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;October 14, 1943
is. /i
IwEEKLY NEWS
ANAL,SlS
Steady Allied Drives in All
iit Continue to Keep Axis on D,
ifl Cong u Studies Higher Tax . .,
i!iAFL Po.twar Goals for Umon l
-I
EDITOR'S NOTE : When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those ot [~
] ~estern Newspaper Union's news analysts and net neeess~trlly of this newspapeT.) I!
IS
~| Released by Western Newspaper Union, --- ~-
TEL[FACT
BRITAIN'S HIDDEN TAXES
@@@e O@00e .
SEER
)0@00000
| Each symbol represenls 10% at ,'eloi! price~
REPAIR FARM
- BUILDINGS
.greater production
British taxes on some items are interesting ~in the iigh~ of Secretary
~f the Treasury Henry Morgenthau's request fo~ 10~ b't'llon dollars of
new revenue, partj~L~'hfch would be raised by t~x~tl~A of goods.
~F~- EUROPE:
"All~es at Walls
With the big battle yet to come,
Allied forces sparred with the Nazis
all along the outer wall of For-
"tress Europe.
In Italy, the Americans and Brit-
:Ish moved slowly northward toward
•tome through stubborn Nazi rear-
'4~aard action. Entrenched in the rug.
~ed terrain, the Germans held back
~xix~ed troo~ with mortar and ms-
gun ~'m, only giving Up their
~'om~ to move to new positions
.~Qn Clark andMontgomerybrought
superior concentrations of artil-
lery end me~
In an attempt to draw out the
~ .German fleet for a fight, British and
~J~nerican naval units raided the
~azis' ehipp/ng center of Bodes in
~florthern Norway. But the German
eel refused to be lured into the
:trap.
Izl. the Aegean sea, the Nazis re.
apmred the islands of Kos and Le.
,ros, which serve as bases from
~Which an invasion fleet moving into
Greece can be shelled and bombed.
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC:
~/ladang Next
Holding the initiative, Allied forces
,sl~oved swiftly up the northeastern
~eoast of New Guinea, to clean out
remaining lap air and sea bases in
area of Australasia.
Latest Allied goal was Madang,
~a~Other of the strong points which
=~he Japanese established to harass
~any force attempting to move north-
~7~ard by sea or land. Driving for-
ward through tropical country, the
Allies neared the first ring of Ma-
dang's defenses, apparently manned
~Y a medium-sized garrison, of the
gTPe being sacrificed by the enemy
~2ommand in brief holding engage-
~ents.
Pressed in by superior Allied
in the central Solomons, the
were evacuating the island of
and moving their
~roops to the north by barge. AI-
r, though the laps moved the barges
qby night, concentrations were dis-
:overed along the shores by day,
nd these were peppered by Allied
~Riers.
iABOR:
AFL Meets
Labor's goal after the war will be
~he establishment of free, democrat-
ic trade unions in
countries, AFL
President William
4~reen declared in
oPenlng the ~rd an.
'.~Ual convention of
~he American Fed-~J
~eration of LaiSor in
~~
Sur~v~ of the ~.~
~-m In the U. S. will -
4epand upon Amer. William Green
z ean business' abil-
ity to provide employment after the
~r, Green said~ Unless production
stimUlated, the people will lose
e.onfldence in business leadership,
"~e declared, and turn to government.
The need for 15 million homes aft-
• r the war will afford one means of
employmen% for seven mile
uon Workers for many years, Green
eald.
Chief interest of the convention
was the AFL'g action on John L
'Lewis' application for re-entrance of
'the United Mine Workers into the or-
s some zaetlons, ti~ere were indies.
flous the path might be cleared for
accepting Lewis through further
negotiations.
TAXES:
Ask/or More
To add to present collections of 38
billion dollars, Secretary of the
Treasury Henry
Morgenthau asked
congress to raise an
additional i0½ bil-
lion dollars in new
taxes.
Morgenthau pro-
pos~ raising 6~
billion dollar| by in-
creasing personal
income taxes and
cutting exemptions He -- /
for dependents. To ~,~.:~',~t~.,
bring in another 1 ,,-~,ae~m
billion, I00 million do~ ,~orpora"
lion taxes woul~kJ~,~oosted.
The rema~r of the money
would be r~a4sed by sharply inereus-
tn~tgxt'~on tobacco, liquor, amuse-
men~s and luxuries. New taxes
wo]J[d be placed on candY, chewing]
g~, soft drinks and greeting cards.
]~rgenthau also recommended
~oroadening of the social security
program to include practically all
workers and provide ~emporary dis-
ability and bospitallza~on benefits.
On hearing Morgenth~U'S propos-
als, Rap. Robert Dought~n said: "I
do not See at this time h~w we can
make the full increases requested."
DRAFT:
Senate Acts
With Sen. Burton Wheeler's bill to
defer the drafting of fathers until
January 1 doomed, the senate acted
on a substitute measure of Sen. Jo-
siah Bailey, designed to tighten
grounds for deferment of govern-
ment employees, and providing for
the appointment of a commission to
re-examine physical standards so as
to permit use of many present 4F's.
Senator Bailey's bill also included
a proposal of Sen, Robert Taft, un.
der which no deferment could be
granted unless the appeals board of
the district where the employer
makes the. request gives its approv-
al.
Although the majority of the draft
hoards held off the induction of fa-
thers until congress acted ou the
issue, dads were being called in
some instances. All told, 446,000
were supposed to be drafted by Jan-
uary 1 under the services' an-
nounced plans. However, the senate
debate revealed that many more
may be drafted because of navy de-
mands.
WHEAT:
Restrict, Feed
Commodity Credit corporation
sales of wheat to feed mixers mutt
be used for dairy cows and laying
hens only, the War Food adminis-
tration announced. At the same
time, the WFA said "an effort is
being made to discourage the feed.
lag of market hogs to weights in ex.
cess of 200 pounds, or of beef cattle
beyond fair to good finish."
To aid in relieving the eastern
feed shortage, CCC revealed it was
seekin~ to import wheat from South
America, with the amount to be
brought in determined by the ship-
ping available. No corn could be
imported, CCC said, because drouth
has crippled the crop.
To encourage the accumulation of
a larger country corn inventory by
butyl alcohol and butyl acetate pro-
ducers, OPA redefined • bushel of
corn as of 56 pounds weight and 15.5
per cent moisture. Since the price
of the chemicals had been tied to
a base cost of a bushel of corn, high
moisture content failed to reflect
true mar~ins,
HIGHLIGHTS ... i. t~,e ~,~', .,~g
.s~ot ~ indtvtdu~ in.
AUTO8: Dealers in new automo.
the war bilss will have to cell to customers
holdin~ ~tes en a "ar~-~om~
ba~" ~r, aeeord.
/rig tO an Office of Price
THE GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS
PAGE SEVEN
Sees City's End
Beeaus,e the automobile, air-
plane and helicopter will reduce
travel time, more
znd more people
v,ill abandon con-
g~,~ted cities and
m~ve to outlying
districts, says
Frank Lloyd
~Vright, one of
the foremost
leaders ~n the de-
velopment of
modern architec-
tu:e. Frank Lloyd
The home of Wright
the future will
contain much glass to permit sun-
shine and light, Wright says, and
o~ae will have a little farm.
Smoke Will be eliminated
-rough ~the development of mod-
heating systems, Wright pre-
and the entire country will
Ceiling
the first day price ceilings on
rags went into effect in the Chi-
stockyards, virtually all classes
brought producers the $14.75
pounds ~op.
$14.75 for good 170 to
and good sows from 300
Good 140 to 160 pound-
475 to 700 pound sows
from $14.50 to $14.75.
20 major markets received
on the first day of the
~g, 51,000 below the pre-
ceding- week. In Chicago, the light-
er receipts were reflected in a fen-
er , pri~e rise, resulting in almost
th, sarape return for all grades.
R JSS~A:
'~ ~l~ Line'~Hitler
lY~tg to the Nazis' Dnieper river
de=--.,Z]~e line, Adol£ Hitler addressed
hi~ /~enerals in these words: '~Iere
~/m, and here I shall stand."
As Hitler spoke, the last of the
German rear-guards were falling
back to the new lines, and the Rus-
sians encountered stiff resistance as
they approached the Nazis' main po-
sittons. Driving rain further imped-
ed the Reds' march.
Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithe
uanla were included in the Nazis'
new defense line. Except for a
stretch in the north and one in the
south, the new line was anchored on
the west bank of the Dnieper river.
Broad along most of its course,
with steep western banks, the-Dnie-
per offers strong means of resist-
ance. The Germans have massed
artillery on these western banks to
shell Russians concentrating for at-
tack.
BRITISH NAVY:
New Chief
To tough, 59-year-old Admiral
Andrew Browne Cunningham went
Great Britain' s most
responsible fighting
assignment, first sea
lord and chief of
naval staff.
Cunningham's ap-
pointment followed
the Italian fieet's
surrender to the A1-
lies after it had
been driven to cov-
er by superior Brit-
ish forces under his Sir A, B.
command. An old Cunnin~ham
navy man, Cunning-
ham served in the Mediterranean
during the First World war, and in
the South Atlantic waters during the
Boer war.
To Cunn/ngham will fall the re-
sponsibility for operating the great
naval armada upon which Britain
depends for keeping its supply lines
open, in war and peace.
Ctmningham succeeds Ads. Dud-
ley Pound, often called the '*father"
of the BritiSh navy's modern ag-
gressive tactics.
BOMB EUROPE:
Hit Nazi Industry
Continuing ~ hammer th~ Ger-
man industrial machine, American
Flying Fortresses struck Frankfort
in a daylight raid, using high level
precision methods to pick out and
destroy production areas. Twelve
hours later, s huge British force "fol-
lowed up the attack, dropping 500
tons of bombs, and leaving many
sections of the big city burning. Mo-
tors, chemicals and tires are manu-
factured there.
Other targets in western and
northern Germany were also as-
saulted by Fortresses and Libera-
tors, one force disrupting installs.
tions at the Nazi-held air base at
St. Dialer, France. All flights were
escorted by P.47 Thunderbolts, and
all reported meeting violent opposi-
tion.
Because the Germana have
massed anti-aircraft guns around in-
dustrial installations and concen-
trated on fighter plane production,
bombings of Europe have become
more difficUlt it has been revealed.
OIL:
More From Others.
Nations with surp~u~ ~ck~ Of
troleum should be edcoureged to in.
crease production and thereby fo~.
stall the deplLqttm of the United
reserves, a group of west-
era senators mid repreeent~ves
reductions
the City of Beach to complete the!
quota in the jury list of the
county, the Council then procesS-
ed to select jurors, resulting in the
following names being drawn: Mary
J. Hudson, Mary, Noyes, Sof~s i
Holthe and Chas. Woodsend.
There being no further bu~ine;.s
a motion to adjourr~ w~s made b3
D)ckinson and seconded by Sch:llz
Carried.
Regula~ Meeting, September 7, 1945 Attest:
ELLEN J. ARI~OLD,
A regular meeting of the Cit Deputy City Auditor.
Council of the City of Beach, N. R. W. JOHNSON,
Dak. was held on Sept. 7, 1943. Mayor.
Members present were Mayor R. i
W. Johnson and Aldermen T. L. [ -V~
Dickinson, M. E. Freese. H. H. Hal-) OPA PLEASE NOTE
stead, W. C. Schulz and H. R. I
Thompson. Alderman M. P. LovgrenI
being absent. ! The story of the creation of the
The minutes of the regular meet-iworld is told in Genesis in 400
ing of August 4th were re~d and I
approved on motion by fI.lsteaC
and seconded by Freese.
The following bills on file with
the Auditor were read and con-
sidered:
Mathieson Alkali Works, Sanita-
tion HTH, $3.00; Dickinson Plumb-
ing & Heating, Repairs. $2.35; Gam-
ble Stores, Misc. Hardware, $19.66;
State Bonding Department, Bond
for Deputy City Auditor, $2.50;
Beach Public Library. Contribu-
tion. $25.00: N. W. Bell Telephone
Co., Local service, tolls & tele-
gr:~,lns, $5.15; Olaus Rishovd. ~ipe
Fittings & Labor. S43.02 • M, .nt-
Dak. Utilities Co.. Power. lights
words. The world's greatest moral
~ode---the Ten Commandments~
contains only 297 words. Lincoln's
immortal Oettysburg address is but
266 words in length. The Declara-
tion of Independence required only
1,321 words to set up a new con-
cept of freedom.
"Let Me Get Yn Seine
& gas, $132.55; Mont.-Dak. lltill- OR. MILES .
ties Co., Street Lights, $114.37:
Lamps, $31.50, $145.87; James Kelly,
Work at Dump Grounds, $27.00; i'
Earl Jones, Janitor Work, ~2.50;
City of Beach, Water used in I~all,
$1.25; The Texas Co., Gas, $9.56.
K. K. Farstveet, Hay, $4.00; Bench
Volunteer Fire Department, F~re-
men's Services, $19.50; Neptune
Meter Co., Meter parts, $22.46; C. ~!i~'~
O. ttalvorson, Auditor's Salary,
$75.00: L. J. Erickson, Police Sal-
ary, $100.00: Glenn P. Cook. :;al-
ary, $150.00 • Loan to Holiday, l
$2.45; Loan to Hirsch, $2.00, $:54.~5;f ][~7ITH YOUR responsibilities,
Ellen J. Arnold, Deputy Auditor's~ Y~'.can you afford to let a Head-
Salary $75.00; express & pc~,t~ ge }
on repairs, $1.85; Typewriter paper, Iache, Muscular Pains, Functional
$3.00. $79.85; Golden Valley News., Monthly Pains or Simple Neural-
Publishing Council Proceedings,[ gia slow you down? Dr. Miles
$117.14; Petty Cash Fund. $10.00,
Anti,Pain Pills have been bring-
Edward Hirsch~ Labor, $9.90; Joe
Davis, Labor, $102.00: J. D. Holiday,
Labor, $91.80; Lewis Rooms, Romn
for transient, $1.00; Davis & l-I,~;.-.
day, $18.00. $19.00; Park C~fe,
Meals for transient. $1.50, Day..,
& Holiday, $59.05, $60.55; Doerner's
Care, Meals for Holiday, $1.99; L.
A. Kirst, Repairing shoes for Holi-
day, $1.25; G. Gllbertson, Plate
glass window & replacing, $43.29;
Victory Tax Fund, Deductions from
wage~, $35.64.
Moved by Dickinson that bills be
paid except the bill of G. G, ilbert-
son for ~1~9, for replacing broken
window, which was fllecL for further
investigation. Motion seconded by
Thompson. Roll being called, Dick-
inson, Freese. Halstead, Schul~ and
Thompson all voted "Yes". "Nos"
none. Motion declared carried.
A committee of four ~azmers met
with the Council relative to secur-
ing City water for farm use. It
was agreed that a pipe should be
erected at the hydrant at the south-
east corner of the City Park, Just
west of the Golden Valley Lumber
Yard to be used for this purpose.
A certificate from the State Bond-
ing Department snowing tha: Ellen
J. Arnold had been legally bonded
to the position of Deputy C~ty Audi-
tor in the sum of $1,000.00 was pre*
sented and approved as to suffic-
iency.
Notice having been received from
the County Clerk of Court that four
jurors names were required from
ii i ii
ing relief from these common dis-
comforts for nearly sixty years.
Countless American housewives
consider Anti-Pain Pills almost
as much of a necessity in the
medicine cabinet, as is flou~ in the
kitchen cupboard. They have Dr.
Miles Anti-Pain Pills in the house,
many of them carry these little
pa~'relievere in purse or lmiKl-
bag. They are prepared for these
minor aches and patz~ that some-
times occur in ahnoet every family
--ARE YOUT Dr. Mfle~ Anti-
palm Pilk are pleasant to take
and do not upset the stemach,
Get Dr. ,Mflu AJati-Pain Pills
at your drug store. Regular
package 25 tablets ~5¢. Economy
package 125 tablets $1.00. Read
directions and use only as direc-
ted,
|11 I
The office of price admlnlstra-
tlon uses 2~500 words to announce
a reduction in the price of cab-
bage seed.
The Third War Loan drive is
over, but keep on buying Bonds!
I I I
How to de it with
CONCRETE
and save scarce mater/a~
To increase food production to meet
war requirements it is essential that
buildinp used tohooseUve~tockand
store crops be in good repair.
' Concretefotmdaflo~ unde~ bam~
hog houses or poultry houee~ will
the~e b~Idin~e to usefuin~a "
and provide protection ~gainst rot,
termites and waste and dam~e
caused by rats.
lem~ ~mo klat, " R es~ OM ~ ~
Building# W~h Con~e~'~ tells how
to make e~Naflal repah~ with
nse o~ IRtle ~no steel ~ ethe~ |~e~:e
materis~
me ~e mumm,em ~mNmme~e~e~e
PORTLtND CEMENT AS$OCLATIOH
Send me free heckler, "R~ O~ ~l
Buildi~s With Co.~et~"
Str~f or R. R. No .....................
c/~ ........................ s~s ......
i i i ii
II I II I
Auction Sale!
I
Having decided to quit farming owing to my age and health,
and as I am moving to Dickinson, I will sell at Public
Auction, 4½ Miles South of Beach, on
Wed
., October 20th
f
The Following Described Property
II I I
SALE STARTING AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.
Lunch Will Be Served by the Catholic Ladies Guild. Bring Your Own Cups.
m i I I ii i i ii i i i
Livestock
Seven Head of Whitefaced Steers, coming 2 Years old; One Roan Cow, 5 Years old,
milking; Two Spring Calves, one steer and one heifer; One Jersey Bull, 9 months
old; About 100 chickens and 30 Turkeys.
Farm Machinery
One Case 25-40 cross-mounted Tractor; one Tandem Disc, 9-foot; One Van Brunt
Double Disc Drill; One 4-section Steel Harrow with Cart; One McCormick
5-foot Mower; One Corn Planter; One McCormick Hay Rake; One 9-foot Daek:
foot, McCormick, with tractor hitch; One Wagon with Rack; One Feed Grinder,
One Hudson Car with good rubber; One Drill Press, One Stock Tank; Some
Harness; Hay Slings; One Iron Wheelbarrow; One Steel Smokehouse; One
Butchering Derrick with rope; Three Oak Pork barrels; One Molette 740 oapaeity
Cream Separator in good shape; One Prima small bench ~Cream Separator in
good shape; Twelve loads of Tame Oats Hay; Some iron and wood.Hog Troughs;
One 25-foot Corncrib Fence; One 125 chick Coop; Some Lumber; Sixty Gunny
Sacks; Some Kindling Wood; Some Gasoline .Barrels; Pitchforks, Shovels, Picks
and Many Other Farm Tools too numerous to Mention.
Household Goods
One.Waltham Piano and Bench, Green Oak Cabinet; 2 Oak Library Tables; One
Lea(her Covered Davenport; Two Leather Covered Rockers; Three Leather Seated
Chairs; One Oak Small Table; One Radio with new Battery; 1 Buffet; Six Oak
Dining Room Chairs; One Singer Sowing Machine; One Leather Couch,
Dressers; Two Beds, .complete with springs and mattresses; One Wash Stand;
Two Kitchen Tables, One Cupboard; Three .Kitchen Chairs and Stool; ~e
Majestic Kitchen Range; One Kerosene Stove;. One Magazine Rack; Two
Smoking Stands, Pictures and Picture Frames, One Wool Rug; Two Lin~
Rugs; One Gas Iron; Two Drawing .B~r. ds; Two Wash Tubs and Copper Boiler;
Kitchen Cooking Utensils of all kinds; Fruit Jars and Croeks;M1]k Pails and
Cans; One Aladdin ~p; One Kerosene Heater.
Terms Cash: No Property to be Removed
could
on