National Sponsors
May 11, 1944 Golden Valley News | |
©
Golden Valley News. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 8 (8 of 8 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
May 11, 1944 |
|
Website © 2024. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader |
THE GOLDEN VALLEY I~EWS Thursday, May 11,
B
/
LOCAL
NEWS
Items Of Interest picked up
hero a~d there by .°u~ News
reporters, We are always glao
to get'Your news items.
PHONE 89
t,
Maxine and Dorothy Sill were
Dickinson callers on Wednesday.
Mrs. Breneese of Wibaux was a
Beach business caller Tuesday.
Mrs. Dan Cafferty of Beach was
a Glendive business caller Tuesday.
Frances Zinda of St. Phillps was
a Beach caller on Monday.
M. L. Walker was a Dickinson
caller on Sunday.
Henry Wicka of rural Beach was
a caller in town Thursday.
Mrs. Osberry of Glendive was a
Beach caller on Friday of last week.
Rudy Kunlck of Sentinel Butte
was a Beach caller on Friday.
Agnes Podolskl of Wibaux wliis
a Beach caller on Friday.
Mr. and Ml"s. Jerry Pesha were
Beach callers on Friday.
Miss Mary Lou Menke spent the
weekend in Belfield with friends.
James Osberry of Olendlve spent
Monday in Beach.
Mrs. "R. T. Courts left Sunday
on a buying trip to Minneapolis.
Mr& A. Witzig and daughter
Carrie were Sunday supper guests
at the Bob Zook home.
Lt. and Mrs. V. Morris are the
proud parents of a baby son, born
to them at Watsonville. Calif.
Mrs. Gloyd Bury of Alpha was
a Beach caller on Monday of this
wick.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Abraham
~ere Dickinson business callers on
Tuesday.
W. W. Ackeley of Medora was
laeach caller the forepart of the
week. receiving medical attention.
H. B. Finneman of Oolva was
Beach caller on Monday of this
"week.
Lt. William Conway of Medora
vlsited in Beach enroute to Louisi-
ana, where he will be stationed.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hartinger of Me-
dora spent Tuesday in Beach with
Mildred Schrnltz.
Mrs. Nels Waarst of St. Phillps
was a Beach business caller on
Tuesday of this week.
Mr. and Mrs, W. W. Mills were
Sunday visitors at the Teddy Blue
home in Beach.
W. L. Logan returned to his
home in Fryburg after spending a
few days in Beach.
Mrs. E. D. Evans received a
Mother's Day cablegram Monday
from her son Douglas, who is
overseas.
Mrs. Henry Trester and daugh-
ter Joyce and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Rost of Medora accompanied Mr.
and Mrs. Werner Nlstler and
daughter to Dickinson Monday,
/I I I
Mr. and Mrs. Art Peters of Glen
Ullin were Beach business callers
on Thursday of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Flayle were
Wlbaux callers on Thursday of last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Orstead of
Belfield were Beach callers on Fri-
day of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. J~kn Scuder of
South Heart were Beach business
caller on Friday.
Mrs. George Oas and daughter,
Mrs. Franklin Smith, were Glen-
dive caller on Friday of last week.
Mrs. Bob McDonald and Jean
Ulfers were Dickinson callers on
Saturday.
Mrs. Donald Ulfers and daughter
Judy were Bismarck business visit-
ors on Friday of last week.
Mrs. Ed Stull was a" Glendive
visitor on Friday and Saturday of
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wischow of
Sentinel Butte were Beach shop-
pers on Monday.
S-Sgt. and Mrs. Earnest Orr ar-
rived Tuesday from Camp McCall,
S. C. to spend a few days with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Orr.
Mrs. Rufus Arnold has accepted
a position as third clerk at the
local War Price and Rationing
office.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hinkel of
Medora were Beach callers on Fri-
day, Mrs. Hinkle receiving medical
attention.
Mrs. Ben Thompson and Mrs.
Ronald Johnstone of Beach were
Dickinson callers on Thursday of
last week.
Mrs. Bryson of Ollie was a Beach
caller on Saturday and spent the
afternoon with her sister, Mrs.
Minnie Sorenson.
Mrs. Elmer Hasbrook returned
Wednesday evening from Brainerd,
Minn., where she has spent the
past two weeks visiting friends and
relatives.
Mrs. Rose Kurkowski arrived on
Wednesday of last week from Bls-
marek, where she had spent a
month visiting with her son, Ted
Kurkowski, and family.
Pvt. Morton Still arrived Satur-
.day from Camp Shelby, Miss. to
spend a furlough with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Still of rural
Beach.
Pfc. Don Carlson arrived Thul~-
day from Camp Rucker, Ala. to
visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Carlson, and other relatives
and friends. He returned to his
camp Wednesday morning.
Mrs. Lydia Harp and daughter
Pearl left Friday for Seattle, Wash.,
where they will spend some time
visiting Mrs. Palmer Skaar, for-
merly Elsie Harp, and other friends
and relatives.
Sgt. James Odenbaugh arrived
Saturday from his camp at Lub-
bock, Texas to spend a 11-day fur-
lough with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. James Odenbaugh, Sr. James
is an aerial engineer in the Army
Air Corps.
THEY'LL
LAST
MEANS THEY'RE
LOVELY
b
$
FULL FASHIONED GAYMODE RAYONS
iii
Serviceable, basic styles for your summer stocking
wardrobe -- sheer enough to go an~where. Two
shades-- Honey-glo, Sundash..
Remember M O T H E R !!
SUNDAY, MAY 14th
"A Day of Days"
Delva Mae Howard spent the
weekend in Dickinson with her
mother, Mrs. Kathleen Murphy.
Alfalfa seed supplies are the
smallest in many years, particularly
northern seed.
Max Franz~n, Harold LaSalle and
Kenneth Larson will leave Thurs-
day for their pro-induction exam-
inations at Fort Sneiling.
Billy Meyers and Dick Sechrist
returned Friday evening from their
boot training at Great Lakes. Ill.
to spend a leave at their parental
homes.
Mrs. William Gardner and Mrs.
Howard Hess returned Sunday from
Eau Claire, Wis.. where they had
spent a few weeks visiting friends
and relatives.
Mrs. S. A. Johnstone returned to
her home in Beach on Tuesday
after spending a few days with her
cl~ughter, June, in Hutchinson,
Minn.
Mrs. P. J. Edkins returned Thurs-
dy of last week from Boise, Idaho,
where she has been visiting her son
William, who is a lieutenant in the
Army Air Corps, stationed at
Oowen Field. Idaho.
Mrs. M. L. Walker left Sunday
for St. Cloud, Minn.. where she
will spend a few weeks visiting
friends and relatives.
Guy Lee made a trip to Gorham
on Sunday. While there he made
a speech in the interests of his
campaign.
W. L. Carlson moved from the
C. O. Carlson farm north of Beach
to the Charles Hollstein home on
Saturday.
The Social Hour Club will meet
at the home of Mrs. Ernest Sorenson
on Tuesday afternoon, May 16th.
Roll call, "Music."
Glen Hathaway arrived Friday
evening from Farragut, Idaho to
spend a leave with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Hatl~way.
There will be a mothers and
daughters banquet at the City Hall
on May 11 at 6:30 P. M., spon-
sored by the O.O. and W-M.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin Thompson
are the parents of a baby son,
born to them at the Glendive hos=
pital on Monday of this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Roddy Kimball,
and Mrs. Casimer Bruski were
Dickinson callers on Wednesday of
last week.
C. E. Wlnkleman of Beach is a
patient at the Johnstone Memorial
Hospital and is reported as doing
as nicely as can be expected.
Elmer Hasbrook, Harold Smith,
Sgt. Jimmy Odenbaugh, and James
Odenbaugh, Sr. were Dickinson
business callers on Monday.
Mrs. Donald Kowalewski and son
left Tuesday for her home in Fargo
after spending some time with her
father, E. M. Enderle.
The Woman's Club met at the
home of Mrs. Rufus Arnold on
Monday. Mrs. Maurice Rohan gave
a very interesting book review.
Don Morrow was a Beach visitor
a few days this week, visiting
friends and relatives, enrou~e to
his home in Chicago, Ill
The local Red Cross chapter is
in need of volunteers for sewing
~onvalesc~ntrobes, scuffs house-
lves, and bedside bags. All sew-
ing is for service men.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Plummet and
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Wang of Ollle were dinner guests
at the Paul Thoemke home on
Wednesday of last week.
The Garden Club will hold a
plant sale in the Montana-Dakota
Utilities Co. office on Saturday,
May 13th, between the hours of
I and 5 P. M.
Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Dickinson and
house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Dickinson and Virginia of Minne-
apolis, were six o'clock dinner
guests at the Raymond Noyes home
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hodgin, Jr.
and Mrs. Luther Hodgin, Sr. left
Monday for Los Angeles after
spending a week in Beach attend-
ing the funeral of Luther Hodgin,
Senior.
Folks who say they are in politics
to save the world and not for their
own benefit are somewhat like the
guy who was driving into town
one day and met a neighbor. "Bill,
where are you going?" "Oh," says
Bill, "I'm going into town to get
drunk, and how I do dread it."
Mrs. Ruby E. Doerner and son
"Punky" will leave Friday for New
York City, where they will attend
the graduation of her son, Cadet
Midshipman Robert L. Doerner
from the U. S. Merchant Marine
Academy at Klngspoint, Long Is-
land on May 19, at which time he
will receive his commission as en-
sign in the U. S. Maritime Service
and U.S.N.R. He will receive his
degree in marine engineering.
~Y
U. S. Naval Training School
Dearborn, Michigan.
Dear Sirs:
I am taking this means of thank-
ing all those who nlake it possible
for the boys in service to receive
the Golden Valley News.
I am going to a Basic Engineer-
ing School and we take .the great-
est part of our schooling right in
the Ford plant, which is only about
a block from our station.
I sure would like to hear from
any or all of the people up there,
and also from any of the boys in
other branches of service.
Very truly yours.
James S. Rathbun F2c
Barracks A. U.
U. S. Naval Training School.
Dearborn, Michigan.
Observe Mother's
Day on May 14th,
Gov. Moses Asks
"The observance of the second
Sunday in May in each year as
Mother's Day, is a splendid tradi-
tion which should be perpetuated
in the national life of our .people,"
said Governor Mose~ in urging citi-
zens of North Dak~ita to observe
the day with the display of flags
on homes, schools and public build-
ings, "as a visible token of the love
we bear for our mothers and as
a fitting tribute to their great con-
tribution to our national heritage
and national welfare."
"'All that I am or hope to be
I owe to my angel mother!" These
words of Abraham Lincoln." said
Governor Moses. "express not only
the love and reverence and grati-
tude we owe to our mothers, but
they also express the greatness of
this nation and the bright hope
for the future. For by teaching
their children the ideals of liberty
and democracy that we as a nation
are fighting ~o preserve, the moth-
ers of America have provided the
inspiration for patriotic loyalty
which has ever been and is now our
strongest bulwark: by teaching
their children the love of God and
their fellow men, by preparing
them for the obligation of citizen-
ship in a democracy, they have
made a contribution to the cause of
freedom and justice which has
been the salvation of this nation in
the past, and which will leave its
shining n~ark on the future history
of the world."
V~
RATION CALENDAR
Sugar--Stamps Nos. 30 and 31
(Book IV) good for 5 pounds in-
definitely. Stamp No. 40 (Book IV)
good for 5 pounds CANNING sugar
through February 28, 1945. A maxi-
mum of 20 pounds additional can-
ning sugar per person may be had
by application to your local War
Price and Rationing Board on OPA
form R-323.
Meats and Fats--Red Stamps 8A
through ~ (Book IV) valid in-
definitely. Red Stamps 8R, 8S and
gr (Book IV) valid May 7 for an
indefinite period. Beginning May
7, thirty points will become valid
every FOUR weeks instead of every
TWO weeks.
Processed Foods---Blue Stamps ~i
through 8Q (Book IV) good inde-
finitely. Five more blue stamps will
become valid June 1.
Shoes---Airplane Stamps Nos.
and 2 (Book III) good indefinitely
for one pair of shoes each.
Fuel Oll~Period Four and Five
coupons good for ten gallons per
unit through August 31, 1944.
Stoves--Applications for purchase
certificates on all gas. oil or coal
heating and cooking stoves must be
made to local War Price and Ra-
tioning Boards.
Gasoline--A-11 coupons good for
3 gallons each through June 21
B2 and B3. and C2 and C3 sup-
plemental coupons good for five
gallons each. For your protection
against the black market, the ra-
tioning rules now require every
car owner to write his license num-
ber and state immediately on all
gasoline coupons in his possession.
Tire Inspections---Truck inspec-
tions must be made every six
months or five thousand miles,
whichever occurs first.
--V---
"OLD ACQUAINTANCE' AT
ROSE NEXT SUNDAY
"Old Acquaintance," a d a p t e d
from the successful Boardway pro-
duction of the same name by John
Van Druten, starring Bette Davis
and Miriam Hopkins, will be the
new screen fare presented at the
Rose Theatre opening next Sunday.
The new Warner Bros. picture
features Gig Young, popular young
player whose outstanding perform-
ances in "The Gay Sisters" and
"Air Force" placed him among
Hollywood's most popular players.
Also featured are John Loder, last
seen with Bette Davis in "Now
Voyager," and Dolores Moran, beau-
tiful and talented young newcomer.
Directed by Vincent Sherman,
"Old Acquaintance" is the poignant
story of two women, complete op-
posites as to character and intelli-
gence, whose lives run parallel in
the course of many years.
"Old Acquaintance" was written
for the screen by John Van Druten
and Lenore Coffee.
~V
DISOBEDIENT CHILDREN
It is a common thing to see small
children frequently disobeying their
parents. People will be heard tell-
ing their youngsters several times
to stop doing this or that, but
they keep right on doing these
things. Some of those kids seem
to be getting an independent habit
that will make them hard to con-
trol when they get a little older.
Perhaps these parents are firmer
when at home where they can in-
flict some little punishment if
necessary. Apparently some of
them allow their children to get
into this habit of frequent dis-
obedience. It would seem better
policy to show firmness and decis-
ion, applied in a kindly way, until
those kids learn the lesson that
orders have to be obeyed.
Greens are most delicious when
cooked a short time until, just ten-
der but still bright in color, crisp
in texture and fresh in flavor.
Fats and oils hold a key position
among the world's ~nportant food-
stuffs and industrial raw materials.
Flax is North Dakota's most essen-
tial oil-producing field crop.
Better cows will always be
ed for more efficient
milk.
Experiments with feeding
wheatgrass hay cut at
stages of maturity show that 4
of hay cut June 16 provide as
digestible feed as 5¼ tons
July 15.
WATCH
THIS
AD!!
?
SMUCKEKS OLD FASHIONED
.FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
ORANGES ,oz,
288 |
CALIF'S FINEST--FOR EATING OR JUICING
CUB,,,Gr. omo sC- s'il
Calavos, 2 for
CORN 22,o
PEAS .0
~rI2~DOM ....... CANS
SAUC~
VAN CAMP BEANS
(13 POINTS)
GRBRN BRANS
VEGETABLE SHOt~ENING
WALNUT MEATS 29'
HALVES AND PIECES
0LOSS STARCH IS'
PENICK BRAND
CALUm
BAKING POV~DER
BAILING SODA
DIAL BRAND
FANCY FRESH ROASTED
SUP SUDS
FLOODS O' SUD8
-- SMOKED MEATS--
ARMOUR~J b'~rAR
iMFiMkV'iididF ~al'amVViW NOW POINT FREE
il~li~ • ~i~dNdNmAlrlf~Idqi~i~ SMOX~D ~-IV~
SAUSAGE
DI AUNDblT W&li, ]bK
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
i SOAP
PKG.
CRYSTAL V~HITE I,AT~Y
LB.