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As it does this year, Thanksgiving Day also fell on November
25th in 1931. Around the state that year, there was good news, and there
was bad news.
In Minot, 13 year-old Boy Scout, Arthur Grandin, received a certificate
of heroism from the National Boy Scout Court of Honor that day. The previous
summer, Arthur had rescued a 4 year-old boy, Roland Berg, from the waters
of the Mouse River. The paper read, He plunged into the river, grasped
the child who was struggling in the water, (and) brought him to the bank
where he performed artificial respiration.
There was also a story about the price of turkey. It was reported that
housewives in Dallas, Texas, were shelling out 29 cents a pound for turkeys
on the hoof that year. In Chicago, they had to pay from 38
to 43 cents per pound, but that was nothing compared to Boston, where
turkeys were selling for the astronomical price of 60 cents for (quote)
fowl executed and dressed for the oven (unquote). In comparison, North
Dakotans were paying less than half that amount.
Out in Timmer, ND, it was reported that Chauncey H. Frost had died at
the age of 88. He was Bismarcks last surviving member of the Grand
Army of the Republic. He joined the Union forces when he was 19 and was
a private with the Iowa Infantry during the Civil War.
The next story involves a Park River boy named Sigurd Melstad, who attended
the Walsh County Agricultural and Training School. The previous May, Melstad
was among nine Future Farmers of America whose records were found to be
outstanding; for his performance, Sigurd was awarded a gold key and named
State Farmer. On this date in 1931, it was learned that Melstad
had advanced in the FFA standings and was to be awarded the degree of
American Farmer.
The next two stories from Thanksgiving 1931 concern two kings. The first
was a Gypsy King who died while he was traveling from New York back to
his home near Jamestown. King Zek Marks funeral was held in a Russian
Greek Orthodox church, and he was buried beside his wife, who died in
North Dakota the previous year. King Zek was buried with an extra shirt,
handkerchiefs, underwear and socks, and tucked into his pocket was his
favorite pipe. In his hands were gold coins and his personal papers
all according to Gypsy, or Romany, traditions. The funeral was followed
by nine months of mourning, during which Zeks followers didnt
cut their hair and beards. They also gave up singing during this period,
which ended with the crowning of a new king, John Costello, the following
year.
The second king in the news was Joseph Leon Cohen Segal Lazarowitz, king
of the hoboes. A news story read, Lazarowitz blew into Fargo heralded
by news stories in half a dozen northwest papers, which recounted how
he was resigning as king to marry a Winnipeg girl and how
he had called a national hobo convention for Chicago in 1932 to elect
a new monarch.
Fargo police arrested Lazarowitz for vagrancy, and he was the jails
only Thanksgiving customer. The hobo king was given a turkey dinner
at noon Thursday, the story went. But for religious reasons
(he couldnt) eat turkey. The bread that went with the dinner was
buttered and he could not eat it for the same reason. When supper time
came, the main dish was roast pork... Two Fargo Jews visited Lazarowitz...with
the intent of bailing him out, but after a few minutes conversation, during
which they received his views on life and the world generally, they decided
to let him stay in jail.
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