Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
od HEN the children romp in hungry as young bears, here are some wholesome, economical de- lights that will not only be received with glee, but will satisfy the most ravenous appetite in a most whole- some manner. _ Cookies ¥& cup shortening 2 cups sugar % cup milk 2 eggs % teaspoon grated nutmeg T teaspoon vanilla extract or grated rind of 1 lemon eA cups flour 3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder Cream shortening and sugar together; add milk to beaten eggs and beat again; add slowly to creamed shorten- ing and sugar; add nutmeg and flavoring; add 2 cups flour sifted withybaking pow- der; add enough more flour to make stiff dough. Roll out very thin on floured board; cut with cookie cutter, sprin- kle with sugar, or put a raisin or a piece of English walnut in the center of each. Bake about 12 minutes in, hot oven. Cocoa; Drop Cakes 4 tablespoons shortening 1 cup sugar cup milk Ree flour feuapoons Royal peaking Powder cup cocoa, teaspoons z ictbood at ‘extract. COOKIES a From ne ae / “Bake with R BISMARCK DAILY, TRIBUNE ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely' Pure Another mae Suggestion ne ¢ SMALL CAKES Sorat CooK Book oyal and be Sure”’ Cheanyshortening; add sugar and ‘well-beaten \egg; . beat well an@ add milk/slowly; sift flour, baking powder, salt and cocga into mixture; stir until smooth, add vanilla. Put one tablespoon of batter into each greased muffin tin and baké in moderate oven about 20 minutes. Cover with boiled ‘nS: Orange Cakes 4 tablespoons shortening 1 cup sugar 4 cup mili Teg 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons Royal Baking % téaspoon salt 1 teaspoon orange extract grated rind of | orange; Cream shortening; add sugar slowly, beating well; add milk a little at a time; ‘then, add well-beaten egg;. sift. flour, baking powder and salt to- gether and add to tilxture; add flavoting and. grated orange rind; mix well, Bake in greased shallow tin, or in- dividual cake tins, in hot oven 14 to 20 minutes. When cool cover with orange icing. COOK BOOK FREE Just off_tl ress and finer. |. se Pee This ROYAL BAKING POWDER 00, 116 Fulton Street New York Oity HOME CANNING ON INCREASE IN; ae NO. DAKOTA More home canning has been done | in North Dakota the past season Laxative Bromo sb: Tablets The World-Famous Remedy for Cotds,‘Grip .and Influ- enza. FREE $4-22¢¢ £077, Products cok products Re, illustrated. Write C ects, ning Con; P. O- Box 161, New York than in any other year, is the re- port of Miss Agnes Hobart, of the home demonstration department at tthe Agricultural college. Miss Ho- ! bart has received about 700 replies from the 3,000 cards sent out to Far- go women recently asking for data on home canning. “We are very anxious to receive |the rest of the replies as/soon as Possible so that we can use the data 4 making our report to the United States department of agriculture,’ said Miss Hobart. “The federal gov- ernment appropriates funds for’ the support of the home demonstration department and the amount of this appropriation depends to some extent upon the number of women: who avail themselves of the home demonstration department’s instructions in home canning. “if only a negligible number of housewives show interest in the de- partment we stand a chance of losing the appropriation. On the other ‘hand if a large number of women fanswer the questions on the cerds vent out and ‘return them to us, it will have a tendency to increase our appropriation. “For this reason it is of very great importance that the cards be re- turned to us at ‘an early date.” seer Souliul Plea Stranger (at the bar)—Slip me a; shot, wqn’t you? Barkeepyyou may be a dry agent for all I know. Stranger—Nobody knows ‘how dry I. am!-Buffalo Express. _ Say You Want \ phe “Diamond nod Dyes" Don’t Spail or Streak you s Material in a Poor Dye Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color into worn, shabby, gay ments, draperies, coverings, whether | wool, silk, goods. Buy “Diamond Dyes”—no other kind --then perfect results are guaranteed ven if: you have’ never axe before, Druggist has color Gar linen, cotten or mixed dred and twenty million meals with Kero Maple for 1921 Last year American housewives bought’ over five million. cans of Karo Maple. Delicious flavor, moderate pilce and wise buying. bbe. y \ “~ Do you know that thesmakers of Karo Maple are the world’s largest users of the purest and best flavored maple sugar? ‘That ovér a thousand ‘tors ‘of maple sugar from the finest maple groves in Vermont and Canada are.used each year to make Karo Maple?’ r) Karo Maple is pure'and ‘wholesome— its flavor is not <n imitation. t Yet the price is so moderate that you can afford to serve it at every meal. Try it just once, on some nice hot waffles, or brown pancakes. spread for bread or crisp toast. . If Karo Maple isn’t the most satisfy- a ing syrup you ever tasted, at the most sapisfying price’ you ever paid for a simi. ir syrup, return the balance of tho can and the grocer will refund,your money. Or asa Selling Representatives ~ NATIONAL STARCH CO., Peterson’& Cunningham, Tyin City State Bank Bldg., St. Paul Midsagers a : /among | sult the governor in yelation to the in- .|kets, shows a gradual reduction in. FOR GETTING $3 FOR 1920 WHEAT Bankers and Farmers Join in Meeting in Valley City to Hear Discussion JAutens GIVES EVIDENCE Topeka, Man., Oct. 27.— Governor conditions iavor -and make possible an arrangement’ under which the | Producer can obtain $3 a bushel for | wheat and-$2.25 for rye during the yemaining nine months of the crop i ', according “to a ,statement by Gen. A. P. Peake of Valley City, be- fore a meeting of 400 Aarmers and business men, of Barnes county, held here Saturday afternoon for the purs pose of considering the Ransom county plan for a holding pool on, wheat, General Peake gave seven points | | bearing directly on the wheat situa- | | tion, as follows: y . Pian Is Outlined 5 i First: North America is alle to dictate a price of $3.00 per bushel ; in Bold for wheat, Second: The | winter states — Nebraska, Oklahoma—the states— Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana and Washington—with the three great i -wheat provinces of the Canadian | northwest control, on thé farms, | over 400,000,000 bushels of | wheat, Third:: A complete stoppage of. farm deliveries from this terri- tory for 45 days should force the desired advance in price. rourth: | World bread) grain | i conditions jare sugh that foreign governments must find means for feeding their People. Fifth: There are no stocks of wheat and rye other than those In \ North America which -are avail- able of Australia and Argentine, are by no means assured. i 7 Sixth. » AN speculative activ- ities on this continent are upon the selling side. and the small i stocks at points of contract de- | livery will force heavy buying by sellers of contracts before the December «delivery expires. Seventh: The great’ problem which remains to be solved is the financing of the wheat belt farm- er. and merchant during the per-\ jod_ of, holding. ~ Congressman: Younz Speaks Henry Nelson,: president of. tle merican Exchange bank of Valley j City, acting ags\chairman of the meet- jing, called on’ several others in the audience to discuss the situation, them’ beffig ~ Congressman | George M. Young of the Second North Dakota district. He declared {the time had ‘come'when the United ; States should put as “much _intelli- ; ence into the selling abroad of its | surplus of farm prodycts as was dis- wheat Kansas and spring wheat | ;Dlayed by the great purchasing na- tions of Europe who have pooled: their interests and do not bid against jeach other for the purpose of our farm products. He said that foreign buyers'had many times depressed our market by<heavy. future selling right | in the grain exchanges of our owr country; and then took advantage of* it by, buying cash wheat for export. id there. was great need of the passage of a law to place the great grain exjheapes under federal license and control, and urged the support of alt the grain growers to the St. Law; rence ship canal pro ct that would make Duluth’ a, seafort and enable us to:-market our grain in Hurope as cheaply‘as our world competitors. ALLEN’S STATEMENT Topeka, Kah., Oct. 26.—Governor Henry: J. Allen of Kansas last night, turned over material he has gath- ered showing the alleged eause for the, drop in the wheat to G. A. Stephens, speeial. agent of the federal trade. commission, who came. to con: PLAN ADVANCED). -Has Your Phonograph ) These Improvements? a Fond Lieve that give complete and accurate control ovér tane “iit yolume without sacrificing any of the beauty of the recordy ¢ |, , Straight Tone Arm, allowing the sound waves to develop fully, : 10.1211 » d and naturally. Z , Streamline Cabinet, in keeping © with artistic modern fur- niture design, mi ry If you .have the new Columbia Grafonola you have all eae important improvements.” Z Each and every one is found exclusively on the new Columbia * Grafonola. And, in addition, .° The Only Non Set Automatic Stop Z Built right into the motor. Invisible. Automatic. Operates ‘on any record, long or short... Nothing to move or get or meas- S ‘are, Just start'the Grafonola, and it plays and stops’itself. No othet phonograph has the Columbia Non Set Automatic Stop. \ \ It is the qast touch of corivenience added to the Columbia ™ 2 Grafénola’s beauty of design, richness of oe and reliability of mechanism. ‘ Ask the hess Columbia dealer for adem- , onstration of the-stop that needs no setting. t Standard Models up to $300 — Period Designs up to $2100 oxclusively on the Se COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHON E COMPANY, ar New WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27, 1920. vestigation: of the Chicago san of Trade. A ‘statement issued from the Bover- nor’s office says: i “The governer turned over, onsid- erable . material showing . thét the drop in wheat. was -upnatural , and dqubtless a result of manipulation in wheat futures, together with the use). made of the free wheat from Cagada. | He presented conclusive proof to off- set the claims of, the Chicago Board of Trade that the market was con- trolled by the law of supply and de: | mand by figures showing stocks of wheat on-hand at the terminal mar- kets -during July, August, Sppcembey and..October.. . Stocks. Drop, Since July 1 “An investigation of the stocks .of wheat. at. Chicago, Minneapolis. and angas. City, controlling, wheat, mar- the amounfy of wheat at these tef- ‘minal, markets during ‘July, August and September, and, while the: state- ments; for October show 4 sight in- crease over September it is much be- low the reserve’on hand July 1. “On July 1 the total stock of wheat at Chicdgo,) Minneapolis and Kansas City was $518, 786 bushels; on Au- gust: 2, 3,791,104. bushels; September .4, 3,757,00 bushels} October 1, %,- 977,715 bushels. While wheat- had |~ faken a sensational tumble of $1.00. per“bushel, there was a reductiomin fhe stock” on hand of 4,600,000 bushels.’ “Surely in the face of these facts, no. intelligent man, will contend it was the law of supply and demand because the price reduced while the stock was decreasing.” VOTING. SCHOOL, The _ Anti-Townley Voting School. for “Men and Women is open every day this, week in the K. of C."Hall‘ovér Rex Theatre. All people aye requested to visit this: school and inform them- selves the correct way -to mark their ballot on election day. -In- struction hours at 10:30 A. M, - “Chew will last. 12:30 .P. M., 3:00 P. M., 7:30 P. M. and 9:00 P. M. “Columbia Phonographs w\ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA > Known all over the Northwest for Quality ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS © Owned by 400 Publication, Dept. “Perhaps * You Don’t Rape | | ; says the Good Judge ' How long alittle. “of ythe’ Real Tobacce , Nor ‘how stich gen- uine chewing satistac- tion the full, rich. real “tobacco taste will give. Ask any. man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew. He will tell. you that this. class of : tobacco _ will give more satisfac- _ tion—and'at lesscost—; . ‘than the ordinary kind. ~ Put up'in two styles W a W-B GUT is a leng fine-cut tobacco- « RIGHT CUT is a THE NONPARTISAN LEAGUE th, Activities and Leaders William Langer. At Bookstands or by Matl prepaid $1.65 MORTON COUNTY FARMERS PRESS. Columbia Records ‘ et “On Easy Terms ft Desired -COWAN’S DRUG STORE Renews Strength} Where there’ is need for a‘ build- ing-up tonic after Heras illness, - { AScaTT'S EMULSION} | f taken regularly, usually spells renewed strength and-vigor. » HURLEY’S ORCHESTRA Music. 40614, Bdwy. ‘| ANTI-TOWN TONIGHT ‘ OVER ®- REX THEATRE ALL WELCOME Seti Bowne Bloomfield §N.J. ad 2 Up-to-theMinute Dance Phone 909 Voting School 7:30 and 9:00 P. M. 4 i ee