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February 10, 1944
THE GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS
PAGE 2~HRE~
THE
GOLDEN VALLEY
NEWS
A Weekly Published Every
Thursday by
The
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
]Fred A. Shipman, Editor
~. C. SHIPMAN, Business Manager
$. D. MaeDOUGALL, SupL
ADVERTISING RATES
~lay Advertising, per inch - $ .3[
al Contract. 52 weeks, inch - .3(
ders, per line ....... 10
of Tbanks, 10 lines - - - 1•00
Positively no exceptions will be
made on the above rates
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Te addresses wilhin Norlh Dakota,
Lad Wibaux and Fallon Counties°
in Montana:
~e Year ........ $2•50
Months 1•50
To addresses outside of North Dakota:
~e Year ........ $3•00
Six Months 2,50
No subscriptions accepted for less
than six months
~t~te~red as Second Class matter at
Postoffice at Beach, North Dakota,
October 7, 1936• under the Act of
March 3, 1897.
~NCLE SAM~S STAR SALESMEN
A few years ago no one would
have thought it possible for this
~r~to raise tens of billions of
voluntarily by public con-
t~lbution within a space of days.
It*has ~not only been proven pos-
~ble, but has been done more than
~--we are now conducting the
Urth War Loan Drive with a
i~um goal of $14,000,000.000.
Of course the demands of war
are the driving force behind bond
~hbut those demands alone
not suffice. No small share
tf credit for raising the money
~U~to:al etffo:h: oftgnifl~ntt eP~:
~i~at salesman in the world--the
e ean businessman sis ability
'~.legendary. Before the w
arhe
.Wed the world. He sold every-
~g. under the sun from washing
~es to hat pins. His cus-
~aers ranged from head hunters
~!elEskimos ~
~ What is more natural than when
~eed with the biggest selling job
tlht9 history, the American business-
'lan should come through with
t01ors flying? Perhaps nowhere axe
energies and abilities more evi-
Qent than in the bond selling
~horts of the chain store industry.
e chain stores are classic exam-
Nee of American efficiency and
ltrogressiveness. Their distribution
~que made necessities and
. Uries available to more people
than all the social reform programs
War devised.
The entire nation can be thankful
that American salesmanship is
~ered unqualifiedly in helping the
lOvernment raise needed war
~enue.
--Vo
I~EEDOM WITHOUT TRIMMING
The wish that seems to be ex-
IWessed most often by American
~?lcemen throughout the world
that after this war they want to
~e home to the same kind Of a
9oUntry they left. They don't
Want a streamlined, regimented
teeiety. Before the war there was
~om, and this is what our men
hOpe, above everything else, to find
~en they return.
~present the feeling that free-
is in deadly ~eril hangs heavy
~r the land. Seldom, if ever, in
history of the country, have
.~e People talked so much of free-
~n~, while never has their freedom
TEAP YEAR STYLE NOTE--194.4
THE LADIES PROPOSED
How comes the accepted tradition that is the woman who proposes
in Leap Year?
It seems to have originated in Scotland during the thirteenth cen-
tury, when there was a preponderance both of unmarried women and
of timid men. A law was passed which decreed that when a
matrimonially-inclined lady approached an eligible gent during Leap
Year, he had to say Yes or fork over a fine.
Apparently that solved the spinster problem for the Scots, for soon
similar laws were enacted in France and in Italy. Thus the tradition
was born.
The women of America, however, waited neither for government
decree nor for traditional Leap Year to propose wedding themselves to
industry when our country was imperiled. History w~.ll .record. thezr
considerable achievement in war production as well as In me umiorms
of the armed forces.
Some of them may remain at work in postwar, due to the sacrifices
paid in battle by their breadwinners. Industry, which has helped them
make the most of their talents in its necessity, will help them
again in theirs.
But ehe great majority of war-working women will prefer, surveys
show, to return to their domestic duties and doings. They will resume
their usual utilities and their feminine frills with the grateful thanks
of us all, and the inner consciousness of a job--voluntarily entered
into--nobly done.
BACK THE A~TACK! BUY MORE WAR BONDS ! !
been so restricted. Today the ener- moving steadily toward victory•"
gies of every thinking person are Competition depends on freedom,
devoted to preserving liberty, just as does the privilege of at-
The president of a leading oil tending the church of our choice•
Yes, plain, unadorned freedom is
icompany recently voiced the thotlght
of many people when he said: our most precious possession.
"It is important to remember that ---v~
the oil industry, like all American POWER OF QUICK ACTION
business, has been able to accomp-
lish the extraordinary war job, be- Many men drafted for military
cause, in time of peace, the corn- service may feel that they are ask-
panics were competing with each ed to take on a heavy burden out
other to make better products by of duty to their country. It is a
better methods. Spin'red on by burden for all who are exposed to
this competition, the skill of the experiences of danger or whose life
American worker and the ability of work or education is interrupted.
American b u s i n e s s management The men who take on this burden
combine to make th~ country the are entitled m the highest credit
industrial leader of the world. What for the cheerfulness with which it
this means to us today, in war, is is assumed.
dramatically demonstrated by the They are also gaining many ad=
fact that three years ago the vantages from military experience.
United States was the weakest in One of these benefits is that their
quickness of
armament among the great na- training produces
tions, and now has become the thought and action, precision and
strongest in armament. With this quickness of action are things that
kind of support, our military forces distinguish a military group from
and those of our Allies axe now an unorganized crowd of people.
J
ur Secret Weapon
so long ago the infaut~Tman was the forgotten man in any military discussion,
done all right with Julhm Caesar. He had carved an empire for Napoleon end over-
it. He ~ll[d gained us our independeneL In the sweat and blood of Frsnca in the firs~
War he had held the line, thrust back the German hordes and finally broken them.. •.
Mlfl~ remembered the infantrymao and only the sober observer ssw thaf h~W~.~ did
17 " .W " "
net suddenly bury its experience~ and lose the value of lte lessons. A~ ~
"0n]y now do we begin to see tha~ our 'secret weapon' of. this war is the t~antry--t~the :the ola
about which we have talked the least and on which we depend the most-- ~ .
mud slogging, jungle hunting, mountain climbing infantry which etose~ w~th the.
;meets him in'hand to hand conflict, kills him or drives him backward_. ~nd seizes the,
which the airplane and the @arship and the production .plant~t"home may havee.n-
doughboy to reach• but which only he can .~take .and"h°ld"" .'~.. • Perhaps~duct ofit theiS atraining,mlstaKe
, ' infant ather it ~s th p .
say merely that ~ur secret weapon iS ~k~ ~ .~.~Y~ .... "--'-:-- ^~ ,,-r infantry.
sn tit. th~ teamwork and the individuality w.nicn goes m~o zne m-~,~ -~.~- "'-nt. '
" ", T" ~ ,, -' . ~-:'-~-~ ~'~'~"--Stephen T. Early, Secretary to the Yreslae
4 ,, B~. ~ ~ 1"4 "
• ,~ /* ¢ ~P~'~'~-,-7-'L " the endurance he has
• , " " mud and cold,
,~'~ on't fo: ,get the foot ~ghter_ s ~ays and nights in ~ ...... fi~hti~=, men
~' eat ro ortlon 0x our ~t
~'b~ ited.. In~bot~'~Britain..tand the United, States. .the• greatu behttles'P p their" service. • • • ~.~*~"~"~
comes into .the ground forces, and I don t think any of s ....... . ri~q re the
..... f, " to uu, VlCtO----
[ ~" r~ ht to know how ~mportant
¢ihzen/of the UUnited Nations has a g ............... ound forces The
fi ht'mg s~nt.-the't. "sense ~f duty_ and the gallantry ana xortituae o, w, s, m when" tao"
,'~,',n'~,~;,~li~h~m~ts" of this~ indisuensable ~nember of the air.greund-naval tea
~;~fu'l~ told:~"~y of~t~e brighest pages of our war.hlSnh~o~w;r Commander-in-Chi~.
-t ~ " ht D J~lsennuw
. ~r~ ~ . The are the mud.rain-fros
the, .,e. to w. ,a 0= .m--
When the military unit marches
along, and is commanded to make
a sudden turn, these men cannot
stop to ponder and reflect, but
have to turn quickly and accurately.
So it is in all their daily experience•
This power of quick thought and
action is extxemely useful in daily
life. The service men will re~urn
after the war with this new power,
and it will be a great help to them.
--'V'~
APPROACHING REALITY
,4 viation Pioneer ]
Fights Monopoly ,I
On Air Routes, 'i
In the words of Time magazine:
"By year's end . . . new huge U. S. l
productive capacity stood as theI
best protection against inflation I
• . . " Business managed industryI
will be as vital to the peace as it
has been to the winning of the war
A smooth working, highly pro-
ductive taxpaymg system of private
enterprise, beginning in the soil
and carrying through to the con-
sumer, has become an absolute
necessity• Anything which re-
stricts the operation of such a
system is a direct threat to living
standards and stability of govern-
ment It is the responsibility of
public officials to do all in their
power to prevent further imposi-
tion of regulations and tax mea-
sures which obstruct production
and clog distributive channels.
Both of these evils have been
rampant.
The distribution system both be-
fore and during the war has been
the recipient of restrictions and
punitive efficiency that have ser-
iously impaired consumer serwce.
Before the war, distributive effi-
ciency was hard hit by anti-chain
store taxes. Since the war. moun-
tains of regulations have been dir-
ected at retailers in the mistaken
belief that inflation could be con-
trolled by freezing retail prices
without effectively putting a lid on
wages and other costs• The result
has been very nearly disastrous.
Necessities are disappearing from
store shelves because they are un-
obtainable within legal price ranges.
The regulatory mania has affected
every industry to some extent.
The country is face to face with
the fact that these conditions can-
not be continued if our industries
are to do the job expected of them
in the days to come. Producing for
peace will be far more difficult
than producing for war.
V-
• CROIL HUNTER
"" The same drive and energy that
enabled him to build a small air-
line into one of the great sky
routes of the nation are behind
Croil Hunter's campaign to save
our postwar international airways
from the gripping hand of mon-
opoly.
The president of Northwest Air-
lines is an active members of the
Airlines Committee for U. S. Pol-
icy. This body, which represents
the viewpoint of 17 of the 19 U. S.
airlines, is in favor of Govern-
ment regulated competition, which
has made our domestic air trans-
port system the finest in the
world, and is against the effort
now being waged to create a gi-
gantic monopoly to be the lone
agent of the American people in
trans-oceanic flghL
Mr, Hunter knows his aerial
distances. He was one of the
first air transport heads to sense
the importance of Alaska, and
prior to the war surveyed that
vast region. His foresight has
paid many a dividend to his fe1~
low countrymen, both from the
standpoint of commercial advant-
ages and the much more import-
ant one of the moment~the na-
tional defense.
---V--
It is remarked that children
should be taught how to make out
a bank check. Before learning
that, they might well learn how to
Some folks seem to think they save the ~noney to create a bank
lose money when they pay up an account on which to draw the
old debt. I check.
I
A perfect investment--War Bonds
III II
RELIEVE i
MISERIES WITH
BUTTE DRUG
SENTINEL BUTTE, N. D.
I
Alka-Seitzer
A B 0 METHOD
A ~ Alka-Seltzcr, start taking it
at once to relieve the Dull,
Aching Head, and the Stiff,
Sore Muscles.
B~ Be careful, avoid drafts and
sudden changes in tempera-
ture. Rest -- preferably in
bed. Keep warm, eat seusi-
bly, drink plenty of water oz"
fruit juices. Be sm-e to get
enough Vitamins.
C ~Comfort your Soze, l~mpF
Throat, if caused by the eeld~
by gargling with Alka-SeR-
zer. If fever develops, or
symptoms become mum-e
acute call your doctor.
ALKA-SELTZER is a pain X~.l
tiering, alkalizing tablet, pIeasa~t
to take and unusually effective in
action,
Take it for Headache, Muscular
Pains and for Indigestion, Gas on"
Stomach, when caused by excess
stomach acid•
At your drug store--Large
package 60¢, Small package 30#,
by the glass at soda fountains.
I
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