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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1984 four new field men. New Field Men for First steps in the reorganization of| strom, Pekin, the farm loan department of the | | Bank of North Dakota were taken ‘Thursday with the appointment of | tration, Officials said. B OXFORDS! . STRAPS! ~ PUMPS! Kids! Fabrics! value ' The appointees are O. B. Kittelson, | _ Bank of N. D. Named) samestown; #, W. Nagel, Lehr; 0. 1. | Erickson, Bismarck, and A. M. Berg- They will replace field men em- ployed under the previous adminis- “Raff” Staff You'll be thrilled at the beauty — amazed at the in Bis- marck’s largest fall variety — get yours tomorrow. Valois model in brown velvet. Typical of the new fall afternoon and dinner hats is this Rose The crown is trimmed with tiny canaries in bright yellow, orange and reddish color combinations. | FeatherinHer Cop | Feather in Her Ca © Additional ociety Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Larkin, 1016 Eleventh St., have as their guests their daughter, Mrs. William Haley and children, Bernadine and Bobby, of Minot, who will visit here for two weeks. Next week Mr. Haley will come to Bismarck for a week's visit. On Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Larkin entertained 10 guests at a party for her daughter. The afternoon was spent in sewing. A luncheon was serv- ed at the close of the afternoon at tables decorated in black and silver. xk * For Miss Evelyn Wattam, Fargo, who is a guest at the home of her aunt and uncle, Dr. and Mrs. R. 8. Towne, 722 Seventh St. the Misses Emily Belk and Sarah Crewe enter- tained at a party at the Belk home, 710 Fourth St. Wednesday evening. There were guests for five tables of bridge and honors in the card games went to Miss Jane Willson, Miss Peggy Jane Skeels and Miss Eleanor Cook. A guest prize was presented to Miss Wattam. Late summer flowers were used to decorate the rooms of the Belk home and the tables where re- freshments were served following the close of the curd playing. xe *® Mrs. Lowell Paddack and Miss Ger- mine Heinze, 619 Fifth St., entertain- ed 12 guests at the Paddack home, 709 Third St., Wednesday evening at & surprise party honoring Miss Hazel DeVore, 611 Sixth St., the occasion being her birthday anniversary. Three tables of bridge were in play during the evening and honors in the card games were won by Miss Pearl Anderson, Minot; Oscar Butte- dahl and Oscar Chaput. At the close of the card games lunch was served at a table centered with a large deco- rated birthday cake, after which Miss DeVore was presented with many lovely gifts by the guests. The host- essés were assisted in serving by Miss Alice Walsh. An out-of-town was Miss Anderson of Minot, who is visiting Miss DeVore. > ———$ O | City and County | om and Mrs. D. F. McKnight, 406 South Ninth 8t., are the parents of @ boy born at 1:05 a. m., Thursday, at the St. Alexius hospital. A girl was born to Rev. and Mrs. E. Herzberg, 708 Rosser Ave., at 4 a. m., Thursday at the Bismarck hos- pital. J. M. Dolph, publisher of the Okla- homa State Register, Guthrie, Okla. is visiting at the home of his son, George L. Dolph, 716 Third St. Mr. Dolph is accompanied by his son, Cur- tis, also of Guthrie. f Today’s Recipe | OO Jellied Vegetable Cubes © Soften one tablespoon gelatin in two tablespoons cold water and dissolve in the contents of one 15-ounce can of tomato juice which has been brought to boiling. Season to taste with salt, Pepper and onion juice. Cool. When it starts to thicken, add one-third cup of finely. cubed celery, one-third cup finely cubed cucumber and three tablespoons cubed green pepper. Pour into a flat pan and let harden. Cut TREE BELT PROBJ HELD UP FOR FUNDS}. nie Morgan, sister-in-law of Work Suspended Pending Allo- cation of Appropriation for Plantings ‘Washington, Aug. 23.—(#)—The for- est service said .Thuraday it had sus- pended work on the proposed 1,000- mile tree shelter belt pending alleca- tion of part of the $75,000,000 author- ized by President Roosevelt to plant the trees. Fred Morrell, forester in charge of the shelter belt, which will extend through the drouth area from North Dakota to Texas, has returned to ‘Washington pending renewal of work. Morrell has established a headquarters for the project at Lin- coln, Neb. The allocation of funds must be made by the Comptroller general's office. Meanwhile forestry officials are marking time and have halted surveys of the region until additional money is made available. At the comptroller general's office it was said that a great many war. rants are now pending inst re: covery funds and they must bé con: sidered in their regular order. Offi- cials were unable to predict when the i belt funds would become avail- out in cubes and serve on lettuce with mayonnaise garnish. This serves eight Persons, € Veal Fricassee 2 pounds foreleg of veal. 4 cups water 1 small onion. bit of bayleaf 1 blade celery 1 small carrot 34 tsp peppercorns 2 tablespoons salt. flour. <. Peel but do not slige onion. Scrape carrot and cut in quarters. Cut celery in half inch pieces and put these vegetables with baYleaf and pepper- corns into a square of cheesecloth. Strange But True Stories of Life | (By The Associated Press) (By The Associated Press) CAME CLOSE, ANYWAY Ticonderoga, N, ¥.—Arthur Fleury, recluse, was cooking a meal in his tiny shack when his trousers caught fire. “Help! Help! My pants are on fire,” he yipped as he ran out the door. He succeeded in extinguishing the blaze and returned to his meal. A few minutes later the village fire department arrived, sirens screaming. A neighbor had understood Fleury to ‘Help! Help! My camp's on Tie securely and ,drop into water. Bring to the boiling point and add meat. Cook hard 10 minutes. Then reduce heat and simmer until tender, about three hours. Cool in the water. Remove meat from stock and cut in neat pieces for serving. Re- move cheesecloth bag of seasonings from stock. Roll meat in flour and brown quickly in hot pork fat or but- ter. Remove meat to hot platter and brown two tablespoons flour in fry- ing pan in which meat was , adding more fat if necessary to make 2 tablespoons. Stir in stock in which meat was cooked and cook and stir until gravy boils. Pour over meat, garnish with parsley and serve. NEW PHILCO 16X—$175 ‘World-wide reception plus tone such 2s only PHILCO can i Sounding Board is the sive, FALCOY Pesceen Lot ing is . 1 Its inclination directs the straight-traveling high tones upto ear level, giving brilliance and clearness. all low: : 2 Ses bocge bolle sone beings one tones, giving . RESULT: All music and speech are distinct and natural, as if the artists were present “in person.” Aad PHILCO REPLACEMENT TUBES IMPROVE THE PERFORMANCE OF ANY RADIO Moscow PHILCO A musical instrument of quality mous the magic of a 1935 PHILCO, artists from dis- tant lands “‘parade before you” in your own living room. From England, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Russia, Argen- tina, Venezuela and many other distant countries, they come! And, of course, you enjoy the finest reproduction of your favor- ite American programs, too! Properly installed with a PHILCO all-wave aerial, your new Peach Meringue Pie 2 tbsp. quick-cooking tapioca 1 cup sugar % tsp. salt 4 cups sliced fresh peaches 1 tbsp. melted butter 2 tbsp. lemon juice % recipe pie crust 2 egg whites 4 tbsp. sugar Combine quick-cooking tapioca, sugar, salt, butter, peaches and lemon Juice; let stand 15 minutes, or while pastry is being made. Line a 9-inch plate with pastry rolled %-inch thick, allowing pastry to extend one inch beyond edge. Fit loosely on Plate. Fold edge back to form stand- ing rim and flute with fingers. Fill with peach mixture. Bake in hot oven (450 degrees Fahrenheit) 15 minutes; reduce heat to moderate and continue baking 15 minutes. Beat egg whites until foamy; add sugar, 2 tablespoons at a time, beating after each addition until sugar is thor- oughly blended. After all sugar is added, continue beating until mix- ture will stand in peaks, Pile lightly on hot filling and bake 15 minutes longer or until delicately brown. Fodder Exportation Ottawa, Aug. 23—()—The Canad- jan government Thursday forbade.ex- portation of fodder except under licen- bed Provided by the new marketing We The order for the regulation of exports by license was issued after surveys indicated the extent of the shortage of fodder crops in all parts of Canada. The activities of specu- lators also was said to have led to decision. the ers embodied in the marketing act. Very few so-called normal adults reach an age over 16 or 17 from the PHILCO will bring you countless thrills from all over the world —foreign stations that were difficult even for experts to get not long ago—with greater naturalness than ever before! No other radio can give you such beauty and perfection of tone, for only PHILCO has the famous Patented Inclined Sounding Board—only PHILCO is scientifically designed as a musical instrument. Generous Allowance for Your Present Radio! Don’t fail to see and hear the sensational new 1935 PHILCOS. Your dealer will Ais Sine 70m demonstration, snextrs- is for sent radio pot pep PHILCO 668—-539-95 This powerful Baby Grand tunes-in foreign mations os wall on favorite American pro- grams. Amomeic Voraee Ce ECG Tick, 7 Tubes, esc, Modern cabiaet of elected woods with hand-rubbed finish. Select from 49 wew 1935 models! A PHILCO FOR EVERY PURSE AND PURPOSE American and Foreign Broadesst Receivers . $39.95 to $600 American Broadcast Receiver 5 . $20 to $200 New PHILCO Auto Redios 5 5: EASY TERMS AT ALL PHILCO DEALERS For a demonstration, phone your dealer—or the PHILCO distributor: TAVIS MUSIC COMPANY : Phone 762: Distributors Phone 762 psychological viewpoint.—Dr. Eliza- beth Sloan Chesser, noted London physician. Seeks to Improve American Ballet Florence Meyer. daughter of the former head of the Federal Re serve Bank, Eugene Meyer, an- nounces she will seck to com tribute to American art through the improvement and development of the ballet as @ native dance ‘She has just returned trom seasters, From Canada Banned] pe say: fire.” PIG RAID VIA AIR Danbury, N. H.—Arthur Hollenbeck identified the thief who has been stealing his baby pigs. Between 3 and 4 o'clock every morning, he said, a large American eagle, followed by six little eagles, swoops down on the farm, grabs a pig and flies away, followed by the little eagles. Bismarck Man Named Elevator Accountant ©. B. Nupen ‘of Bismarck, veteran elevator man, has been appointed chief elevator accountant for the state mill and elevator at Grand Forks. Nupen has been in the elevator business in North Dakota for 25 years and has operated a number of eleva- tors. Would-Be Kidnapers Are Sought in Utah Ogden, Utah, Aug. 23—(7)—An ap- families sent police in search of three men Thursday. Accosting the girls in a wooded ravine where they were on a picnic, the three men bound and gagged their victims, but were frightened away when the sound of approaching horses was heard. Zwicky Named Head Of S. D. Legionnaires having been elected late Wednesday ‘as the Department ended its three day convention here. Mrs. Eva Sherburne of Madison president Legion also concluded its state convention here Wednesday. * strength, it allows you to play or work at. Schlitz precise *Enzyme Control, Schlitz beer gives you strength, and in giving good for your golf—or anything else you beer at the peak of perfection every time. ‘There ig « difference in beers: Drink Schlitz Beer + That Made Milwaukee Famous IM .. Schlitz all-star program .. Columbia ;; Frideys.. g:99 p.m. Central Standard Time Illinois Relative of Flasher Woman Dies) te *uebit,, green ‘and Word has just been received here the death at Elgin, Ill., of Mrs. Jen- ‘Mrs. Lil. Shortridge of general | DY 25c TONITE 7:30 " Starts Friday THE SCREEN’S MOST - relax. And that’s is brewed under which which the limi was cut from eight of the 10933 season to five include blue-winged , elder duck, shoveler and gadwall. Probably will be assigned to a snce- aes bend at the Alcatras federal prison, Warden James A. Johnston intimated Thursday. At the Atlanta federal penitentiary from which he and other convicts were transferred, Capone did the same class of work. CAPITOL —sae THEATRE eoe— IT's COOL Last Times Tonite 25¢ Until 7:30 The truth about our neglected husbands! y R Hire GINGER ROGERS, WARREN WILLIAM, MARY ASTOR More Desperate— More Dangerous— More Alluring— Than the Underworld! Coming — Friday Saturday Matinee oo i { Hl !