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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
December 27, 2018     Golden Valley News
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December 27, 2018
 
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Page 6 Golden Valley News December 27, 2018 By Jane M. Cook i( ' Prior to Christmas, Bank of the West arranged for Santa Claus and elves to visit residents at :Golden Valley Manor. Shown is a visit with Judy Curl. (Courtesy Photo) Resident anglers may fish that weekend without a license. All other ice fishing regulations apply. Those interested in darkhouse spearfishing that weekend must reg- ister with the North Dakota Game oil The following relates to oil and gas well activity for the week of Dec. 16, in Stark, Golden Valley, Billings and Slope counties and is from reports of the N.D. Department of Mineral Resources: Producing wells completed: #32301 - Whiting Oil and Gas Corporation, Pronghorn Federal 41- 14PHU, SWSW 12-140N-100W, Billings Co 1,084 BOPD, 744 BWPD - Bakken #32784 - Whiting Oil and Gas Corporation, Kessel 44-35PHU, and Fish Department prior to partic- ipating. Registration is available by visiting the Department's website, gf.nd.gov, or through any Game and Fish office. Legal fish are northern pike and nongame species. ity Lot4 1-139N- 100W, Billings Co. #31782 - Whiting Oil and Gas Corporation, Pronghorn Federal 24- 12PH, SESW 12-140N-100W, Billings Co 595 BOPD, 637 BWPD - Bakken #31883 - Whiting Oil and Gas Corporation, Hecker 14-7PHU, Lot 1 18-140N-9W, Stark Co 748 BOPD, 320 BWPD - Bakken #31780 - Whiting Oil and Gas Corporation, Pronghorn Federal 31- 13PH, SESW 12-140N-100W, Billings Co 876 BOPD, 539 BWPD - Bakken Dec. 26, 1968, 50 years ago: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson of the Sentinel Butte community were hos- pitalized following a collision with a car driven by Albert Allen, a son of Mrs. Clara Allen, last Thursday moming. Mr. Johnson was taking his wife to the Westerheim school where she teaches, when the mishap oc- curred on top of a hill, in a spot where the visibility is poor. Golden Valley County appears to have a lot more than a normal amount of flu cases, probably of the "Hong Kong" variety, and many households, schools, businesses, etc. are affected by the rapidly increas- ing number of cases. Dec. 30, 1993, 25 years ago: Terry Martin, a certified physi- cian assistant from Helendale, Calif has signed a contract to provide healthcare services at the Golden Valley County Clinic in Beach. She will begin seeing patients the first week in January. Dec. 13 - The residents went shopping at 10 on Thurs- keys. Following the program, the Boys Scouts helped to lay morning. Deb held exercises at 10:30 a.m. The com- pass out the Christmas goodies and also handed out their ~nunity bus came at 1:30 to pick up those who wanted to homemade ornaments to everyone. The event consisted of i~ee the Lincoln School Elementary play, "The Great Bake- young and old alike sharing their God given talents. It was off." The students, fifth and sixth grades, did a wonderful a joyous day! job on the play while the students, first grade through Dec. 17- Reading with Gary took place at 2 p.m. John fifth grade, sang Christmas songs for us to enjoy, It was a Abraham was here to see his mother Edie Abraham. Terry great afternoon outing! Scherman also visited his father Charlie Scherman, and Dec. 14 - Hair was fixed in the Manor Salon starting at his sister Lorraine. ,8 a.m. This week's hair lady was Lezlie Paul. Dec. 18 - The public health nurse was here at the ' Dec. 15 - Reading with Gary was held in the Activity Manor in the morning. Exercises took place at 10 a.m. Room in the afternoon. Rod and Mandy Burman and kids Bingo was enjoyed in the afternoon at 2 p.m. Pastor Visited Mert and Louie Schlautmann. Tony Efta also had Ahrendt was here in the evening and offered Devotions in visitors on this day. the Chapel. Bank of the West employees arrived with Dec. 16 - Adoration was held at 8:30. Word and Com- Santa and his helpers around supper time to visit the res- reunion followed the HolyHour. A Community Christmas idents and bring them a special treat from Santa. They vis- Celebration started at 3 p.m. Members of the community ited the Dining Room and also made special stops to the Were here to share with us all their musical talents with a residents' rooms to visit those who were in their homes. 'wonderful program. The Activity Room and the Chapel No one was on the naughty list that we know of ,were full with piano players, flutists, storytellers, bell- Dec. 19 - Linda Tvedt came and sang Christmas med- ringers, choir members and community members who just leys for us at 2 p.m. Christmas cookies were decorated wanted to watch this wonderful event. We had solos, also in the afternoon for our Manor Christmas Party being duets, trios, and full choirs singing and twinkling the piano held tomorrow. local See MLB Games in Phoenix, Colorado & a day at the Gra. nd Canyon Tour begins in Phoenix/ends in Denver. June 24-28, 2019 $1,195/person* See MLB Games in Boston, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & New York (Yankees & Mets). Also, visit Pro Football, Baseball & Basketball Halls of Fame. Tour begins in Newark/ends in Cincinnati. May 25 - June 2, 2019 $2,150/person based on double hotel occupancy* Coach bus tours. Good game tickets. Quality hotels Call for Free Brochure: 507.217.1326 NDSU Extension: Reduce risk of nitrates in oat hay High levels of nitrate in feed can be toxic to cattle, a North Dakota State University Extension livestock expert warns. Nitrate interferes with the oxygen- carrying capacity of the animals' blood, which can result in abortions and sudden death. "Oat hay is known as a feed prone to accumulate nitrates when grown under environmental stress," says John Dhuyvetter, Extension livestock systems specialist at the North Cen- tral Research Extension Center near Minot. "It also responds well in growth and yield to nitrogen fertil- izer, which contributes to elevated ni- trates." Drought is an environmental stress that can cause oat hay to accu- mulate nitrate. "With the droughty summer in central and western regions of the state, it is not surprising some cattle- men are finding nitrate levels in oat hay that are of concern," Dhuyvetter gays. ! He recommends producers get oat hay tested for nitrate levels before ~eding it to their livestock. Producers should dilute oat hay ~ith low-nitrate feeds to avoid health Issues if tests show the oat hay has ~,500 to 3,500 parts per million (ppm) of nitrate nitrogen. For preg- high-oat hay. Grinding and blending nant cows and heifers, nitrate levels through a mixer helps ensure this is below 1,000 ppm are considered the case." safe. Feed with nitrate levels less He sUggests that another way to than 1,500 ppm are considered safe reduce the likelihood of nitrate poi- for other classes of cattle, soning is to introduce very limited "Oat hay testing 2,500 ppm of ni- amounts of high-nitrate feeds, then trate, if fed at only a fourth of the ra- slowly increase to an accepted limit. tion, would bring the ration to 625 Feeding a small amount of an easily ppm and well below the level for an- digested grain also can reduce nitrate imal safety," Dhuyvetter says. "How- absorption into the blood. ever, it means all animals must eat an For more information, search on- equal mix of feeds and no cow gets line for the NDSU "Nitrate Poison- an opportunity to eat primarily the ing of Livestock" publication. Additional copies the Golden Valley News are also Beach Food Center Golva Grocery Golden Valley News Office, 22 Central Ave Beach The Billings County Pioneer and Golden Valley News have shared advertising and have been sharing the news for some of their inside pages for about 50 years. This means the coverage of your ad isn't limited to just either county/Ourprimary coverage area is western Stark County and west to the Montana border. It pays to advertise/ AY PUBLI Due to the upcoming holidays, which will result in shipping and mailing changes, please note the fol- lowing deadline adjustments: Publication date: Thursday, Jan. 3: The deadline for ads and any sub- mitted news items will be 5 p.m Thursday, Dec. 27. Happy Holidays to Everyone/ Golden Valley News and Billings County Pioneer . 5' : / ~ i '~i : i' !, : / . : if l e In e nfair rnme t! t eti' i I news t t l