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Page 8 April 1, 2010
Happy spring to everyone. We
are packing away all our snowmen
and snovJflakes and getting out our
spring flowers and getting ready for
• nice weather.
Thursday morning Mass was held
in the chapel at 9 a.m. Exercises
were at 9:45, and at 10:30 we took
the bus downtown to do our shop-
ping and errands. "Why Catholic"
was heldin the chapel at 10:30. In
the afternoon we enjoyed Gospel
music by Tom Horn and Radie
Clayton. They entertained us for 1 V2
hours.
On Friday we had our hair done
by Gloria Hendry, Leone VanVleet
and Marlene Muruato. Kathryn
Larsen and Dineen Mitchell from
Glendive visited Roger Meidinger's
room. Becky Tescher Robison from
Billings came to see 'Lorraine
Tescher. The Holkup family from
Bismarck came to see Orville Moe.
We enjoyed coffee in the afternoon,
and devotions in the evening were
lead by Loft and Start Koppinger.
Our exercises on Saturday morn-
ing were led by Loretta Wyckoff.
We all enjoyed helping Orville Moe
celebrate his birthday in the after-
noon. Agnes Schmeling came to see
the Stulls, Laurence Zook, the
Brengles, Vi Schmeling, Alice
Miller. Ella Schaal, Marie Hollar and
attended Orville's party.
Sunday morning, we had Word
and Communion. We played games
and cards in the afternoon. Pearl
Olstad's daughter, Phyllis Jessen,
spent time with her mother. Gladys
and Ed Berger, John and Thelma
Stull were visited by Judy
Ridenhower. Gayle Harpster visited
Eileen Buchholz, Laurie Lynn from
Wibaux was Kay Jones' company.
Randy, Julie, Jackson, Tanner and
Sydney Binstock came to see Frieda
Feldman. Florence Miske was vis-
ited by Chuck and Lois Miske.
Monday morning Bible study was
lead by Don Brengle. The Catholic
ladies came at 2 p.m. and played
bingo with us, and we enjoyed the
great treats that they brought for us.
Alice Miller's granddaughter Pam
from Eugene, Ore., was here visit-
ing.
Tuesday morning exercises were
led by Lorna with adoration follow-
ing in the chapel. In the afternoon
we enjoyed hearing about Orville
Moe's daughter, Dianne Henrikson's
and her husband, Jen'y's, trip t0
Malaysia. Neil Lang from Lag
Vegas, Kathy Maus from Grafton
and Hal Lang.from Billings came to
see Margaret Walz. Juanita Baird,
Don and Ethel Brengle and Pauline
Ross enjoyed a visit from Bey
Maxted. In the evening, devotions
t
were led by Judy Ridenhower. i
On Wednesday we made a fleece
bhmket for the prom raffle. Last
week Vera Schneider's son,Spencer
Slocum fi'om Williston, and Sara'
Becky and Hannah Slocum Iron
Bismarck took her to the Flying J fo
dinner.
Have a great week, filled witl
sunshine.
Darlene Hansen, Linda
Stoveland's mother, her sisters Jan
and Kari and nieces Jessica and
Maggie and Mark Nicolie. all of
West Fargo, were guests at the
Stoveland home last weekend.
They came to attend a family
birthday party for Rick's 50th
birthday, which was held in the
new shop recently erected on the
Stoveland farm. Rick's actual
birthday is on March 28, but was
held early. Also attending were
Joel and Vickie Erickson, Corey,
Jen, Cole and Chance Erickson
and Gerald and Judy Curl, all of
Beach. and Rob and Sheila Curl of
Bismarck and Annette Curl of
Lincoln.
I wasn't intending tbr last week's
Golva News to sound as if Don and
Marie Nistler shouldn't go to
Arizona each winter, but meant that
we miss them while they are gone.
Guess the quotation marks weren't
dark enough. Sorry about that.
Many from the Golva area were
in Sidney. Mont., on Wednesday to
attend funeral services for Kyle
Sperry Jr., better known as Bud.
Those
attending from here were thee
Brian Sarslands, Gerald Streitz, Be
Zachmann, Paul Schmitz, Amy
Northrup, Linda and Rick Stovehmd
and others. Bud will be missed by
so many.
Phone 872-3633 with news.
Thanks to Holger Johnson for
the following quip and for several
others which will be used in the
future: The keys to true happiness
are: Having something to do.
Having someone o( something to
love. and having something to hope
for.
Woody's Feed & Grain
S. 7th Ave West - Dickinson N.D. 701-225-5161
Dan and Grace Cash traveled to Grand Forks last
weekend, where they attended the Republican
Convention.
Darrell Feldmann and Kei Farstveet were afternoon
and evening visitors at the home of Don and Rella
Abernethy on Sunday.
Jim and Marj Wyckoff went to Dickinson on
Wednesday, and that evening enjoyed a potluck supper
held for Jim's niece, Pam Dizney, from Eugene, Ore.
Irene and Arnold Bakken, and their daughters, Deanna
Bany from Canby, Ore., Tammy Plummer from Spokane,
Wash., and Mary Jane Fields from Sheridan, Wyo., Jack
Cook, and Jane Cook were supper guests at the home of
Mary Cook and Judy and Terry Mollendor to help Jack
Cook celebrate his birthday.
Jim and Marj Wyckoff met with Jim's niece at the
Flying J on Thursday to have breakfast with Jim's niece.
Pam Dizney.
Thought for the week: Patience is the abilior to idle
your motor when you feel like stripping your gears.
DID YOU KNOW?
Farm Credit Services of Mandan
www.farmcreditmandan.com
March 24, 1960:
Fahnlander goes to White House
The Rev. William Fahnlander,
superintendent of the Home on the
Range for Boys, left March 23, for
Washington D.C., where he will
attend the White House conference
on Children and Youths, which gets
under way March 27 and ends April
1. The event takes place every 10
years, and this is the fifth. The first
one was 50 years ago, and was orig-
inated by President Theodore
Roosevelt.
There are 37 delegates • from
North Dakota. In all, between 5,000
and 7.000 delegates will attend, and
the number will be broken up into
small group conferences discussing
youth problems.
Enroute to Washington D.C.,
there will be three nights of talks in
Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.
Afterward, Fahnlander will go to
New York on business and will also
visit the late Rev. Cassedy's family
in nearby New Jersey.
The next stop for Fahnlander
will be Flint, Mich., where he will
speak to the Eagles on April 6-7,
then on to Detroit and East Detroit.
He will fly back to Milwaukee,
Wis., where he will meet with the
Grand Aerie officers of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles for a few
hours, with Minneapolis his next
stop.
Bijou Theatre seats destroyed
About a dozen and a half
padded, upholstered seats at the
Bijou Theatre have been malicious-
ly destroyed in recent weeks, and
Roy Walz, owner,-is taking steps to
prevent any such similar occur-
rences. He has offered a substantial
reward for information leading to
the arrest of the guilty party, with-
out ever revealing the name of the
informant.
Walz exhibited the destroyed
articles, revealing slashed, gouged,
tattered cushions, which could
hardly be recognized as such.
Some had been cut on top, the plas-
tic upholstery being removed in
one huge circle, while others had
large gaping holes in them where
the padding and filling had been
pulled out.
Because of vandalism like this.
Walz decided not to do any improv-
ing in the theatre, or decorating.
10 new TB cases registered
A total of 10 newly registered
cases have been reported thru
March 7, t960, according to
Kenneth Mosser, director of the
Division of Preventable Diseases of
the State Health Department. One
of the 10 was in Golden Valley
County. The provisional figures of
total cases registered in 1959 is 109.
Looking Back Golden Valley
News
March 31 , 1960:
Adkins to head new school
The Rev. Joseph Adkins, a for-
mer priest at St. Michael's Catholic
Church in Sentinel Butte, has been
named the principal of the new
Trinity Catholic High School to
built in Dickinson. Adkins is at
present pastor of St. Thomas parish
at Tioga.
He had served as an assistant to
the Rev. Blaine Cook, when the lat-
ter was principal of St. Mary's High
School in Bismarck. Bids will be
accepted on the new school in
August, and classes are expected to
start in the fall of 1961.
Gilman injures eye
Five-year-old Bobby Gilman,
son of Mr. and Mrs, Monk Gihnan,
is wearing a patch over his left eye
as the result of an accident last
week, when he stepped on a piece
of wire, which penetrated his eye.
Dr. Bush administered first aid. and
sent him to St. Joseph's Hospital at
Dickinson, where he had surgery to
close the wound.
Doctors said his vision would
not be affected. Bobby now has a
little sister named Rita Lynne, who
became a member of the family last
Thursday, when her parents brought
the 22-month-old tot home from
Fargo.
Car crash victims in hospital
Jim Kramer and Bill Teeters of
Wibaux are both patients at the
Johnstone Memorial Hospital in
Beach, after their head-on crash last
Saturday evening on a country road
north of Wibaux. Kramer is the
more seriously injured, but both are
believed tobe out of danger, barri0g
complications.
M
yourself count
:h Dakota!
Mail your Census questionnaire.
We can't move forward until you
i .-<:: : mail it back. IUrdtedStat. I
L, ensus i
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Educational sessions also offered on April 14 and morning of Aprll 15 for a fee.
See website for details.
TRMF offering $5,000 prize
MEDORA - The Medora
Musical's Burning Hills Singers
may be singing a new song soon.
The North Dakota Songwrirting
Contest, sponsored by the Theodore
Roosevelt Medora Foundation, is a
new competition and open to all
independent songwriters.
Entrants are encouraged to write
a new song that captures the attrib-
utes of the state of North Dakota
and the spirit of North Dakotans.
The winning selection is scheduled
to become a part of the 2011
Medora Musical lineup.
The contest was launched on
March 30, and will run through the
summer season. Along with having
their song featured in the 2011
show, the grand prize winner will
receive $5.000, a Medora
Experience vacation package, and a
Medora Musical gift baskeL
"For 45 years the Medora
Musical has worked to feature tal-
ented North Dakotans in a show that
our state can be proud of. This is a
new opportunity .that the Medora
Musical is offering for a talented
songwriter," said Kinley Slauter,
Burning Hills Amphitheatre manag-
er tbr the TRMF.
The competition is open to any
U.S. resident who is at least 18
years of age, and entrants may sub-
mit multiple entries. The winner
will be selected by a .judging panel
that includes members of the
Medora Musical production team
and the TRMF. Judging will be
based on lyrics, melody, composi-
tion and originality.
Participants must send a copy of
their song on a CD along with an
entry forna and lyrics sheet. Enn T
forms and a complete listing of the
official rules are available at
www.medora.com.
Show
In response to last Friday's live
musical performance by Roger
Tvedt of Wibaux, Mont., and Seth
Domek, the Bijou Show House is
developing a program for regular
entertainment prior to a movie.
This Friday, March 26, starting
house starts live performances
at 7 p.m., singer-songwriter. Beau
Wadhohn of Sentinel Butte, will
perform original material and other-
s" songs.
To hear Wadholm perform,
moviegoers will need to purchase a
ticket for the movie. Wadhohn won
before movies
third place in this year's Beach's Got
Talent Contest.
"It has been my goal to present a
live performance ahead of a movie
show to make for a rich evening of
entertainment," said Emanuel
Cuhnan, show house owner.
Egg hunt
MEDORA - An Easter egg hunt
for children of all ages will take
place at the Chateau de Mores State
Historic Site in Medora on Easter
Sunday,April 4, beginning at 11 a.m.
The event, which is free and
open to the public, is sponsored by
the State Historical Society of
North Dakota and the Medora
Chamber of Commerce.
The egg hunt will begin on the
grounds of the Chateau de Mores
Interpretive Center. In order to
ensure there is plenty of time to hide
the eggs, parents are asked to pro:
Roosevelt Memorial Lodge
Notice of Meetings
Roosevelt Memorial Lodge No. 129
invites all Masons to a dinner
at 6:30 p,m.
Meeting at 8 p,m. every 2nd and 4th Tuesday,
Belfield. 1 block west of Great Plains Nat] Bank
I
I,,,1%,,# I I
vide a dozen e,,os. - already decorat-
ed - for each of their children who
will be participating. Eggs should
be delivered to the Americlnn in
Medora, beginning Thursday, April
1, at noon, through Saturday, April
3. The motel is open 24 hours daily,
and the eggs can be delivered any-
time during this period.
Everyone is welcome to attend
the event even if they do not have
children participating. Coffee, rolls
and juice will be provided on the
eduled for April 4
patio of the Interpretive Center. In
case of bad weather, the egg hunt
will be moved to inside the
Interpretive Center.
"The Easter egg hunt at the
Chateau is a long-standing tradition
started by Han'y Roberts, the first
caretaker at the Chateau many years
ago," said Dee Linn, site supervisor
at the Chateau de Mores. "We're
pleased that the Medora Chamber
of Commerce sponsors this event
with the State Historical Society."
I Premium Barley ........... $2.10
Feed Barley ............... $2.00
Race Horse Oats B .......... $2.00
Race Horse OatsC .......... $1.90
Milling Oats ............... $ 1.70
Feed Wheat ............... $2.50
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The MonDak Newspaper Network offers a quicker, inexpensive method of
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The MonDak Newspaper Network offers discounted
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Contact the Golden Valley News/Billings County Pioneer for more information at
(701)872-3755.
Member Newspapers:
Billings County Pioneer, Medora, N.O.
Golden Valley News, Beach, N.D.
The Circle Banner, Circle, Mont.
The Journal, Crosby, N.D.
Searchlight, Culbertson, Mont.
Glasgow Courier, Glasgow, Mont.
Ranger Review, Glendive, Mont.
Farm & Ranch Weekly, Glendive, Mont.
Sheridan County News, Plentywood, Mont.
Fallon County Times, Baker, Mont.
The Greeter, Plentywood, Mont.
Plains Reporter, Williston, N.D.
Sidney Herald, Sidney, Mont.
Tioga Tribune, Tioga, N.D.
McKenzie County Farmer, Watford City, N.D.
Wibaux Pioneer Gazette, Wibaux, Mont.
Williston Herald, Williston, N.D.
Herald News, Wolf Point, Mont.