National Sponsors
March 7, 1935 Golden Valley News | ![]() |
©
Golden Valley News. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 6 (6 of 8 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
March 7, 1935 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
MOB THREATENS
ENGLISH H 0 g SE
in the lobby, and surrounded the mem-
bers of the house as they entered and
td~outed "Down with the national gov-
ernment." The unemployed oppose
many features of the pending bill de-
Igned to end some inequalities of the
bill recently passed.
ALL SETFORCCC
Ninety-two roj t~ Approved
by McKinnon; Asks Govern-
ment for 32 Camps
Ninety-two, water conservation proj-
ects have been selected definitely for
work this coming season under the
CCC troops allotted the U. S. Forest
service, A. D. McKinnon, state tech-
nician announced.
Projects in Reserve
In reserve are a number of additional
projects that can be whipped into shape
should the government approve Mx.
McKinnon's application for 32 camps
for North Dakota this next summer.
This application was forwarded to
Washington recently by Mr. McKin-
non following a meeting held in Bis-
marck for consideration of the pro-
posed program for the summer and
survey of projects offered.
The fifth enrollment period for the
camps will begin April 1, Mr. McKin-
nin said, and by that time it will be
known whether or not the government
will grant North Dakota the full num-
ber of camps. T~ere were fourteen
camps in operation last year under the
forest service. If the government ap-
proves the $4,800,000,000 work relief
bill the number of camps will un-
doubtedly be doubled, Mr. McKinnon
said.
Loc~tions Suggested
Locations suggested for the 32 camps
are:
Wishek. New England, Mandan,
Hazen Killdeer. Dickinson, Devils
Lake. Watford City, Williston, Cros-
by, Kenmare, Minot, Towner, Drake.
Rugby, Bottineau. Rolla, Langdon. Can-
do, Park River, Lakota, Grand Forks,
or Larimore. Hillsboro. Caaselton. Val-
ley City, Forman, Hankinson, Ellen-
dale. La Moure, Edgeley, Carrington
and McClusky.
FODDER HELD
SAME AS GRAIN
No Exceptionsin-Case of Fodder
Corn Will Be Made; Com-
plete Con tra¢_ ~ Early
No exceptions in the corn-hog con-
tract for 1933 for the benefit of farm-
ers who wish to grow fodder corn on
land held out of grain corn production
axe to be allowed by the corn-hog sec-
tion of the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration, according to informa-
tion received by N. D. Gorman, state
county agent leader of the North Da-
kota Agricultural College extension
service.
As explained by Claude R. Wickard,
chief of the corn-hog section in Wash-
ington, "land held out of corn produc-
tion under the 1935 corn-hog contract
may be planted to crops other than
corn, unless such planting is contrary
tO the provisions of other commodity
control contracts that have been signed
by the land owner."
The Adjustment Administration is
convinced that further modification of
the 1935 contract would endanger the
purposes of the program, and would
complicate compliance with the con-
react.
Completion of corn-hog contract
sign-up meetings in North Dakota by
the middle of March and sooner than
that in many of the main corn and
hog producing counties is expected by
Mr. Gorman.
Si,*~.lng of the contracts which has
been underway in some counties for
a week or more will be followed im-
mediately by meetings for organizing
the county production adjustment as-
sociations, Gorman said,
Increase in Small
Coins Seen as Sign
of Business Gains
Washington, March 6.--Prosperity
~s returning amid a record-breaking
jingle of small coins in the average
American's pockets. Nellie Tayloe Ross,
first woman director of the United
States mint. said today.
"During the last year we dispatched
more coins to banks than in any year
since 1919/' Mrs. Ross said. '"]?his is
significant of business revival because
as money goes into circulation, there is
need for making small change."
During 1934, federal mints in Phila-
delphia, Denver and San Francisco
coined 358.269,853 pieces with a value
of $25,951,750, compared with 23,109,-
250 pieces during 1933 with a value of
$I 3,136,225.
N. D. MAN ACCEPTS
ST. PAUL SCOUT POST
Fargo, N. D.~E, H. Bakken. for the
last three years chief executive of the
Red River valley area, Boy Scouts of
America, has resigned here to accept
~he post of deputy of Region 10 at St.
Paul. He succeeds L. J, Cornell of St.
Paul, who was named deputy chief exo
ecutive of the New York city area.
~ L~-:, -
.~eo~:f ,~ LrJIAI
h'OU T~E GC~.r,4T r J| ~ ~IP~JLAN' LL----
~..~rr~ ~ ~-F'~ ] ~ .~,L
~-~Li -,. ~ -.I-, ,.
: I::)l~O'~_.,. NO'~-IIN'[] E~JE GETT|N'
~VE. GOt ~1 ALONG-
vo ~ I-== ( ~ u:x=.oEc> z
FRITZI RITZ--One-Track Mind
~OIN' OUT)/.~TT'r~ HE'~ AI.~VAY~ TALKIN~ ,
•
W~EE'ZLE "J~llll I I'J
By ERNIE BUSHMILLER
WHERE ,~J4ALL ~ Nlswr" CLUS "WITH A. ~ !./".- ~ kw~ p~ our FoR ~;
"
POP--How Many Husbands Are Roped In
_ ~ i,¢JSS-- IN
~,%,:~ik-THE I
4