walker etux to
46
Wm. D. Ausmus etux: South
ft. of Lot 2 and North 10 ft. of
Proposal
Causing World-Wide Speculation
campaign
Korean
and the World
Malik's Korean Peace
VA
Elixir, one of 122
1951 Kentucky
for the
nated
bred
by Herbert M.
was
Derby,
owned
and
bred
Woolf, who
winner of the
1938
the
Lawrin,
REAL ESTATE DEALS
SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS
Hercegovina in western Yugoslavia with adjacent sections of
Bosnia and the Dalmatian coast
holds more than a fifth of the
world’s
known
bauxite,
crude
nomi-
horses
July 5. 1951
Thursday.
.
6 -Hardin Tribune-Herald.
gialS
ntr nlUrZiiui1 Un
EASYTEBMS.
>'
on-
and
turnips.
Every living process seems slowed
TRIBUNE-HERALD
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR FAST RESULTS. USE
VALLEY IMPLEMENT CO.
<
;
•
- Item sets
- Visual Documentation of War Still Images
Part of Page 6 of the Hardin tribune-herald (Hardin, Mont.), July 5, 1951