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HANDS
having too little harvest help too late,
be made at once for obtaining those extra
business men from town, local boy
children from local areas, and other
can be obtained on short notice. They,
not be able to supply all the extra labor.
estimated that the Dakotas will need thou-
specially recruited men for shocking, thresh-
in the beet and potato fields. The county ex-
and the state extension offices are in
of the labor recruitment programs. In order for
them to get a complete picture of the labor needs, they
will have to have full cooperation from all those need-
ing laborers. Information on needs must be obtained
and assembled. The only source of that information
is those who need the help.
It takes time to arrange for the transportation of
seasonal workers from southern states. Prisoners of
war or troops can not come into the harvest field.~
over night. It takes weeks of planning, arranging and
~eparation. The state supervisors of the farm pro-
H. W. Herbison in North Dakota, is in high gear
He needs your cooperation and information
~om you if the program is to be successful.
jUNE DAIRY MONTH
June has been designated as Dairy Month. Dairy
~oducts are a war essential. They are needed oll
both the war front and the home front. The dairy in-
dustry and its products have a vital place in keeping
~erica strong and vigorous. Dairy Month provides an
_ ppuortuvjJ~v.~t n_ focu ~.:t.b ~_ettev:tj an voL£b
public on the part dairy products are playing in win-
GOLDEN VALLEY NEW~
[R pit i for a time after the war they o~uldI
edem on Value
d / "This experience," states F.L.
Conklin, "proved that a negotiable
Printe On Bonds bond wa= a placo f°r far-t
mers to invest money intended as
W~r Bonds are "depression a financial reserve. There is a ten-
., ......... ] dencv for these bonds to sell below
prooI, says ~. L ~onKlm, sm~e ~_ "~, ~ ,:~
p~, a~ , ~,mc when the farmer
chairman. He explains how the needs cash the most.
unique redemption feature will "'Profiting from this experience, i
prevent a farmer~ or any person, Ithe Treasury is now issuing the]
from taking the ~iicking" on War] popular E. F and G series in reg-:
Bon~ ~hat man- did when f~rc--~ t istered form only. Printed on every
~= ~ ~ ~Ibond is a table of redemption val-
to cash Liberty Bonds soon after ues--a art of the bond contr ct it
p a -
World War I. self. The owner of these bondsi
F. L. Conklin reports that some Iknows now what their 'cash-in'[
North Dakota farmers still remem-I value will be at any future period. I
bet how they were forced to sell] They are worth as much in a de-[
Liberty Bonds for 82 cents on the[ pression as a boom--~etually more, t
dollar in order to get cash to tide]for dollars buy more in a depres-[
them over the post-war slump of l sion. [
the early twenties. These Liberty
F.L. Conklin has found thatt
Bonds were negotiable securitiesi most farmers are buying War Bondsl
that the Government had agreed to as an investmen,t. They plan toI
redeem onJy a.t maturity. Un£il hold them until they mature-- [
that time they were bought and which is the smart thing to do for[
sold like any commodity and were much of the interest accumulates[
worth only what the buyer was! in the last five years. However,[
willing to pay. Later the sale value l they regm'd the fixed redemption[
of these bonds went above par, butJ values of the present War Bonds
I The Lone Ranger
as a valuable feature. To them it is[ creased. Following the inflation of
a gauaranCee that no. h~lder of I land values during the last war,
these bonds will ever be forced toI land prices broke sharply in 1920.
take a loss if he gets in a pinch Treasures in Heaven
and must have cash. t Ilya Ehrenburg, Soviet writer,
said in Moscow that five leading
COUNTRY DEPOSITS UPI Nazis have $30,000,000 in foreign
137 PER CENT ~ banks which they hope to leave to
their dependents "on their being
Demand deposits in county banks
(consisting largely of ordirmry
checking accounts) increased 137
per cent from 1940 to April, 1944,
according to the Bureau of Agri-
cultural Economics. Such an in-
creasing body of idle funds, more
than twice that of four years ago,
could cause inflationary trouble if
country depositors began using
their funds to bid against each oth-
er for the purchase of land at in-
creasing prices, the BAE advises.
Already land values have risen al-
most two-fifths above their pre-
war average--an increase that is
inflationary i~ many areas. Further-
more, in some of the principal
farming areas the volume of land
sales in 1943 surpassed previous
high levels reached ir~ 1919 and the
number of farms resold after only
a short period of ownership in-
hanged or guillotined." Ribben¢rop
has $5,665,000, Goering, $4.000,000,
Goebbels $2,490,000, Ley and Him-
mler smaller sums. Hitler's hoard
was not specified.
A further increase in farm and
town gardens in North Dakota is
estimated this season by NDAC
Extension Service. Information in-
dicates more than 90 percent of
farms and 80 percent of town fam-
ilies have gardens.
More than 3,000 cattle were treat-
ed for grubs in a control demon-
stratio~t conducted in five western
North Dakota counties.
The fresher the food is, the better
looking, better tasting canned pro-
duet it makes. And it keeps better,
1oo.
By Fran Slriker
"Play" Comes