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
May 11, 1944     Golden Valley News
PAGE 3     (3 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 3     (3 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
May 11, 1944
 
Newspaper Archive of Golden Valley News produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2024. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




Thursday, May 11, 1944 THE GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS PAGE THREE THE GOLDEN VALLEY HEWS A Weekly Published Every Thursday by The NEWS PUBLISHING CO. Fred A. Shipman, Editor N. C. SHIPMAN, Business Manager J. D. MacDOUGALL, Supt. Entered as Second Class matter at the Postoffice at Beach, North Dakota, Ogtober 7, 1936, under the Act of March 3, 1897. ADVERTISING RATES Display Advertising, per inch - $ .35 Local Contract. 52 weeks, inch 30 Readers. per line ...... .10 1 Card of Thanks. 10 lines - - - 1.00 Positively no exceptions will be made on the above rates SUBSCRIPTION RATES To addresses within North Dakota, and Wibaux and Fallen Counties, in Montana: One Year ........ $2.50 Six Months ....... 1.50 To addresses outside of North Dakota: One Year ........ $3.00 I Six Months ........ 2.50 No subscriptions accepted for le ss than six months "~VE SENT Itl~! TO SUNDAY SCIIOOL" She was standing before the I Judge, her face white with terror. I It was without doubt, the bitterest hour through which any mother eoul~ haste lived. She had heard the evidence and confessed within ker soul that it was conclusive. Her l boy was guilty. The judge was a kindly man, with a sympathetic heart, but he could not change the facts. The crime had been com- l~itted; the law prescribed the pen- ally; the court must do its duty. l~ut, as a last resort, he had called the mother up before him to coun- Sel with her, thinking she might be able to offer some solution. "Your Honor," she said, "I can't believe it. I don't understand it. We've always sent him to Sunday ~hool." "You say you have sent him?' the Judge queried. "But have you taken him? Have~ you furnished any religious training inside the home? Has he ever heard the Voice of prayer raised at a family altar? Has he ever had a religious book placed in his hand by a i~Other in whose religion he had Confidence? Has his father ever taken him aside for an evening to hmtruct him in the things Of God and righteousness? Or have you depended upon the Sunday school to train your boy in these matters ~hile you have been content with l|roviding him with food, clothing and a shelter? You see, it is ex- ~emely important that your boy thould be in Sunday school, but the teacher under whom your boy tits in school is limited by the re- ligious training you give him in Your home. If he comes to teacher ~rith some training, a superstruc- flare of faith and conviction can be raised on that foundation. But if he comes into the Sunday school ~iritually illiterate, the teacher ~Ust begin at the beginning, and 60 it in competition with the home ~thich, by its silence on such sub- Jeers, has trained him to think re- l~lon is of no importance. "You did well to send him to I~mday school. But when you sent you still had an obligation to Mm to discharge, and a responsi- bLllty to fulfill. You have not done Your duty unless you have done ~ore than send him to Sunday ~hool. Nothing less than parental training plus the Sunday school will lttffice. The times are so danger- • ~m that it will take the utmost that all of us can do to safeguard 0tar children in such a world."-- ~tchange. CORRECT ABUSES NOW The Price Control Act expires Jttne 30. Before it is renewed, it lhOUld be amended to correct taults that weaken price and ra- RO~ing control, by creating l~ublic ~Pposition. Under the ~ct as it tlbw stands, OPA lawyers have ~anaged to deny private citizens the right of appeal to the courts ~t the nation for relief from OPA lallings no matter how unjust they ~ay be. OPA officials, in effect, olaAm that inflation control is ~re important than personal li- ty, apparently assuming that th cannot exist together. Congress should immediately cor- l~et this dangerous drift toward t~Pression. As 'the Smith Commit- tee charged with investigating t~tecutive agencies, warns: "The Ol~ice of Price Administration has ta~Umed unauthorized powers to legislate by regulation and has, by l~tsinterpretation of acts of Con- ~ss, set up a nationwide system iudicial tribunals through which executive agency judges the t~tions of American citizens . . • i~ . " a tl The Office of Price Admanistr - I 0n has . . . matmged to take unto tself far more judicial power than • . the laws . . . could be con- atrued to grant. " a tloq~ne Office of Price Adminlstr - ten has consistently displayed a ndency, wherever conceivably l~t~ible, to avoid recourse to courts law, even to the extent of the statutes In some beyond all reasonable under- The Greatest Mother of All! "This situation inevitably tends • to bring the law into contempt and ridicule and creates widespread in- dignation and resentment among our citizens. Such an unfortunate situation will ultimately lead to a complete breakdown of the price control law and necessarily retard the effective prosecution of the war." V THE 1AND OF MIRACLES If Kit Carson and his colleagues of the wilderness could look upon the nation they explored not so many years ago, they would think indeed that many miracles had come to pass. They would see mir- acles v~here we of tod~y see nothing. In Kit Carson's day, distance was a mountainous obstacle to be traversed painfully on foot. The journey sometimes took months. Now, airliners and express trains have made the mountain into a molehill. When a housewife in the Middle West wants a dish of fresh strawberries or a crab cock- tail or fish for dinner, she has but to go to the nearest grocery store. If Kit Carson wanted them, he had to walk a few thousand miles to Maine or California. The fact that nearly 8,000 car- loads, of fruit and vegetables were shipped by express to all parts of the country ~during 1943, is no miracle to contemporary consum- ers. But to the pioneers of a hun- dred years ago who were acquaint- ed with nothing more speedy than a horse, the spectacle of a modern refrigerated car loaded with deli- cacies robing at sixty miles an l~our across deserts and mountains would have been overwhelming-- the work of gods from another world. The miracle of refrigerated ex- press is not a creation of super men, but merely the work of the American business men. It is only one of thousands of miracles that make the United States a good place to live. During the next hundred years, thousands more such miracles will be created by the same kind of men--provid- ing this country remains a land in which men are free to create miracles. V~ THE COMING ATTACK The tremendous task of invading the western shores of Europe by American and British troops is about to begin. It seems a very difficult task to attack those Nazi fortifications, which the Oermans claim are so formidable. Against them, the American and British troops are provided with the very best weapons that military and technical science can provide, and in an enormous volume. The Germans will be hindered by the job of destruction which ABied fliers have been doing on the railroad supply lines back of the front. The railroad centers through which troop and supply trains need to pass will have been hit again and again. One might guess that these trains will find slow going to get to the front. The Germans do not know where the attack will come. They depend on quickly shipping forces to the points attacked. With their rail- road lines in confusion, will those reinforcements be able to get to the front when needed? It is not surprising that the German people are reported to be jittery as they face this attack. HOME ToWN PARTNERSHIP It should be the aim in any com- munity to make people feel that they are partners in the common enterprise of maintaining that town, and that they all own a share in it. If they get that feel- ing, they are likely to back up the home town causes witqa their labor and money in so far as they can afford it. Young people will feel that they have an interest in maintaining the neatness and beauty of their home town, and this should keep them from throwing refuse in the streets and public places. Home owners who feel this sense of partnership will" be keener to keep their own dwellings in perfect order, so that they shall have done their share in maintaining an attractive town. ~-V-~ Do your shopping in Beach! I I d _I ~ ~AVE you tried Alka-~lt- .~- ~- v3 ~L~ nmr for Gas on Stomme.~ ~.~.~ Sour Stomach, "Morning |~ t'}t~! After" and Cold DJstreat J~ ..~.J If not, why not? Pleasant. ~[k~..~% prompt in action, elfeetive. ~'~ Thirty cents and Sixty ~- | c,.t,. °'-N ERVINE MILES FOR relief from Functional Ner- vom~ Disturbance8 such as Sl~P- l~sn¢~b Crankin~s. ~bilRY. Nervou Hm~lache and Narrows ln- dieestion, Tablehs ~ and..15#. Liquid ~5# and $1.00. R~d. ttoM and use only as dlrecte~ em~,.1 ~ I i g'Jd h l'JI li~ SmGLZ Dr. ~m. Anti- T-:~at -"!-Pain Pill often ~wl ~ U He~t~che, Mma~dar Fa~, A~_._\ or Functional Monthl~ 4~.~k~J Pains--25 for ~S¢, lS5 ~%: ~orSl.o*. e,~ th,~ at ~.our /,/fi2~ drug ,,tan. Read d/reef.on#. •'~ %/ snd we ~Ir m dh~ete~ ~ Z ~_ 4 f~i.~da C~mpanN, Lon~ Island Citll, N. Y. Franchised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Hettlnge~ EVERY LIITLE HELPS People are sometimes deterred from doing things to help the war program by the thought that the little they can do will make no appreciable difference. When each one of many millions of people does some small thing, the aggregate result is tremendous. People may say that the few bonds they can buy will only be an infinitesimal fraction of the totar amount to be raised. But when millions of people are buying these bonds, the total result finan- ces the great war. It is the :~ame in making surgical dressings, knit- ting for the servicemen, and hun- dreds of more things. Millions of people, each doing his small part, create the most powerful war pro- duction in the world. ~'V The way the Republicans are gaining ground in every state elec- tion, the outcome of the Presiden- tial election in November is a foregone conclusion.. This should illuminate the handwriting New Deal appointees with the same speed as was used by the Roose- velt administration when It took over the nation's political plums. Politics is polities and always wilI [be. "To the victors belong the spoils," and the spoils are appoint- ments from fourth class postmast- ers to Federal judges. Get r~ to move, you political leeches. ~-V~ It used to be said that people on the wall that signs the finis voted just as their fathers used to. for the numerous New Deal politi-fin the present state of intelligence cal appointees, regardless of the bunko democratic civil service law. they have got so far that many :A republican administration can, vote for the one they think will and will, "de-office" the democratic win. THE OLD JUDGE SAYS... / "Glad you dropped in, Judge. I was just~ trying to explain to Mary what you told us down at lodge last night.., about all the grain used to distill war-alcohol not really being used up. She didn't realize it, either." "It's true, Mary. Wherever the govern- ment has permitted distillers to purchase the equipment necessary to reprocess the used grain, at least 50% of the feed value (25% by weight) of the whole grain is being recovered and returned to farms like yours in the form of premium-quality live- stock feed. Only the starch is removed during distilling.., the part recovered is a highly-prized concentrate containing valu, a~le proteins, fats and carbohydrates. The distilling industry really has taken a leading part in the development of new cattle and poultry feed products frorrl~zeprocessed grain.., products rich in vitamins B~ and ]32... so essential to satisfactory growth and production. And the recovery of grain will apply also to the making of whiskey when production is resumed." Tits ado~tiument spon.~rcd by Co~f~¢.¢. of Alcoholic B~eralle Industties. I~.~. CALL AND SEE US... WE HAVE THE MATERIAL TO FIX YOUR HOME THE EASY There is no better time than the present to start your spring cleaning. Start with the outside of your home. Fix it up with a gleaming coat of paint that just shouts freshness. For Paint, Wall Paper, Wall Coverings, or Varnish, see us. We also have a nice selection of Floor Coverings at bargain prices! A. OVERsTAD & SON Beach, North Dakota