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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
December 6, 1934     Golden Valley News
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December 6, 1934
 
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T~E BEACH, N. D.. ADVANCE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, THE BEACH ADVANCE W. F. CUSHING, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER GAY ~TSON, ASSISTANT EDITOR $2.00. To aT£ other states. $2.50. M~HKBw~R NATIONAL AND STATE ~E+ITORIAL ASSOCIATIONS ~tn'll~tlons in North Dakota, South Dakota. Montana and Minnesota ~'od at postoffJoe at Beach. North Dakota. on May 8, 1908 am seG~n~ class matter UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE comment gives President enunciating his program of economic security• reeking to "turn to the right" in the face of a with strong leftist tendencies. In his de- recovery ahead of reform, the President went on record as opposed to new taxes for the purpose of putting into effect unemployment insurance. He stated that the funds for such insurance should come from private means and not through taxation, w+tth the national government and the states cooperating in the carrying out of he insurance program. If we are to have unemployment insurance, it is of course true that it should be financed by industry and not by the else it will degenerate in the long run which is the thing the President seeks to avoid. trouble is that while the administration and the government may start out with the most laudable purposes, there is no assurance of what the next five or ten years will bring forth, There will be a constant effort on the part of • in Congress and out, to "liberalize" the provi- of the the government assuming a greater Lhe burden. Such assaults will be diffi- because they will be accompanied by dema- gogic appeal to the voters. Such insurance schemes were tried out in Europe several years ago and were started on a sound basis. But it all ended taking on an increasingly the insurance became a dole supported by true, as the President says, that we mistakes made by European governments. in the light of American politics and the political thought• whether we will be able to do so. There is room for grievous doubt. The President well says: "We e~anot work miracles or solve all our problems at once. What we can do is to lay a sound foundation on which we can build a structure to give a greater measure of happiness to the individual than any we have whether the professional poll- not undermine the foundation and ~he structure on his already Therein lies the real danger, and J t J HAD A DEPRESSION ONCE BEFORE (A d~scription of 18"/3-78, as given by James Ford Rhodes in , of the United States) are a long dismal tale of declining mar- , a lowering in value of all kinds real estate, constant bankruptcies, and grinding frugality in living, laborers out of employ- md lockouts, depression r t Fr day morning. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. ~erman and Mr. and Mrs. GOO. Han~n were dinner guests at the Hudson home in Beach Thanksgiving day. Lloyd Callender was a business visitor in Wibaux Saturday. Miss Jeanette Welsh of Glendive spent t!~ T~Iving lwlldays at the home of her" parents, Mr. and Mrs. Win. Welsh. Miss Welsh re- turned to Glendive Sttnd&y evening. Ort~ of the delightful affairs on Thanksgiving was the dinner at which Mr. and Mrs. John Carlson were hosts, seated with the host and hastes were Mr. and Mrs. Mel. sin Pedersen of Glendive, Mr. and Mrs. Wurst of Carlyle, Mr. and Mrs. Earle Carlson and daughters Mar- Jorie and Marian, Miss Esther Carl- son and David Dick. Ernest Page of Glendive on Ml~ Dorothy Meyer, spent Another Photo of Young Lindy TI~ remarkable photo, among the first ever taken of the Lind- bergh's second child, shows young Jan leaving kindergarten school at Englewood, N. J., with his mother, Anne Lindbergh. Colonel Lind- bergh's son is two years and three months of age. and Mrs. Louie Larson and family and the Misses Christine, Rose and ~isle Jakin. Contributing to the week's social tctlvitlea Mr. and Mrs, g, L. Engle- meyer were hosts to a group of friends at their home on Friday eve- last. Seven tables of bridge of- fered diversion for several hours, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Larson, Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Haslewood and Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Keller receiving the score awards. At a late hour, a dainty lunch was served by the hostess. Miss Ruth Jones, a Glendive teacher and a former Wlbaux girl, spent the Thanksgiving vacation at th¢ Jtmtin Cassidy home, south of Wtbaux. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Stipek and the iatter's mother, Mrs. Anna Gordon, visited last Thursday and Friday with relatives in Glendlve. TROTTERS On Wednesday O. K. Omley drove Mr. Campbell and son Blllle to Beach, from which point Billie lefb for Bowman, where he will attend the school which his brother Rex and his wife teach. The Nelson girls returned to Trotters with Mr. Omley for the Thanksgiving vaca- tion. On Thursday the Omley fam- ily were dinner guests of their daugh~e~.+Mrs. Alfred Treater of Sentinel Butte. On Friday Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meeker, and Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crook were Beach shoppers. The C~rook Iamily is enjoying a new radio now. Mrs. W. O. Schuett, Mrs. Rose John Oreenup was a dinner guest M~ Geraldine Elliott returned to ~wi~nd, ~nt, Sunday evening ~tcr 8p~l~lng Than~givll~g ~oli- parents, Mr. and M~. P last, Helm are the boy born Tuesday, puplB of the a Thanksgiving ay ~ ft a.noou was a passenger th4 laid f~ Th~ving day, Beach . P. A. Fischer were t h e informal one presided Covers Win. Welsl~ Welsh, Mrs and the r at tl~e home of and Mrs. Max Subert and Mrs. L. C. Faltermeyer at the Crook hmoe Tuesday. were shopping in Beach Friday. Mrs. Herbert Hesse _accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Melrose H. H. Burcnette to~+~n r~on- and family were dinner guests at day, where she ~now makh~g her ~h~. M. P, Ostby home, Thanksgiving name. . ./ . .. ~ day. C~cil Me~cs~ remrne~ home gram MLSS Esther Carlson and mother, Fargo, on ~fesday evening, wl~ere Mr~ • ~" ,~^.,M- .,.,,.~ ^+ the ne nas ~ee~. employed for several M~,~'~;~ov~.'~+ondl4 months. ~ an~ his cousin ca~e S-tn"~l~ .................. , by truck./~Fheyi ~0ught a trutk ...... load of etabl d some f , Paul. Harry and Bud Drake, M~I ..... ~e~ ~, wmcn tn a I . Blanche Teska and Rae Samson of l _ ~ne~na~" ~ sa~. • a -me of hool dist t len ve spent day t l . _ .b p_o me~ a~ t~ ~roo weanssa y their respecttve homes in Wlbaux. [. ._ t~t~[ uroo~.nom~ w __ ~.~y Of interest to friends in Wibaux]x°r me ~ o.I o pen~ the ~us on me ell sonOOl n e Is the marriage of Miss Edna Jones, I---- ~e.ll .~nool n~se. ~e m~s were U rejec~eo as ey re ~;~ ~fl%+-~hnso~ of Olendlve Which I- ~re .~.U re Jecr, ea as ~n, w~re • cous aer ~ ,ow. was solemnized st the home of the Do ;re~o0 £?W. .. ~ / ~,a~o -'+~.~. m.+o. ,~.~ n't f~get the meetin| of/the .... ~ .......... -~t,*~' ~" Lo 1 P.JI~-A. at the Sml~ " " n~la Novem~r 9~ ~ ya P.-'l~ A. at the ~nn~ ]~ree~ ~*" ' ....... "~ h00 7 _ ....... ~ sc I hou~ on Dec 7. A ffn~ time Jan " ,. __~, I. ,_ In $~ ~Or all who a~l. w- ....... v. o. hn on +ain Webbs' Wllling~-,~ her home west of WI- where she graduated from the ty high school. Later she on December 20. All are invited to attend. bRux. Mr. and ed Saturday ~. A. Steele return- days visit Sioux Falls, S. Dak. Stair. one of at Mrs. g. L. Watki~ re- Loren, his the one s. g. B. Stair Their guests included Mr. Oscar Ottensen, Dr. and Junior and glsenbart. Ba~ week, proving. Olatts Rishvod were at the John Baird in Billings and Dillon has been is one December and entertained glving day hospitality at Mrs. Johuson many Burns, at the Mr. and Mrs. F. motored to Beach where they were home. Mr. and and a family A. Barrow MarJorie l~altermeyer to Mrs. M. B. Larson was hostess to Clara Lan~owski returned the Wltmux Woman's club at her to resume her home on~ Monday afternoon. After teacher in the ~.~slon. which was pre- sided over by the president, the fol- Earle Baker were iowtn~programwtthMrs. F.E. Elli- okt as chairman, was presented: paper, "Neg~ Poets and MUsicians," M~. M. P. Ostby; paper, "The Am- White; At lunch was Peck the As Christmas time draws nearer, the teachers are making plans for Christmas programs. Mr. and Mrs. P. V. Moore and children left the Friday before Thanksgiving for Leonard, N. Dak., to visit at the parental home of Mrs. Moore. Carlot Neliermee is running the ranch in their absence. Helga Omley was suffering with pleurisy last week. She seems to have her share of sickness this fall. Reverence for Printed Word Among the Chinese the printed word Is held In such reverence that the principal cities have "word boxes" where any refuse contalnlns any form of lettering may be stored for safe-keeping. iealaad Not Frozen Wa~[e Inland Iceland Is not a pretty country, although its scenery might be said to possess a w~ird, magnifi- cent beauty, coupled with desola- tion. Iceland is not the frozen waste that distant popular fancy would make it, but it has fared badly at the hands of another of nature's great forces--fire. C. Samson, Mrs. E. B. Sherman, Mrs. Burton Welsh, Mrs. A. V. Cowee, Mrs. Robert Alton, Everett Cowee. Don Welsh, Harvey BulruSh, Berger Nelson, Pete Kramer, Watson Mar- ~n~n:nd. Mr. and Mrs. 1~loyd Ten- DUKE OF KENT WEDS MARINA, GREEK PRINC'SS ColorfUl Show Attracts Many Thousands of Merry Well- wishers to London Thanks- giving Day. In our country the 29th was a day of feasting and happiness, for blessings received by many, but in England all of the blessings were showered that day on a single radiant couple: beautiful Princess Marina of Greece and her bridegroom, the Duke of Kent, King George's hand- some. youngest son. Their wedding ceremonies were the grandest, most gorgeous show London has seen in many years, and it may be the last for a long time, since the Prince of Wales has determined not to wed. Feverish, happy excitemept, not at all blighted by early morning rain, fog and mist. gripped the capital from the moment Marina, waking early, peeped out between the cur- rains of her Buckingham palace suite until shouting throngs saw the newlyweds off for their country honeymoon. The mood of merry-making still held the city Thursday night and the spirit of carnival reigned at all London's places of amusement as the royal honeymooners sough se- clusion at the Earl of Dudley's country home, Hlmley Hall. Two colorful ceremonies, each steeped in centuries of tradition, united the pair, wh~e romance, born at the country estate of Prince Paul of Yugoslavia in the beautiful Slovenian Alps, thrilled England's charwomen and countesses alike. The first ceremony was the sym- bolical and impressive service of the Church of England, carried out be= fore the crowned heads and the notables of England and the con- tinent in the old world setting of Westminster abbey, the nation's shrine. Beneath the high windows and the roomy arches of the abbey, where sleep the nation's kings and queens and other mortals, Kent and Marina spoke their vows before the august archbishop of Canterbury. The most imposing gathering of many years, its splendor shining softly under candle-light, watched in impressive silence. The second service was the 1,100- year-old rites of the Greek Orthodox church, solemnized in the white and gold private chapel of Buckingham palace before members of th, couple's immediate families. People of Crimea -- People of Crimea are a strange mixture of Turk, Russian, Cau. easlan, Greek and Tartar, with the latter predominating. The penin- sula was once a Tartar Khanate, the seat of which was Bakhchisarai, a rambling collection of Moslem buildings and gardens; there are old Genoese forts showing medieval in- terest In the country; Roman walls still stand ; an impressive ruin, Kher- sones, is what remains of a once thriving Greek colony of 2,600 years ago. Sevastopol is the usual polnt of entry by land. Its pocket har- bor and gracefully mounting rows of white-walled, red-roofed dwellings are reminiscent of some Medlterra- nean shore • Jlhth Cmatury CAMs Cui~ Glass cups were found In an Eighth century Viking grave ~. csvated in Sweden. Of Interest To Montanans RAILROAD TAXES Baker Journal: Railroad taxes are being paid in Montana this week. More than four and one-half mil- lion dollars will be paid in two in- stallments to county treasurers by the railroads operating in the state to cover the 1934 tax bill. From the Milwaukee Road word comes that vouchers to cover the first half of its 1934 payment total- ing $921,154.49 will reach the treas- urers of the counties in which the road operates on or before November 30th. A LAND OF PLENTY Miles City Daily Star: The Terry Tribune visons a valley that will be a land of plenty, as optimism is ex- pressed over the announcement of the proposed survey of the Buffalo Rapids project. Funds to the extent of $20,000 have been promised by the federal authorities to conduct the survey. This fact is accepted as an J $ indication that with the completion of the survey enough data and ~'r formation will have been gained to convince the surveyors that the pro-. Ject is feasible. ADDED PAYMENTS SCHEDULF~ Bozeman, Dec. 2.--With payment~ of first installment cheeks to pro- ducers cooperating in the 1934 corn- hog adjustment program practically completed, Dlans are being made in the agricultural adjustment admin- istration to start immediately the distribution of the second install- ment, which will total approximate- ly $92,000,000, the Montana exten- sion service has been informed by administration officials. Up to November 14 Montana pro- ducers had received $224,189, repre- senting about 95 percent of the first installment, and may expect second installment checks in accordance with the promptness with which compliance certificates are submit- ted. SENTINEL BUTTE Mr. and Mrs. John Raisler of Thelan were guests at the W. J. Burns home Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Englund had as Thanksgiving dinner guests Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hall and sorm Junior and Bobble. Mrs. C. P. Reed has been fll with severe throat trouble. Many of the young people have been skating on the dam since It has frozen oven James Lyons~ State Teachers' spent the his home at Mr. and George at the turned ~day where past few Mr. and had as Thanksgiving dinner guests Doctor M. W. Lyons and children, James, Jackie and Eileen. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Huseby spent Thanksgiving day at Fallen, Mont., with relatives. Mrs. Loule Hovland and Marion Wosepka accompar~ied their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Woscpka and daughter Dorothy on a weekend trip to Matt. N. D., and Lemmon, S. D., where they visited relatives and friends. Mrs. Harve Robinson and Miss Mary Fltchen drove up from Dick= inson Friday to visit the Burns fam- ily over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Overstad were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wagner were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Nlsler of'Golva. Dr. M. W. Lyons has moved his household goods to Beach where he will make his future home. During his s~y at Sentinel Butte, "Doc" has made many friends who greatly regret seeing he and his family move away. Miss Trumbe~ arrived here Mon- day from Wisconsin for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Harry Huseby. Miss Tnnnbull previously spent several months visiting here and made many friends who are glad to see her. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Pederson and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Haugse a- tended the show at Beach Monday evening. Mrs. Wm. Gardner and Mrs. Pat Gallagher returned Monday from their vacation trip to Eau Claire, Wisconsin. MOODIE MAKES IT EASY FOR PAPER, WRITES INTERS]JEW Dec. 4.--Thomas governor-elect of North Da- facilitated procedure for a newspaper recently he dropped into the office he formerly worked as a re- and submitted to an inter- a seat at the desk he used his own, the new chief execu- to the city editor, "how do you want on this yarn?" hastily added, "but no political taboo." about your inaugural ball,~ was asked. Moodie snorted. "Inaugural ballf Make a lot of women spend a lot of money for fancy dresses, when there'~ so many people in North Da- kota hardly have enough to eat! None of that for me." He ~ particularly jubilant about the executive mansion in Bismarck. "Seven bedrooms," he chuckled. "Enough to give us a different one each night in the week." "What's North Dakota like?" he was asked. "Finest state in the nation," re- plied Moodie, "and that's a good place to end thk interview." Action of Frogs' L~gs The frog was nature's flr~ ~x- periment in providing legs for land travel. This explains the poor con- struction of amphtbian legs which, in the case of ~lamande~ cannot even lift the body loft the ground. Its legs are used only for poling the wriggling body along the muddy groun~L In frogs and toads the legs are so awkwardly anchored to the supportln~ backbone that the an~- real cannot bear its own weight upon them. A~frog progresses o~y by the momentary exertion of a hop or Jump. The Beach NATIONAL Advance has a limited supply of / "Easy Way" Books on hand in connection with, :and printed in this paper weekl~for the smart entertaining ideas, h~ts for make the most of your nicely bound and sell for r to, the cooking lessons being of our subscribers, covering cooks and old, ideas o~, how to in cooking, etc, These books are FOR COMPLETE SET. Get Yours Now While They Last! , , r , , , , , Everythimg you want to know about cooking at this remarkable