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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
April 11, 1935     Golden Valley News
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April 11, 1935
 
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\ THE BEACH REVIEW I I / [VENTS OF THE WEEK THKZJGHOUT TH[ STATE TOLD IN BRIEF FORM Liabon.--Distribution has been IZade here of $31,870.88 third pay- kent of corn-hog contracts in Ran-- county. . Mlnot.--Dates for the annual grand assembly of the Order of Rainbow for girls, Minot, were set for June 27, 28 and 29. McClusky.--C. G. Ritchie, state tenator from Sheridan county from 1924 to 1928, died at his home at the age of 87 years. Pa0e. M Eighteen farmers were graduated from the evening school of adult farmers here. The school Was sponsored by the vocational agricultural department of Page high school. Wahpeton.~The fourth annual ~lchland county music festival will be conducted in Wahpeton with ~ore than 750 children in the an- nual rural chorus. Other numbers Will include music groups from the larger classified high schools of the county. Grand Forks.raCine after clue tailed as authorities questioned Scores of people in the invesUga- ties of the murder of Raymond ]hind, 20-year-old Grand Forks taxi driver whose body was found with • bullet wound in his head. Lakota.mTen cases of oranges, Worth $60, were sold by Boy Scouts to raise money with which to send a local scout to the national Jam- boree at Washington, August 20- 31. Grafton.~Haroid W. McCarthy, a ~stoffice employee at Grafton, was arrested by a federal postoffiee in- SPecter and charged with taking a letter containing $12 from the Untt- td States mails. Fairmount.--Believed to be the Qrst Starling caught in North Da- kota was banded at the local Bird ]~anding Station. The ldentlflca- lion was positive. The bird was ~eleased with band No. 34-237910. Mandan.--On the site where 59 Years ago Indian fighters, including Gen. George A. Custer and his Sev- enth cavalry, prepared for a final campaign against the hostile Sioux, Old Ft. McKeon is assuming its original appearance as the result ef more than seven months work 5y the CCC. Bismarck. ~ Present code and Wage scales covering the bitumln- oats coal industry throughout the Country under which the lignite acids are operating in North and SOUth Dakota have been extended ~til June 16. LaMoure.--Excited barks of the family dog caused death indirectly for 10-year.old Richard Fenno, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Fenno. The lad was riding a horses when it be- ease excited by the dogs barking a~d shied, the lad's foot catching l~ the stirrup, dragging him for SOme distance. Oakea.--Selma Fradet, Monango, Wen the Masonic oratorical district ntest, defeating representatives rein Forman, Cogswell, and Oakes. l~hebe Andres, Oakes, placed sec- Ond. Winners go to Jamestown lat~ in April to participate in the regional event. Fargo.~Hugh C. Corrigan and l~red "W. Sheffield were elected to th6 Fargo city commission at the r~cent election. F.A. Leonard was returned as police magistrate and Harry Howland as park commis- Sioner. Corrtgan, former Fargo ~Ostmaster, led the field for city c~missioner with 2,154 votes. Minot.~Paying $156.60, a band f gypsies, including a woman who efrauded a Minot man out of $90, ~Williston made settlement which eluded reimbursement to the t~ud victim and payment for ex- l~e~ses in apprehending them. Less than two hours after taking the l~°ney at Minot, the gypsies, trav- eling in two automobiles, were ap- Prehended at Williston. ~RU0by.--Wedding gowns ranging age from more than 100 years to ose of modern times were shown .U the Centennial Bridal Parade Itere. Gowns belonging to local ~ecOPle as well as gowns from New ork, Florida, the Philltpines, .Rus- ~a, and neighboring towns were modeled by young women of Rug- by. l=arco.~In competition with 40 ether teams in the seventh corps ~trict of the annual national t ~arst match, one N. D. A. C. rifle ~ea~ placed second, according to ~Ptaln J.B. Conmy, coach. High ~ste~t ~n in the district was the Univer. !ty of Minnesota, and the Univer- Sity of Missouri, placed third. Minot.~For one dollar, Helnrlch 'oisfut, Benedict farmer, has built dam impounding a million gal- ena of water. Draining less than Square mile, the dam is 50 feet ug, 10 feet wide, and varies from ~o to eight feet in height. Be- des the dollar, which was spent ~e gasoline and oil, the dam re- ~i~ed 10 hours of labor, with four '~ses, scraper, tractor and plow. Q;r•nd Forks.---Judges for music |tests at the university May 15- Will be Harold Bachman of Chi- ~o, formerly of Fargo, director of "million dollar lined" and Prof. ~" I~eDinekT, dlFeat~ 8~, or~- ' Z~usic at the University of MlzZ- ~ta. Peptn~ky will Judge orebel- and Baehman the bands. guess what those troops could do. If Germany declared war it would be with planes drop- Arthur Brlmbnne ping explosives and poison gas on Paris. No nation at war will sit in trenches for four or five Fears, now that fying Is reaL Brltain, going a long way around, wisely, sends a suave statesman, Cap- fain Eden. to Moscow to see Stalin of Russia. The talk, not published, may have been like this: If England agrees to help you fight Japan, will you help against Germany, in case of need? A British naval officer cut the throat of a shipmate. In England they hang you for that. When hanging time came, Mrs. Violet Vanderelst, prosperous widow, opposed to the death penalty, hired two planes to fly back and forth above the gallows, trailing banner~ reading, "Stop the death sentence." While airplanes flew. overhead, trucks drove back and forth before the Jail, with loud speakers bellowing "Abide With Me." The man that "killed his comrade sleeping," or however he did It. dld not "abide." He went through the trap. The British believe in discouraging murder, and prompt punishment seems to do it. Graft and dishonesty are old, as old as human need and cunning. A papy- rus written 1~200 years before Christ tells of three men tried for robbing a royal tomb. Egyptian kings were de- scended from the gods; to rob their tombs was sacrilege, the punishment death. A dishonest Jeweler, putting base metal in a supposedly "pure gold~ crown for King Hlero, Was exposed by the great Archimedes, who thought out a method in his bath, and started the word "eureka" down through the ages. Buy A Can From Your Groccr Today Michael Angelo, building St. Peter's at Rome, complained to the pope of the materials furnished by contrac- tors, reminding his holiness that he, Michael Angelo, would make no profit from St. Peter's except "benefit to my soul," and urged the pope to punish the grafters. There is even graft now in this modern, enlightened republic. What is life? What is death? What • re we? An English gentleman "dies"; doc- tors pronounce him dead. He returns to life, says he has been in heaven, tells what he saw--s dull accounL clothing the same as we wear here. How far, how fast, did his spirit travel while he was "dead"? What does the soul do while the body Is supposedly dead? Does it go away and come back, or Just wait around inside the body? What is death? Some say it is only a "belief," and there is no such thing. In New York's American Museum of Natural History is shown a drawing of the largest land mammal that ever lived, named Baluchiterium. This huge animal, which vanished from earth °,25,000,000 years ago, stood 17 feet 9 inches high at the shoulder, was as big as two big elephants, weighed 20,000 pounds or more. It was not as big as a dinosaur, but the dinosaur laid eggs and was no mammal. A food problem might be solved if the "big- zest mammal" could be brought back and raised by cattlemen. It ate 500 pounds of food a day; that must be considered. In America it might be necessary to drown the mammal Balu- chiterium, with her unborn babies. Sir John Simon, returning from an unsatisfactory talk with Hitler, reports "certain divergencies" of opinion. That is going pretty far for a British states- man. There is a bigger fly than that In the ointment: Sir John learns from Hitler that Germany "already has a larger air force than that of Great Britain." Britain thought Germany had only half aa many planes. A wise statesman gets his fighting airpl•nes ready before he starts to fight. In France three persons "sterilized" at their own request by "a mysterious Austrian doctor" because they did not want to have children have been ar- rested. France, striving for more population, believes that "sterilization" can be ove~oue. The mysterious Austrian performed 15 operations on men and women I~ f,~N~ di~mpp4mriz~. provide lists of poultry men flocks have been officially tested and found free from the disease. Pullorum disease, also known to poultrymen, as "B. W. D.." Is probably the most serious disease attacking baby chicks and causes the loss of thousands of chicks every year. It can be pre- vented only by starting with hatching eggs from pul]orum-clean stock, hatch. lag them under the most sanitary con. dltlons, and always keeping the chicks free from contact with possible sources of Infection. The poultrymen In the state whose locks have been found 100 per cent free from pullorum disease, have gone to considerable expense and trouble to eliminate the d|sease from their flocks. These flocks may provide stock or hatching eggs for replacing diseased flocks. Warning Is also sounded against buy- Ing chicks from hatcheries which hatch eggs from Infected or untested flocks. Chicks from disease-frce flocks can eas- Ily pick up pullorum Infection in the hatchery tf any infected chicks are present. Claims as to freedom from disease may not be reliable, and for his own protection the poultryman should get a list of pullorum-clean flocks and buy his supply of chicks or eggs from one of them. "Open Front" Plan Good for Airing Hen Houses The best method of poultry house ventilation Is the one that will secure good ventilation without cold drafts upon the fowls, particularly az night, says a correspondent in the Rural New-Yorker. There are many plans for accomplishing thls. few of which can be considered ideal. The "open front" plan Is undoubtedly the most commonly used, and this consists in having all wails of [he poultry building airtight, with the exception of the front one, and the "front" Is ummlly that" facing the south or the southeast. If cross openings are afforded. It will be di~cult to prevent cross drafts, whereas if but one side of the building has outside openlngs, winds cannot blow through. The idea is illustrate! by an attempt to blow Into a bottle. It Is true tha~ • long building with opened front windows may suffer some drafts by permitting air to enter at one end shd sweep through to the other. This may be prevented by the use of partitions ex~ending from the rear wall nearly to the front of the room. A common mistake made by those using an open front Is to close it up in ummually cold weather, this stopping the interchange of air and bringing about dampness of the i~ farter. Exercise Unnecessary Exercise, it has been found, Is not necessary for laying hens. says the Mis- souri Farmer. Since eggs are made from surplus, it is logical to believe the less energy expended in exercise the more surplus there will be for the manufacture of eggs. In visiting the hoppers the watering tank, nests, fly- ing up on roosts and in ranging over the laying house hens in confinement get enough exercise for their daily egg" production needs. This is not true, however, where hatchabllity of eggs is concerned. Hens whose eggs are to be hatched should be given exercise, particularly some six or eight weeks prior to hatching time Lack of exer- cise in breeders makes for weak germs and weak chicks. Breeding hens should be given range out of doors wheneve~ possible In the Chicken Yard Pound for pound a pullet needs fou~ times more oxygen than a cow. Birds which ~tar~ t~ lay when verY young are likely to produce smaller eggs throughout life than those which start productlon later. Young drake~ ~tt~ln weights of • bout four pounds In from seven to eight weeks. Hen ducks are housed in i•ying quarters at about six months of age. $ @ $ It Is estimated that close to a billion chicks are hatched each year In in- cubators. CUTTING PATCHES FOR QUILTS B~ GRANDMOTHER When making a patch quilt the patches must he cut out right if the finished quilt is to look neat. Sewing seams the same width Is glso very important. These two points should • lways be watched as work pre- grasses, to obtain good results, and not have trouble after work is well under way. Cut the patches from accurate cut-out diagrams. The cut- out diagrams shown here are a set for the "Dresden Plate" and "Bas- ket" quilts, and include allowance for seams. Any width for seams may be used but always use the same width in ene quill to come out right. Directions for use are very simple. Place cut-out on material so the longest dimension follows the weave. Mark outline with pencil and cut out material carefully. Send 10 cents to our quilt dept. and we mail you both of these fiber cut-outs set No. 83a and 10a. Address Home Craft Co.~Dept. D.--Nineteenth and SL Louis avenue, St. Louis, Me. When writing for any information inclose a slumped addressed envelope for reply. To keep clean and healthy take IOta. l~leree', s Ple~mant Pelle~. ~e]r regu~ liver, bowels and stomach.--Adv. Never Heard of "Ira Clergyman (to father who has Just had his baby christened "Homer")~ I suppose Homer is your favorite poet? Farmer~Poet? No sirl I keep pigeons.--Cincinnati Enquirer. SHOT OF THYROID TO RESTORE PEP OF BUSINESS MAN Business men are advised to get • dose of "brain oil" when they begin to slow down and lose their grip. They can get it from horses, pigs, lambs or other animals, and It will do Just as much good as though it came from their own thyroid gland. Dr. George Crile, head of the f•mous Cleveland clinic explained. Doctor Crile, in Kansas City for a regional meeting of the American College of Surgeons, gave the ad- vice at a chamber of commerce luncheon. The decrease in chemical and physi- cal activity sets in at birth, Doctor Crile explained, and the •ctlvlty of ~e brain depends on activity of the thyroid gland. *'When a deficient amount of this glandular product is secreted, and this is common in the second half of a buslm,ss man's life, his brain be- gins to slow up and his associates notice a letting down in his work." Doctor Crlle said. "He feels drowsy and dull in the afternoon. His busi- ness fails to hold its dominance among compeUtors. The activity of his essential organs is letting down. "Then the man can take thyroid extract and his brain will be sharp ened, Just as it formerly was sharp- ened by his own thyroid hormone, li doesn't matter whose thyroid gland makes the extract given to him ; it is exactly the same whether it comes from a pig, a lamb, a sheep, a horse, an ox or another man. Thus the lag- ging individual can be placed back in the saddle again." Piss end Patronage "How do you stand on the hog- slaughtering program?" "It has been of no use to me," an- swered Senator Sorghum. "I haven'~ sufficient sophistry at command t@ make it look to my eenstltuents like an excuse for not bringing home the bacon." MORE LUSCIOUS VEGETABLES Fresh, large, full-fla- vored and luscious ves- etables can be grown right in your baek-yat~ or garden, if you use Ferry's Purebred Ve~. table Seeds--the kind that have been Amea4- ca's favorite seeds for three generations and more. Don't miss this chance to eeonom/ze! warms up "T.ER "r.EY PICK OUT A PRIZE ~_ BUB, AND ,WE'LL KNOCK EM OFF l WISH I WAS LI KE :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: , .;:::!!~ii~:::~.::, • i~.~:. " OFF! pR,, THREE ALLS r----/I U. ill St I //A DOLLAR S [Ii[THAT'S |2 STRIKE'OUT5 IN W ROW, KID, AND A DOZEN H. PRIZE5 FOP, YOU T, ou . l [ DIZZY bEAN. I I I'M CLE. NEO OUT! A : ,zzY b Zdi Only happy, c~nt~nt~d hens lay eggs sod, in addition to making them com~ ~ JoiaDiz~DcaaWioners.carryDizzy'sLuckyPie~ fortable, adequate roosting ~psce will ~mnd the_top from rote ftdl-W~ze Orspe-Nuts package, with prevent accident by hens ,being crown" ~ nameand addre~m, to Grape-Nuts, Battle Creek, ]~Bch., for ~d off and Injured. ~dmq~mm~m~~m~~ memlz~mhip ~ and copy ot club n~nual--'%Vin with . . . ~ ~ D¢~," containlag list of ~w¢l~ t~ A n•tlon•! survey has determinedI~__~M~°~Pd~N~P0I I~,ooo,ooo Is lost aunu•ny b~\:t.~e.Jamerk~n poultry industry, t. ~ ~~~ r~ ]~J , t hmf~ winnl~fla~,-silit~ own, lgomomlcal,~'~'(~A~jl ~l And formo~eu~rgy,starteattn~Gmpe-Nuts. :t'lo Ulbl~ with ~."~ m, cr~ HOW TO LI KF.. ~TICKS WHEN TO U GH Boys/Girls/... Get Valuable Prizes Free!