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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
March 1, 1934     Golden Valley News
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March 1, 1934
 
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NOW VER. DEFACTO ~ers of All Kinds Pledge Obedience To Every Wish Of the Nazi Chancellor- Feb. ~.mAdolf Hitler can himself king or era- if his ambition runs that way. reich yesterday sixtieth German pronounced oath: fidelity to and unquestioning to him and the leaders him." and women who thus pledged their very lives to Chancellor-dictator are or officers of the political, economic, pro- social and labor organisa- d~onswhich constitute the separate of the Nazi movement. oath-taking, President • Germany's grand man of war and peace, has vir- faded out of the picture. Hitler is now the de factor sorer- of Germany. D'MOL'Y, BUTTE OUTLAWS N D BANTAMS ~ = Pre-Touraament Games Hold Interest of Fans; Sentinels Now Favorite for Cham- pionship Honor& games replete playing and filled with ~e spectators, the Beach the mighty De- Tnesday night, fray and Sentinel Imlependents took home the ~in the second game played Bantanm, 43 -25. of the second tilt WM ~bout as fast basketball ever the ~ooal floor and the opening tip- for Sentinel Butte shot into the hoop and duplicated a second McM~ters, left guard the Bantams team, made good same manner. of the town among people game is that the Sentinels contendors for the tour- crown and should they be tO= keep their team intact, as Tuesday night, starring ~in at foward, they will put up a ~scrap for the laurels, for clever Sentinel Butte coach who led the scoring that game, making 20 was short two of in the fray, Carl Davis Tl~ompson, two boys who be counted on to put action into Bantams will play, Stanley Smith game Tuesday well at right for- been out of of the his game to night, they , at the con- and Man- of the DeMolay club, is tl'mt his team has on ice and neither may ~, as both teams have of the Bantams- fg ft pf rf ...... 2 I 4 rf .......... 1 0 4 if .......... I 0 2 4 1 2 2 1 Od~nbaugh, ig 0 0 0 11 3 15 fg ft pf 8 4 0 If .......... 4 3 0 c ...... 3 1 3 rg ...... 0 0 I 1 0 1 1 I 3 17 9 8 at Golva on high school team 35-7. be filed for city 20 days before the in th~ case would erection THE LAND PATENTS Is Russia Model AWAIT MANYt (Cone nued from page one) ]first a long step toward collectivism __~mmr~,~mw~traw~rlc-~ {and then a shorter step back into IIUIVlI ILAVi I J the old American way. The advances toward collectivism are longer and more permanent. IntePor~ Department Asks They come, from the radicals, the brain trust. The occasional back- Register of Deeds To Seek Out Those Entitled To These Patents. Quite a lot of people of this sec- tion who long ago proved up on their 01aims never got their patents of title from the general land office at W.a~thington, which seems strange as the filing and registering of these would appear to be a necessity to establish title to the land, much of which, undoubtedly, has changed hands many times. Register of Deeds Noble has re- ceived a list of parties in this county who never have called for 'their patent, and these Darties can get this nece~, ary document by makirtg a suitable affidavit and fil- ing it with the register. The parties who have an interest in this matter are: Lands lying in township 136, range 106: John Bcegli, Fred Oorze, Julia Sawyer. In 137-103: LeR~y Harmon, Fred Wolf. Martin Hess, Harry G. Funk. (2 pieces.) In 13%104: Edward J. Helser. Albsl~ Jesok. 13%106: Frank B. Miine. 138-103: Wendell Phillips, Arthur N. Englund~ Frank D, Mailey, Ed- ward L. Malley. 138-104: Fred Blow, Thomas A. Lamb. 139-103: ]~ettt Carlson, 140-103: Frank Dempsey,, Ray C. Youngblood, Frans Nordblom. 140-104: James M. Rowan. 141-103: Hans Oygaard, James T. Ronerts, LewAs F. Rlchardton, John C. Honnold. 142-103~. Warren Sehulte, Frank Henderson, Samuel G. Pendleton, John S:'Rathbun. 142-104: EdWkrd C. Stecker. 143-105: Richard E. Leiter. 143-104: Elmer L, Hubbard, Ross Allen Elder, George F. McCioskey, Fellman W. Sprague, Milton E. Northrop, 144-103: Monroe Oashc, Oliver E. Olson, Charles E. King, Prank H. Gallus. 144-104: H~irs of ~raCe M. Pow- ell, forn~erly:Grace Lewis, William Campbell, Ureerge F. Hubbard. 144-10~: ,Grant A. Hillman. Langerites Won (Continued from page one) resolutions praising the present ad- ministration. The victory ~was not gained, how- ever, until a~ battle royal had been fought betWe~ft :Viasoff on one side and the antl-Langer men. As county chairm~n Joe presided and did his Job, l~ machine well oiled. He was charge~i with ignoring the other two members of the county executive committee; switching from a violent anti-Langerite of two years ago to the obedient servant of the master; and they wanted to know who paid his expenses down to Washington on that famous Townley Cavalcade and charged him with being in the employ of the state as a game warden or other- wise, which latter was denied, and they fried him on the griddle a plenty as being a t0ol of the gov- ernor, Other state employes taking a lively part in the proceedings were also grilled and this pleasant indoor practice was continued for three hours, during' which many pledged their votes to anybody but Langer. An upshot of the discussions was that Charles Smith and William Ueckert refused longer to serve on the county executive committee with Vlasoff, and it ls understood that Herin BrOwn and Harve Easton were named as their successors. Ready-made resolutions l~.~g the administration were produced and passed after many delegates ~d either Iost interest or left the meeting. The whole affair was more of a defeat for the adminis- tration on the show-down than a victory. The real test of strength will be shown at the primary. It was suggested that the conven- tion endorse a candidate for the legislature, but that stirred up an- other hornet's nest, and the meet- ing dissolved without any action be- ing taken. It is understood the anti-Langer men will send representatives to the Jamestown convention. KICKED OVER THE BUCKET Washington, Feb Z%--in a session that voted down a plan for Immedi- ate payment of the bonus, the sen- ate put thrGugh a wild series of amendments~ Tuesday that all but annffdlated the economy act's V~00,- 000.000 Savings in veterans benefits and federal ImY. The ses~n was marked by Warn- administration leaders of tracks toward the old American system are mainly Mr. Roosevelt's own. These annoy the brain trust a little but not much. The radicals have a consistent plant, they know exactly where they are going and they are getting there rapidly. The lack of pattern in the Wash- ington picture as a whole is due to one of Mr. Roosevelt's traits of temperament and mind, He has, to an extraordinary degree, Susceptibil- ity to suggestions. Some of the in- timates immediately around Mr. Roosevelt are familiar with this trait of his, and are alert to see that new ideas are not put into effect until after opportunity for examin- ation by critics. Occasionally some conservative who has access to Mr. Roosevelt presents him with an idea that be- longs in the orthodox category of economics. Because Mr. Roosevelt is natively conservative himself, he puts it in effect. For a moment we have a spasm of conservatism. But it is the radicals who make steady headway. They know the technique of revolution--such a man as Pro- fessor Tugwell has studied the re- cent revolutions in Europe pain- stakingly and knows the technique of caxrylng America from individ- ualism to collectivism as minutely as a farmer knows the technique of raising a crop. The process of car- rying America toward collectivism goes forward along the lines of a consistent plan, The occasional backft~tcks toward the old Ameri- can ~stem are: intermittent, unre- iated~ end ineffective. To complete the comparison be- twecn the radical and the conserva- tive groups around the president, it would be necessary to add that the conservatives, compared with the radicals, are a little '~dumb"---using the word not uncourteously in its connotation of being simple and candid, ingenuous and un-suspici- 0US. Revolution is often described as a movement arising from. great mass- es of people. Fully as often, revo- lution is engineered by~ shrewd, daring and ambitious men who take advantage of emotions or conditions they observe among the masses. It is the technique of social revo- lution, of revolution accomplished without violence, that one step leads to the second, the second to the third; and so until the revolution is compete. In several different areas the!~overnmeflt at Waahlngton is Just ~!u ~e midst ot th~ proee~, A sufficient illustration is in the area of crop restriction. I.~tst JUne the administration de- termined to reduce the quantity of cotton grown in the United States. For last Year's crop the means chosen was to pay farmers to plow under one row out of every four. For the coming year the method contemplated is to pay each cotton raiser to reduce his acreage by 15 percent. Those two methods taken togeth- er constituted the first step. • Right now the administration is] at the end of th.is first step. It] turns out to be a mistake, or atI least not to be successful. It is not l successful because,~ among other } reasons, some farmer~ do not unite t in it. " ! The first step turns out to be a mtstt~e or at least not successful. Bat happens Does the mln~t]on turn back? Not at all --it is the law of revolutions that they go forward and that the first step makes the second inevitable-- those who promote the revolution understand this and take advantage of it, We are just now on the thresl~old of the second step. It departs from voluntary action by the farmers (which was the first step) and in- itroduces compulsion. The cotton raisers are to be compelled to re- duce their crops--the bill is in con- gress and it has the indorsement of Prasident Roosevelt. ~ What the third step will be no one knows. "No one," that is, ex- cept the radicals at Washington. I suspect the third step, or at least one of the early steps, will be price. fixing; the same government agent who tells the farmer how much cot- ton he may raise, will in the sum- mer or fall tell him the price that he is to be paid for it. AS to the steps further we can only speculate. We know, however, what the objective is--Russia, and , we know the Russian system. To be concrete, the American rev- olution, if not interrupted, would lead fairly early to the wiping out of profit in industry. Not quite so early, but quite certainly, it would arrive at wiping out private owner- ship of property. This would come gradually, Probably in America private ownership of homes will re, main a long time---though in RUs- sia private ownership of homes was destroyed. Destruction of of farms would be one of the late phases America--but it ff the revolution BEACH, N. D., ADVANCE Mexican Queen Dark eyes and olive skin enhance the regal robes of Miss Mercedes Gonzales, of Nogales. Sonora. Mex. ico, who recently was crowned "Queen Mercedes the First" of Mexico, during Mardi Gru festival at Nogales. LOCAL NEWSPAPER IS BEST ADV. MEDIUM T h e community newspaper furnishes the most profitable medium of advertising for the retail grocer, Fred Reed, man- ager of the Quality Store of Dickinson, declared before a dis- trlct meeting of the organization at Bismarck recently. "From my experience,"- Mr. Reed stated, "I am firmly con- vinced that the newspaper, be- cause of its general in~erest to our prospective customers, is the medium in which our advertising gets the best results." Mr. Reed said that merchants should be more careful in their selection of the advertising me- dium. "Buying advertising space," he said, "is deserving of as much study and ¢or~slderatlon as buy- ins any ' of the merchandise which appears on our shelves." He pointed out three principles to be followed in the selection of the medium: first, the content; second, the circulation (how many people does the medium reach); and third, the appear- ance and attractiveness of the publication is important. In behalf of the community newsI~per as the medium, he said that its advantages included the fact that it ~ntains inform- a~i0n such asia1 notices, offl- ~oiai procee~ and general new~ of interest to everyone, it is read from the first page to the last page and instead of being thrown away after a casual glance, it is kept around the home until it has been thorough- ly read by everyone in the family. "An advertisement in such a publication," he added, "cannot fail to get attention." Mr, Reed also emphasized that a policy of consistent advertising has proven profitable in his ex- perience. The consumer, he said, looks forward to a particular ad- vertisement and if he or she can depend upon seeing it in the forthcoming issue of the paper, the sale very often is made be- fore the customer comes to the store. "Consumers,- he concluded, "have come to 10ok upon adver- tising as their best Protection, putting more sense in their dol- lar spending." LOCAL NEWS Alwin Teed has gone over to New England to do the baking fol" a bak- ery there during the time the pro- prietor is at a hospital, which it is expected will be about a month. The ladies of the Methodis~ church are serving another of their appetizing dinners this afternoon (Thursday) in the church dining room. Dinner will be served from 5 o'clock until all are accommodated. Frank L. Gage, who has been laic up at the Golden Valley hotel re- covering from an auto accident, is slowly improving, but is not yet able to walk. Mrs. Howard Wenberg is seriously Ill with pneumonia as is her youngest child. They were brought in to Mrs. Turnbull's this week. Social Hour will meet with Mrs. P. A. Gisvold at her home, Tuesday, March 6th. T. E. Hudson left Tuesday night for Portland. Oregon,, where he will visit with his daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Klev, Jr. The Royal Neighbors will hold theh" regular meeting in the Mason- ic Temple, Wednesday, March 7, at 8 o'clock. Special meeting of offic- ers at 7 o'clock. Initiation. Guy Curl went to the Bismarck hospital at Bismarck Monday morn- ing for treatment. It is thought he has either appendicitis or gall stones and will be operated on soon Mrs. Curl and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schouboe went down to see him Wednesday. Roy Snow was severely injured last Saturday when a lump of coal fell on his head, causing a deep wound. He feels improved but his head has not yet healed. Word has been received in the city to the effect that Harry Harp- ster, who with his wife, spent the winter in California, and was on his way back here, had bought an oil filling station at Perry, Okla- homa, and expected to reside there. MARKETS Wednesdgy Noon Northern wheat .............. $ .61 Barley ........................ ~5 Flax .......................... I~5 Oats ........................... 19 A meeting of those farmers inter- ested in the hog-corn control asso- ciation for the Beach district was held at the cour~ house Tuesday, it being in the nature of an education matter, This county is affected adversely to about $10,000 by the refusal of the Northern Pacific railroad com- pany to pay more than 70 percent of its taxes, which sum has been paid. The payment of the balance of the taxes will be contingent on the decision of the courts. Save your pennies for tickets to the home talent play the Lions club will stage the end of the month. It will be the greatest show ever produced in this section, the talent therefor being the best ever. ADVANCE ADS GET RESULTS I Write or Dickinson, N. Dak. 44-47 The Many of,£he frien& ~ave requested this hour until Easter. We invite yo~ to enjoy this hour of gospel music with us. THURSDAY, MARCH 1, ANOTHER FED- ER L LOAN DEAL IS READY TO GO New Production Credit Ass'n Elects Officers; Will Fin. ance Short Term Chattel Security At 6 Percent. Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 26.--Officers and directors today completed the working organization of the Dick- inson Production Credit association and within ten days "will be pre- pared to finance short term chattel credit loans in the counties of Stark. Dunn. Billings, Golden Val- ley, Slope and Bowman. This association has a capital of $75,000.00 provided by the Farm Credit administration through the Production Credit corporation of St. Paul. The directors representing each of the counties in the associ- ation are as follows: ~tark--Otto Oukrop, Dickinson I ~r,n--R. Cole Smt+h, Halliday YJilii~gs--N. T. Findah! Medora, and Emil Strand, Fryburg. Golden Valley--Ernest D. Nelson, Sentinel Butte Slope--Anton Schmit, New Eng- land Bowman--Maurice Nelson, Scran- ton. Officers elected were: President, N. T. Findahl; vice president, Emil Strand; secretary-treasurer, F. A. Oar foot. Members of executive and loan committee---N. T. Findahl, Otto Oukrop and Anton Schmit. In order to give good service to farmers in all parts of this district the board of directors through Sec. Oarfoot will select some party in each important trading point In each county to represent the associ- ation. Farmers in that area can see this local representative who will have application blanks and be able to give the desired information on loans and also assist in prepar- ing applications. The names of the parties so selected will be announc- ed shortly by Secretary Garfoot. These loans will be made through this co-operative-association for a period of from six months to three years. The current rate of interest is six percent to borrowers. Loans are secured by first mortgage on livestock, implements, stored grain, and other chattel security. Borrow- ers are required to take stock in the association in the amount of five percent of their loan and also pro- vide an abstract of the security offered and l~Y for the appraisal of the property offered as security. TOUHY GANG CONVI~ED Chicago, Feb. 24.--The law, after three trials, has put the finger on Roger Touhy, one of the last and most notorious of the dry era des- peradoes. The jury convicted Touhy and two others Friday for the abduction of John (Jake the Barber) Factor, and fixed the. prison sentences of all three at 99 years. Those convicted with him were Albert Kator and Gustav Schaefer--lesser fellows in a once mighty combine against law and order. DIRE NEED OF A CAT CONTROL CODE While the government has ed codes for almost all there are still some the experts Washington have overlooked as shown by the following letter to Chicago paper: Dear Editor: I am a farmer living near ville, Ill., and am writing for formation. I have two old which I think will soon have tens, and I would like to know to do. I don't know just what cats come under. Should I to Mr. Wallace, Oen. Johnson Prof. Tugwell himself? No there are too many cats now. I get some government benefit eliminating them, or should cats stimulated? Please let me know soon as possible as the kittens appear any day. Thanking you advance for any information will furnish me relief and compensation, I am, dear yours very truly, John Kepler. The Children Pay A University of Pittsburgh made of Pittsburgh children a Ins before the Juvenile showed that 50 per cent of were products of broken homes. B[ACii BFALiTY SHOP If you are sensitive about the looks of hands OUR R[ We are now BRAND NEW wave set which the hair soft and dries in " ~he be to give thi set a test by wave your~ hair. NO INCREASE IN PRICE ! Call for appointment. Phone 177 McClellan Bldg. ALREADY wages in rubber factories have been raised while rubber and cotton are costin~ more . . . If you're l~oing to need new tires this Sprin~, our advice is: them at once--a Guaraateed $4.0o, Good quality Lowest f~.a% ~h Medium Gum-anteed | 'r~tactlon in sa~-w~Tm~z because ~f every ~ up is built SUPERTW World's 8tma- dard of ~ire ~aatu~ I~'U aubJoct mchs, nfle ~lthout notre and to nn7 StlttO ~ W. C. SCHULZ, Agent PHON]g 74' Bea©h, N. D. GOod Used Tires ~1 Up