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
August 10, 1944     Golden Valley News
PAGE 6     (6 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 6     (6 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
August 10, 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




GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS interbureau FOR NEW FARMERS surge toward farming as of ag- committee on postwar pro- are likely to guiding principles for establish- others on farms, the com- prospective farmer should know how to farm, and he and his family should know like farm life. There is no good substitute for in farming." It,continued: "During the demobilization period, when many veterans and war workers will want to get started in farming, land values in many areas will be highly inflated. In this situation is may be advisable otherwise ready to assume the obligations to rent until land is available at its pro- ductive value. "Purchase of farms at inflated values should be strenuously avoided." The committee estimated about 350,000 families could find '~lecluate family farms" in the first five years after the war on existing farms or those that greater productivity. An addition- Gothic tine Near Rites Held For IJuds0n Woman - Democratic Candidates Presiclent Roosevelt, renominated by the Democrats in Chicago to seek a fourth term, and Senator Harry S. Truman of Missouri, who won the candidacy for vice president as Roosevelt's running mate, are shown above. Truman defeated Vice President Henry A. Wallace on the second ballot after Wallace lead on the first. GERMANY'S Gothic Line, long tout- eel "last stand defense" in Italy be- fore the Po River, is about to be faced by the Allied Italian armies. Gen. Clark's 5th Army, as shown on the map, is hammering into Piss the west anchor of the line and British troops inland are closing in onqFlorence. (International) Funeral services were held at 2 p. m. Sunday at the Convert fun- eral home for Mrs. Elizabeth Reif. 76, Judson, who died at 12:55 a. m. Saturday, July~ 29, in a Bismarck hospital. Rev. E. P. Meyer, New Sa- lem. officiated. The body was sent to Sumner, Ia., for burial. Survivors are a son and daugh- ter-in-law, Mr .and Mrs. R .D. Reif of Judson, with whom she had been making her home for the last seven years; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Pa- den of Sum~er, Ia., and four grandchildren. Her husband died 12 years ago. AUTO TAX STAMPS FAKED Seven men in custody at Buffalo charged with possession of counter- feit automobile use tax stamps as Secret Service agents reported smashing a ring dealing in whole- sale traffic in the bogus stamps. The Lone Ranger draining and clearing over a 10-year period, said the MASKED MAN GOT BAD VVD~D. FAI~/ report. WHEAT DOLLARS FOR WAR BONDS For the third successive season wheat farmers of the Great Plains are reaping a bumper crop and more dollars are pouring from the combine spouts than ever before in history. From the high plains of the Texas Panhandle north- ward through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and on in- to the Dakotas and Montana the golden harvest, this "miracle" wheat crop, will siphon a jack-pot of a bil- half dollars into the pockets of the growers. By Fran Sfriker I ! woo ; ro EAST, %ASO ! I I REL ,V WO p WHEN SOt.-)t ASKEq I ' \! DIER CO~E/~-- I KNOW < CAPTAIN~ I REALLY THINK ~ THAT INDIAN WAS TRY-/ ING TO TRAP US./ TI-IAT~ MAN wrrM /~/ WlPE-UM OUT] GE~: PLENT~ mrLe NINON, E'r wHrrE t, .N'S .iii ..... i t:ooTAI)ER o~ SOLDIE~ BEUEVE WHAT NTO SA~/,---I l[O~ 1[Im ~1¢¢ WE'VE GOT TO TELL THESE SOLDIERS THEY~E INTO AN INDIAN SUIT IS FILLED WITH ,NDIAN~J OU~ ~;COUT HAS GONE )----- I IN AMSUSH--- I AHEAD. IF THERE IS I~AN~ER "'- CAME TO WARN ) ~r-~" I Y. _ billion-bushel crop is bringing an ave- per bushel, a far cry from the big yield of 1931 when the price went as low as 25 cents. Wheat farmers will use this money for four things: 1. Pay debts. 2. Buy more land. 3. Make investments. 4. Purchase consumer goods. After two record crops at top prices, however, the farmers have just about liquidated their indebtedness. Land is hard to get and land speculation is boosting land prices. It is a risky business at best, as witness the sorry spectacle which followed World War I. There is little consumer goods for purchase. At best it is ersatz goods and at war time prices. That leaves investments, and the best investment in the world today is War Bonds. This huge wheat crop is going to be a big factor in winning the war, for* af- ter all food is a most vital weapon and this wheat crop is a big break for the United Nations war effort. So the wheat farmer is already helping to win the war. Why not, however, help more, and at the same time by taking advantage of War Bonds as best investment in the world. War Bonds are the one big opportunity for wheat farmers today. ± Medical Aid for a Soldier Beside a Jungle Trail ~io a=l t~e,motbex~ b~ore they po ! ~m~ed mms eoidd be tl, lUU~on'od to a ~ll~" peess~ imto Nret~ u am mmbalnce. The At~T ram& ma~ morn m~lt~i ot¢~m to ea~ so~ o~ £1h~ me= on the ~=edlu~ f~htla~ fronts. Army surgeons serve in the fror~t Army medical officer started him lines on everY front .to insuret on the,road tohealth._ -. ¢ Dromnt treatm~,~t of wounded l The Army nas me Des~ memcai - ~ "* t talent in the country. Wounded fighting men by experts, bu~ as ourI men are ireated by specialists in lines extend, the need for additionall their type of injury. In the field, medical officers increases proper- surgical teams are made up of ~onately. I surgeons who ace specialists in The sooner ~ wounded soldier treating compound fractures, chest wounds, abdominal wounds, or amputations. In Ibis war, less than three per cent of the men wounded in battle have died after being admitted to a hospital, compared with 7.4 per cent who died in hospitals in World War I. This record, according to Major General Norman T. Kirk, The Sur- geon General, is attributable to prompt and proper surgery, the use of large quantities of blood plasma together with whole blood it is needed, the use of sulfa care and ical care, the, better are his The Army's on the many lives which former are of ~e l SUT you ScouT You J lS DEAl::),/ WE y-~ INDIAN I FOUND V---"~//" F~IEN~ lHl ! ) /J SAID THAT, ~xr--~ ( i~JT I ~ON'T -:.:~:L~!~:~ "~:~:~:,:: ...... t I Corps may apply to The him to the General U.S, Army, Washington where an 25, D. C. Voting Record IShows Truman k New Dealer The Democratic Party's Vice Presidental n~mmee, Sen. Harry S. Truman, who came on to the nat- ional political scene as a protege of boss Thomas J. Pendergas~ of Mis- souri, has established a reputation for liberalism and integrity in the Senate. Truman gained nationwide fame as the chairman of the Senate Committee investigating the war production program because of the way his committee exposed the scandals and mistakes inevitable in such a huge spending pcoEram. Several court martials and prese- cutions have resulted from the Committee's investigations, au£1 the Truman Committee helped to elim- inate many of the bottlenecks and delays in preparing the Nation for war. Popular New Dealer Prior to his chairmanship of that Committee, Truman had been an inconspicious, but popular, mem- ber of the New Deal wing of the Democratic Party in the Senate. He rarely made speeches but voted re- gularly for the Administration mea- sures that helped to alleviate the depression and prepare the country for its part in the war. From a political standpoint, his voting record will help him in the coming campaign. He has great strength in labor circles, and has many friends among farm and Ne- gro leaders. Few Senators have a better record of voting for liberal measures. As a former artillery officer in the last war, with a distinguished record, Truman has always been popular with the veterans. His memory of the scandals of the last war and their effect on the return- ing war veterans has contributed to the zeal with which he has used his investigating committee to try to block them this time. Because of his political assets, many veteran observers in Wash- ington have long felt Truman was the most likely Vice-President nominee if Henry Wallace was turned dowrt by the convention. Simple Tastes President Roesevelt wanted Tru- man as chairman of the Democra- tic National Committee early in the year when Frank Walker resigned. but Truman prevailed upon him to name instead Robert E. Hannegan, his young political protege, who was so active in helping him win the nomination. A quiet, unpretentious person, aImost as simple in his tastes as Wallace, Truman is one of the most popular members of the Senate. His friendship with Senate collea- gues helped him tremendously to win the nominatior~ from the eon- evntion in which Senators played a major role. After his nomination, he an- nouneed he was resigning at once as chairman of the Truman Com- mittee so that the war investiga- tion would not be involved, in poli- tics. But he said he will remain in the Senate until after the election. So cool and that all your summer will be doubly pleasant! A skirt frock with open tereSting shoulder detail gives ample bust fullrmss. matronly figure. Barbara Bell Pattern No. designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 44, 48 ~nd 48. Size 36, requires 3~/4 yards of 3g-inch erlat Plan fall new fall "Paasing In Review" is now --co~talns 32 pages of in clothes the boys in mire -- "Date" frocks, sportswear, clothes 1~ home for Juniors and children. cents. For this in. coins, tern number and. Barbara Bell Strut, Chicego 7, ILL