The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1935, Page 2

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Filthy Food Found By State Chemist field to make butter has discontinued its manufacture, Unless creameries comply with the law, he said, more prosecutions will be instituted. Additional ociety rod B Concordia Group to Campaign Against Adulterated Butter, Bread and Apple Butter Is Launched ‘ Launching @ campaign against the| edulteration of bread, butter and ap- pie butter in North Dakota, the state regulatory department’s food labora- tory Wednesday asked buttermakers to improve their product, condemned | 15 lots of apple butter and warned | bakers against fraudulent advertising | of so-called health breads. j Spreading its activity to milk, an-/ other basic food, the laboratory an-| nounced approval of a new standard | for milk bottle caps. As soon as their j | present supplies are exhausted, dairy- | Hold Noon Reunion men were urged to use bottle’caps of i such design that they will protect he | Graduates and faculty members of pouring lip of the bottle from con- Concordia college, Moorhead, Minn., tamination. |attending the NDEA convention are to ‘Thirty samples of apple butter were |8ather in the Trinity Lutheran church analyzed and half of them were found | Parlors Thursday noon, according to IL to be illegal or adulterated. Three & communication received from Arthur |* contained excessive amounts of lead|©. Wigdahl, alumni secretary. The and arsenic or both, indicating an ex- | Trinity Lutheran Ladies’ Aid is serv- cessive residue of spray poisoning on jing the luncheon. the apples used, while others revealed eee large numbers of fruit parasites or in- - sects which had not been. removed, | LOdge Potluck Dinner These are classed as filth. Some well- | known brands were included in the) lots which were condemned. To Examine Bread Supporting the action of the nation- al conference of food officials, the; department announced it would ex-| emine with special care all bread| which is advertised as having special ; curative powers in order to prevent | fraudulent, misleading, excessive and | extravagant claims as to their medi-| cinal value. | In some cases, the department said, | advertisements for certain kinds of bread are reminiscent of the quack | medicine claims. The stand was adopt- | ed that bread is a food and should | not be made the purveyor and sales} agent for drugs and medicines, al- leged to be “permanent and certain correctives and cures for divers ills, | all the way from headaches and con- stipation to the melancholy condition | of premature old age.” | Comparing analyses of 781 butter samples this year with last year, the department noted a larger proportion of illegal samples despite efforts to e1 force the law and a national improv ment campaign in the dairy industi Find Short Weights Thirty eight and six tenths of the butter sampled was found to be of! short weight while 39.9 per cent con- | tained more than the legal amount} of water and 21.7 per cent had less} than the required,80 per cent of fat.! Postponed to Nov. 12 The Royal Neighbors of America ledge has postponed until Tuesday, Nov. 12, its potluck supper and busi- ness meeting originally scheduled for Thursday evening at the A. O. U. W. hall. Members who wish to attend are to telephone Mrs. E. J, Schultz (317) or Mrs. Carl R. Kositzky (881) not later than Saturday morning. 2. * * Masonic Groups to Entertain at Cards Saturday, Nov. 9, has been chosen as the date for the card party whioh 1 be the third in a serics of social functions sponsored during the win- ter season by a joint committee from the Masonic and Order of the Eastern Star lodges, which is headed by O. A. Convert and Mrs. C. J. Tullberg. Both contract and auction will be played. | starting at 8:30 o'clock. Members of both lodges and their friends are in- ed. * * * Jamestown Reunion Time and Place Set Alumni of Jamestown college will} hold their reunion and luncheon, which always is a social feature of the Several prosecutions and convictions were obtained in the better butter’ campaign, according to Culver S. Ladd,’ state food commissioner and chemist, ‘nd one concern which was not quali- NDEA convention, at the McCabe odist Episcopal church at 12:15 ck Thursday noon, according to Mrs. F. H. Waldo, who Tuesday was |appointed ehairman of the function by college officials. Local alumni and former students who wish to attend are to telephone reservations Wednes- jday evening to Mrs. Waldo at 1012. * oe OK ‘Girl Scouts Will Aid | During NDEA Meeting | | Bismarck Girl Scouts headed by | their commissioner, Mrs. E. A. Thor- berg, will render assistance to the NDEA convention as part of their community service program, Their special duties will include act- ing as guides for the tour of the cap- itol at 5:15 o'clock Thursday after- |noon, ushering at the performance SPECIAL ONE-HOUR SERVICE —on— DRY-CLEANING WHILE-U-WAIT PRESSING Phone 434 Toman *S 106 3rd pec! a beter re! All Phones CONOM We 34 GROCERY Deliver Spitzenberg, Delicious, Jonathan, 40-Ib. box... $119 Minneopa Maple and Cane ae. Lee Hershey’s Cocoa, 16-0z. tin ... Apples Lib tin .........29C Corn, Peas, Green Cut Beans, Wax Cut Beans, No. 2 tins Standard, 2 for .................5- STRICTLY FRESH EGGS FRESH OYSTERS eons ih Corned’ Beet —— Gallon 69c 19¢ 39c Sauerkraut, Seymour, No, 2', tins, 2 for...........19¢ .Coco Hardwater Soap, 3 large bars ...............14¢ Kellogg’s All Bran, 16-oz. pkg. Sergey Highline Imitation Vanilla, 8-0z. bottle hii aie stone Post’s Whole Bran, 10-0z. pkg. ......... sis vases AQ Soup 8 for n- QOC | 2b jar nn. - ALL SEASONABLE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES fj adette 3 1 of “Tons of Money” at’ 7:30 o'clock Friday evening in the Bismarck City auditorium, and participating with the Boy Scouts in the convention parade at noon Friday. Senior Girl Scouts and Mrs. Thor- berg met at 4:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the Capitol with E. M. Nelson, who gave them instructions for conducting the tour. Mrs. Thor- berg is to supervise their work Thurs- day afternoon. xe * Katherine L. Andrist Given Farewell Party Mrs, Chester Parks and the Misses Ethel Elness, Nell Byrne and Ann Erbe were joint hostesses at a 5:30 Rose room, followed by a theatre par- ty, Monday evening in honor of Miss Katherine L. Andrist, who leaves for Fargo, Nov. 15. Covers were marked for 12 guests! at a single table decorated with a! white and yellow centerpiece and harmonizing place cards and nut baskets. The guests, who were em- Ployes of the Northwestern Bell Tele- Phone company traffic department, presented Miss Andrist with a brace- let and vanity case as farewell gifts. Miss Andrist is being transferred to Fargo by the telephone company. * ek * Bismarck Homemakers Will Hold Candy Sale Plans for a candy sale, to be, con- ducted at the A. W. Lucas company store, beginning at 11 o'clock Thurs- day, and for the regular meeting Fri- day, were announced Wednesday by the Bismarck Homemakers’ club. Mmes, Henry Gierke, J. O, Quinn and Joseph R. Kirby are the commit- tee for the candy sale. Members are to bring their contributions to the store by 10:30 o'clock. The project leaders will give a les- son orf weaving and crocheting purses from yarn and cord for the meeting at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at Mrs, Gierke’s home, 318 Eighth St. Mem- bers are to be equipped with a No. 6 crochet hook and a ball of cord. There will be @ potluck lunch, ** ® Junior Music Group Having Guest Night; ény high school boy or girl who has had some formal training in music and who is seriously interested in de- veloping himself along that line is in- | vited to attend the guest night pro- gram of the Bismarck Junior Music club at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening. The function will be held in the! home of Miss Barbara Henry, 807) Sixth St. and is under direction of the club's sponsors and special com- mittees. The Misses Jeannette Croon- quist, Mary Davis and Phyllis Brain- | erd are responsible for refreshments. This is one of the early season ac- tivities of the club, which is affiliated with the North Dakota Federation of Music clubs. * kK Junior Aides Meeting Is Set One Day Ahead Because the American Legion Aux- fiiary room will be otherwise occupied Friday, the Junior Aides will meet at 3:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon, it was announced Wednesday by the sponsors. The hour is earlier than usual bécause there will be no school. The puppeteers group which is composed of both Juniorette and Junior Aide. members is busy this week rehearsing for the presentation of “Hansel and Gretel” Thursday af- ternoon for the NDEA convention. Mrs. H. A. Pike is directing the pro- duction in which puppets will be handled by Dorcthy Ann Knecht, Betty Jean and Joan Rosenthal, Roy- ;ann Kennelly, Barbara Baker, Dolores Kast, Maxine and Betty.Brauer and Frances Nelson. * * & o'clock dinner in the Patterson hotel] Women’s Recreation Groups Are Organized At the organization meeting of the women’s recreation classes held Mon- day evening it was decided to hold classes from 7 to 9:30 o'clock each Monday evening in the World War Memorial building auditorium and from 7 to 9 o'clock each Thursday evening in the lower gymnasium. Monday evening periods will be devoted to volleyball tournament games from 7 to 8 o'clock and to bas- ketball games on the same plan from 8 to 9:30 o'clock, Exercises, folk dances, tumbling and recreational games will be play- ed from 7 to 8 o'clock and team games during the last hour on Thurs- day evening. Regular classes start Thursday eve- ning. This meeting and the second next Monday evening will be open to anyone who {is interested in the pro- gram. Guests may take active part or come merely as spectators. It was decided to allow members to pay 25,cents each time instead of paying in advance the $3.00 fee for the season from November to May. * ee Horace McLeod, coach of the Car- rington high school, will be the guest of his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Roy D. McLeod, 520 Ninth '8t., during the NDEA convention. * * * Dave K. Wright, Moorhead, Minn., and Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bry- ant, Jamestown, arrived here Tues- day to attend the funeral services for Joseph 8. Wright, brother of Mr. Wright and uncle of Mr. Bryant. x * * Convention guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Newton, 1021 Seventh St., are Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Hugelen and children of Maddock, who arrived Wednesday afternoon. Mr, Hugelen is superintendent of schools at Maddock. * ok x Mr. and Mrs. Warren J. Dunham HOMEMAKER LEADER MEETINGS ARE HELD Project leaders from Burleigh coun- ty Homemaker clubs met here Tues- day and Wednesday for the second training meetings of the homecraft major project work under the di- rection of Miss eld, College at Fargo. Phases of the work discussed in- cluded the art principles applied to articles made, the making of bags and purses, and a knitting supple- ment. County Agent Henry O. Put- nam made arrangements for the two meetings. Project leaders’ present were Mrs. F. Owen and . G. Melick, Meno- ken Three Clover club; Mrs. Bert Hendershott and Mrs. Oscar Coleman, Trygg Cedar Hill’ club, Baldwin; Mrs. J. O. Lein and Mts. Lester Knowles, Wing club; Mrs. Hallie Belk and Mrs. Martin Nelson, Sterling club; Mrs, R. E. Hagen and Mrs, Dave Albright, Wilton; Mrs. win; Mrs, Frank Nichols and Mrs. W. C. Wiley, Capitol club, Bismarck; Mrs, Glenn Oder and Mrs. Albert An- derson, Menoken Cross Country club; Mrs. B. O. Strand and Mrs. Charles Tedholm, Regan; Mrs. Albert John- son and Miss Lola McGahey, Still club; Mrs. J. O. Quinn and Mrs. Joe Kirby, Bismarck; Mrs. William Edna Sommerft clothing specialist from the Judges Can’t Prevent Testimony Printing Austin, Tex, Nov. 6—(%)—The ‘Texas court of criminal appeals Wed- nesday ruled district Judges ‘did not have authority to forbid publications by newspapers-of testimony taken at @ public criminal trial and ordered six Houston newspapermen released from contempt charges. permen were held in selection of juries in two companion cases. i Kills Wife and Self At Gay Dinner Party Sutherland, Sask., Nov. 6—(?)—At| the height of a gay’ dinner party Wednesday night, Steve Shillnents of|a Sutherland shot and killed his wife and himself, Shilinentz, 35, and his 25-year-old wife had been quarreling. They leave a 9-months-old baby. ‘LaMoure Burglar Is Given Year Sentence LaMoure, N. D., Nov. 6.—(#)—Homer ment of a conference of naval powers from Dec, 2 to Dec. 5 was officially annaqunced Tuesday. Fricke, Jr. and Mrs. Ralph Falken- stein, Crofte Star club; Mrs. J. Mor- ent and Mrs. Roy Colton, Driscoll; Mrs. Jessie Easton and Mrs. Fred ‘Habeck, McKenzie; Mrs. Oscar Erick- son and Miss Naomi Hagstrom, Lake- ville; Mrs. Melvin Agnew and Miss Pearle Salter, Menoken; and Mrs. Faye Johnson and Mrs. Alfred Hoo- ver, Rainbow. Miller of Watertown, 8. D., was sen- tenced to one year in the state peni- tentiary when he pleaded guilty to a charge of third degree burglary before | District Judge W. H. Hutchinson. Miller was taken to Bismarck Wed- nesday. FOR SALE TURKEY Barrel Packs State Seed Show Set For Minot in March Minot, N. D., Nov. 6—(#)—Directors of the North Dakota state seed grain show met here Tuesday and set dates for the 1936 show which will be held in Minot March 11, 12, and 13. Plans market prices for your tur- keys. “Northern” Hide & Fur are being considered whereby about Company $400 in cash prizes will be distributed Brick Bldg., Cor. 8th & Front to growers of pure seed, as well as & Bismarck, N. Dak. number of special awards. “O. W. Florence Nelson and Mrs. Lorraine Christenson, Glenview club, Bald: Klindworth of Fessenden presided. and daughter, Rowena, have returned to their home at Fargo after visiting Mr. Dunham's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. N. Dunham, 204 Avenue B, west. xk x Mr. and Mrs. Bruce C. Wright, Cooperstown aviators, have returned to their home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred Roberts, 1002 Seventh St., for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Wright made the trip by airplane and while here had a new motor installed in their machine. ‘Charter No. 2434 OF BISMARCK, IN THE STA’ Loans and discounts .... Overdrafts United States government and/or fully guaranteed . fixtures, $11,836.21 Reserve with Federal Reserve Outside checks and other cash Other assets ............... TOTAL ASSETS ... Liab Demand deposits, except U. S. United States Government and posits .. mass Deposits of other banks, cashiers’ checks outstandi! Interest, taxes, and ot! unpaid ..... Other liabilities .. Capital account: Surplus Undivided profits—net . United States Government and/or fully guaranteed . Pledged: ings deposits ......:.... State of North Dakota, County o: I, my knowledge and belief. ber, 1935. (Seal) “obligations, Other bonds, stocks, and securities .. Banking house, $95,500. Furniture and Real estate owned other than banking house Cash in vault and balances with other banks. including certified and shares, par $100.00 per share. AS TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNT ......... TOTAL LIABILITIES Memorandum Loans and Investments Pledged to Secure Liabilities: TOTAL PLEDGED .. Reserve District No. 9 REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TE OF NORTH DAKOTA, AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON NOVEMBER 1, 1935 Assets ..$ 725,436.80 1,680.35 967,095.91 491,189.60 direct 107,336.21 1,126.19 . 1,735,412.43 577,222.75 6,359.17 ra bank items ... ilities_ Government depos- its, public funds, and deposits of other banks $2,761,335.59 Time deposits, except postal savings, public funds and deposits of other banks ... Public funds of States, counties, school districts, or other subdivisions or municipalities postal savings de- on 8,117.46 ing ... . $250,000.00 75,000.00 53,914.84 obligations, direct aa Re, $ Total Pledged (excluding rediscounts) . .$ 11,610.68 Against United States Government and postal sav- seeeeeeB 11,610.63 sesesees$ 11,610.63 rleigh, ss: N. I. Roop, vice president of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of | N..I. ROOP, Vice President. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 6th day of Novem- C. W. VORACHEK, Notary Public. My commission expires January 22nd, 1937. Correct—Attest: F, L. CONKLIN 0. N. DUNHAM E. T. McCANNA Directors. 51,254.34 se eeeeeees §4,664,118.75 1,177,522.49 170,542.50 149,377.68 17,822.77 980.42 378,914.84 se eee + 0$4,664,113.75 11,610.63 1936 FINE-CAR FEATURES THAT MAKE OLDSMOBILE ube Portable Radio $13.50 Roomy, luxurious than ever... Fisher No Draft Ventilation admits fresh sir without draft... and excludes rain. minum pistons, aute- matic choke and vacuum fuel saver. | Morton Debt Board a al Organized for Work | county Judge B. W. Shaw was Bismarck’s first coasting accl- dent of the current winter was re} Wednesday. Te victim was Jimmy Grabow, ‘Teyear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl F. Grabow, 707 Washington &t., injured at 4 p..m., Sunday in @ mishap at Mandan &t. and Avenue D. The child was coasting down the Mandan street hiil when his sled got out of control, and he crashed into @ parked automobile. Several stitches were required to close a scalp wound and five stitches were required to close & cut under his chin, He was taken to the Bismarck hospital for treatment but was able to attend school Tuesday. county debt adjustment board when that body organized. Other members are David Cannell, Glen Ullin; John B, Stephenson, Flasher, and | Fred Schwenk, Hebron. The duty of the board is to conciliate farm debtors and creditors and bring about a set- ble, thus avoiding tlement if possible, bas foreclosures, ment of farms and other hardshine ck E——wSKmOoa_aeeeeee OVERSHOES Complete line of rubbers and overshoes of every description for men, women and children. ‘Try a pair of overshoes with your initial on the fastener. POSTPONE NAVY MEETING London, Nov. 6.—(P}—Postpone- Now at s Saving at PEOPLE'S DEP’T. STORE 113 bth St, ‘The peacock’s scream can be heard mile away. SELECT A MODERN MIRROR FROM THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE CITY You will have a wide choice at our store—ab- solutely the latest in de- Circular mirrors are being featured this season but we have them in all shapes and designs. Of special interest to you will be our mirrors in col- ored shades. Ideal for home, beauty shop or any business which desires the last word in decorative appointments. Vantine Paint & Glass Co. “The House of Service” Bismarck, N. D. Phone 544 313 Main Avenue the Vew nnouncing OLDSMOBILE NEW STYLE-LEADER STYLING... SMOOTHER, LIVELIER POWER... INCREASED COMFORT «»eGREATER ECONOMY...NEWLY ENRICHED INTERIORS...AND ALL THE MODERN COR today announces two beautiful new Style Leaders for 1936... a big, power- ful Siz and a luxurious new Eight «+. both at new low prices! ... Powered with smoother, livelier engines—90 full horsepower in the Six, 100 horsepower in the Eight—andtwith newly enriched interiors and every fine-car fea- ture—they confirm anew the pop- pd description of Oldsmobile... ‘be Car that has Everything!” (Come in, see and drive the new style, new value Oldsmobiles for 1936—now on display. CORWIN- CHURCHILL “MOTORS, Ine. " ,

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