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
November 21, 1935     Golden Valley News
PAGE 6     (5 of 7 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 6     (5 of 7 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
November 21, 1935
 
Newspaper Archive of Golden Valley News produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




=3 :~: * / _ i.~ Conestoga:Wagon Dr|~ First to Keep to R,ght WhY do American drivers keep to the right Instead of to the left as in England and some ~ntlnental eouu- ~? In the new Columbia Bneyclo. pedla drivers of the famous Cones. toga Wagons are credited with orlgl. mating the custom because they rode the left wheel horse. The wagonL often called "ablpa of inland com- merce/' car~ed freight over the Alle- gheny mountains before the rail- roads were built in 1850. The Conestoga wagon originated in Pennsylvania before the Revolu- tion, according to the encyciopedistL It was pulled by a six-horse team end was capable of carrying n five- ton load. The bottom of the wagon box was curved, rising at both endJ that in going up and down hills the goods would shift less easily and the end-gate be subject to less strain: n of the Conestoga wagon. ~e prairie-schooner was a modifies. Mother Should [ OW--d el serve [ r Give Your =h!ld Art | ~ownRemed' w/t/tout | ~g Your D~ :~ First ding to ~--~ oryo. M he on!y W way Is ~'i to give TAT child a you don't know ag dObserve Net~r Give Your Child An Unknown Remedy without Asking Your Doctor First According to any doctor you ask, the only safe way is to give your remedy about, witheut o~tdng him first When it comes to "milk og magnesia," that you know every- where, for over 60 years, doctors ~ag e said "PHILLIPS' Milk og nesia for your child." So--always say PMUips' when you buy. And, for your own peace of mind, see that your child gets this; the fine~ mcm Vobca " y to accept a substitute for the ipmuine~ Phillit~t" Milk of ~ ~. ~a. Do this tn the ~est ~.~.~/~_~-. terest of the~ PHILLIPS" ' I ! face e 0g • ~atad t0day to relieve the 8oreneso.~ aid lWalM~.-m~ Improve your 81d~ "°'?ifi o| : WNU~Y 47--86 L~ Gift= o~ Great Vahm The best giftS we g~ are fro~ those who have nothing but then~ " ~elves to give. CONSTIPATED 30 Y£ARS ~ttpatlo=~ stomach, and gas relief for you report action in taking just one dose. give= complete action, clean- gram, with American dollars, would seem to Indorse Hitler's program of persecution. That is the Important fact. Officers of the American air corps, Capts. A. W. Stevens and Orvll Ander- son, rose above the earth into the stratosphere to a height greater than any human being had ever reached, with the possible exception, of course, of Elijah golug up tn his chariot of fire. The American officers radioed : "We are at 74,187 feet, trying for 80,000 feeL" ~hey did not go higher, but broke all records. Seventy-four thousand one hundred and eighty-seven feet is more than 14 miles. 2,000 feet higher than the nnoffi- elai Russian record of 72,200 feet. A movie news reel photographer In /~thlopia, Edward Genoek, was assault- ed when he tried to make moving plc- tures of warriors at Harar. The Ethi- opians beat the camera man, explain- Ing afterward, "We shall lose our souls If we are photographed." That will surprise Hollylvood, where the belief Is the other way aro0nd. Once, It was generally believed, even by real Chris- tians, that if you made a wax minia- ture figure of a man and stuck pins In it at intervals you would kill the original. Man is a superstitious biped. Not long ago, when foreign coun- tries were starving, America sent over American corn. and the foreign eoun- tries would not eat it. Even Russia refused. Now, thanks to various devices for persuading our farmers to produce as little as possible, the United States Imports more than 20,000,000 bushels of corn In one year. Shortage of corn means shortage of food for hogs, dnd that meant expen- sive "bog meaL" pork chops and bacon. Somebody always has to pay the bill, and now tt appears to be those that eat, a decided majority. At Maryland's Plmlico race track a horse named Axlean, winning the $1,000 relay steeplechase, paid $340.40 for a $2 betting ticket, 170 times the amount paid. That news will cause many unfortunate geese to lose sev- eral times $340. Nobody ever won at race track gambling in the long run. If tb~t were possible, who would sup- port bookmakers and tracks? Speaking In Arlington natlon~l cem- etery, the President warned the coun- try that there is danger of war, urging "adequate defense on land, on sea, and In air.': He knows, ns does ewrybody, that defense, first in the air, and second under the water. Is most important. President Roosevelt announced the early "consummation of a commercial agreement between Canada and the United States," referring to "our two peoples, each Independent in them- seh, es, closely knit by tles of blood and common heritage, with stnndards of llfe substantially ti~e s:tme." While eleven lawyers and clients dis- cussed the sale of a window-cleaning business In 1~ew York s Brownsville, four young gunmen entered, sald, pleasantly, "Reach for the moon, yen- out wlth $2,261 in cash. :That THE BEACH REVIEW "Luncheon" Set to • Crochet and Starch s g iUTTER IMPORTS ABE DECLINING--" [ DEPARTMENT SAYS[:: tified The open AGRIGULTURE tmalaila/::ten? ,residents on an. 1 se: ew~lt~P:t~i,~:to:h:mU~l~lllams~ ,eft, tabl :OP PRESIDENT ° '° lly t lm Inches. Onl: to hold theh tel sh les~ adds v ]ch the en re s~ ~"ack ge 1~ extra i .~avy cotton :o cr Two e :c: one 2~ will m ke s six an one One :omp thread and malle~ for ~nly ] cen Add ss ] Ntnete ~th Louis, Me, S~ GRANDMOTHER CLARK network pieces make beautiful service pieces for an at- tractive table setting. Four sizes in the combination. Center piece 28 Inches, plate doily 14 inches, salad dolly 10 inches, tumbler doily 5~ Only one center is required for any slze set. The other three pieces can be made up In any num- These pieces require starching to hold their shape. Tinting in pas- tel shades of green, pink, yellow, adds much to the attractiveness of the entire set. Package No. 743 contains sufficient extra heavy Mountain Craft crochet cotton to crochet e seven-piece set. Two each of the small pieces and one 23-inch center. Two packages will make a 19-1nch set service for six and one center. One complete package No. 743-- Instructlons will be mailed for 40 cents. Instructions only 10 cents. Address Home Craft Co., Dept. B. Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave., ~. Inclose stamped, ad- dressed envelope for reply when writ. People in the co-operative move- ports. But the margin dropped all times, by" a doctor who is paid lag for any information meut have slowly awakened to the realization that co-operation means co-0peration of co-operative socie- ties Just as much as it means co- operation of individuals. Until American co-operators caught the vision of the great co-operative movement~how it is composed of national federations of co-operative socAeties and these federated inter. nationally into a world-wide soll- darity~they never knew what co- operation meant. The League Promotes Union This is the most important con- trlbutlon of The Co-operatlve League to American co-operatlon. Beginning wlth nothln~ in 1915, the league set out to bring about such a federation to this country. While it was promoting union, it was car- rylng on education, making sur- veys, drawing up model constitu- tions and laws, forcing knowledge of true co-operation upon people who really did not want it, expos- ing and fighting humbugs, and in every way possible advancing the interests of cooperation. The fail- ures had been due to violations of co-operative principles; the league penetrated every state in the Union with thedefinition and meaning of these principles. It then proceeded to carry co-opera- tion into the trade unions, farmers' marketing associations, the church- es, schools and colleges. In the meantime the work of fed- eration went on. From the begin- ning, the best societies, the sound- est, and the societies whose mem- bers had the most understanding of co-operation Joined the league.-- C. O. Warbasse, President Co-op. League of America. Says AAA Is Popular An Associated Press dispatch from Washington quoted Secretary of Agriculture Wallace as saying he had been tel4 that 85 per cent of the farmers would favor chang- ing ~the constitution in order to have the AAA if it should be de- clared unconstitutional by the Sup- reme Court. Mr. Wallace was also quoted as saying that Midwest farmers were "feeling very good." back to 9.9 cents in May and kept on declining to 4.0 cents. In Bulgaria the consumers' co- operative wholesale buys practical- ly all of its milk and dairy pro- ducts from the producers' co-opera- tive dairies. It also buys salt from a co-operative sugar refinery. Church Leaders Urge Consideration of Plan Following the lead of the social service committee of the New York conference of the Methodist church which endorsed the Consumers' Cooperative movement at its an- nual meeting in May, the Missouri Methodist conference last week called on its ministers and laymen to study the movement and "or- ganize cooperative enterprises of every sort.' The resolution passed without a dissenting vote, describes consum- ers' cooperation as a "world move- ment active in forty-one nations, supplying the needs of millions of people_. Its growth has been steady through famine, wars and financial crises. It is founded np- on the principles of democracy, ethical Justice and the equitable distribution of the material goods of life." Mexico Makes Gains A rapid growth of the co-opera- tive movement in Mexico is re. 13orted to the U. S. Commerce Dept. by T. H. Lockett, commer- cial attache at Mexlco City. Since the passage of a new law on co-operative societie~ in May, 1933, the government has been en- couraging formation of producers' and consumers' co-operatives among workers and farmers, Lock- ett says, and 1,100 have been leg- ally authorized. In the first half of 1935, 324 co- operatives were formed, with a membership of 12,190. Of those, 136 are consumers' co-operatives, 118 producers' co-operatives and 80 mixed co-operatives. Capitalism is a tough old bird that will live a good deal longer than any of us wilL--Amos R. E. Plnchot. by the community to keep its peo- ple well and lessen his labors, rath- er than merely treat those who be- come ill. Reforms Spring from Heart -Permit me to emphasize with all the power I possess that no real, genuine and per- manent reform, either moral, Intellectual o r economic, In the whole history of the world has ever been purchased with political patronage to be paid for with Intercat b~ unborn generations. All real reforml must spring from the hearts and souls of the men and wo- men who are the victims of such exploitation. They must spring from an unselfish desire for Justice, equality and right- eousnesa on the part of the oppressed a n d remember-- those oppressed must be as wise as serpents and as gentle as doves. They must be able readily to distinguish between the real and the false---be- tween the statesman and the political demagogue. Th • y must be willing to serve, not fop the wealth or monetary compensation they may re- ceive; but rather for the gen- uine satisfaction that only sacrificing service to one's fe{- low-man can give for faithful service honestly and unselfish- ly performed, These opportun- ities are available to everyone and, oh, the joy, comfort and happiness they bring to every- one who puts forth his beet efforts because he loves Jus- tice and righteousness. Such compensation cannot be com- puted in dollars and cents or in material things because it transcends by far any such compensation. It Is not food or raiment for the body but it is Intellestuai food for the minds and love, righteousness and Ju~fce for the heart and soul." Excerpt from a radio address by E. H. Everson, Natlon~ P~sldent Farmers' Union. It won't be long before the wet~ and the drys will be staging the same old argument. No Recreation Any man shrinks from going home to trouble after he has had a hard business day. Do You Ever Wonder Whether the"Pain" Remedy You Use is SAFE? Ask Your Doctor. and Find Out Don't Entrust Your i Housing Plan Starts, Desp te Protests Own or Your Family's Well- Being to Unknown Preparations THE person to ask whether the preparation you or your family are taking for the relief of headaches is SAFE to use regularly is your family doctor. Ask him particularly about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN. He will tell you that before the discooery of Bayer Aspirin most "'pain" °remedies were adwsed against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you ~mek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods yet dis- cooered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neu- ritis and neuralgia. And the experi- ence of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest re- member this. You can Genuine its full Make it a point to do this -- and see that you get what you want. Bayer Aspirin ~.d Came of Life The game of life usually startf with a bawl and a racket. Who./SHE TOLD WOMN'OUT HUSBAND he~selg had Constipationl The felt like General view of the site of the $1h~,~ housing project at Ber- wyn, Md., with transient wozker~ Clearing the land; and Mrs. Alice B. Morris end he~ daughter, Edna, who were among the many elt~mss of Berwyn who va|nly protest~l ag~ the p roJe~_~ which has been dttbbe~ ~Tugwell ~'~w]a.~