Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_REFERER in /home/stparch/public_html/headmid_temp_main.php on line 4394
Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
October 20, 1932     Golden Valley News
PAGE 2     (2 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 2     (2 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
October 20, 1932
 
Newspaper Archive of Golden Valley News produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




THE BI ,ACH, N. D. ADVANCE ' THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1932 THE BEACH ADVANCE W. F. CUSHING, EDITOR &ND PUBLISHER Member National and State Editorial Associations ~MLISHED AT ]BEACH, NORTH DAKOTA, EVERY THURSDAY ~ter~ at Dostoffice at Beach. North Dakota. on May 8. 1908. as secon~ class rp_a t.t e r ~bserlDt$ons in North Dakota, South Dakota. Montana and Minnesota. $2.00. To all other states, $2.50 OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY NEWSPAPER REAL EATERS The American of years of age has done a gargantuan stunt of eating in those years and ought to be the huskiest man on earth. If you were served at a single meal all the average person eats in a lifetime, you could sit down to a beefsteak weighing as much as six dressed steers, confront a giant potato too big for a two-ton truck to haul, cut slices from a loaf of bread higher than your head, and pour milk from a bottle as tall as a bungalow ! In the fifty-six years that the average American lives, recent statistics compiled by the U. S. Department of Com- merce show, he consumes 106,000 pounds of food---enough to load to capacity several freight cars. On other dishes at this colossal feast there would be a haft-ton block of butter and a 224-pound slice of cheese. The sugar bowl would be six feet high and the salt shaker would weigh 800 pounds. There would be an egg 12,000 times the average size, an apple seven feet in diameter, an orange lveighing 1,100 pounds. Around your table would be piled 1,120 tins of canned fruit, 124 cans of salmon, 600 tins of sardines, 336 pounds of dried fruit, 888 cartons of breakfast food, and, more surprising still, 280 pounds of rice. To top off your meal, you would find a 672-pound box of candy and nearly 6,000 sticks of chewing gum, not to mention fifty-six pounds of walnuts and 1,176 pounds of grapes. HUMAN LABOR GOES TO WALL What machinery is doing to human labor and horses is quite well known in the agricultural grain world, as well as the sinking of farmers into debt to buy machinery. The grain farmers know all about that, but now a similar test is put up to the cotton raisers of the South, where, with the adoption of a new cotton picker, each machine wilt cause idIeness for 60 human pickers, and the question, as in the grain fields, is what is to become of the people thus thrown out of work. An improved cotton harvester, exhibited recently in Chi- q 6. )S TO K AL.WA'(G eA ING { r,K "l",f. Df.N) AINO BURIED Wtl T? FIGHT SLASH IN OFFICIAL I TAKE A LITTLE WALK PAPERS TO PROTECT THE I YOURSELF PUBLIC_AGAINST_ GRAFT Tax-reduction committees i n:when you're critizing others many states are just now focusing, And are finding here and there, their plans on reduction of official A fault or two to speak of newspapers and elimination of much Or a weakness you can bear; [ official proceedings published. That When you're blaming is the best way in the world to en- weakness, I courage graft and malfeasance in Or accusing some of pelf-- office. In a way this may be eco- It's time that you went out nomical, but experience has taught To take a walk around yourself. that full publicity keeps the people There are lots of human failures informed--their right---and it is a In the average of us all; great deterrent to public grafters.--- And lots of grave shortcomings Exchange. In the short ones and the tail; HE D-ESSERVJ A REST . But, when we think of evil Men should lay upon the In the hop, step and jump, the . committee substituted Sol Furth of the New York A. C., for Levi Casey, Los Angeles veteran who was second in the 1128 Olympics---Wilkes-Barre Times Leader. It's time we all went out To take a walk around ourselves. We need so often in this life This balancing of scales; This seeing how much in us wins And how much in us fails; But before you judge another ;Just to lay him on the shelf-- It would be a splendid plan POHH~AL To take a walk around yourself. --Sons and Daughters of ANNOIINffM[NTS AREN'T THEY ALL? i ................... i They will co£? e oountry ................ - ...... - "unknown" to portray the role of FOR STATES ATTORNEY "panther woman" in the "island Lost Souzs." I The g, rl selected must be 17 This will repeat notice of my can- ,' didacy for the office of State's At- not more than 30 years torney. The splendid support aq- ton Chronicle. corded me at the June primary ~ a source of great satisfaction ar/fl I feel that it wiI1 be extended t~ the general election November 8tl~. The HIGSfSTANDARD office of. State's Attorney ~arriesTHE with it considerable power v~hd dis- creation to spend or cor~rve/Che tax. payer's money. My t~e~ty years Drve~d [a~t and more of exverience lt~i~ubile af- i falrs, years spent in the~[service of cities, of counties and the State, is, I feel, proper credential to place gu, supplies the most recent threat to the contin wed use of ]before the voters this fall. hand pickers. When it passes over a field of stalks, cogs re- . ........... -: :=- ............. - - =- ................ ! Columbus' face as he views the new] 22-te. GUY LEE volve and pick the cotton as neatly and thoroughly as human , - - -- I land. Now the scene fades. It is ------: ~ -~------.: hands can do it. Such is the speed of the machine that i¢ is 7 he , tuHent (:rv i evening. Soft TheI moonlight falls. said to do the work of sixty men.As it is equipped with ................ J Spanish vagabond is serenading his[ FOR STATES ATTORNEY head-lights, the harvester can be used after dark. !lady love Far along the silver f h "~-----:- .... -------- ........... ---=-----: ....- ......... ~ - " Yl Having been nominated or t e accounts for popularity Thus the march of science and invention steadily adds to ~ aver comes a canoe its paddles important office of State's Attorney with town and m folks. WHAT WAS THE SCORE? Miss Dorothy Lowell gently stirrin- the moonlit w " the number of human beings thrown out of the work they are ....... o, .... n ..... t s a~er. }at. the June Primary Election, an accustomed to. Yet the world cannot stand still in its labor The car full of enthusiastic foot- ~" ~'~ ~,'o i You can hear the wind singing soft- i honor for~ which I wish to expressTRY IT ............... ._~.,' ................... ;ly the tree tops whispering [m sincere a reciation to the vog . saving strides, but something will have to be ised to pro- eau ,ans nee oarezy com~ z .... ~"~ Dear Miss Love11" 'Yo " ' Y PP " • "s ~ a'es saw~ " u come back to reality with clefs of Golden Valley County I ~ vide a living for the thousands constantly shoved into idleness of the field wnen i¢ "nm ~ ...... a~n ...... ~'~,~,~.,,~ ~,,**o I .LZ .L remember correctly I believe lstart. Have you really been in this/t.kin~ thi.~ ~nnnrtnnitv tn 'th~nk yOU are Mark Lovells youngest httle room all the tlme9 Your im 'by invention, teams warming up I .... " • - , o '. I" " • ' -Ithem for the support they ]~ave _. . , ~ ." ...... ~oaugn~er in mar~: l_~ell's mmiw |a~ination has simply carried you/ iven me and to assure them that - " U~Y "lI u~eyve smr~e~ wimou~ was~-t ............ .:, .... g a/t ~ne aim pas~ ooes nee recall l~sen a~a~ and while at flrst it seemed~ • h~g for us!" v ailed one. I. ' . . ~.'.', ~ I will greatly appreciate a co,tinu- ~ _____ , , very well but I beheve that toddhng slll~ a~,d unnecessar ou now be m~ 'D~n't worr-' came the drivers'~ / " " " YY g" ,ation of the confiden~ whic]~ they .et Us aCe(vice : It is to be regretted that rivalry should become so in ..... .... ....... w_nnin~ u..,,}youngster was you. lie appreciated pantomines I have shown in me b~ voting for tense at sport e~"ents as to cause unpleasant ructions which ~"You" see " went' on ~ne ..... cusmayea i the tlmeS I wasg ..... o~ Inmaen~s aDou~ I - me at the general elecec~o'on ~ov{ovem- ~kT_._.. f~l u one I'm supposea o 1 ~e p I ~ ' greatly mar the continua lce of interschool athletic and sport '" t w'r' u thisI in or ensere~ nign lDEPARTMPNT NOTES ber 8th If I am elec I shall ' . ....... ~school makes me feel very old evenl The English 8C class is now stru- ~carry on the work o~eth~oIi:~ to activities, such as occurred at Sentinel Butte during the foot-, game ~rom me wew point ox an oo- ~- game that place and Beach. It is server--I'll neea a lo~ oi time m ge~: . : .......... [~. g P • Y Y Y. ball between the school~ of ....... i though I haven't reached such a ~lin with ronouns f the ver. best of m abilit 5 pmce ~ snouan ~ ~or ~ zs omy a • ,titled downin oraer t.~ oh~m'Wt " P- The English LC class is concen- --A. M. KUHFELD. We carry a c.~ml~lete stock of particularly to be regretted hen such unfortunate things oc- I T~x~:~ c,~4 AND OIL cur between the folks of our own county, for we should be - rs ....... ....... i Beach]Pr°ximatelYHigh schooll0 yearSin Juneag° thatand Ienterleft ]andtratmgnewspaper°n the articlesWriting of editorials ii " ........ " fort climbed from the ear and ob-' ea ahe University of .Wa.shh~.gton inI Treasure Island is being studied FOR T EASU ness,°nepeopleshouldincharacterizeall things, and healthy rivalrY,as baseball,with°utfootb d]bitter" • pe on ~oomea m literary e~- f " . ' 'g ! • " " R RER the fall Thin let ~e mst~tutmn hek Im e fl PROMPT, .%RVSE d ta bs' the Enghsh'~ 1R class such contests served the crowd and saw that there - ..~' ... ~ ~_ .... " " a' *~;,' qme I ~-ish to thank the [FF)ftuENT or other sports staged between the \arious communities, oth- were many Beach people, an ~ne peals zor me ~nat l~ aoes zor Participles are being studied by ........ . . any wandering youth and I am the English II-C class, vo~ers for the fine majority .~hey erwiSelose thethefinetrUeflavorSpiritofOfsportsmanshipCOmpetition thetis lostshouldand thecharacter.games Well, if ita isn't oldHarry Rice Ana aha"d " s ..... " - - - ~ P~blic speaking class for the last gave me in the primary elect~n as , , ..... " " t ~- IIO[UQ llaVe %~eaKcnecl nag i~es g~vmg gee= unto-the same it not been for the timely assistance a candidate in a field of s~endid Texaco . ervice ize them. It is proper the various towns should heartily and e e gave lasr year--an~ the year ~ week has been attempting to give candidates for county treasu~r, and ..... that line Yea" • " a ~d good cheer of Harvey E. Emer," pantomines, and the typing class is to appreciate the work don~ by my ~[ [O-a-lo n vociferously back their teams, as such bacMng cultivates the before. "t~et m mere ~eam--smeari " :~ 'era up. Hold : fof~sr~:rl:~ lOfnBIaf~hshfft[h:OUc}: ,,ears verYwhen consciOUSowen R. Ofdrankthese,theeSpecially{ morale of the players and places all sports on the high pinacle . " " ~ gg g = "enti~ic friends. The t'k!ne is apl~Oaching that they should occupy. The exhibition of bitterness robs che~ee~_Pc:qUi~der~sblenthmUoSlraeStlthlalnY ~ course and received my B S in 1928hemlock~-nearly breaking theP°is°nfloor. I when the voters ~ again~ce called GOODWIN THOMPSON • upon to express ~eir ~hoiceof Manager the event of the true spirit of healthful and generous compet- g-- y e That same summer I was lucky The English III. class is tacklingI candidates for offi0~ an~ I beg to ......."'z mas. a g nna s one WnOmy WaSex. English II-R has been reading and lsay thatabllityif andelectedenerg~I~will~dev°tet~ the dutiesmY ! ition that should predominate in such events, murmers of approval greet some of enou h to ~--- ome - ~ne~.ia~r ye!ls-~-especmlly7 willing to share the rest of verbals and lots have been defeated, lbest A good many people are wondering what repeal of the o ou' a°' ar ' '" perlences so Elaine Brussard of studying short stories and are now/ 'North Dakota prohibition section of the constitution will do, holler?" way won ~ Seattle and I got married, attempting to write a short story inI OfancethiSof office,that confidenceand as~ a continU-in me dialect resembling "How Gavin Birse expressed in the June primary. put it to Meg Lownle." --ELLA G A~HO. FOOTBALL " FOR SHERIFF. The game at Sentinel Butte last Thursday was very successful. Beach won 27 to 0. Bobby Jones had the I beg to remind the voters that !they made me one of the nominees nextmisfortune game of will breaking be with his Dickinson nose. The for sheriff at the June primary, an next Friday on the home field, honor I very much appreciate? and The boys physical education class- that I solicit their votes ir~ the es are now playing volley bail. The general electlon. In ~ai ~ c~nnec- girls are also playing volley ball. tion I want to empha~ ~ ~hat if elected I will devote ev~/energy NEWS I possess to the duties of ~e office, The report cards were issued and which will be run solely ff the in- should be returned as soon as the iretest of the taxpayers and with parents have had time to look them I the closest economy. over and sign them. --A. J. BEIER. The Northern Missouri Conference will again sponsor the declamatory TO THE VOTERS OF GOLDEN or how it will leave the state. Will it simply wipe off the The new Mrs. Zielsdorf t~ sitting All that summer I attended school • slate all statute laws relating to prohibition and leave the, over there in a car--guess it'll be all and worked in the University lib- ate,re wide open, or will the repeal of the constitutional prohi-I right to ask her which team she's rary where I had been employed for for.--"Miss Wilner-- I mean Mrs. two years. The station is placed bit/on clause leave all statute laws in force, but leave it to the Zielsdorf, which team are you for?''~ here so students may advantageously : : rai, government to enforce them, or leave the whole mat- ] z don't see any teams. All I canIstudy animal and plant life of the R~ tD general government's enforcement ? A goodmany I see is one saddle horse. As far as I sea in their natural habitat. ExperT- ; asked us these questions; also if repeal would make sale colors go, though, I like red---' ences and studies made along and . er and liquor legal ? We are not lawyer enough to an- ] The gamels quite interesting right t around the shores of these islands ' more than one question and that is that so long as na-!now and the crowd is pushing overtwere very interesting and pleasant. tl prohibition exists it will not be legal to sell intoxicat-I the line into the field--Guy Cox This summer I was fortunate liquor in this or any other state. Voting repeal of the with the aid of several others push- enough to have the privilege of be- prohibition law will merely relieve the state of enforc- es it back. "We must have room to l coming a teacher in the Centrall~ b(e state law and pass the buck to the federal authorities, play," he drawls. , High school. Besides the high school Mr. Davis doesnt believe he'd like they have a Junior college which has The address of Wiliam Lemke, Republican candidate for it ,out there-- l about 100 students. I teach Zoology Good for you Howard. That was i in the Junior college and General tess, was, according to the list of speaking dates of all what I'd call smashing the linel ' Science and Glee Club in the High idates sent out, the last political talk, on the Republican The intermission between quarters school. Enjoy my work very much that will be made in this county in this campaign. How- is on--several Sentinel Butte ladies here also. the candidates on the Republican state ticket will be have been having 'ladies aid society.' My plans for the immediate future elsewhere every day just as though they did not One turns around-~"What--where'slare not well outlined but I should contest, for both boys and girls, and VALLEY COUNTY the team? W'hats the score--is the ~like to be able to do some work in the music festival. Nothing will be • r pretty nearly had a cinch. -- -- .... ,.,, ~ .... ~ ~ -----=---=---- game over?" l the South Sea Islands. It sounds done with debate this year. These Having been nominated for /he The game is on again---Mr. Oechlrather impossible but I am hoping matters came up before the confer-!office of auditor at the June Pr~n- HOMEMAKER MAY DO. cause bad falls. Too much wax on is roaming about excitedly. "It's a ~, for the best. ence Thursday evening, October 13. aries, I wish to assure the vc~ers I MUCH T O PREVENT the floor is another cause mention- good game, all right---but of course] I hope you can read my scrawly It is too bad that debate can not be'that I will appreciate you~cont~nu-] ACCIDENTS IN HOME ed by Miss Meints of many home it could never be as g o~,, as some I writing. This history of the grad- sponsored as well as in former years. I ed support and your vote~at] the ! ~ accidents. She advises that the wax games they used to have. nares of Beach H. S. that you are November election. ~/ e idents in the United be rubbed into the floor thoroly. "Irene Rhyner -- you have no' gathering sounds interesting and I DEPAR~----~ NOTES [ During the period I have had 1 ~ta~ in 1931. claimed almost as A rocking chair, broken chair, or a right! I say, Vera Power, are you should like to read them all. If you The ancient history class is now charge of the auditor's office, I have I the automobile--and box on a chair should never be used from Beach or Sentinel Butte " can save some copies and send them deep in the study ,of the Greeks. made an earnest effort to give its l wen more injuries, according for a step-ladder. One call from the "Sentinel Butte, of course!" ¢o me when you have four or five at having just finished with the study ~ affairs a business-like admlnistr~.- a report by the National Safety doctor will cost more than a step- "It's a pretty good team isn't it?" i one time I shall appreciate it. of the Orient. i ton and have practiced rigid econ- l ~mmcll. There were approximately ladder. Some of the other "safety .... I'll say--it's as good a team as it ISincerely yours The Present Day Problems class i omy in its conduct, t 30,000 home deaths, and 4&00,00 In- points urged by Miss Meints are;lever was. Th~s m--I mean--That'sl JULIUS t-lf~v~n.qc~ is in the d~scussmn of inflatmn of UPOn my record as an official, II he home. put a railing on the unsafe stair; ! all, right Vera--. ' I - pr,ces. They are planmng budgets base my request for a favorable vote I re )air dan crows ste s on r ' Those r r t showng how to live econommally and November 8th omemakers and" 5~cupants w~lks; pu~gep a gather ~hP~ai;Cth~;or°r catch p~ss~[S"areSe~e ~o=rgt }o "Walk quie~ly.~OONMo lt4alking allow save, but the tendency among the 21-% CKAS. CHRISTIANSEN. ded"ae in thegeneralnumberbeC°meof mOresuch an open stairway to keep the small my ears from a man standing" near. t, ed' Seat yourselves" at the back~" classtie savin-sSh°ws that there are ~ery lit- will be diminished, is the children from falls; provide hand If it isn't Bruce Lowell! Sh~--sh''' So "o" are ..~--^..,~.~a ::~ ~ • . ........ , rails ,^~ ,~^ ~_,~ ...~ .... I ,, ................ , ~ " ~ ~ '~""'~"~"='~ ~'~ The enrolhnent in cro~s and soils ~eam is navlng some nara worK-ou~s I ,iola Meints, NDAC exten- rubber~mZor~turkl~lUtowelP~Ctha s~a~nEv:~at T~aYl~on.IOo~oan, tyl: e::dr, ceT~:ir~yn~ smalul,sS~lm- has increased 65 percent over last ~hre_thaeir fan:X:d 7tfoelen::er g~ee~ ~llst in home management, bottom of the tub. ~"Do you mean to tell me that the ~)m 14 it is nu--be--~ No--it ~'- year. At the present time they areY ....... i e than one-third of the ~ ~ame ~- over ....... ,~. ~ ~ , ..... m ,~. m , studying the corn enterprise as to opponenus. "me gins are aLSO aomg dents are due to falls, Mt~ / ~ ...... .-- .-~ .............. -s- no~ a prison cell, nor a school for lselection of seed from the field some heavy roadwork trying to de-I outlined some precau- BAZAAR / let alsrnayea. ,,l~rson--d0omed- to deaf and dumb. And, that last re-[ The adv,ne~ A~t~,~* .... 1 ~o~ velop some slender legs and hips I nst such n~haps. **~erary enor~s I was so ousy listen- ar s , ............. ----- 2" , . m k is imply insulting. It m not a I is e,~a~ed in the m-*---;--- ^~ *-^--^ 1 ~ [ You will findman mg ~o otherpeople I didn t have lunatic as 1 f "'~ ~ ,~ww-,~ .... ,,-,~ stairs to the i~ement Y dg~lghtful]mg ! .. . ' y urn. I yell watch you [ farms t . JOKES I 11 lighted it is advisable to gifts for your Christmas )~t at the ! much ttrne m watch the game. What will soon learn. ~ " -- I The teacher, in addressing her l is the score, anyway? ,, Last step white or any light Bazaar held ~y the Co~,regational I is th Betsy Ross rises and sedately [ ATHLETICS I pupils, bgan: As I gaze about, I see ] a rubber mat might be ] ladies aid on'~ Nov. 8/~ the Olson i "-----. treads to her table where her dimp- I The game with Belfield was post- I before me a great many shining I the last step to act as a t building, one ~dcor/~orth of the i The following is a letter received led hands find employment in sew- ! poned on account of snow. It has i facess." Just then 36 powder pull / Where small rugs an ,us-] Golden Valle~ h~l Have a cup,in reply to one of the letters written ing together the red, white, and blue[not been decided ff the game will be ]came out. 0 make them n(m,.sdd, of coffee and ~Kch while you stoplby a member of the Student Cry bits of bunting. Gracefully, slowly,]held this week or if we will play Prof: !In Physical Geography) Ice~ do: ~ by overe~ ing in. \ - 5-{tlStaff asking for .information about comes the ancient water carrier, ISentinel Butte instead. Practice Land is about as big as Siam. Stu-I ~r rings or piccc.~ of -----~ [this past graduates life since grad- with her earthen jug of water po dlwm probably not be held until the dent: (In test) Iceland is about as[ The ot ~look fb~ggs and poultry t u anon. on her head. ]snow melts. The team had a little big as teacher, t set is teddy and upward, according to I 418 NO. Rock St. two friends going to the work out in the gym but on account Mr. Me.: How old would a person 1 [ Centralia Brown planting his gar-|of the hard landing couldn't d6 be that was born in 15937 Student: [ a~l Joy on]much work. Mr. Reimehe's Phy. Ed. Man or Woman? COFFEE Coffee mellow, hrl is easy the Coleman Maker. Brew! "no-boil" way, retaining -all the fragrance and flavor. The Colonial model is beautiful in design. Fin- ished in special process, extra durable nickel plate. Six or 9 cup size Ebonized handle. Has extra large heatir ele- ment. The non-spill spout is a feature you l like. Extra qualitF cord and plug, This attrac tiv coffee maker is an ideal gift for any oceasior See Your Local ~r WHee ~ The C~hmmll Lamp 6" Wldd~, Ka~