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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
January 6, 1944     Golden Valley News
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January 6, 1944
 
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PAGE ~VWO THE GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS Thursday, OLLIE I gWS Dies at H~pitai in Baker Fred Brown died at the Baker hospital Thursday morning after being ill for several months. He was born March 7, 1861 at Glen I~alls, New York and died at the age of 82 years, 8 months and two days. He resided for several year~ at Princeton, Minn., before coming to Montana in 1908, where he took a l~mestead northwest of Carlyle. Later he ran a rooming house in the town of Carlyle. moving to Ollle in 1925, where he has resided since. He had been in poor health for several years and was taken to the hospital in Baker iu April, where he stayed until the time of his death. He is survived by two children, Mrs. Maude Moe of Min- n~ap01is, and a son, Robert W., also of Minneapolis; one sister, Mrs. Wllla Wessel of St. Paul. One sister preceded him in death. Fun- eral services were held Sunday efterncon from the U. B. church, with Hey. L. G. Wetzel officiating. Mrs. Ross Cameron and l~s. Fay Shepherd sang several selections, accompanied by Mrs. Bert Hudson. Mr. Brown was buried in the car- lyle cemetery. Pallbearers were Everett Plummer, George Rusted, Fay Shepherd, Claud Baker, Percy Bryson and Carl Rest. ]Kenneth Rustad spent several da~ at Billings lest week. Miss Cleo Baker spent Wednes- day and Thursday at Beach. She was an overnight guest there." Mr. and Mrs. Allle Ferrel and family were New Years dinner guests at the Carl Rest home. Mr. and Mrs. Baker and Joan were dinner guests at the Charles Nelson home New Years day. Mr. and Mrs. H~ning Stun and family were dinner guests of Miss Jenny Steen Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Plummet were business callers in Baker on Thursday. Mrs. Claud Baker was taken suddenly sick Monday, but is much better now. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hudson and family of Baker spent Sunday at the Bert Hudson home. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Rest cele- brated their fifty-fifth wedding an- niversary on December 10th. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Rest and Mr. and Mrs. Christ Rest were din- net guests at the Fay Shepherd, home Monday. Hubert Rusted ~ been confined his bed the pa~t week with an attack of quincy. It was n~ for tl~ doctor to lance his throat. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Plummer and Cecil Plummer of Baker visited at the Everett Plummet home Tues- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Rusted and Kenneth Rusted were dinner guests at the George Rusted home New .Years day. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bryson and family were supper guests at the home of Mrs. Narum Thursday evening. Rev. and Mrs. L. O. Wetzel were supper guests of key. Allen of Baker New Years eve and attended Watch at the Baptist church. A group of about twelve men have been working on a railroad bridge near the stockyards. They began work Monday. R. E. Morrlson accompanied a load of livestock to Chicago last Thurs~y. He will visit his daugh- ter Helen there before returning home. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hudson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Vergil Moline and family, and Mr& Rudolph Lutts and family were dinner guests at the Grove Lutts home Monday. John Stromme returned home on Thursday after spendlDg several ~ks in Elkriver, Minn. Mrs. ~[zomme went on to Chicago to V~lt her sister before retP.rnlng home. The Misses Lenore and Gladys Hartse of Carlyle spent the week vlsithlE at the Percy Bryson home. Mr. and Mrs. Art Hartse and other danghters ware dinner guests at the Bryson home when the girls returned home with them. Mrs. Rudolph Lutts received word from her husband, who took a load of cattle to Chicago last Thursday, that he Is ill with pneumonia there. She left Saturday morning for Chicago to be with him. Word re- ceived Monday states that he Is better. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Sherva en- tertained at dinner Tuesday eve- ning the following ~eople: Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Jesfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Madler and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Ben~ie Jesfleld and son, Mr. and Mrs. Christ Rest, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Rest, and Mr. and Mrs. Nor- man Rest and family. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holmes of Baker entertained Monday evening at a family dhmer in honor of Dwight Beach, who left that eveo ning for the army. Those present Included Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Beach and sons, Mr~ and Mrs. Paul B0wen and Mlckey, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rustad and family, Mr. and Mrs. George Waterland and Mr. and Mrs. Ernle Stark and Doris, Mr. and Mrs. Oloyd Bury and family, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Keener, and Prank Kyle were din- ner guests at the Claud Schouboe home New Years day. Robert Bendixon had his foot hurt Friday when a plank with a nail in it dropped on his foot, puncturing the foot deeply. He was taken to Baker for medical atten- tion and is getting along okay. ONLY THE WORTHY REMAIN FREE As the calendar heralds 1914, grim predictions of allied political and military leaders rank fore- most m the minds of all people. Nineteen-hundred-forty-four is the ~ear of decision. -It is the year of total war and destruction, death and suffering. It may well be the year of military victory~thanks to the courage of our fighting men and the American production miracle. Armament production in the United States has reached stag- gering proportions. In November, every five minutes saw the birth of one new complete plan. The month's total was 8,789, of which 1.000 were heavy bombers. More than 150,000 war planes have been built since the state of hostilities. [ Nineteen million tons of mer- chant ships were launched in 1943, compared to 1,163,000 tons in 1941. Naval and shipbuilding has out- stripped the imaginations of the wildest dreamers. About a dozen aircraft carriers v~ere turned out m November alone. Warship ton- nage in 1941 was 2,132,000. Out of the ashes of Pearl Harbor it rose to 5,000,000 tons in 1943, a colossus bent on the destruction of Japan- ese aggression and Nazi tyranny. Tanks, guns and supplies are being produced in unbelievable quantities. These things were made possible by the productive genius of free enterprise. In the hands of 10,000,- 000 American men and their com- panies in arms, they are the an- swer to the warped leaders of and Japan who have chal- lenged our freedom. But we have no cause to rejoice. Tens of thousands of our men must die in 1944 to meet the challenge of the dictators. Usual year-end speechmaking and editorial phrase- making are out of place. The people were told when the war started that they would have to make sacrifices. They were told that this was total war. And yet, other than those who have given their men, no one has so far made an iota of real sacrifice. It Is not in the cards for such a condi- tion to continue. Sometime In the not-to-distant future we, at home, are going to find out what total war means, even though we rely never feel the im- pact of bombs on our cities. A pretty good indication of how we are going to find out can be seen in the gusts of bitter contro- versy sweeping through, the land over strikes, taxes, sudsidies and inflation. They are the prelude to the storm. When it hits in full furY, the test of our love of freedom will be upon us. No person in this nation can ever shut from his mind the awful vision of the last days of 1943 in which 1.000 marines lay dead on the beaches of one little South Pacific islahd. Those men died for the right to be free. We at home have yet to prove worthy of the freedom tor which they died. V.____=_._ It has been claimed the Ameri- can people are too interested in sports. A country where there are plenty of ball tossers develops a lot of fellows who can toss bombs at the enemy with wonderful accuracy. V Since healthy, well-bred livestock and poultry generally make more efficient use of their feed, close culling of herds and flocks is an important factor in feed conser- vation. When you say pleasant andl cheerful words to the people you[ meet tn the stores and elsewhere,l you make wartime deprivations] seem less. , I ! Hellcats Take Zeros-£.30 to Nothing Official U. 8. lCat, y Photograph SOMEWHERE IN THE PACIFIC~In the recent smashing attack on Wake Island, one of the first brushes which the powerful Hellcats, shown in action at the top above, have had with Jap Zeros, the score was 30 to nothing in favor of the U. S. planes. The two girls in the lower picture, using tiny flashlights, are mak- ing a final inspection of a 2,000 horsepower P. & W. supercharged aircraft engine at the Kenosha, Wis.,plant Of Nash-Kelvinator. This motor will be wrapped and boxed andthen be on itsway to become the fighting heart of a Navy Hellcat like those shown above in flight "Somewhere in the Pacific". Each of these engines contains more than 12,000 pieces ~ and they must fit together with tolerances of practically "minus or plus nothing". In a Navy Day telegram to employees who build these special engines for the Hellcat and Corsair fighter planes, Rear Admiral Ram.sey thanked the workers and urged them to keep the engines coming. At odds of 30 to nothing these engines are mighty profitable war "products and make good hunting for our fliers, TRACTOR REPAIR COURSES TO BE GIVEN IN BEACH, GOLVA A series of short practical tractor repair courses for farmers, similar to the courses conducted last year by the Beach High School, are being planned to start on or about Jan- uary i0, according to G. E. Sand- heSS, superintendent. Courses will be conducted at Beach and Golva. The courses will be conducted in cooperation wlth the State Board for Vocational Education under the Food Productlon War Training Program at little or no cost to the school district. W. H. Delve of Fargo, assistant to the state supervisor of agricultural education, discussed the program with school authorities Friday and applications for courses have been submitted. Approval of the applications Is ex- pected within the next week or ten days. Tentative plans are to organize each course for a period of two weeks, with enrollees meeting 6% hours a day 5 days a week. Farm- ers enrolled will work in groups and will repair their own tractors, trucks or other farm motors. When one course is completed another one can be conducted with the same or different, farmers enrolled. At least 15 farmers are expected to register before the course starts. There is no cos~ to enrollees except for repair parts and material used on their own equipment. The course at Beach, according to present plans, will be conducted in the county shop and Burns Abernethy will be the instructor. At Golva the course will be con- ducted In the Johnson implement building with Chris Johnson in- structing. Farmers wishing to enroll should get in touch with G. E. Sandness, superintendent, or with Burns Abernethy or Chris Johnson. Farm- era who cannot attend the first course may be able to enroll for a later course but ff possible they should register now. Vo- You may not want to tell tedious callers that they talk too long, but you might inquire of them if they are running short on their ration poInts for conversation. Rudolph Lutts is in a Chlcago hospital with pneumonia. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Hartse were Sunday callers at the "Julia Flsk home. L. R. Mollne and son of Baker were Carlyle business callers on Saturday. Harold Fulton, Jean Hartse and Gwendolyn Fulton were business callers in Baker V/ednesday. Mrs. Chas Fulton entertained the Red Cross Tuesday. A large num- ber attended. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Huffman have been confined to their home the past two weeks with the flu. Dicky Jacobsen has been in the Beach hospital from effect~ of the flu. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fulton en- tertained Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ful- ton and family at dinner on New Years day. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Fisk enter- tained Thursday for dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Martin and Mrs. Gan- non, in honor of their 46th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Frank Fulton son and daugher, arrived Tuesday evening from Centralia. Ill. to visit at the Chgs. and Tom Fulton homes for a few days. From here they went to Glendive, where they plan to make their future home Army Constructs "Model" Underground Hospital ~a U. £ Army O/fici~i Pkot# A three-ward underground hospital, complete with X-ray equipment and facil_ittee for operating was dug out of the sandstone andsolid rock at Camp Joseph T. Robinson, Ark. Each bf the three wards are about 12 feet high by 10 x 20 feet in area, and are connected with each ~er by tunnels, which in ~ connect with a passageway leading ; the~p~. E~. Itis estinmted that a similar installation eoul~ be bulk in the fie d under combat conditions in 24 bourn. Photo shows a ~ of one of th, u~d wards, with simulated ~ualty under~oinS ~ent. i ALPHA NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Art White drove to Golva after lumber Tuesday. Rudolph Boehlke has been help- ing Art White with carpenter work the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sonnek and family were Sunday dinner guests at A. G. Faschlngs. Wililam Turner (Mrs. Langdon's brother) went to Killdeer Wednes- day to receive medical attention. Wilfred Gamroth has been spending the past week with Richard Knopp. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Larsen and daughter were Sunday evening call- ers at Fritz Fasehings. The Alpha Boys Basketball team drove to Golva Tuesday evening and played basketball. Mr. and Mrs. Louie McManigal were callers at Gustafsons on Wednesday. Mrs. Myrtle Davis and children spen~ a couple days at A. J. Zei- berths the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Northrop and family were callers at Leighton Nunns Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Leighton Nunn and children were callers at Harold Ziebarths Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leighton Nunn and family were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nunn Monday night. Mr) and Mrs. A. G. Fasching and girls were dinner and supper guests at Robert Souneks on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Oamroth drove to Dickinson Sunday and took their daughter, M~try Lou, back to school. Mr. and Mrs. Karnes Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Johnson were New Years dinner guests at Oscar Clarins. Dewey Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nell Kennedy of Beach, was visiting at Henry Olsens a couple days the past week. Mr. and Mrs. John Irons and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Drewniak, Mr. and Mrs. Art White, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fasching and Warren Irons were New Years dinner guests at A. G. Faschings. The Study club met at Scher- mans Tuesday evening. After the meeting a delicious lunch was serv- ed by the hostess, Mrs. Ed Scher- man. The next meeting will be at Chas. Otrembas. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thomas and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Szudera and family, Mr. and Mrs. Werner Nistler and Betty Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Otremba and Carl, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hagen were New Years dinner guests at Ed Scher- mans. RELIEVE MISERIES WITH BUTTE DRUG SENTINEL BUTTE, N. D. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Kinsley, and Mrs. Herman Brockmeyer, and Mrs. Harold Bathel, Carew and A1 Irons were Years dinner guests at Win. -V Prices of insecticides have stabilized and, insofar as can 'foreseen, no significant changes planned by th~ OPA. - --V.-- People are urged to eat fruit. Kids of Beach will all that grows on the tree. ELECTRIC All the fence yOU need easily up, quickly moved--a boy it. World's largest selling tric Fencer. 5-Year Service { antee. Immediate CHRIS G. Dealer GOLVA, N. HE&o&¢HE IS euGH A 8|G L|TTLE "IrH|HG ALL SET for work when a sehe sneaks up and eo does your work. Ready for an ation and rest, enjoyment or DR. MILES Anti-Pain usually relieve not ache, but Simple 1% eular Pains and Functi Monthly Pains. Do you use Dr, Miles Pills? H not why not get Dr. Miles Anti-Pain your drug store in the package for only a and in the economy cheaper. Why not get today ? Your h Read directions use directed. Your money am not mati~fled. ORCHIDS for your Standard Off Desl~ Well, I~ wouldn't ~xpeet them. And yet the vital character of his Job and the stee~lfsst way he is doing it are worthy of real rccoEnttion. his servieu on the home front, the war effort would be impeded. •. For instance--milUmm d war workers have no way of getting to wca-k except by auto.. • At ~e plants 90~ of emp~yees get to and from their Jobs by ear •.. $,211 U. S. cities with 11,162,000 populetism have no trolleys, buses, or other transit facilities--depend on private ears. The rationing system recognizes the ne~ud~ for a minimum amount of driving on the pm't of all motorists.