Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_REFERER in /home/stparch/public_html/headmid_temp_main.php on line 4394
Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
March 20, 1941     Golden Valley News
PAGE 7     (7 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 7     (7 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
March 20, 1941
 
Newspaper Archive of Golden Valley News produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS SEWIN6 CIRCLB. ~. ':" tL.. ::,:'.:h ::.:::.. !i!ili!!! i i !!!!i!i 1 :l):::::;1 : :ll: ,lq iJ. llZt "¢I/* Itl" 1 :1 ::~!i:i':i?:!::~ is the kind of dress in ~ large women look best, it is skillfully tlesigned to ~te height, place emphasis ~P, and make curves look 'e, not heavy. It's very • just the type you like best ~ear most---a basic style al~- ~iate for general wear o~1~',, and ~e°d°.n. Th.e skirt is slim and ~-~. xne bodice is made with • ,, ~ shoulder yokes and r~. V,,~. Just • ~° ~h gathers to ensure correct ~t. And the neckline of this )i!" " :~. { (design No. 8877) is unusual. ms~en you see how beautifully it the~lnd how good it feels, You'll h, tl~i: this pattern time after time [uid~cr epe, spun rayon, silk prin~ na n~ ers. .b~ * * . acet~rn No. 8877 is designed for slzeI ;t E_40' 42, 44. 46. 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 ~,1 S~s; With three-quarter sleeves ~ds• ~ terial, short sleeves, ~o~ ~eafi ~ W earn 1324 dls~ ~~w"acker Dr. Chtc~,,. lrst " Cl .~v ~.- .._~°"'~hc Ose 15 Cents in coins for ~: :::',"'--- ..... ~,.. ........ ~ess ......,.....,.,. ew method, N0$£ DROPS in Action forward to rest only delivered from toil and sub- he can find enjoyment and cares for noth~ lrgues. Praise and Glory all excited by the Iove the noblest are most glory.--Cicero. nervoul Philh'pa" PRIVATE PURKEY WRITES Dear Ma-- AGAIN Well when I first got called in the draft I was told no soldiers wud be sent to Europe and that I was just going to get a year's training just in case but everything I here on the radio sounds like I am not up here just for fizzical kulshur. I see the lease-lend bill is all but past and all I am.still wondering is if I go with the lease. • • • Nobody in my divishun seems to no what the lease-lend bill is all about except that it is for all aid to England short of war and the boys say you can be a midget in this army and not be too short for war, s~ I gess if war comes there is no way out for me, morn. I am still getting a lot of instruck- shuns in how to saloot and from all _ . the emphassiss ~~ put on salooting I li/ll////"~-~ gess there are [ll]/~/[ ~ some people who k'~ltt~ ~Y'~ are so old-fash- ,~.~.%,~f~ ened they think ~---.~[ ~ I]~ this ~war is going ~5~" l' I~ "- to be as polite as ' the last one. I am gradually getting used to going around with a gun. At first this felt very funny as all my life I was brung up to avoid weapons. The life here is pretty confining as I sed before and how I wud like a week end auto trip to no place spe- ciall It wud also be a big kick to be abel to talk back to people whenever I wanted to like in sivilian life. Up here if you talk back to anybuddy you wind up in the gard house. I got reprimmandid for smoking cigarettes while marching. The cap- tin was very sore and sed it wuz against the rules and he sed it was bad for my lungs also• What made him sore was when I asked him not to worry about my lungs but start worrying abou: my ~eet. Well, morn, now I know why they went over my teeth so carefuly in the draft test• I could not under- stand why the ~ f/~-I doctors made so /~/_~\~-._~I much fuss about ~~ my teeth but it is . .~,j~~ all clere now ~ since I got some "- of the beef the army useg in beef stew. The cows they g~t it from must be half ele- phant, ma. I wish Mr. Nuddson of the defense bored wud do something about getting sharper knifes for sol- mers. • • • . If this army life dont do nothing else for me, morn, it will make me appreshiate good coffee. I gess they use tobacco leaves for coffee in the army. The boys say the cook dont ~now how to make coffee which I gess has ben true all through the history of armies and navies and I dont see why the U. S. dont have a secretary of coffee just like a secre- tary of war so a cup of java will taste like a cup of java and not like a hot brake smells. I still got that chance to join a tank corpse like I wrote you but dont worry as they are still using ice wagons for tanks and I wud look pretty going to war in an ice wagon, wudn't I, ma? Well this is all for now so I close with love. Oscar. Between the dark and the daylight, When the night is beginning to lower, Comes a pause in the day's occupa- tion That is k~own as the Children's Hour. I see there beside the loudspeaker The innocent, sweet little dears While stories of gangsters•, and • ' bump-offs Are brought to their infantile ears. From four until seven they sit there-- Enslaved by the programs' ap- peal, And hear of the gats and the gun molls And terrible mobsters who squeal, Cowboys and horses and rustlers, Love and the wages of sin, Kidnapers, death and destruction, Maniacs, arson and gin. The serial, ah, how it grips 'eel Enveloping all in its power; If the kids ain't in jail wh~en they're fifteen Then no thanks to the air "ChD dren's Hour." ---Mary Holland Gordon. Probably whenever anything goes wrong with Hitler he ex- elaims, "It must be something I hate !" We take no stock in Fiorello La- Guardia's statement that he will not run for mayor of New York again. His auto siren is in too good shape and his fire helmet isn't nearly wor~ out. Add zimflu: he looked M bat- M ff Im had Imm i o t- Meals-Appeal By AMY SMITHERS fAssoclated Newspaper~---WNU Service.) |T WAS Aunt Dora's diary that " started it all. Aunt Dora kept close track of everything that hap- pened to any member of the Lami]y. This morning she had read out to Naomi : "Why, it's just three years ago today that Tom Tyler was introduced to you, Naomi. Three years-- m-m-m--three~ years." It was not so much what she said. It was the way her voice had trailed away softly into silence that hissed as it started. Oh, Aunt Dora didn't say that she thought Naomi was a flat tire• Dear, no! Dear, gentle Aunt Martha wouldn't hurt the feelings of a mos- quito• Naomi, nevertheless, caught the gleam; three years was a long time to "go with" any man without having at least the offer of an en- gagement ring. Naomi had never heard Tom mention the word mar- riage in any positive, definite fash- ion. Tom stopped in twice a week and allowed himself to be persuaded to have dinner with them. He had a habit of saying admiringly: "You certainly look 'cute' in that apron, Naomi! If there's anything a man likes to see it's a pretty girl in a pretty apron. It makes him think of home and mother and good meals and so on. That's the way to get 'em--meals-appeals! There's nothing like meals-appeal." "Three years," Naomi whispered to herself as she frosted the layer cake. "Three yearzt Why, Alice Parker met Jim Parker only a year ago and they're--married." She opened the drawer to find a fresh tea towel and saw the pretty little organdie apron that she had laid there for the evening. At that moment her Aunt Dora walked into the kitchen. "Making marshmallow frosting?" she asked• "Tom a'lways likes your marshmallow frosting." "Marshmallow frosting!" said Naomi, suddenly. "Why, I wouldn't give Tom Tyler a mouthful of this cake if his tongue hung out of his head a mile! And if I ever put on that apron again it 11 be because some one fastens the rags on me when I'm dead!" She took the delicate little wisp of froth and tore it almost viciously from left to right and up and down. Why--Naomi, darling, gasped her Aunt Dora. When that evening Tom Tyler cheerfully ran up the stairs of the apartment building he was aston- ished to meet Naomi coming down~" "Where're you going?" he asked. "Oh--out," she said, with a shrug. "Out?" he echoed. "Out? Out where? You're such a domestic lit=. fie home body--why, Naomi! I al- ways think of you as being home." This last was said with a reproach- ful glance that might, had it not been for Aunt Dora's diary, have melted her completely. "Pooh!" she remarked airily. "Home body, indeed! I guess I have stayed at home too long--about three years too long," she added in an underbreath. "But where are you going?" "Why, I'm going out to dine, if you must know," she said demure- ly. "Alone?" he demanded. "Ah, yes--unless," she dimpled, "I meet Prince Charming at the door, awaiting me in a coach and four or an eight-cylinder car of cream color with brown banding,. I just adore cream;colored cars, don't you, Tom?" He eyed her uneasily. "Say, will it be all right if I go along with you?" he asked. "If you can finance yourself--yes. Otherwise, no." She spoke candidly. "Well," he said a half-hour later when they were settled at a central table with an orchestra playing a vigorous melody, "I---I guess I don't understand women at all. I--why, I thought you liked to stay at home and cook and wear little soft- looking aprons--" "r don't," she cut in heatedly." "! hate to cook." He stared at her. "Jiminy, I nev- er knew you were so pretty, Naomi. You look so--so demure." "Demurel" she scoffed. "Let's dance this while they're hustling along the fodder, eh?'t "Pep," he murmured, well- pleased. "Ah, you have it, my dear. Pep! Super-pep, eh? And that pret- ty dress, I nev~er saw that before. Did I?" "I guess you never saw me bo- foze either, maybe? Huh?" And that night when he took her home after a movie and a lttle bite of supper they talked for a long, long time in the living-room. When he left, Aunt Dora came out. "Didn't Tom stay rather--late?" she asked gently. "Well, now that you speak of it, Auntie, I guess he did, a little," said Naomi softly. "And if it isn't midnight yet, I have a little entry for your diary today. If it's after midnight it makes it a day over three years. Tom and I are going to be married some time next month, Auntie." "'Well, now," murmured Aunt Dora. "We'll have to enter that item in the diary in red ink. Come to think of it, I had no black ink the day you met him end I entered that in red ink, tool's i Stagnation Is Corruption Better that we should err in ac- tion than wholly refuse to perform. The storm is so much better than the calm, as it declares the pres- | U-- kFOR A TASLE 26"HIGH I make them rigid. Have you any ence of a living principle• Stag- [ ] ~USEOSOARDS ~r"-~l suggestions as to how this may be nation is semething worse than I~II~~WffHI~OLES.// "]1 done~ B P." death. It is corruption also.-- l~~A~o THE Curtain rods are used through S~mms. --=~I~o~,~/,,, ~e ~o~ ~o ~o ~e ~o~ ~o~ ~.~uSEC~5;~.. P;[ ~er take along a spool to try when .,, il SMALL SPOOLS[ yOU shop for the rods; and get \\\dlbZ ~~7/~I~IANO 24LARGE~1 the type that has one piece fitting ~%__~'~'" "/~ ~"-~ t[II'~ONES-f'~[ inside the other. If the spools are 10 ~,[~"~. _--" II~--~"~i~usE~sRAs$] [ a little loose on the rod it won't l"$- -___ ...T~.~.?~-/~'-- CURTAIN ". ' '-~ I~.'t ~" [~"~~'IaOOS RUN/ I make any d,fference for they must 4~~. .-~r~-a~.--" ~r ~.~/~l ~l [THROUGR // ] be glued between each SpOol, and /~n/~ ~f =" 1~.'~// /~ ~DS~S/''~[ a]so between the spOOlS and the 7~¢~ #'~ ~'~ ~~; ;CTW~I table §helves... ~, If~"~ ~ ~ - _ SPOOLS~ NOTE: If you have an iron bed or a we take sensible care of our health. rocking chair you would like to modernize, Remember digestion and elimination ~I'~EAR MRS. SPEARS: I have be sure to send for my Book No. 3. It, are not as vigorous as in youth. We made a pair of spool shelves contains 32 fascinating ideas of things.to j don't get the exercise we need. Food like those you give directions for make xor your name, ~cna your archer m: still tastes good, and itts a constant .......... I temptation to eat more than is good m your ~:~ewlng~OOK 1SO 6 "!hey • , " ".. . I M.~ .~. wriT. ~p~a.~ I I for us. Then--spells of constipation are pamted watermelon pml~ to • • ...... I ........ ......... I I often bnng gas paros, coated ton[ue match me hewers in my oearoom [Bedford Hills New York I I and bad breath. Many have learned curtains, and they are very pretty I .... ~ , ~o.,. ,^~ ~..u ~. , I [ the value of ADLER1KA in helping hung at each side of the windows. I ........................... I I enjoy the sunny middle years..Get I would like to make some end ]Name .................. I I ADLERIKAtooayatyoururugg~st's. tables of spools for the living J Address ....................[ room, but I can t think of a way to ~. Life a Garment We never know the true value ~. .. ............................................................................................ ~ lot. friends. While they live, we l:f-"~ ~ ' il l are too sensitive of their faults; ]i ~/~ ~ .- .'~ .... .~ -- ~ .~ i[ ]when we have lost them, we only see their virtues.--J. C. Hare. I:%~...~////~/~ .~z ~":~,. I I I .,~ ,l~ i ..... " / }l I I=. Ili , ................................................................ ~ in No. 30 cotton and can be used as scarf ends, too.. ~~1 lilP::::~i~::6°~c;ntna~nsstldcTeCstl°;~oft°grSaept~ i ~ MOT"E" of set; materials required. Send order to: give I 'YOUR child I I I .me expert care used when :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: IIUIHTUPLETS F~r~~ ~1 CATCH.COLD I I TID C . I At the first sign 0,8. chest cold--the I li~.~,~l_t_*.~]~'~ I • # • I ]~ ~'f} I Quintuplets' throats and chests am I I I • c 'd ensMildMu, terola --"~--" - ~" rubbedw~th hfl r ' s I ~1,~,'~.~).~."~,~ I ~ ' 1 I --a product made to promptly relieve I J~~'--~:~.'~ ~ ~ "~r/~' .~ ~'~ ....... / the DISTRESS of children's colds and I I I[ ~ ~-~,~'~/~l-~-~- I resultingbronehialandcroupycouglm, I ~'~~'~.'@~@~-~ft::~ [ ~ ......... I Relief usually comes quickly because I ~h~~@ _.~:~'~ ~ I Musterole is MORE than an ordinary I ]~~~.~l~ ~l I "salve." It helps break up local con- I ~~.'~'~$~,~ NEW SWEET PEAS I gestion. As Musterole is used on the , , I Quints you may be sure you are usiuE l ~J~~~2~,"~-~:~ ~ NEW, more vigorous, longer- [ just about the BEST product made, LI reszstant sweet AlsomRegularandExtraStren thfor I ~[~,:Jk~~'.=.~;~ blooming, heat- ' I • g I ~It~~!l¢:~JK',Y]L~l~'~d~ll ...... ----~- ....-~ .^ / those preferring a stronger product. I ~.~'~TY-:~:~._~b - " - -- i pea Iamlly nas been lntl'U~lUUCt~ tu i • CHILDRE/~S I ~~!~~ the gardening world. It is the / ~~~ I I : J- UEI " spring flowering sweet pea. / II ! ! I t lii lilll I ql I Because of their newness, spring ] IillllltlilliIllll I x~=I;F~Yi?~ flowering sweet peas are as yetI I available in only seven colors. I I - -- " Three All-American prize-winners / i were introduced last year: Rose l Few Aceompl shments ~"-" ~ ~3 pink, blue, and lavender. The new ~ He that leaveth nothing to "=" ......... ones this year are white,, clear chance will do few things ill, but THE ever-popular pineapple de- pink, light lavender, and mauve, he will do very few things.---Haltb S-sign forms this lovely chair set. The new sweet peas are grown fax. Though so effective a design it is just like other types now in gen- an easy one to crochet. It is done eral-use. They may be planted outdoors as soon as the soil can T ., ~ In -h °e be worked. For best results the - -~ Learner fro t e D a ........ soil should be spaded to a depth of Touay mere is a source at learn- 18 inches, and the lower 12 inches ,.:-... ,- ...- d er supply formerly unknown. It mixed with fertilizer, preferably ' "-- ..... 1 • i in Wrlt, for a,to~ls o, ~ne,~en,~* is the sea. The casing or l n g well-rotted manure. The trench n.~ ADRENO.MI$T inhoion, of a whale's stomach provides a should then be filled with the soil- treo~m,nt. {M:)-Second rellel in S thousand square feet or more of strong leather which tans well. The skins of young sharks make a leather excellent for women's shoes because it takes dye perfect- ly. The hide of the manatee, or sea cow, is another source of leather suitable for footwear, while porpoise hide (which is ac- tually the skin of the beluga or white whale) is naturally water- proof. Rays of different kinds, very common in tropical seas, provide a fine and flexible leather and many other fish are being experi- mented upon. The difficulty is that in the case of most fish the skin is very thin and hard to remove without damage, while the tanning is also a matter requiring much care. fertilizer mixture to within six inches of the top, and the seed planted one inch deep in this shal- low trench. After vines are well established they should be watered thoroughly once every five to seven days, and the flowers picked regularly. Moral Truth The most natural beauty in the world is honesty and moral truth: for all beauty is truth; true fea- tures make the beauty of a face, and true proportions the beauty of architecture, as true measures that of harmony and mumc.--Earl of Shaftesbury. Out of every 10 cases. No mare Must bring relief costs you nothing. snt Costs less than 3c a Dayl ,ADRENO-MIST Asthma treatment costs le~s than 3c o day. Egective in vost majority o| cases ia every type of climate. I . NO HABIT-FORMING DRUGS- I ADRENO.MIeT contains no oplote$ or narcotics. It Is I based on a sta.dord USP Eplnl~phrfne solute;m, OUt I special nebulizer$ carry Adreno-MiIt direct tO infl~led i hIIiel. Re'it generally comes in 60 ieconds, I FREE TRIAL OFFER t I Why |~e¢ needletdyl Why handicop yourself IO¢lally I or in business1 Send for f~ll informotlon today. J S-K Research L~boratorles, fne. Phoenix, Arl¢, Short-Lived Joy The joy that isn't shared with another dies young. ilii THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU NICOTINE than the average of the 4 other lltrgest-selling clgarettes tested--less than any of them--according to independent scientific tests o~I the smoke i~lf. THE SMOKE'S THE THINGI