National Sponsors
March 28, 1935 Golden Valley News | |
©
Golden Valley News. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 7 (7 of 8 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
March 28, 1935 |
|
Website © 2024. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader |
• "6o~e
OF THE WEEK
DI BRIEF FOI?J4
county re-
ha~e graveled 90 miles
Graveling of 16 city
will soon be-
Utke was re-
given an appointment to
Point through Congressman
after taking the entrance
at Minn~apolis. He
go to West Point In the fall to
his military tral~ng.
City. -- Enlargement of
City high school is be-
sought by the school board to
use of the grade school
and reduce school ex-
Construction of a gymna-
under consideration.
City.--Mrs. Sarah Tooley,
nurse of Civil war days
| a Barnes county pioneer, mark.
anniversary here surrounded
and relatives. Mrs. Too-
despite her years is mentally
and likes to relive the days of
1860's.
Dr. A. J. Lang, a
known figure in medical cir.
of the state, died unexpectedly
home here from a heart at-
Dr. Lung practiced medicine
| 8anboru for 28 year's and in 1916
to Jamestown. Mrs. Lung
November, 1933.
~- 173, the drivers
which has been involved in
coal drivers strike in Fargo,
repudiated by the l~rgo
and Labor assembly. The
o~aetime ago lost Its charter
their international.
airplane, property
Canadian Airways, seized by
officials here, was return-
to the owners after the company
$500. The amount was
for not complying with
regulations In notify-
customs officials when the
to arrive here from+ Can-
J. Drisooil, 60, in the
and heating business in
many years, died in his
here. He suffered a atnoke
ago and had never reenv-
Drlscoll served as secretary
th plumbers and stean~tters
here and suoretary-treasurer
[ the Fargo Trades and Labor as-
of IAent.
of CO. F, Nerth
National Guard, at Carting-
announced. At the~e
Ci~ M. E. Tlmdall, eomma~
Headquarters oompa,uy at
asked to be transferred to
inactive list because of other
struck three
in rapid suecesslon in one
county lam/ly within a
nothing Immediately
as to what Its cause was.
were Cameron, 9; Blanche,
Duane, 18 months, all mere-
of the Earl Carter family of
Finley,- Steele county's gopher
~son m/x/ng plant will again oP-
~4erate in 1935, according to Mr. C. H.
local extension agent. Suc-
the exterminatl0n campaign
Year, has prompted a similar
this year. The poison is
of oats, strychnine, me-
saccharin, soda, starch, and
bounty of 4c per egg
first 1250 crow eggs brougt2t
being offered by the F&geley
and Gun club. It was fu~-ther
that a .22 calibre single
rifle or a camera will be
the club to the boy or
of age or under who
In the most crow eggs dur-
time the bounty Js being
~mWd.
WalhallL -- Robbers who broke
ths Walhalla Hardware and
office .and the Set-
store in ~the" same-
escaped with $102 in
l~om the
place and $26 in cash from
grocery store. They gained ca-
through three
in,the rear of the bnilding.
incorporation for
to construct and operate a
in Bismarck under the
of North Dakota Brewing
~.hmel~ny, was recently proposed.
• proposed brewery would have
annually and would furnish
for 25 persons.
and Mrs. C. V.
at the Trnax.Tmer
i a atran~e ¢olnci-
the time of the birth of
children. Tbelrflrot
and born
apart, their birthdays"
fall on January I0. The other
children being girls and born
!Years apart, their-birthdays
:fall ou December 15.
head of
llvestoek llrlshed when
barn Lg~
Discovered by neigh,
THIS WEEK Child Needs Time to Develop Power of Attainment;
I O EES
BEVERLY HILLS.--Well all know Is
~ust what I read in the.papers, or what
I see here and there. Mrs Rogers and
Mary are away off
on one of those Med-
fterrsnian cruises
and I think they are
about Cairo EgyPt
by now. Think they
did a little flying.
They wanted to
stay longer In Jeru-
salem and Pales-
tine, so they flew
over to catch the
boat again In Egypt.
I never was on
one of those cruis-
es; They must be very fine trips. You
know i never did do much along that
line for Just pleasure. I was always
pretty busy. Done a~ot o£ traveling but
it was always working my way. In the
early days It was workin~ my way on a
boat to tr~ and get back home. I left
home ~rst class one Ume and ft took me
two years and nine months to get back
third class.-Thats what a clever lad 1
wa~ and had to go all the way round
the world to do it.
I want to go to the Holy IA~nd. I flew
over it and circled Jerusalem, but I
dident land. By golly a billy go~t could-
ent land. Those old early settlers had
the world to pick from and by golly
they So and nettle on that place, and Its
the rockiest place you ever saw. River
Jordan looked pretty good. That Nile
ha8 ~ot~..fertfle lalld, lld thl bait
grass I ever saw outside of the early
days In the Indian Territory where 1
Was bern. Was in a very big long val-
ley, hundreds of miles, and I thought
looking down on It from the plane com-
ing from China to Europe, that I had
found me a real new cow" country, and
I thought my goodness why dent folks
settle here, I bet they dent know where
it is. There was Just roving bands of
Nomads with cattle, sheep, goats, and
camels. (Not all in the same hunch, but
each handling different stock.)
i maid to the pilot, a Holland Dutch-
man, too bad people dent know about
this place, it sure looks fertile. Pretty
soon he circled the plane° and pointed
down and said, "There Is the Garden
of Eden." Not a thing there but tall
grass, not a soul in miles, not a tree,
Just p~tns. It was right above the
mouth of the Tigris and Euphrates
R/vers. Pretty soon he pointed out the
ruins of Babylon. Nothing there either.
I hold the record of being the only
person that ever went to Cairo and did-
ent go out to the Sphynx and the Pyra-
mide. It aint far out of town. There is
Suddenly Polite
Why? He Is Prepared
" ~aoulht for Atheists
Strange Hangings
How politely Germany ts treated,
suddenly, by the "victorious allies"!
Recently Germany
was kicked aroun~
• all her money taken
by the ailk~, French
and English sol-
dlers camping on
her territory at her
expense, the Ver-
sailles treaty stern-
ly enforced.
What a change
now I England sen~
a clever statesman
to talk it over with
Hitler the moment
he throws the Ver-
Artier Itrtebene sallies treaty on tO
the rubbish heal~
France Is almost polite in messages
to Germany. No more threats; no
more "Do as we say I"
You know what causes thl~ Hitler
lets it be known that he has been
preparing for a war in case anybody
wants one ; that Germany has a well
drilled army of half a million men and
an enormous fleet of commercial air-
planes that could drop explosive bombs
and poison gas most conveniently.
In other word& Germauy is pre-
pared, willing, ready and able to fight
If anybody insists on it. So nobody insists.
Thel~e'*ma, y beta ~leseon U~ere~for thls
country, that, if attacked, could only
throw a few lumps of gold at the
enemy and plead: "Please be nice."
Flying Is like human life in thl~,
you do not see what it is that pulls you
along through the upper air.
You look at the three engines, stick.
ing out Into space ahead of you, and
see no sign of power, nothing to ex-
plain the speed and climbing power or
what it Is that keeps you aloft.
The propellers move at a speed that
makes them invisible. You know that
you move. but do not see what moves
y0U.
A clergyman might find a text
for athei~ in that. Your athe-
ist, or gont2eman from Sanegam.
hi& would say: "Do not talk to me
of a trinity of propellers that haul me
to mY de~lnation and my destiny. If
them were any such propellers 1
should see them."
In Austria, Nazis are suPp_o!e~ to
have murdered the Austrian chancel.
lor, Dollfuss. Now the government
Early Achievement Not as Desirable as Some
Parents Would Seem to Believe.
"We are hipped, we Amerlean~,
0pith the passion for early succo~
and youthful achievement&" so
writes one of the best known, expe.
rleneed, and sucee~ful critics, "H.
T.P." It Is a sentence to give pause
to parents' thoughts. There Is som~
thing stimuh~ting to them in ~e
realization that their children are
proving their ability while still
youthful In imagination they see
these, their offsring, spurring ahead.
not only of those of their own age
but overtaking and forging ahead of
these of more mature years and of
wider experience.
When a child Is s genius, or ca-
penally gifted or talented, he, (or
she), Is able to grasp with amazing
rapidity the meaning of instructions
and to acquire technique at a very
early age which would otherwise be
beyond him. With this mental and
physiCal equipment there is also a
qualitY, not'to be gauged by years, for
it is ageless. But geniuses are rare.
despite the fact that many parent~.
consider their children belong to
the limited company. It is wiser"
to be slow In such. clas~flcatlon,
while nurturing and cherishing what
m~ems to be a spark of the "Divine
fire" found In geniuses. Above all,
youths and give them every po~-
ble opportunity tot proper develop-
meat of the ability.
Apart from these exceptional chll-
~, "lliere is the la~c-'~rlty, the
surreal average. These children
maY be slow In developing ~heir pew-
er~ They require time to lay the
l~lht foundaU~n, if they are to have
sufficient tecbnlque to amount to any-
thing worth while. It is a mistake
t~ be "hipped with the passion for
early sueeees and youthful achieve
meaL" Give the young folks Ume
prove themselves. So long as
they don't settle down to content-
meat with medlmn'lty they are work-
toward some i~lfillmenL To put
lO~msure on them may stunt the de-
velepment ef their powers. Provide
u suitable an envh~nment as pos-
ldbla for their pregre~ and encour-
~e rather than urge them to go for-
ward.
waiting game on the part of
enid, mieeiaily when
they see others rislni~ The con-
solation to them has to e~me from
the realization that achfevemen~ i~*
laid on a cumulative fmmdstic.n.
Rome was not built in a day, but it
• was being built continually and
steadily. It was neither s lazy nor
a makeshift process, but a steady
rising. Parents have the right to
expect something of their children,
but unless they foster abilities and
do not push the youngsters ahead
before they are ready, they may
frustrate their owl~ hopes.
0, nell Syadlc&t~--WNU ~ervfoe.
THOS~ MIgMENTOESI
We all lack coura'go:in ~
awa~ Junk that we sail souvenirs.
here at home its still cheaper, and we
got a lot to see. I wish I Just had the
time to get in a ear and |nat take lay
time and prowl around, see a lot of
ranches that 1 been always wauUng to
see. I never been on the north rim of
the Grand Canyon, Drove along below
the south rim the other day, l~red
Stone, Edd'. Vail, a California cattle-
man~ and got off the train about eight
nelock in Seligman. Arizona. Drove all
day long. Saw Just three ranch houses,
two men hauling wood at one, one
sheepherder with a band of sheep, and
one cowboy at another ranch, and we
drove UII dark. Now thats about a roe.
ord for keeping away from the crowds.
Nothing ls spoken of in acres. In
fact lots of ranch countries dont men-
t/on acres. They speak of sections,
thats 640 acres. ~ . -
But this country J /~1
will always speak ! ~lli~d~'jl) I
of It in townships, I ~ I
~ts. times 6,0. ! ~ I
They will say I~A~ !
there ~. a lime I~ Mk I
lln~ up here of I~-~ ~ I
I lmnk lta l~or I ~}
twenty townshiPS, [~f4[/~ (~]
i twenty times. ~N ~iw~
86 times 640. ]j~['~V" /~//[
There 18 an awful ~ ~/J~t//(/,/ ]
lot O~ room in this I ,~' ~'~'~dd~
coantry. T ha t a" .=~
where I Was itheUl~g, iOl" the nqps
cent~ e~r. My ~od friend Brisbane
sam ~ ~ ~uk to +~ aw+s to PUt+ on
wheels a foot higher, he dldont say
what would happen to the fenOers. Then
i have been swamped with wires and
literature saying the Crysler put on~
oUt, .and I think m~Y L ~ ~OUm"
never did hear from Ford about It. He
was Just about monkeying around and
had his mind on something els~l.
Then litellily dozens wired and
wrote that the Government should take
the ~'unemploped and bnlld- boulevards
to .these places 1 was talking abouL It
would be a lesson to some folks to pUb-
lish some kind oli statistics of people
in ~nerios that dent lfve ea a tiiilti-
WaY. Also neve~ saw a car all day out*
aflde th~ town we left. The wood hiulers
ksd a tern off, mules, the ~e~
had a burro~ lot of folks ri~nil hor~-
VTltem
torship you have wholesale
They go together.
The int~ thing~ls the
of banging In