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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
October 14, 1943     Golden Valley News
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October 14, 1943
 
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PAGE TWO ii i[ i i i i i +--+ Short spent several days last week visiting at the Bushman and Baird homes. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Payne and Marlin and Miss Ambernetta Klampe were visiting in Dickinson Mrs. P. A. Fischer spent a few Monday. days at Dickinson last week., W. Schuett made a trip to Bl~- Monday. The Eastern Star had special practice for initiation Tuesday evening. The Royal Neighbors met Wed- tuesday evening at the Commercial Club rooms. The Catholic Daughters met at the home of Mrs. M. ArRonbrlght Thursday evening. Mrs. Stanley Trollope and Mrs. Roy Amunrud and children wereI 4,, Dickinson Tuesday. I Mrs. Willis Fischer and childrenI returned home from Columbus on Sunday. [ ~D. M. Danielson and Ross BixbyI left Tuesday for Minneapolis, re-I turning the latter part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Finkie are the parents of a baby boy, born at the N. P. hospital October 7th. At Red Cross Friday afternoon Mrs. L. Faltermeyer and Mrs. W, ISe/%uett served lunch. PhlMp Dahl "had his appendix removed Saturday at the hospital at Dickinson. Frank Walker of Butte spent a~veral days here last week install- a tank at the Conoco bulk plant. The Masons had a special meet, last Wednesday when Beaman ~b, erman, Junior Warden, was on leave. R. Amunrud entertained the Christian Fundamental Ladies Aid Thursday afternoon at the G~hous~ Mrs. Wallace Scott and children returned home Thursday after vlsith~ with relatives at Valley City for two wceka Ambernetta K~mpe of spent Sunday and Monday at the home of her sister, Mrs. 3~ranck Payne. Miss Lavern Baird came home California the first of the week to Visit her l:~rents during her vacatl~. Mrs. Red Beeler was very ser- iously hurt last week when a tru~ turned over on her, break- in8 both hips and the pelvic bone. She was taken to the Beach hos- Pital, wh~re she is doing as well as can be expected. L Theatre Calendar, ROSE GLENDIVE. MONTANA NOW SHOWING--- #AIR FORCE" starring John Garfield. Gig Young and Harry Carey. All that a great picture can be l Men you can't help loving ... in the story you can't help cheering "lilt PARADE OF 19~" start'lug John Carroll and Susan Hayward, The grandest musical e%~r produced for old and young! A gorgeous spectacle of gay laughter and hit tunes! Ente~ent in l~rofusiont FOUR BIG DAYSI WEDNESDAY--~AY-- FRIDAY--SATURDAY- "STAGE DOOR CANTEEN" with Judy Anderson, Kenny ad~l GUY Lombardol 48 siam Harry and Fred Drake left Sun- day for Helena, called there by the sudden death of their brother, Frank. Mr. and Mrs. OrNmd Howard spent several days visiting relatives and friends and attending the funeral of his grandmother, while Mr.. Howard was on leave. Miss Pat Egan and James Kie- droski were married Thursday at the Catholic Church. They were entertained with a wedding dance at St. Phillips Thursday evening. The Lutheran~, Ladies Aid had a special meeting at the church on Friday afternoon. Mrs. Ross Bixby and Mrs. Sig Pederson served the lunch. There are quite a few of our boys home this past week on leaves, Calvin Stair and George Griffith being two of them, Sial Woodard returned last week with an hon- orable discharge. I Beaman Sherman spent a few I days last week visiting his parentsI and then went to Fargo on Thurs-l day and spent a few days with his wife, returning to Farragut, Idaho, where he is in training, on Tuesday. Mrs. Joubert, mother of Mrs. ] W. Howard and Mrs. Pete Bold, I passed away at the Dickinson hea- pital after a lingering illness. Fun- eral services were held Tuesday at the Catholic Church and inter- ment was made in the local ceme- texT. -V 0LLIE Mrs. Joe Baker, Reporter Mr. and Mrs. Bob Corbitt and family of Baker visited at the Fay Shepherd home Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schouboe and family of Golva spent Sun- day at the Claud Schouboe home. Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Stark we~ supper guests at the Oscar Keener home Tue~y evening. Mr. and ~rs. Pa~ Plummer visit- ed at the George Rustad home Sunday. The Ollie school is making plans for a carnival to be held November 5th at the schoolhouse. The Ollie Lutheran and U. B. Ladies Aids served lunch at the Christ Rest sale Wednesday and realized a neat sum. Howard Stark left Monday morn° ing for Fargo to be with his mother, Mrs. Stark, who will un- dergo an operation there soon. A number of young people enjoy- ed a picnic and party at the cement bridge west of town Fri- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepherd and family were Sunday dinner guests at the Randolph Perry home. Mr. and Mrs. Dave McCann and Verna of Wibaux and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sanford and Jean were Sunday dinner guests at the Archle Slater home. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Plummer, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Baker, and Mr. and Mrs. Fay Shepherd end family were among those at'~ker Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Harming Steen and Mr. and Mrs. Pat Plummet were business callers In Miles City on Thursday and Friday, Douglas visited at the Everett Plummer home during their absence and Gloria Steen stayed with Mrs. Ross Cameron. Hubert Rustad was taken to the hospital at Baker Wednesday after= noon suffering from an attack of appendicitis. He was operated on that night and is convalescing satisfactorily. Mrs. Rusted and son and Miss Doris SamPson are stay- lng a~ Baker to be with him. Mr, and Mrs. Errde Stark and Doris and Mrs. Bert Hudson left Friday afternoon for Moorhead, Minnesota, to visit Mrs, Ora Stark, ,who is not we]], and Mrs, Ray Ulvin and family. Mr. and Mrs. Stark returned Sunday night, but Mrs. Hudson remained. Mr. and Mrs. Everett" Plmnmer received word last week that their son, James, who has been in an Army training camp in California the past six month, has gone over- seas. His new address is: Pfc. James Plummer, 3961"/'/05, Sqdrn. 40, APO 124~, % Postmaster, New York, ~ew York, Mr. and M~. James Perry re- calved word Tueeday front their daughter, Mrs. Earl Holmes, of the death of her husband in an airplane crash in Tennessee, where he was taking cadet training, and where he would have received his that week. Mrs. Perry left for Nebraska, where will beheld. Ollie P.T~,. held lt~ first THE GOI,DEN VALLEY NEWS i i Propeller Blades to Power "Wings ot The blade~ that put the power into the wings of Victory I turing system, for the United Nations constitute an important war pro- [ aircraft forgi! duction project for the Chevrolet Motor Division of[blades are f General Motors. Shown above is a scene in one of the four I forging harm great aluminum forge pLauts in the Chevrolet manufac- I democracy." Mr. and Mrs. John Stroenner were Miles City visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. AMe Ferrel and family of Cabin Creek visited at the John Schlect home Friday afternoon. ~.Y.-- WATER-REPELLANTS GOOD SCHOOL WEAR How to keep school-golng child- rex, clean, trim. warm and dry Is a real problem, says Julia Brekke. NDAC Extension Service agent in clothing. Buying school wardrobes treated with durable water-repellants is erie answer. Repellents have "grad- tinted" from exclusive use in rain- coats to corduroy knickers, coats, snowsuits, caps and even mittens. Mothers no longer think of water- repellent garments as mere shower shedders, but as clothes that will stay clean longer and give longer wear. A spill of sandwich jelly or an accidental squirt of orange juice may be sponged off wi~h' a damp cloth and leave no stain. Oil and grease will stain but can be spong- ed out with spot remover. This type of treated cloth also resists playground soft. Fewer tubbings save time for busy mothers, and the clothes last longer because the life is not scrubbed out of them. The treated garment will come out of the washtub still resistant to water and stains. Tubbabili~y of school Jackets, knickers and snowsuits is especially important now that cleaners are over-busy and gas rationing decrees fewer trips to tov~n, Miss Brekke adds. Durable repellents ordinarily are used on finely woven strong fabrics. GarmentS made from these fabrics are the hard wearing type. The higher initial cost is compensated by the special properties of a good water repellent finish. Finely woven cotton poplins or twills, popular fabrics for water- repellent treatment, repel wind as well as water, Miss Brekke says. In fact, these cotton fabrics will contInue right into the winter season in snowsuits and outer gar- ments that keep children warm and dry and are not bulky. Many of the snowsuits made from water° repellent fabrics are lined with soft wool flannel, making the suit warm and pliable. Water-repellent parkas, ski pants, caps, coats and Jackets also keep the younger set trim and neat looking. When buying these garments, read the label and follow direc- tions for wearing and washing. ---V~ WEBSTER UP TO DATE A conference is a group of men who individually can do nothing but who as a group can meet and decide that nothing can be done. A bureaucrat is a man with a passion for regimentation and no talent for doing same. A statistician is a man who draws a mathenmtically straight line from an unwarranted assump- tion to a foregone conclusion. K professor Is a man whose Job it is to tell students how to solve the problems of life which he him- self has tried .to avoid by becom- ing a professor. A consultant ls a man who knows less about your business than you do and gets paid more for you how to run it than you could possibly l~ake out of It even if you ran it right h~tead of the way he told you. A specialist is a man who con- een~ more and more on less and le~ Thursday, 10ctober 14, 1943 I I ~L, II The amount required to he Paid in order to make redemption from such sale, exclusive of the costs of publishing and serving this no- tice is on this date the sum of NOTICE OF EXPIRATION ~)F Lake. ~risconsin. PERIOD OF itEDEMPTIOI~$ You are hereby not~.fied that the l tract of "land hereinafter described STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA and assessed in the name of Eliza- COUNTY OF GOLDEN VALLEtY beth Draws for taxation for the OFFICE OF THE COUNT~J~ year 1927 was on the llth day of AUDITOR • iDecember, A. D. 1928 duly sold as BEACH, NORTH DAKOTA. ] provided by law for the delin- To: Elizabeth Draws. [ Owner ~and quent taxes for the year 1927 and e in whose name the herelna'ft r that the time for redemption from described lands are assessed, iand I said sale will expire niDety (90) to Robert Y. Wallace, whose ~ost-Idays from the completed service office address is Fox Lake, ~ris-I of this notice. ToWit: on the 30th cousin, and to Anna Wa~lace, lday of December. 1943. whose oostoffiee address is "~Fox I Said land described as follows. Lake, Wisconsin, ~ h You are hereby notified that~t e I THE EAST HALF OF THE descrf~ed I NORTHWEST QUARTER (E~- tract of land hereinafter NW*A), and The East Half of and assessed in the name of Elit~el the Southwest Quarter (E½- beth Draws for taxation for ST*A), of SI~CTION TEN ¢19) year 1927 was on the llth--~da TOWNSHIP ON~D HUNDRED of December, A. D. 1928 duly sold THIRTY SEVEN (137) RANGE as provided by law for the delin- ]\ ONE HUNDRE'D THREE (I03), quent taxes for the year 1927 and | "~GOLDEN VALJ.~Y COUNTY from that the time for redemption | I~RTH DAKOTA. (90) said sale wLII expire ninety | Th~h~amount for which land days from the completed service was [sold ~s Ten and 011100 dollars of this notice. TOWIT: on the 30th day of December. 1943. [($10.0I) "~ubsequent taxes for the / 192~>-~1929 1930 1931 1932 follows: years Said Land described as | 1934,' 1~.~,' 1936/ 1937~ 1938: The West half of the North- 1933, east Quarter (W½NE~4), AND[1939, 1940, 1941," have been paid. THE WEST HALF OF THE • ~'a ~ SOUTHEAST QUARTER (W½- SE~4), OF SECTION TEN (I0), TOWNSHIP ONE HUNDRED THIRTY ~EVEN (137) RANGE ONl~ HUNDRED THREE (103), GOLDFA~ VALLEY COUNTY, NORTH DAKOTA. The amount for which land was sold w~as Ten and 01[100 Dollars ($10.01). Subsequent taxes for the years 1928, 1929, 193C, 1931, 193.2~ 1~33, 1934. 19~5, 1~3~, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, have been l~aid. The amount required to be paid in order to make redemption from such sale. exclusive of the costs of publishing and serving this notice is on this date the sum of One Hundred Seventy Three and 10il00 Dollars. $i73.10). In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice. and unless you redeem said land from said sale before the expira- tion of the time of redemption es above stated, a deed thereof will issue .to the holder of the sale certificate as provided by law. WITNESS My hand and Official Seal this 20th day of September, A. D. 1943. MINNIE E. SMITH, Auditor of Golden Valley County, North Dakota. (Sept. 30, 6k, t. 7, 14, 1943) --V NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER OF THE ~- TATE OF EUGENE D. LO~AN, DECEASED. NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned Administratrix of the estate of Eugene D. Logan, late of the City of Beach in the County of Golden Valley and State of North Dakota deceased, to the creditors of. and all persons hav- ing claims against, said decedent to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers within six months after the first publication of this notice to said Administratrix at John Keohane's Office in the City of Beach in said Golden Valley County, Nortl~ Dakota or to the County Judge of said County, in his office in said County and State. NOTICE is hereby further given that the time and place fixed by the court for hearing and adjust- ing such elaims are the lath day of April, 1944, at ten o'clock A. M. in the Court Rooms of the County Court in the Court House in the City of Beach in the County of Golden Valley and State of North Dakota. D~ted this 6th day of October, 1943, INEZ IX)GAN OECH, Administratrix. JOHN KE~HANE, Attorney for Administratrix Beach, North Dakota. First publication on the 7th day of October, 1943. (Oct. 7, 14, 21, 1943) NOTICE OF EXPIRATION @F PERIOD OF REDEMPTION STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA COUNTY OF GOLDEN VALLEY OFFICE OF THE COUNTY AUDITOR BEACH, NORTH DAKOTA. To: Elizabeth Drews, Owner and in whose name the hereinafter des- cribed l~nds are assessed, and to Robert -#Y. Wallace, whose vest- office address is Fox Lake, ~Wls- consin, and to Anna Wallace, whose postofflce address Is Fox t[i I I I Victory One hundred Eighty One and 80]100 In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice, and unless you redeem said land from said sale before the expira- tion of the time of redemption as above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the sale certificate as provided by law. WITNESS My hand and Official Se~l this 20th day of September, A. D. 1943. MINNIE E. SMITH, Auditor of Golden Val- ley Count/, North Da- kota~ (Sept. 30. Oct. 7. 14. 1543) NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF PERIOD OF It~DEMPTION STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA COUNTY OF GOLDEN VALLEy OFFICE OF THE COUNTY AUDITOR ]~IEACH. NORTH DAKOTA. TO: CHAHLEy MONROE, OWN* El{, and in whose name the here- inafter described lands are assess- ed: and to Stanford C. Halvorsom and V~'alter S. Halvorson and Nils Stodle. You are hereby notified that the ~ract of land hereinafter described and assessed in the name of Char- lay Monroe, for taxation for the year 1928 was on the 10th day of I)ecember, A. D. 1929 duly sold as provided by law. for the delin- quent taxes for the year 1928, and . . that the time for redemption from OI aluminum s t i ' " ...... ~'~ d sale w~ll exptre ntnety (90) attaining recor~ proportions. ~ropeher I days from the completer] ~,~ from aluminum \bar stock on giant [of this notice ToWit':--~()n I)ecem: in this vast unit of "the arsenal of [ber 30th 19463.' ~. | Said land is described as follows ~"~%~ ~.mI_~E EAST HALF (E~) OF P e l'2unaz-ed Thirty I Eight (]3S) i~ange ONE HUN- /~0RTH ~,a- KOTA. The amount for which land w~ sold was Nineteen and 83 100 Dol- lars ($19.83}. Subsequent taxes for the years 1929, 1930, 1931, L932. 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1935, 1939, 1940, 1941, have been paid. The amount required to be paid in order to make redemption from such sale, exclusive of the costa of publishing and serving tbls notice is on this date the sum of Three Hundred Thirty and 641100 Dollars. ($330.54). In addition to the above amount you will be require~ to pay the costs of the service of this notice, and unless you redeem said land from said sate before the expira- tion of the time of redemption am above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the sail certificate as provided by law. WITNESS, My hand and Official Seal this 20th d~y of September A. D, 1943. MINNIE E. SMITH, Auditor of Golden Valley County, (Sept. 30, Oct. 7, 14, 1943) Pepsi-C01a Company, Lonl Island City. N. Y. Franchised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Battling Company of Hettinger YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF- You bet you do . . . yoh've been working darn hard all summer and fall . . . Now why don't you take a vacation trip to Fargo and get your nose away from the grindston~ for a little while? And then while you're here you ought to see about a job that will give you a minimum of hardship and a maximum of comfort for the winter. See us here at the Powers---we have a job for you that can use whatever aptitude you have. HOTEL POWERS FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA Golva Trading Co. Carries A Complete Line of General Hardware f Gilt Edge Paints and Varnishes GOLVA, Bert Covert, Manager NORTH DAKOTA th~ quir~ patr new~ H~ argt up , Info~ dut~ ~s and ....... of +d . bein W l~tr free of how .ernl- eerl~ L~ We t~~ .that ] bust to( adv~ cart ed~ a g isr~ Plen ente ~en ~h ever ~eln tars. ~te and (S.