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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
June 7, 1934     Golden Valley News
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June 7, 1934
 
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BORN TO SMALL CANIEK WOMAN There Have Been But 30 Cases of Quintuplets In 500 i Years. All Babies Doing t Well. CorbeiL Ont., May 29--Five baby girls, the largest weighing three pounds and four ounces and the smallest a pored less, were born Monday to Mrs. Oliva Dionne in her ~i: ~rm home two miles from here. Visitors found the 24-year old • aother and the babies in good con- dition and the father, seven years older than his wife, busy ac his chores. There are five other children in the family, the oldest being 7. One other child of the couple, who were married in September. 1925, died. "Oh, pretty good," sald Mrs. Dion- ne after her French nurse interpret- ed to her inquiries as to how she was feeling. "'Well, do you feel proud of your- Imif?" the father was asked. "I'm the kind of a fellow they ~.hould put in jail." he answered. The total weight of all five was 13 pounds and six ounces. The father was torn between pleasure at the unexpectedly large - addition to his family and thought of the financial burden. He is 5 feet, 8 inches tall and weighs only 130 pounds. His wife is slightly smaller. Births of five children at once are so rare. medical historians said. that only 30 cases have been recorded in t~he last 500 years. In none of the cases on record have all the children lived mord than 50 minutes. At last reports the children are all doing well, three of them being normally cared for and two kept in an old fashioned baby incubator and fed human milk stripped in from Chicago. The family may become a feature of the Chicago fair if nego- tiations now Pending, and the health of the children permits. BULLS OWNED BY WlVL KREM- Ell, S, GOLVA WIN TOP PRICE At the Missouri Slope Livestock Breeders Association annual sale held in Dickinson recently two bulls entered by William Kremers of Ool- va brought the highest prices Paid. One, the first, Lawrence Domino, 1st, brought the top price there of $260 and the second bull, Domino :R~oeater, Junior, brought the next ])Ace. However. as Mr. Kremers had withdrawn this bull from the ~'ing, the second high price went to Peter Schnell and Son for an animal r~nsigned from their herd. hundred persons were present ~at the ringside when the sale start- ~d. Buyers came from a widespread ~erritory embracing North and ~South Dakota and Montana. These included the best catlemen in the Missouri slope, A recommendation ~or the reputation of this sale and ~the quality of the livestock handled .wms the fact that several of the :bulls were purchased by Miles City, MOnt.. buyers, in the face of the :~act that a bull sale was being held ~t Miles City that same day, TO OI[[O ¢- "Mr. and Mrs. C. G. E]linger and ~[amlly will leave Monday by car for Oberlin. Ohio. where they will at- tend the National Council of ~hurches, which will be held there In the near future. Enroute they make stops to visit relatives and friends in South Dakota. Wisconsin and Michigan. They expect to be gone about five weeks. Oberlin is ~he old home of Mrs. Ellinger, who a graduate of Oberlin college. They will visit, while there, with Mrs. Ellinger's family, who are still in that vicinity, living about twenty miles from Oberlin. THE RAINBOW GIRLS The order of Rainbow~ Will serve ~Rnner in the basemenfl/of the Ma- sonic TempIe, Satu]~ty, June 9th, IJeginning a~5:30 91~lock, This din- ~er will be ~)pert~Ko the public at a very reasond~l~'charge, The menu will be ms fol}0~s: Chicken a la king, mashed potatoes, vegetable salad, Dickies .and Jelly, rolls, cherry pie ~nd coffee and cheese. 5-1t. OUT FOR JUDGE Morton L. McBride was up from Dickinson and left his announce- ment as a candidate for district Judge which will be noted elsewhere in this issue, He was raised in :North and South Dakota for 51 years, 32 years of which he has prac- ticed law in Dickinson. during which he was states attorney six years and six years city attorney. .At one time he was even states at- torney for old Billings county in 1903-4. For eight years he was state ~#enator from Stark county and ha~ farmed and raised live stock on his fine farm most of those years. "Mac" has been identified with most of the development movements west d ~2 the Missouri river and with gov- ernmental activities for farm relief. MARKETS Wednesday Noon Northern wheat .............. $ .81 Winter wheat ................. 77 Durum wheat ................. 73 l~aX ......................... 1.62 RYe .......................... 42 Barley ....................... 34 Oats ......................... ,30 Y~utter ........................18 Eggs (in trade) ................ 08 Cream ........ sweet. 22c; sour, 20. TIlE P, EACH. N. D.. ADVANCE Canadian Quintuplets and Their Champion Mother All well, happy, and with an excellent chance of growing into five beauty- I are shown with their proud mother, who, though only 24 years old, had contest winners, the quintuplets q~ Mrs. Ovila Dionne, of Corbeil, Ontario, [ five other children beforo tho five newcomers arrived. Forgiving Wife , LOCAL NEWS Judge Dickson. judge of the ju- venile court for this district, came up from Dickinson Tuesday and con- firmed the adopt.ran of a baby girl by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fischer of Golva. Mrs. Johnny Alguire has been ill thts week. Mrt. Helen Hickmaa !)espit~ fact that she has been sops- ated from him for $ long time, ~rs. Helen Htckma~ of AI~ ,,alif., declarea she is ready to stand ~y her estranged husband, Millard !Iiekman, held at San Fran~ .harged with" slaying Louise Jepp~ :an, daughter of an Ogden, UralS" banker, after awhoopee vaz~. ALL ONE WAY The school election Tuesday wa~ not a very s~renuous affair, only 23 votes being cast and the election cl Albert Thompson as a director for three years. O. W, Douglas for one year. and M P. Lovgren treasurer for two years west over ul2allimous- ly. AmcnL" those bach for the sum- mer from their year of school a[ college were Louis Odland. junior, and Bradley Tillotson. John Rice is expected back this week. a grad- Ben Pierzina is lca~t,iLg tO cook~uate from the NDAC School of and do housework inasmuch as his Pharmacy. Elizabeth Russell will wife has gone to Sioux Falls to visit the old home for the next three months. Jack Lindt is constructing a fine playhouse on lhe order el Judge Halliday and doubtless the Halliday youngsters wi!l have a great time playing in it. H. L. RoqueLte of Dickinson ha~ been appointed manager of tt~e N~t~ for this district, wh:eh work has been removed from tile variou, counties and consolidated into a dis. trict headquarters. "]?his threw5 Jess Hougen ou~ of the loe.~l man- agership, his service terminating to- day. All relief work will be handled at Dickinson. The county commissioners have been in session this week engaged on routine work. The state, between Dickinson and Fargo, got a very nice rain last Sun- day, while we only got five-hun- dredths of an inch here. Byron Abernethy has been ap- pointed as Registrar for the coming = year at the Dickinson Normal school. He left today to take up his new Escaped Assassins Recent attempt on life of Jefferson Caffery, U. S. Ambassador to Cuba, when gunmen fired into his Havana home, wounding a Cuban guard, has created intense excitement in offl, cial circles, President Mendieta called a meeting of the Cuban Cabi- net and every resource of the gov. ernment is being used to trace would-b• assassins. duties. Miss Marjory Fuller is visiting in Hebron this week. Miss Pearl Stuss of Belfield, a graduate of the Chicago Hairdress- ing Academy of Fargo, is now assist- ing Mrs. Oladys Smith in her Beach Beauty Parlor. Stub Noyes. Roy Noyes, Curt Sill and Ole Thorson are delegates chosen to represen~ Beach at the State Firemen's convention being held at Mandan this week. They left Tuesday morning. Al. Gilman, 'Jim Thill. Jack Lindt and Kenny Alton will leave Thm'sday to take in the convention. Mark Gilman and Donald Mc- Danold returned from theh" winters school at Devils Lake Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Niece and fam- ily left Saturday night for Fargo where they visited for a sho,"~ vaca- tion, expecting to reCurn today. AI. Ollman is expecting to attend the State Oil Jobbers convention which will be held at Grand Forks next week. Mrs. Martin Paterson was hostess to the young married ladies bridge club yesterday afternoon at her home. The club has shrunk some- what owing to many of the mem- bers being away for the summer or unable to attend through the sum- mer months. The Beach firemen are contem- plating a fine party to be given July 4th out at 18-mile Beaver. They are planning a ball game in the after- noon and a dance in the evening with go~d music. This party will be held at the new bridge as sort of a dedication affair and bids fair, if plans go through, to be a very gala event. They will be unable to com- plete their plans until permission has been received from the powers that be to use the new bridge for this purpose. Six boys motoring from Napoleon upset between Beach and Sentinel Butte, due to a wheel coming off their ear. None of the boys were injured with the exception of one whose shoulder was dislocated. He was brought into the hospital and his shoulder set and after a twenty- four hour stay was on his way again with the other five, Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Fuller motored to Mott, N. D., Monday, for a com- bined business and pleasure trip. Mrs. C. E. Fuller and Miss Carrie Witzig are Dickinson visitors today. The Golden Valley Sunday school convention will be held av the Con- gregational church at Beach on Sun- day, June 17th. Ray. Arm~strong will be the visiting speaker." HASN'T FORGOTTEN HOW Last Sunday a gentle shower gave us five hundredths of an inch of rain and Tuesday night brought us .14 more. with intermittent showers since and indications that the wea- ther man would bring us the usual 4.75 inches during the month, our average. These late showers have made a wonderfully improved ap- pearance in the country and once more things look green. It has also brightened, up everybody's spirits. If the usual rain for the month comes along, it is predicted that many fields now looking hopeless will bring in a falr crop. CARD OF THANKS We wish to express 9~ir sincere thanks to the many /friends who helped during the 2~ickness and death of othr wife/ mother and daughter, alsdt for/the many floral offerings. T~e ~ninister for his comforting @o~d~and the choir for the lovely must~] Hugh (~affee and children. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. McCoy and children. ADVANCE ADS GET RF~ULT$ also return the latter part of the week_ Harry Rice has been ill tiffs week. A abort vacation Bible school is b;in: 1--;d at, the Congregational ?htl(e"~ bc~orc lh, Eastor leaves for i.,e X:~t!e:mi C~,,anc:l meeting. Willi:m.~ Co~mell of Medora is vis- iting a few days this week with Her- ::rt c:'d Russell Ellinger. The "C] amp]on" ~unday school ! :,: ~f the Cougreg~tional church " -~ entertained by its teacher. r'-. A. B~ier. on Tuesday afternoon. Word has reached the city that John Jablonsky will graduate this week from th University of Illinois with the A. B. degree. Marie Spiegelberg, with 53 others graduated from the Jamestown col- lege yesterday. She is an English major, and during her college life has been an active member of the campus Y.M.C.A. and of the Ale- thenorian social society. Candidate Thoresen, nominated by the Jamestown convention for governor, and Mr. Crum. nominee o~' the same convention for attorney general, will speak at the court house in Beach Thursday evening, June 21st, at 8 o'clock, l Attorney Harvey J. Miller of New England, candidate for district judge, was a Beach visitor last Sat- urday making new acquaintances and looking after his fences, so to speak. Trajan', Wall Famed Structure One of the most famous struc- tures in Europe is TraJan's Wall, au old R'oman earthwork. 8 to 15 feet higb, extending across the Dobrud- Ja from the Danube above Czerna. voda to KustendJl on the Black sea. As recently as 1~54 It was used as a defense against the Russians. "In the Doldrums" The expression "in the doldrums," came from large ocean areas which, because of their complete calm, were once the bane of ~atlors, as it was not uncommon for a shlp to get In one of them and remain there. for months at a time. Sign of Good Weath•r Green r~ys from the sun Just be- for it Jets are dependable signs of good weather, ~ays the weather bu- reau. The~ ray~ will not be vis- ible onl~m the air Is clear enough to Insure good weather for at least 24 hours. HE'LL OPEN T_HE. I.%TE Some of these days it's ~oing t0"rain Some of these days it will pour Don t go around wi~h a look of pain Do no~ chant that sad refrain: "It ain't goin' to rain no more." There ~s a God whom the pagans elafln, There is a God they adore. Jupiter P!uvius is his nan]e-- tie has charge of lightning andi: rain:] He makes the thunder roar. Then dont watch the glowing sky; Just pu~ a cheek on the moan and sigh, Just ~end a little Prayer up on hish And sit in ~I,.c shade and wait. I'll :uake a bet with any of you. I make a bet 'fore the w~ch is through-- Jua, t you see if it don't come true: Titat Old ~'-2 wi!l op,on the gate. .o,~ .Mrs, H. J. Darby. GUT ON CANVASS Harvey J. Mille,.' of New Engl~ad, candida[e for judge oY this district, ,.:.~. i:- tov;n Saturday meeting up with the people. Mr. Miller is a native son of the state and ires practiced law at New England con- tinuously for 23 years and is, there- fore familiar with the peopIe and conditions of this section. TO CR[AM PRODUCEI S TVe wish to present a short statement to the farmers of this vicinity in regard to the price of cream offered by one of our competitors: That firm is offering farmers here 2"5 cents for cream and asking shipment of a trial can at that price, while the snout 65 m:Ae~ to tiff east of he~ the far~rs but 19 Icay for their ~)team. This procedure is obviously fcr t l~e purpose of putting the Beach out of basi- ne~ ~an.-t tothe sion ~ that ~the be plain\to all faxm- Beach here cream would ]edl to about 16 or 17 cents./ / We arc giving our fJCstomers all that le~tim~~ business will warrant, for we want to build up a permanent business that will prove both profitable to us and to our farmer cus- tomers. On this basis we ask the producers of cream here to stand back of their local creamery, and pledge a square deal to them all along the line, EACH CREAM[RY THURSDAY, JUNE 7, SICK NOTES !the other day. i Mrs. Woodin of Carlyle has .Mrs. Orrin Baughn has been on'on the sick list this week, ibis sick llst this week. Alex LaSota has had the tune to have a horse throw breaking his collar bone and other small bone in his Fred Reinholz of Sentinel was rammed by a bull leg up quite badly medical attention. Woodrow Gass has been quite ill from an abscess in the throat. Charles Wilson o~ Sentinel Butte hurt his leg by running a piece of iron into it recently in an automo- bile accident. The Zinda baby has been ill with pneumonia. She has been at Miss Haltermans. Mrs. Webber of Wibaux has an infected hand due to running a splinter into it. GALLAGHER IN THE A letter from "Dick" Clayton Wallace, who is working says he is out in the race on the road gang broke his ribs. He trict judge for the Sixth didn't come into town for attention distrist and that he will visit as soon ~s he should have thereby soon, as much to renew old making his condition no better, ships as to do a bit of Mrs. Ray Moline of Carlyle has for the primary election. been taken to the Dickinson hos-iwas greatly pleased at the pital for treatment. :signing of his petitibns in Sofus Holthe had the misfortune county and that it was "good to to break his big toe while working l the old names.' Beach • Beauty-hrlor ~ "Under the Postoffice Permanent Wave Special ~N UNTIL JULY 1ST / As we,~ave been during bur May SI~ First. GET ~'OUR PERM d 3able to take care of our m~ny customers ial we are extending it to?ou until NENTsNQW AND TA~ ADVANTAGE dj's Smith Permanent Wave Specialist PHONE 177 This Week End at RED OWL 0S0 F/he_ lb. I~$5.39 10 lb. Bag Frim Crisp LETTUCE Lemons e Bananas ORANGES i' 7" i tkrmouPs Star C°r"ed 19C Beef Hash scorns spoon n~z W,T. ~. GRAPE NUTS FLAKES • ~ * ~" CERTO • * [~.mr~ S.~m wl~ Ri~ Fndt G e m Theater PAR COFFEE I~=I!LONBLACK TEA ~ 15c • KOOL-ADE BEVERAGE ~-m. ~ th/m Tm Ohum...A.ert~l l'Isve~ " " i DOGGIE DINNER . ~,,,~ . 3.- 0. K. SOAP- • 7- Saturday nyunday, June 940 SOAP CHIPS 5 COME N MARINES WhRe Eagle Soap ......... : 10.- 66 99 RiPE OLIVES De Monte or No. 1 With RICHARD ARLEN, IDA LUPINO, ROSCOE Wyandotte Can KARNS, MONTE BLUE, GRACE BRADLEY TOBY WING SYRUP Hospitality No. 2 1.2 Can, ~ Also Popeye in "SOCK A BYE BABY" Paramount News 7:45 and 9:15 P.M. Adults 35c JOHN F. HALBKAT, Mgr. BOB ALTON,