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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
September 21, 1944     Golden Valley News
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September 21, 1944
 
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Thursday, September 21, 1944 THE GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS LOCALS Mrs. Eugene Hathaway of Beach is a hospital patient in Dickinson, Mr. Matecjek of Hebron, father of C. J. Matecjek of the Pentmy, store, is spending a few days in Beach visiting at the home of his~ son, enroute to Twin Falls, Idaho, where he will spend the winter with his daughter. Dance at Sentinel Butte - Friday Eve., Sept. 22nd Old and New Time Music. Good Time For Everybody. Come Out and Celebrate Our Bountiful Harvest. I I I I I ] H I I I II II I ] i II Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Algulre, who • The Misses Olga Moyer and Mar- ~ Pfc. Ernest Orr returned to his have been visiting with friends and I vel Erbele entertained Mr. and Mrs. I camp at Daytona Beach, Fla. Tues- relatives in Faribault and Min-T. L. Dickinson, Guy Cox and lday, September 19th, after s~end- neapolis returned home on Tuesday IGeorge Hoeck at dinner on Sunday ling an emergency furlough- with afternoon, at the Moyer home. ~ ~ his family. , : IAttle Garry Fish observed his Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ewalt and Glenn Anstot of Tacoma, Wash., birthday anniversary at the home children are here on a 21-day fur, of his,. ~ndparen~, Mr, and" Mrs. lough from Mr. Ewalt's camp In Raymond Noyes, on Tuesday eve- Texas. Mrs. Ewalt plans to remain ning by* •having a few friends over after Mr. Ewalt returns to camp for "soup." Miss Virginia Noyes for a longer visit with her parents, observed her birthday anniversaz Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fletcher, who on Sunday. ~j live near Wlbaux. I THE OLD JUDGE SAYS... [ :: more...it must provide the base for such : .d:spensable products as synthetic rubber, : mtterproof glass, lacquers, plastics and "Yes, I'm afraid there's no denyi::' :" -. ...jeetmand trucks andotimr k~, ;, ized equipment have taken the I c: . ;-:.ay other of our requirements so essential t } victory. "As a result hundreds of millions of gal- lons are required every year...half of which is being produced by the beverage distilling industry. Bet you didn't know that, Eben." "'As a matter of fact, I didn't. Judge. That's a mighty important war contribution that had escaped me completely." good old horse inmodem warfa:': "It's true of lots of things in t ~ '~ ~. Every day we hear of ~w i :, : i requirements and new uses of p:c = instance, take the alcohol that is t:==d ~ war purposes. In World War 1, thls vi~:Jiy needed product was used mostly in making smokeless powder, chemical warfare matc:i- als and medical supplies. Today it must do Both Philh'ps Research Laboratar/es tory.., a fl~ing laboratory for a Phillips pioneering research project. Phillips recendy wasflrato condu .ca a flight test program to determine the anti-knora: p~ormance of aviadon gasolines.., not in earth- bound test moeors.., but in combat-type engines under actual flying conditions. PHILLIPS HIGH PLACE in ~e war production 0fbumdiene fc~ synthetic robber, 100-octane avk. ..4a~g~t~L-~4ava-t~m4ar a,~ ~ :~ho ,-, result of Phillips long y'eatsof l~cedme rest"'"[ | to extend the frontiers of knowledge concerning hydro-carbon chemistry. Who can predict what great new benefits will flow to motorists after victory, as the resuh of Ph!llips wartime exploration of the limitless pos- stbdities of the chemical production of uew and better things from petroleum gases as **'ell as from petroleum/ This much can be predicted with confidence: With the coming of peace, car-owners will be offered a vastly improved postwar Phillips 66 Gasoline. In the meantime, whenever you see the Phillips 66 Shield, let it remind you that Phillips great refineries are gigantic ckemical plants pouring out weapons iof ~,ctory. PtIILI.IPS PE'FRoI.EF.M COMPANY, Barhesvi//c, O/e/a. who-has been here during the har- vest season went to Sidney, Mont. for a short visit on I~iday before i returning to his home Ln Tacoma. Friends of Miss Helen Dickinson will. be sorry to hear of her illness in the Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis. Miss Dickinson is tak- ing cadet nurses training at North- western. The Misses Irma and Lucille Schumaeher left for eastern states on Saturday. Irma went to Min- neapolis, where she will be employ- ed, and Lucille to St. Joseph's aca- demy, where she" will attend college. Miss Barbara Weinacht of Long Beach arrived in Beach on Thurs- day and is a house guest of Mrs. Edgar KukowskL Her father, Nic Weinacht, who usually comes back to Beach for a visit each year was unable to come this year due to illness. Mr. and Mrs. John Knopp re- ceived word of the death of their grandson, Gary Fredrick Kautz at Billings, Mont. Gary was the 21- month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. LFrcdrick Kautz, Jr., and passed ~.~gO" .~rL49,, ..vg.,'h~ ..in .~ _BDlt~: hospital of complications resulting from burns. The child was burned on Tuesday of last week in the course of play. He was an only child. Wednesday was the first day of the 1944 hunting season and many of the "sure-shots" of the com- munity were out combing the fields in quest of the elusive game birds. The~e seems to be an abundance of game but the hunters are la- menting on the shortage of ammu- nition and state that the art of putting salt on pheasant's tails doesn't go so hot. "Mugs" Walker reports that he even tried to run them down. II _.J . I I Our sincere apologies to Pfc. Don Carlson. Don asked that we put his address in the paper so that his friends could write him, but we are not allowed to publish the ad- dresses of service men ,overturns; We will/however, be only too glad to give his address to his friends if they will call at t~ts office. The first large auction sale of the fall will be~ held at the Alfre@ Reinholz farm south of Sentinel Butte on Wednesday, September 27. Owing to continued poor health, Mr. Reinholz has decidec~ to give up farming operations. Read his sale ad in this week's Golden Val- ley News. George E. Omley, 20, of Beach recently was awarded the silver wings of a pilot at the La Junta Army Air Field, Colo. He was graduated as a second lieutenant after completing the final phase of flight training as an Aviation Cadet In the AT-24 airplane, a slightly modified version of the famed Mitchell B-25 medium bomber. Mr. and Mrs. Chem. King and daughter Jean; Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Upgaard and daughter laarieal of Glendive and Mrs. Ja& King, mother of Chas. King, of Bellingham, Wash., called on Mrs. John Gifford enroute to Sentinel Butte on Sunday to visit at the T~vlor and Ted Cook homes. Mrs. Jas. King is a sister of Taylor and Ted Cook. Miss Ethel Krause, former resi- dent of this community, is return- ing to Beach for a visit, leaving Portland, Ore. by plane September 17. Miss Krause heads the bond department for Columbia Aircraft Industries. where she is employed. The company is engaged in the manufacture of various airplane parts. In. addition to her duties as head of the War Bond department Miss Krause is chairman of ghe Young Democratic Association of Portland. She will be remembered as a grade teacher in the local school. ~*ee*~****'en%*****~*****:i t ANNOUNCEMENT I wish to: annodnce'to the public that I have i ~. rented my blacksmithing ann welding aepartment to :~ Sam Schmidt, .formerly of Dickinson. Mr.' Schmidt, is }~ a very good'workman and I can recommend him to .?. ~. our many customers and patrons, i~ t SORENSON MACHINE SHOP • i IN TIME OF PEACE hu.dred of Phillips chemists and'engineers devoted themselves, in the glass-bricked laboratory pictured above, to search for product betterment. Car-owners reaped the benefit in improved gas- olines and lubricants, ar ~rices which represented ever-increasing value for the money. IN TIME OF WAR, Phillips research activities are sharply focused on the requirements for victory, and the U. S. Armed Forces... and you, not as a car-owner but as citizen and raxpa'rer.., reap the benefit in improved products, at pt~es which repre- sent ever-increasing value for the money. The Phillips airplane pictured above, with its unique test and measuring devices, is also a labora- - • ,! ' 5PE[IAL5 While It Lasts! • ~ "lt1 :W.e, ~der to cut down our stock before movl g to ~ ne:~_, location, are offering our Paints and Varnish at~~ Special Low Prices! Chi-Namel Paint is manufactured by the Minnesota Linseed Oil and Paint Co., and is: the finest money can buy. ,The ~st pigments thoroughly ground in aged linseed oi[:~ke possible this fine paint. ""'~i EVERED BARN PAINT A bright red, liquid barn paint which challenges all competitive first-quality paints for durability and covering capacity. An unusual value at a special sale price. Super House Outside Paint in 5-gal. lots - $2.69 Super House Outside Paint in 1-gaL lots - $2.~9 Super House Outside Paint per quart - ~ Evered Barn Paint in 5-gal. lots - - -. $1.~. Evered.,Bm/n Paint in 1,gal. lots - - - $1,75 Shingle Sta~ in 5-gal. lots, per gal. - - - $1,56 lyeR r la-~ "w ~tr "l-.,Rni-~-'g :~r~Ic-- - - Rex Flat Wall Paint per quart 65¢ Coat-O-Lite Inside Paint per gallon - $2.95 Coat-O-Lite Inside Paint per quart - - 87¢ Kitch-N-Tint Gloss Paint per gallon - $2.98 Kitch-N-Tint Gloss Paint per quart - - 87~ Rapido Enamel per quart - - - $1.05 Sash Black per quart ........ 60¢ Sash Black per pint ......... 35¢ Fl*)or Enamel per quart ..... 98C F!(mr Fnamci l)('r ])int ........ 60C