Thursday, May 13, 1943
THE HERALD-NEWS |
iba Ptaaeer Vutoe W Dm Ooinmuntty f
■ETABUBHED IN DU J
Ccutinuation of The Wolf Point Herald, The Roooevelt j
County News, The Fort Peck Leader, The Wolf Point Pro- J
moter. The RoooeveJt County Independent. J
Entered as second dam matter at the post office st ’Wolf £
Point, Montana, July 11, IMO, under the Act of March S, 1179 <
NATIONAL EDITORIAL— I
l!Hg3g
Member Butera Montana Pram Aaaociatiea +
Published Every Thursday Moraine at Wolf Petal, T
County Seat of Rooeevelt County, Masi tans ?
JOS. F. DOUN, PUBLISHER
|
—SUBSCRIPTION RATES— X
Year >2 50 (In the Counties of Rooeevelt MoCone, Daniels. ♦
Valley, Sheridan and Richland.) Outside the above counties, i
13.00 per year. In Canada. S3-SQ. Soldiers, $2.00 per year ;
AU Snbeeriptiesis Strictly In Advance
H g
Catholic
REV- FRANCIS J- SHEVLIN
Paster
®'■ ■ I
Two Masses every Sunday at
7 and 9 o’clock, followed by
Benediction of the Most Blessed
Sacrament. On Holy Days of Ob
ligation the Masses are at 6:3t
and 8 o’clock.
Confessions every Saturday ev
ening at 7:30 and the same hour
on the Vigil of Holy Days. On
the first Friday of each month
the Mass is at 7:00 a. m.
Assembly of God
1 H. N. BARFOOT, Pastor I
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Sunday, May 16:
Sunday school 10 a. m Classes
for all.
Morning Worship 11 a. m
Evangelistic at 8:00 p. m.
Midweek services—
Wednesday 7:00 p. m. Bible
Study
Wednesday 8:00 p. m. Young
People’s.
Thursday 8:00 p. m. Oswego
school house.
Friday 8:00 p. m. Evangelistic
Come! You are welcome!
•s ft
English Lutheran
REV. F. C. SCHMIDT, Pastor
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Trinity—Wolf Point
Sunday morning worship at 11
Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Wednesday school at 3 p. m.
Confirmation class on Satur
day at 10 a. m.
The public is invited to wor
ship with us.
Our Savior’s—Vida
Sunday morning worship at 9
The public is cordially invited
to worship with us
OCCIDENT
Elevator
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First Lutheran
O. N. RUE, Pastor
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Sunday, May 16:
Sunday school in Wolf Point
st 9:45.
Morning worship service at 11.
Afternoon service in Prairie
Elk at 3 o’clock. w
Adult class in Christian doc
trine will meet at 7:30 p. m.
The WMF will meet Thurs
day. May 13th at 3 p. m.
Confirmation class on Satur
day, May 15th at 10 a. m.
Junior choir practice on Mon
day, May 17th at 7 p. m.
Lutheran Brotherhood will
meet on Wednesday, May 19th
at 8 p. m.
The Divide Ladies Aid will
meat at the Henry Sethre home
on Wednesday, May 19, 2:30 p.m.
Immanuel Lutheran
O. L. BORSHEIM, Pastor
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I VIDA
Sunday, May 9—Mother's Day:
Sunasy school a: 1:43 p in. .
Afternoon servicj al 2:45 p. m
After services lunch will be
served by the Ladies Aid with
Mrs John Sorley and Mrs Har
old Olsen as hostesses.
First Lutheran Church of Circle
Sunday, May 9th:
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Morning service at 11 a. m.
Friday, May 14:
Father and sons banquet. Gov
ernor Sam Ford to be the speak
er. Serving begins at 8 p. m.
* X M
First Presbyterian
ALBERT H. CROPP, Pxstor
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Thur-day: ,
7:30 Choir practice.
Sunday:
9:45 Sunday school
11:00 Morning worship
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Baptist. Methodist I
1! I). SIMPSON, Pastor
Ist and 3rd Sundays:
10:00 a m. Culbertson Metho
dist Church.
11:30 a. m. Bainville Methodist
Church.
7:30 p m. Whitetail Baptis’ ।
Church.
2nd and 4th Sundays:
10:00 a. m. Culbertson Metho I
dist Church
11:30 a- m. McCabe ,Baptis ।
Church.
7:20 p. m Bainville Methods !
Church.
28.7 Pounds
It is estimated that the average
tire weighs 28.7 pounds when new.
loses 12 per cent in use, Weighs 25
pounds when scrapped, and yields
21.5 pounds of reclaimed rubber.
The Herald-New—Wolf Point, Roosevelt County, Montana
SAFETY ON FARM
BOOKLET AVAILABLE
A strictly American killer, as
treacherous as the Japs, took
twice as many lives in this coun
try during the fateful “Pearl
Har or year” as were lost dur
ing the first World War. The sa
boteur, Accident, home front’s
greatest enemy, caused 10C15O0
deaths and 350.000 permanent
disabilities during 1941. Of those
kill d, 18.500 were farmers and
amon K all occupations, farm field
work headed the fatality list.
Carelessness and thoughtlessness
in minor matters were the chief
contributory causes of casualties
among farmers.
These are the facts on which
farmer-born T A Erickson, who
knows farms as Tiffany knew
j wels, bases his new book,
“Safety For the Farm and Home
Front.”
Erickson, “Dad" as he is now
known to thousands of Minne
sota farm boys and girls, a pion
eer in practical education for ru
ral youth <yid for years a state
4-H Club leader of the Univer
sity of Minnesota’s Department
of Agriculture, believes. “Less
thought has been given to acci
dent prev-. ntion in farming than
in any other occupation.”
In his “Safety for the Farm
and Home Front”, published by
General Mills, Inc., where he is
now consultant in the Depart
ment of Public Services, “Dad"
gives complete guides to be used
by rural youth groups to help
prevent accidents. Without a
wasted word the famous club
leader goes into every possible
accident—from using a staff in
stead of trust to lead a bull, tc
boiling home canned meats be
fore serving. Each article is de
signed as a basis for discussion
among Rural Scouts, 4-H clubs,
Future Farmers of America and
other groups.
“Safety for the Farm and
Home Front” is not one of those
youth-repelling “do and don’t”
manuals. Written in a sprightly,
easy-to-follow style, much of it
is in the popular quiz form. And
sometimes “Dad” waxes toler
antly satirical to drive home a
point. For instance, to help peo
ple bi come safety-minded he in
cludes a homily he entitles
simply: “He Forgot"!
Copies of these booklets are
available without charge. Write
to: Department of Public Serv
ices, General Mills, Inc., Minne
apolis, Minn.
•> . ir.i*
i *c — : ■„y juu"3 distances va
ries among drivers. It lias an im
portant bearing upon moving safely
in tragic, especially on two-lane
highways. Every driver should study
and understand his visual limita
tions in judging distances.
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He's she Best
There fs /
Invest in
WAR BONDS
and STAMPS
Herbpfr
[Calculated for the week of
MAY 17 . . 4 W Z 7 _ MAY 17 . 7.00
MAY 19. . .4.42 MAY IS ! ’. 7;I I
yH ig): MAY 22. . .4:40 v V MAY 22. 7.14
Time civen is standard BIILOVA watch time ...
s=s= —=sssßßs«aßßHßre:
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'^-’W A it MAY 22 - NATIONAL MARITIME
VC V DAY CELEBRATING THE FIRST
I OCEAN VOYAGE UNDER STEAM
COMMODOne
JOHN BARR* — I r Zx*
-athb. or thb D, H . J/LL
U.S NAW
IS YOUR NAME BARRYF IT IS "SAY BUDDY CALL ME A CAB'
DERIVED FROM THE NAME OF "I’M NO DOORMAN, I’M IN THE
THE BARRY ISLANDS IN WALES AIR COOPS"
"OK CALL ME A PLANE. I COTTA
GET HOME'
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RUT A SMALL AMOUNT I \ THE STARS POMCAST THE
OF BLUING IN THE VMTW I I SUBJECT BORN M THIS
FOR WASHING GLASSES POMOO WAX TRAVEL
•TRW WILL DRY WITH AND MSET WITH MANY
AN ADDED SPARItt*. ADVENTURES • • ■
5^NQ TIME FOR MESDIte OCT WtGUtWINEM MTN BOMBS AW ȣU5^7
PLANE TALK
Uto Observer *
There is little doubt that aircraft engineering design
wifi be ready to fit the products to the needs of the post-war
oil Already wartime necessity has advanced the industry
-20 years, according to some observers.
The big problem faced by the
aircraft manufacturers —and a
bigger one than that faced by
industry in general because of a
precedent-shattering expansion—
is the transition from all-out war
production to peacetime opera
tions.
bhriously there will be a
eat in production but how
great it will be no one knows.
Ta meet the emergency and
io cushion against the shock
of greatly curtailed produc
tion and unemployment, air
frame manufacturers are try
h>g to build up post-war
reserves.
It’s not for an amateur like The
Obeerver to get too deeply into
this problem but we are pascing
on an interesting excerpt from
a memorandum written by one
of the best informed men in the
aviation business.
“Adequate reserves are needed
to effect the transition into peace
time development of products and
full peacetime employment. Thus,
| the most important existing sac-
Itor in the situation is the ability
of companies to build up adequate
reserves—which are a primary
requisite for the life of these com
panies. and for their usefulness
to the national economy. Rene
gotiation of contracts, as provid
ed for under a law enacted last
April, is an incubus on the in
dustry because confusion and un
certainty regarding corporate
earnings and assets exist over a
long period.” •
An encouraging sign, so far
as the manufacturers arc con
cerned, is a recent recom
mendatiMi by the Senate
Truman Committee investi
gating the war effort. It
urges the adoption of a na
tional policy to provide “lib
eral profit margins” for war
contractors who create rea
sonable reserves for post-war
reconversion purposes.
The Committee, after studying
the existing contract renegotia
tions law and operations of the
price adjustment boards under it.
also urged more general adopt on
of the so-called future- —
Easier to Process
Properties of Reclaimed Rubber:
Less absorbent of solvents than
crude. More uniform and easier to
process than crude, and has a faster
rate of cure. Usually lower in ten
sile strength and lower in resistance
to abrasion than crude rubber.
Mt IT^I 1943
WCRADS/
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THE SHERMAN
Hotel
policy used by the War Depart
men: as an incentive for efficiency
in war production.
LONG WAY TO GO
Any idea any of us may have
that the railroads and trucking
companies will be put out of busi
ness by cargo airplanes after the
war certainly is dispelled by the
following (from Washington)—
The volume of air cargo now car
ried by U.S. airlines could in
crease a hundred times and yet
capture only one-tenth of one
percent of the freight-ton miles
now carried by American rail
roads and trucks.
NOT ART, BUT . . .
. .Maybe it’s the picturesque
scenery, but we think it’s a desire
to help win the war that prompt
ed five of America’s most widely
known artists to go to work at
the Tuscon (Ariz.) Division of
Consolidated Vultee.
Working on Liberator (B
--24) bombers are Ray Strang,
noted illustrator; Jack Van
Ryder, famed for his western
paintings; Gerry Pierce, who
does etchings and water col
ors; Oscar Davisson, sculptor,
and Edith Hamlin, famous
muralist.
NO MORE, BROTHER
Anyone who has ever voiced
the thought that a policeman
hasn’t a heart could not have had
^Officer Carl C. Neuman in mind.
This burly, 49-year-old ex
baseball umpire, who now guards
the Pennsylvania-Central Air
line hangars and offices at Wash
ington National Airport, has a
heart that’s as big as his blood
supply, and the latter is monu
mental. Neuman’s a blood don
or and too modest to talk about
it, but he has given exactly 77
pints of blood to aid suffering
humanity. He says he keeps in
trim by drinking plenty of milk
and eating steaks that would put
Diamond Jim Brady to shame.
All this, you will agree,
_’s something of a record—
w vt it was set before meat ra-
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I HOW WILL YOU SPEND THESE I
I |rSsl FINE SPRING DAYS! I
= V SPRINGTIME, or anytime for . . •.- J
= Zx F..'/^xA that ma ^ er > Is no time to spend I \k s
S in the basement slaving over a | jH>W
= . washing. Why not really enjoy 1 15* ~( a
= IwA Spring .. . Get out in the fresh 9
= ’ W£) -f/X/Xx^^r-X lts easy! And inexpensive! f
Just Bend y° ur laundry to us and R,
=- Ct • \( \PCL “ake washday your fun day! J
| PHOHEIIB ' .QI I
| OUR LOW PRICES! Kx I
WE SPECIALIZE IN HAT BLOCKING! I
| WOLF POINT LAUNDRY & CLEANERS I
Sanford Mahlum, Prop. Wolf Point 9
iiiiiiiiii^
VIDA NEWS
1 .. . ' •
Mrs Ervin Schutt and Rosalie
arrived recently from Bremer
ton, Wash, and are visiting at
the Bill Eggebrecht home:
Evelyn Schillinger spent the
wesk-end with Rosalie Grins
vald at Circle.
The Vida Royal Neighbors met
Wednesday at the home of Mrs
Fred Young in Wolf Point. Mrs
Charles Jacobs treated the lad
ies to a six o’clock dinner at
the Modern Case, and this was
fo’'owed by a theatre party, ancl
then back to Young’s for ice
cr. am and cookies. The town
meeting is always one of the
special occasions of the year.
Mr and Mrs Frank Whitmus ot
Sand Creek and M E Howard
of Cow Creek were Vida callers
on Monday.
We understand there was a
nice crowd at the Red Cross
meeting at Martin Beck’s Thurs
day, TOe next meeting will be
at Loendorfs 'Hiursday, May 20.
Mrs Joe Knutson and children
of Froid-are visiting at the Clar
ence Nefzger home.
Mrs James Anderson and child
ren of Minneapolis arrived Sat
urday to spend the summer at
are at
BATTLE
■WpJL STATIONS J
!
doser
/ j
Battles these days are being fought in
the air, on every continent, every sea, aided
by the nation’s communications lines.
Telephone operators are handling the
greatest volume of calls in our history . . .
largely calls dealing with war and war pro
duction. They and the other telephone men
and women are occupying vital battle sta
tions . . . backing up the war front.
Uncle Sam depends upon the telephone
for swift, reliable communication, and it is
the task and the privilege of more than
10,500 men and women in this Company
to see that he gets it.
SAVE, SERVE, GIVE . . .
MAKE DEMOCRACY LIVE . 4 .
KEEP BUYING WAR BONDS! i
The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co.
the Tritschler home.
Mr and Mrs Edward Elverud
of Circle were Sunday guests ot
Mr and Mrs Gene Schillinger.
—salvage for Victory—
I'ROI'KKL* PRINTED POSTERS
PLEASE PARTICULAR PEOPLE
WK PRINT ’EM
ifi ^| |^,
w 1943
/ Lw I HTTn\
JOHNSON'S
Bakery
Page Two