The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 23, 1935, Page 4

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THE RISMARCK TRIBUN LIGHTING CONTEST DEADLINE AT HAND Committee Warns That Entries Will Not Be Received Af- ter Tuesday Night Deadline for entering the Bismarck | Christmas home lighting contest is ‘Tuesday night, the Junior Association of Commerce committee sponsoring the event announced Monday. With approximately 20 home own-| ers already entered, there still is op- portunity for many more who wish to compete for the $25 in cash prizes to send in their names to any of the committee members. A tour of Bismarck residential Streets at night will reveal that en- trants should not be deterred by the thought that their simple decorations will not be able to compete with more elaborate ones. While scores of windows bear illum- inated wreaths and sparkling lights gleam from Christmas trees in front windows, there are few if any elab- orate displays, the committee pointed out. Entries may be made by telephon- ing C. C. Goodwin 74; Cliff Palmer 546; Leonard Anderson 141; Henry ‘Wadeson 240; O. I. Devold 185. There is only one important rule. Entrants must have their displays il-| luminated from 7 to 10 p. m., each ENTIRE pire COUNTY IS QUARANTINED | night beginning Christmas eve and} oe ae - continuing through New Year's night. Report 20 Met Death By Flames in State’ Twenty met agonizing death in flames in the last two years in North Dakota, the biennial report of State Fire Marshal J. H. McCoy disclosed Monday. Of the score who died in fires 12| were children ranging in ages from two to 12 years old. Two men and six women, including mothers of some | of the children, met death in fire. One woman was burned to death in! @n overturned automobile: A 12-year- A. F. Kudick, Jr., 109 Ave. A West, ® burning barn and was trapped; an oven explosion snuffed out the life of nother woman; explosion of gasoline took the lives of two small farm chil- dren; a mother and her daughter died when flames enveloped them from ex- plosion of cleaning fluid in their home. In all, 42 persons were either killed or injured in fires in the state during the biennium. 12 Stitches Takenin | Kudick Boy’s Wound| A. F. Kudick, Jr., 109 Ave. A West, eight-year-old boy who suffered pain- ful injuries when he crashed into the rear end of an automobile while slid- ing on the Mandan street hill Sat- urday, was reported recovering rapidly Monday. Twelve stitches were necessary to close a gash in his forehead, his nose was fractured and several teeth loosened, the result of his aviator’s cap slipping over his eyes and blind- ing him as his speeding sled headed for the car. Dancing at Dome Christmas People’s Forum (Editor's Note) —The Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of tnter- est. Letters dealing with contro- versial religious subjects, which individuals unfairly, or ffend good taste and fair vill be returned to the writ- letters MUST be signed If you wish to use a pseudonym, sign the pseudonym first and your own name beneath it. We reserve the right to delete such parts of letters. as may be necessary to conform to this policy and to re- quire publication of a writer's name where justice and fair play att wate! play ers. A make {t advisable. All letters must be limited to not more than 0 words. AGAINST HUMAN GREED Steele, N. D., Dec. 14, 1935. Editor, Tribune: We are prone to believe that right} after the immortal Abraham Lincoln caused the chains of chattel slavery to be removed from the wrists of four million black slaves, the money-chang- forge other chains that would fasten nicely upon the wrists of thirty mil- lion white slaves. We believe, too. that the forging went on rapidly and insidiously until today the work is complete and money is the master, while all things else is the servant. We believe, too, that this earth should belong to those who will till it, in the interest of all who eat. We feel that this state of slavery which exists to- day is far worse than that which did exist prior to 1861-65. And we know too, that slavery includes all other crimes. It is the joint product of the kidnaper, the pirate, thief, murderer and hypocrite. It degrades labor and corrupts leisure. With the idea that labor is the basis of all progress goes the truth that labor must be free. The laborer must be a free man. Agricul- ture is the base of all wealth, pros- perity and luxury. In a country where Eve. No cover charge. the tillers of the fields are free, every- MEATS—“THAT ARE BETTER”. ers in the temple of greed began to} National Guardsmen have been posted o~ all main highways through Southern Kiowa county to enforce a county-wide quarantine designed to prevent spread of meningitis. Passes were Issued for through traffie only. This station was set up 10 mi/es west of Snyder, Okla. (Associated Press Photo) | body is free and oabbe to be j pecipaes Tevery: flower a tender iiought; and | ous, Happy is the country where those | who till the soil own it. Interest eats | night and day, and the more it eats |the hungrier it grows. The farmer in | debt, lying awake at night, can, if he | listens, hear it gnaw. If he owes noth- ing he can hear his corn grow. The first thing a man wants to know and | be sure of is when he has enough to pull through on. The land belongs to the children of nature. Nature in- |vites into this world every babe that jis born, What would you think, for jinstance, if you were invited to a | party—nobody had charged you any- thing, but you had been invited—and when you got there you found one |man pretending to occupy a hundred ; Seats, another fifty seats, and there- | upon you had to stand up. What | would you think of the invitation? Every child of nature is entitled to his share of the land and he should not be compelled to beg the privilege to work the soil, of a babe who hap- pened to be born before him. No man should be allowed to.own any land that he does not use. And why? Don’t you know that if people could bottle the air they would? Don’t you know that there would be an American Air-Bottling association? And don’t you know that they would allow thousands and millions to die, for want of breath, if they could not pay for it? I am not blaming their natural greed, only stating facts. In the country is the ideal home, that is if the monopolies allow it to be so. There you can see the rising and setting of the sun; you become acquainted with the starry constella- tions of the heavens; you hear the rain on the roof, and listen to the rythmic sighing of the winds, You are thrilled by the resurrection called “Spring”; touched and saddened by autumn—the grace and poetry of death. Every field is a picture, a landscape; every landscape a poem; rors TURKEYS 0....30-35c DUCKS CHICKENS Fancy, lb. 25c fancy, lb. 23c-25¢ Motantsracn2Be f%, 19¢,23c LUTEFISK Pearl White, pound . Sliced, pound SMOKED COUNTRY SAUSAGE, pound .. OYSTERS Extra Jumbo Extra Standard Cheese and Cheese Specialties—Gammelost, Gjetost, Edam, Roquefort, Cammembert, Imported Swiss, Liederkranz Spread, Calumet Club Spread QUEEN OLIVES Whole Kernel Corn Monarch, No. 2 tin SOUP : Med, tins, Heinz, 14 varieties ...... 2tretC COCOA, Hershey’s, pound tin .. 13c JELLO, six delicious flavors .. 4 tor LBC Libby’s CATSUP, 14-0. bottle Pay". PRODUCT PINEAPPLE. part stices 26-07, jar large Olives 1 7 c Dates 1%4-Ib, package .. Candies and Nuts 2 1s. 2DC Ib, 10c Old Time Mix Peanut Chocolate Nuts .. fancy . No. 2% tins, | JUST PHONE 1060 5 39c PICKLES, Libby's Dills, 2% size tin... 16c Fruits for Salad, Libby’s No. 1 tin MARSHMALLOWS, pound package Chase and Sanborn COFFEE, pound every forest a fairyland. In the country you preserve your identity, your personality. You are an aggre- gation of atoms, but in the city, you are only an atom of an aggregation. It elevates a man to own a home— even where there are no waterworks, It gives a certain independence, a force of character that is obtained in no other way. A man without a home feels like a passenger on a stranded bus. There is in such a man a littie of the vagrant. Homes make patriots. Few men have been patriotic enough to shoulder a gun in defense of a boarding house. I would like to see this world, at last, so that a man could die and not feel that he had left his wife and children a prey to the greed and avarice, or the cruelties of man- kind. That time will never come, however, as long as millions of acres of land are owned by those who use them only for the purpose of giving color to their financial rating. Give the farmer at least half of the 53 taxes imposed upon our bread and, when 1 lo MONDAY, DECEMB China Clipper Loses In Fight With Storm Alameda, Calif., Dec. 20.—(#)—Un- able to escape from a mid-ocean storm, the China Clipper returned to her Alameda base Monday from an intended flight to Honolulu. The Pan Afmerican Airways big fly- ing boat landed at Alameda after 14% hours in the air. She Had flown 700 miles of the 2,400 miles course to Honolulu, fighting head winds all the | way. When a storm failed to move off the course as rapidly as expected, Captain Edwin C. Musick ordered the ship turned back. Four Meet Death on Minnesota Crossing Taopi is 20 miles southeast of Aus- persons were killed Sunday when an automobile was struck and dragged 20 rods by a Chicago Great Western passenger train at a crossing here. The dead are John Wimmer, about 40; Monic Wettstein, about 19, Leo Hughes and William Jordan, all resi- dents near here. The train hit the car-in the middle and scattered it on both sides of the track. Hughes was the driver. Taopi is 20 miles southeast of Aus- tin. sieannnaRsncar es one es f Today’s Recipe o— Molasse? Taffy One cup granulated sugar, 1 cup brown sugar, 2 cups molasses, 3 table- spoons butter, 1 tablespoon vinegar, % cup water, % teaspoon soda, 2 drops oil of peppermint or winter- green (optional). Put sugar, molasses, vinegar and water into a large sauce pan and stir until sugar is dissolved. Boil until a few drops tested in cold water form a hard ball (265 degrees Fahrenheit). Add butter and as soon as melted re- move from fire and stir in soda. Pour into oiled shallow pans to col. When cool enough to handle add flavoring if you use it. Pull until light coloréd and porous. Stretch and twist into a rope not more than half an inch thick and cut into inch pieces with Scissors. Wrap each piece in waxed paper. The human brain is exceeded in size only by those of elephants and whales, that is done, more people will be able to till the soil. That it may bring forth its biblical thorns and thistles. Yours truly, J. N. McCARTER. R f Widow Is Pallid j MRS. WALTER W. LIGGETT . The strain under which she has been placed by her husband's assas- sination and subsequent events is clear- ly shown in this character study of Mrs. Walter W. Liggett, made as she completed telling a Minnesota -grand jury about her late husband’s mur- der. Large frogs come from small eggs, while small frogs come from large eggs. A bad egg floats in water because gasses have formed inside it, owing to decomposition. The Hotel Patterson will serve its usual FAMOUS CHRISTMAS DINNER from 11:30 a, m. to 10 p.m. The Hotel Patterson wishes to extend the season’s greetings. BUTTER No. 1 Creamery. Churned fresh daily. Parchment wrapped. Lb. 34c MIRACLE WHIP A rich, mild dressing for all salads Pint 32c KRAFT CHEESE CRANBERRIES LETTUCE CELERY Acorree SCHILLING A rich, mild blend. Either drip or regular . Vacuum POUND 27c Piggly Wiggly extends to its customers and friends a most Joy- ful Christmas Greeting... that all may experience Health, Happiness and Prosperity during the New Year. PRICES EFFECTIVE MONDAY - TUESDAY All varieties Kraft blended Cheese. 14-LB. PKG. CRANBERRY SAUCE Red ripe Cape Cods......... POUND 21e Arizona Iceberg. Crisp, solid heads. EACH Large, well-bleached stalks. EACH SWEET POTATOES Smooth, even size for baking. 3 LBS. with a sincere hope BEVERAGES Old Colony Charged Water, Ginger Ale. Large bottle. Large No. 214 cans. Libby’ for salads l6c lc PEAS garden peas .. Ocean Spray, ready to serve. 1%-oz. Del Maiz Niblets—like fresh barr hel GODS ooo. scessesscvcnceccsces: EACH the cob. 12 02, ..........000005) SWEET BREAD PUDDING MINCE MEAT Tues a. Our | All varieties from Heinz—Plum, Date or | Minneopa prepared Family, local dry mince lid pack. bakeries. meat. 9 oz. gare 11c |e 12¢ mats 8c Med. (200 size) DATES Layer pack in 13c 14e Peanut Brittle ... Chocolates Pickled Pears 11 on. Green Giants. Large, NIBLETS Small size Texas Marsh Seedless. ORANGES MIXED NUTS All new crop, no peanuts. Xmas Candy . -2 Ibs. 19¢! seeeees 2 lbs. 19¢ Cocoanut Brittle... .2 lbs. 25¢ 100% Plastic Filled 2 lbs. 25¢ Peanuts .......:...2 lbs. 28¢ Lime ert \CH Pickled Pears 13c GRAPEFRUIT ct: 17 wet me rae 9 18¢ 39c DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE 15_o2. flat tin, 4 large, thick, whole center slices, cellophane, 1% lbs. EACH EACH lic 18¢ Yams and Old Monk Pineapple, Grapefruit, big 64 size, only ... Fancy Emperor Grapes Extra Fancy Delicious and Winesap Apples, Avocadoes Tangerines Flemish Beauty Pears Fancy Head Lettuce, 2 for .. Fancy Bleached Celery ... New Cabbage Old Cabbage Red Cabbage Stamped Rutabagas Spanish Onions Artichokes Richelieu, No. 1 tall cans Ripe Olives, ee No. 1 tall cans Ripe Olives, 27 count Libby’s Sweet or Sweet Pimento Stuffed Olives, Olives—Stufted Pimento—Celery—Almond— 2 4. 3 on. jar .... idl c Lydia Darrah Chocolates, % Ib., 1 lb, and 2 Ib. size Xmas Mix Candy Peanut Brittle Mixed Nuts Cider Grape Juice Ginger Ale Sparkling Water Plum, Date and Fig Puddings Mince Meat PO rs keeatine eta WIAD cecccccereessees 25c Swansdown Cake Flour, 28 per pkg. ....... see eeeeecreeeeeeeees Cc Softasilk Cake Flour, Dromedary Ginger Bread Mix, Feri eer Stair merrier eeneery Dromedary Pitted Dates, 1% 02. large can ........ ee eeeeeewaneeesesreecees 19c Brach’s chocolate covered Cherries, FANCY SPRINGERS STANDARD AND SELECT OYSTERS FANCY TURKEYS Gold-N-Rich Cheese — It’s a Sensation! All Phones 211 DELIVERIES—8:45 & 10:30; 2:30 & 4:30 Christmas Fruits and Vegetables Oranges Fancy Seedless Navels. Califernia’s Finest, Famous “Carnation Brand.” . APPLES ............ Per Box $1.29 Snappy, Rosy Red Winesaps Dr. Walter |home Fred Allen plays the saxophone ‘eusates between six and|and banjo (not at she same time, Usten |however) for relaxation . . . Xavier “Fresh Vegetables” Sweet Jersey Potatoes Washed Parsnips “Pickles and Olives” 25c Mammoth Queen Olives, “Lest You Forget” “Grocery Items” pkg., 2 for broken slices, “Meat Department” STEWING HENS GEESE and DUCKS “Leave Your Order Now” 118 Third St. Clese Saturday at 8 P. M. Large 150 size, LETTUCE ......:..... 2Heads lic Fancy, Crisp, Selid Heads CELERY ................. 2for25c Especially Selected, Tender Stalks SWEET POTATOES ..... 5 bs. 25c Smooth, Bright, Kiln Dried GRAPEFRUIT ... . 5 for 19c Also Fresh Persimmons, Cabbage, Parsley, Endive, Limes, beans p caress, Mashtoones " Fomegasaion, Ee Our Christmas Food Sale will continue through Tuesday. We Deliver Phone Otters C; 0. D, These Ai REE Owl 26, 3 om Hoe AY ve., Phone 0. 2 on Broadway, Phone 74! wy ey we

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