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nrf - ■* inA ' - • ïCtfiï Chemurgic 99 H .„e Now Devised a New Plan to 'taHstic H nf i Take Some More of Its Save Ü 1 ® WUÎ Apply More Science 5X£p TOWARD fascism 10 farn»ns_ another r Locke Bv Jerome G - in Chemurgic: Even 0U \ pH® „ ir - off P lace TS r<*' »ideas we are apt t it in ,^ c t ^ked i farm Messers ^•Jev-real nl0I "£; p nt and M * Tad. lr . ene Sth bulging dozen others. with drolls, arc its ^ ;À backers- ^ to tre f TYrefullv edited tractive and careiuu> ^ ^ f'd of Proceeding,, a 1 . s quota of pie*. Wv ?pre:l the Chemurgic is to save t Ç ■ i all the h°aç r w fl . int more money aI ™ u ! e Tte * Ä «SS pSd .efson* « J ; psychology of great ^ pmente corraled and di mass new channels. vertm "° Chemurgv "com jp plain "»forte of chemical prehends t" e p Chemurgic manufacture* th sc i e nce of * tf Äthe farm. All growth rhemistry to T m ical action. If -clts from ingredients are PS* t c A soil and right chemi pia^m tne hereafter in d U ced, ! made seven or eight I f e ' ds as thev are now. By I u ® es SOI of chemical science It Sow can multiply yields by I * «(rht times, depending up I tW °i qlitv crop, intensity of cul I 011 ml other factors. ■ tuI * a( jvance publicity admits, not do all the^e which event « UK M tjie farmers may Kkutific things, in v„ i an d must be taken over by ln Strialists »h» can hire scientists <4 farm. , . l T « of Surplus Products Worked Out When all the surplus of Agri it must cultural product is grown * used. That part is worked out Hiller Terror in 1935 (Reprint from above entitled pamphlet now being circulated by American Federation of Labor) IM »fficial and unofficial pri _of Germany are filled with political dissenters and such peo ple who have for one veason or gather incurred wrath of the Nazi leaders. Prison penalties for harra fea critical utterances are simply tea numerous to be cited. A few characteristic cases may suffice. August Baer, book dealer of Karemberg—one year for possess or and reading a foreign news man and "using it to support his hews in an argument." Two editors of the "Essener Vol btitling"—three months each for publishing an erronous report that i man sentenced to death had been reprieved. A woman—10 (ten) months for spreading uncomplimentary tales about the Leader. Karl Voigtl ander of Dresden— ten months for critical remarks a rainst the government. Johannes Hof—eight mopths for spiteful remarks against Prime Minister Goering. Albin Stroebel of Leubnitz —14 »«ths for insulting the Leader. Kaufman, George Huscher Freitag — one year, nine sraths and six months respective ly for the same "crime." The auctioneer Pius Dagenhart « Memmingen— indefinite term in ?r„»on for dishonoring the Nazi t*rty brown shirt bv putting the ■irt* of former storm troopers up for «action. Jentseh of Dresden—7 °Mths for having written to her The Big Muddy Irrigation Project By R. L. Wheeler County Surveyor State Planning Ü2? i* ld » meeting at Plenty wo. Ihe purpose of this meet ÏÏL -. , e consideration of g» should help s* «I** 8 *®.°* this county. As pro to advance infcS P Vr J £ l 1 suggested the ¥ ih / Big Mu< Wy flat. Un * already made a prelimi 5te. wll ' ch showed that it oMkc ^ r ' Erabrey, chair ■ B ,° ard ' I 'iat kT* ». S * Paul and me I te kIl Woal<1 ah in his power n 4 survey made to find 5 ould ** don « in 10 »mgation of the flat. Wre, v crew i® now • n * lere f°r three m v' in another thirty days nobody seems hS« ®* matter seriously. This 8110 ""P 01 * bsvf V aad ue will nev K «H a*""- I have * I -n. 1 ***! do for the present, ***t all the business otb* ^uommerdal Club and Æf°n s i n each town S'ssiitw appoint a i iv .^dle the matter. !** tove+kT* 10 ** community, must 60 fet*er and boost this pro Mr. Laçasse, will S&ä: £5 ex too. For instance one half alcohol mixed with gasoline makes motor ars ^ faster and smoother and cheaper. There will be required ten bS Râlions of alcohol made billion bushels of corn— double the present crop Pipe to convey water, gas, oil and electric conduits is now made from cast iron, steel or wood It can be made much cheap er, and to last indefi nitely from . "plastic" material. plastic material can be compound ed from several kmds of farm pro duce> j The list 0 f w hat can be done po es to considerable length. The advent of a great chemical age is us her in. An abundance for all can De produced-just turn the philanthropic bankers ana in dualists -<1 «•*. Oique of Utopia will cease to be a dream. Chemistry Can Brin. Plenty This is Chemurgy. Scientists in the chemical, biological and allied fields have just discovered that productivity and cheapness of pro duct—saving of energy expendi ture—is within our national grasp, There seems to be no limit to what can be done. Five years ago, Tech nocrats made the same kind of dis coveries in the fields of machines and power. With little or no aid from the chemical fraternity they can also produce the Abundance of which we have so often heard. The Technocrats faced the facts. They knew and said that Utopia can never be ushered in under pro fit or capitalistic system. Pauper ized masses cannot pay cost, plus a profit, for what the country pro duces now, let alone an output sev eral times as large. The chemical fraternity and its back-log of banker-industrials are not so hon est. They urfold a vista of delight ful scientific probabilities—that are only impossibilities under cap italism. Lookss to us like nothing more than another wedge inserted along the drive to Fascism. scientists loose and brother in Basle, Switzerland, that food conditions in Germany were very bad. Willi Hoehnelt of Reisa—one year for transmitting to his son in Canada "untrue statements a bout conditions in Germany." A similar case is reported from Leipzig where a man was senten ced to 5 months, in prison for hav ing written to friends in Vienna that everybody in Germany "who dares to express his dissatisfaction must face a judge. A Vorker Kurt Walter of Eiben stock received ten months for sim ilar offense. He had written to friends in the Saar Territory about the miserable conditions of the German workers and the loss of their rights. In Sulzbadi, Saar, the sixty-nine year old worker Petri and his wife were arrested and jailed for hav ing remarked to friends that Hit ler had not been "of any good to the Saar." Not a single pant of Germany is free from similar happenings and brutal persecutions of people whose sole crime is to voice tlidr personal opinions. It must be borne in mind Abat these punishments are meted out to men and women who do not participate in the bit* ter underground struggle against Nazism. The full force of the ter* nor is brought to bear upon those who are working in the ranks of the illegal movement for the re covery of the people's rights a* gamst Fascist oppression. >» behind this project, and show the State Planning Board and the State Water Conservation Board that the people of this county do appreciate what is done for them. If we show no interest when we are offered such an opportunity as this, it may be a long time be fore we are offered another one. a POULTRY MEETING SEPT. 13 AND 14 Two meetings of interest to Sheridan County poultry produc ers will be held next week. Miss Cushman, Extension Specialist, will be present to discuss problems of poultry grdwers at this time. A pullet culling demonstration will be given at the Lars Angvick farm southeast of Reserve, on Fri day. Sept. IS, at 1:30 p. m. This is a new practice which is being used to reduce the cost of egg pro duction by eliminating the board er pullet or non-profitable bird in the fall and thus save on feed and labor._ On* Saturday, Sept. 14, a meet ing will be held at the Court Room at 1:30 p. m. in Plentywood to dis - _ Turkey marketing. Miss Cush man has just returned from a trip to the eastern markets especially N. Y. C. to study Turkey Market ing as it relates to Montana Pro ducers. The facts learned will be of assistance to Growers in this cuss area. * ^ÄWSTOffiüTION , DISCL 0SED BY NORRIS • redfstHK 1 ?- any , nee d for a ♦ fwîî 1 ?î n .* M,t,0n °f wealth in • I> it true that wealth and income are : ^ C T tr !i ted ^ a SSaSi * of th ha ^! i an î that mass <* » ®. t * le People have lively very little? Here compara * urp-a are some officia l fig ures in answer to these t gestions. They are S * da the propa S an ' * that ar^fighfi^ 'uxaticn * proposals tending to break • down the vast concentra tions of wealth 3 ; Gfe**' W, Norris. Nebraska Progressive «nK ; milled to the üSVaïe' * senate an official report of the Federal Trade Commis* S1 ®n «n this matter. Here i what the commission« _ showed: That one per cent of the people of this country own * 60 Per cent of the nation's wealth, and hence a large share of the national In c °me.. That 90 LS report * , per cent of tbe * "atwm s wea ^E is owned by 13 per cem* of the people, leaving 87 per cent of the people owning only 10 * cent of tl«e wealth. per LOANS DECREASE 'ederal Reserve Report Show Idle Money Piling Up in Banks. Only One Dollar in Eight Working. Reserve System reports that loans to business of the reporting her banks have declined to mem _ a new low level for the depression. Busi ness is not borrowing. Indeed, the Federal Reserve re ports that but on© dollar in eight of its assets are loaned to busi ness, three to the government and nearly three to speculation. The theory was that if the RFC poured hundreds of millions taxpayers' money into the banks, the bankers Vould lend that money to businessmen, the employers would hire workers, and, lo, the depression would be over. Gen. Charles G. Dawes preached that as RFC chief. To prove it, he re signed from the RFC and borrow ed 90 millions from it for his own bank. The banks are glutted with funds. New York banks report all-time high in deposits. Swollen bank deposits have not ended de pression. At two o'clock p. m. July 27th, 1935 the Board of County Commis sioners met in special session, all members of the Board and the ^lerk present. Minutes of Special Meeting of Board of County Commissioners of SlWeridan County, Montana,, held on the 27th day of July, 1935. A special meeting of the board of County Comissioners of Sheri dan County, Montana, was held on the 27th day of July, 1935 at 2 o' clock p. m. at the Courthouse in Plentywood, pursuant to a due and proper order and call for such meeting made and given in accord ance with laW; All members of said Board con sisting of A. J. Olson, chairman, Carl Tange and Henry Hunter, in addition to Niels Madsen, County Clerk of said County and Clerk of said Board, and Vernon Hoven, County Attorney of said County, were present. held on the 6th day of July, 1935 were read and approved and there was also read to the Board an af fidavit showing publication of a "Notice of the Adoption of Bond Refunding Plan for Sheridan Co unty, Montana," in "Plentywood Herald," a legal newspaper of gen eral circulation printed and pub lished in said county. After a full discussion relative to the compte COMMISSIONERS PROCEEDINGS tion of the bond refunding plan heretofore adopted by resolution of said Board on May 7, 1935. Mr. Tange presented the following res olution Which was seconded by Mr. Hunter and being put to a vote was unanimously adopted: EDITORS NOTE. The com plete resolution is very long since it reviews all transactions leading up to the issuance of re* funding loans, and also sets forth form of bond, interest cow pons etc. in full. Only the part of the resolution that is of gen eral interest is reprinted. Now, therefore, be i'. resolved: (l)tliat, for the purpose of refund ing the outstanding bonded in debtedness of Sheridan Coiunty, Montana, there are hereby author ized and directed to be issued re funding bonds of said countv un der the terms and provisions of said resolution of May, 7, 1935 in aggregate principal amount for .hundred lour thousand dol lars ($504,000) maturing on Jan uary 1, 1954. bearing interest at the rate of four percent (4%) per annum for the years 1935 to 1944, inclusive, and at the rate of five percent (5%) per annum for the years 1945 to 1963, inclusive, pay able semi-annually on the 1st days of January and July of each year Upon presentation and surrender of the proper interest coupons as they shall severally become due, interest and principal to be pay able at the office of the Treas. of said County in the town of Plenty wood, Montana, said bonds to be dated January 1, 1936, and to be redeemable by lot on any interest payment date at par plus accrued interest in the manner provided by the aforesaid resolution' of May 7, 1935 adopting said refunding plan; At 6 o'clock p. m. the board ad journed. the five - NIELS MADSEN Clerk A. J. OLSON Chairman HIGHWAY PATROL I LAW IS VICIOUS Tom Dinwiddle R pntp^ What Has Happened in Other States Having Pa trol Laws. UNCONSTITUTIONAL The highway Patrol law of Ore gon has a clause in it that the pa trol must not be used for strike breaking purposes. However, when the seamen and longshoremen were on strike last year, the patrol was used to prevent picketing. The recent session of the Ore gon legislature repealed the c:; tion of the Highway patrol law which prohibited the patrol being used for strike-breaking purposes, and amended the law so that the patrol can be used in Oregon, in times of strike, the same as the regular militia. This amendment is row in full force and effect in Ore gon. sec I The patrol in Oregon is now e ipped With sawed-off shotguns and tear gas bombs to be used in breaking up picketing in times of strikes. The patrol has been very busy in Oregon during the recent strikes of sawmill and lumber wor kers. qui To overcome some of the ob jections of Montana organized la bor against the patrol the legisla- ' tors favoring the patrol law amen ded it by inserting the following: 'Provided that such highway patrolmen shall have no author ity and are expressly forbidden ; to make arrests in labor disput es or in preventing violence in connection with strikes, shall not be permitted to per form any duties whatever in ! connection with labor disputes, strikes or boycotts, and shall not be permitted to congregate j or act as a unit in one county i to suppress riots on preserve the peace. Any future legislature has the power to amend the Highway Pa trol law by repealing the fore going section. • The question arises: How far would such a section get in the courts? The patrolmen, under orders from the governor, could be used for strikebreaking purposes the same as they have been used in other states, and who is to prevent it? Organized labor knows that from past experience when it com es to using force to break strikes there is no such thing as law and order. The highway patrol is a peace ■ and semi-military organization I that can be used at any time cor- I porate interests desire, to break I s and of ■ an strikes and smash the heads of I pickets. And that is that! 1 What happened in Wisconsin— I LaFollette's state—when the milk I strike took place ? The highway pa I trol men smashed the farmers' I picket line! I The same thing happened in I other states when the Farm Holi- I day declared a strike on the deliv- I ery of farm produce. I What happened in Minnesota I when the truck drivers were on I strike? The highway patrol men I were on the job fighting the truck I drivers the same as they fought I the milk strike in Wisconsin. | There will be a convention of I highway patrol commissioners ; I held in California during the early I part of October. This convention j I is for the purpose of devising I ways and means to carry on pro- 1 1 paganda to have the legislatures i I of the various states pass uniform ' I highway patrol laws so that the I patrol law of the various states will be in harmony with each j I other. We can expect that the next sesion of the legislature of Mon tana will have a bill introduced to make the Montana patrol law as vicious as any now in existence, j Two members of the Montana 1 i ed **° attend the convention at the exp ® nse of Montana taxpayers, Government by Commission The Highway Patrol Commis sion are making rules and regula tions for owners of automobiles to conform to. By what constitutional j authority has the commission the ' power to do this ? None whatever, j like all bureaus the Highway ' Patrol Commission will become autocratic and dictatorial. It will ! issue orders and the patrolmen ! will enforce them, p Q r example: A patrolman made the owner of a car parade up and down the white line in the center of the highway to ascertain whe- j ther or not he was sober, By what authority has any pa- ! trolman the pdwer to order any citizen to walk along a white line on the highway ? By what authority has a patrol man the power to order the owner of a ear to vacate his car so that the patrolman can inn the citizen's car up and down the highway, in order that the monkey-Wrench in chanic might satisfy himself that j the car was equi The might of bureaucracy and | dictatorship gives the patrolman | the power. Free and liberty-loving voters will sign the petition for a ref er - endum on the patrol law. _by Tom Dinwiddie with brakes Wheat Cut Reduced to Rye Percent Bozeman, Sept. 4. — Sam L. lor, director of extension at Mon tana State college, says the change in 1936 wheat planting made pos sible by the Agricultural Adjust ment administration placing the 1935 acreage adjustment at 6 per cent instead of 16 per cent is in* tended as an offset to the severe crop damage which occurred Judy. The action Was taken to as sure the consumers of the country of continued ample supplies of wheat and to protect farmers a gainst another possible year of bad wheat weather. It means that the individual fanner may plant all but 6 per cent of his baise acre age .instead of all but 16 per cent, as was originally planned before the severe crop damage was shown by the crop report for Aug. 1. in Associated Stores Greet You With Lower Prices on High Quality Merchandise I I I We are here 10 Save you money on Groceries, Auto Supplies, Hardware and Furniture. Being members of the Largest Hardware Chain ganization in the world, namely: 9000 in number, and also members of the SAVEWAY organization supply ing you with high quality groceries and fruits is reason for our above statement. We opened our store to the public August 24th and judging by your generous support we are more than pleased in selecting Plentywood as a base for our operations in this commuity. Car load buying and eliminating sources of losses, puts our store in position to cut distribution of merchandise to the lowest possible cost-which means SAVINGS TO THE CUSTOMER. Look over the list below and then come in and examine our merchandise and new store, and see if we cannot save you money. Ours is a friendly store, where service is helpful and given with a smile. or ASSOCIATED HARDWARE VALUES "SAVE WAY" GROCERY VALUES $3.29 Schillings Coffee, lb. 29c Dinner Sets 32-Piece in Semi-Porcelair • No. 2 Walnut Finish Wood Tomatoes 3f«25 Bridge Tables 95c Can 10 $2.69 9c Coffee Canvas Gloves Full Size Light Weight pound Paii Gallon In new easy pouring can Worth a dollar A!1 Auto King Uu 5 Gal. $2.90 59c Catsup Can 49< Vinegar, gaL 29c Bake-serv Guaranteed oven-proof Tableware Preserves 10-qt. garbage receiver in colors 39c pure 2 lb. jar Sanette Apple Butter 19c S. B. handled at the price you want to paj Sl.lO Axe 26 oz. jar Tall Milk 49c-89c 3 f" 19c BOYS—S Grades to â* jê Choose from gna X «49 Footballs Cans M-W Associated Stores c. e. McLaughlin, Mgr. M-W STORES and SAVEWAY STORES located in the following towns bring carload prices 9COBEY — FROID — (CULBERTSON — WOLF POINT — GLASGOW — SIDNEY FA1RVIEW — wn.ij.g mw — RAY — GRENORA — STANLEY — WATFORD CITY ALEXANDER — CROSBY — FORTUNA — BROCKTON — NASHUA — ANTELOPE OUR STORE LOCATED 4 doors South of Penney, Across the street from Theatre