The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1936, Page 8

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i { i ‘wo! | DISBASE IN HORSES ON WANE IN STATE: i Only Few Isolated Cases Are Expected If History of | Trouble Runs True | The horse brain disease outbreak whieh struck North Dakota heavily in 1935 and left in its wake 5,000 dead animals is not likely to treat the state so harshly in 1936, Dr. T. O. Brandenburg, state veterinarian. says. He estimates 10,000 horses were af- fected. | “Experience with this disease in} other states indicates that after the disease has been very severe, as it was in nearly every county in this state during 1935, only a few isolated | cases, if any, appear the following | year—the disease being more severe! in the adjoining territory slightly in- vaded the previous year. “Reports of this disease are not) complete but from those we have we are certain that with the possible ex- ception of some counties west of the } Missouri river and Towner and Cava-} lier counties little trouble is to be e: pected. Counties reporting the few- est number of cases may have some | trouble with this disease, however. | In such areas we would strongly | recommend that all valuable pure- | bred horses be vaccinated by a li- MAN IN }.<D’ SAILS censed veterinarian, using what is known as formalized brain vaccine.” | Encephalomyelitis, according to Dr Brandenburg. probably is a very old | disease of horses that passes over the county ct certain intervals, killing. Dillinger to from New Yer! Mrs. Anna Sage (center), the “woman in red” who decoyed John death in Chicago, sailed aboard the President Harding a deportee to her native Rumania. She is shown aboard the ship a short time before it sailed. (Associated Press Photo) as a rule. only a small percentage of | the horses and producing immunity | in the others. Knights Templar to Meet in Jamestown In time, due to the death of the immune horses, an entirely new crop! jamestown, N. D. May 7T—(Pi— cree thet is suscept- mie 45th annual conclave of the ible to the disease, and if conditions Grand Commandery of the Knights are favorable for its spread another) plar will be held in Jamestown epizootic of this disease sweeps over 25 and 26, it was announced by cee oounitzy. | Chester A. Butler on. grand com- Studies by Drs. Meyer, Haring &|mander. The conclave inciudes. Hewitt at the University of California: aqqition to the bus dn 1931 show the disease is caused by |religious service, parade, and drill @ filter passing virus, which pro- | competition in which teams from Bis- duces an inflammation of the brain marck, Grafton. Fargo, Minot, and (encephalitis) and also of the spinal/ Devils Lake and Jamestown will en- cord (myelitis), and so we get the!icr. Mark Norris. Grand Rapids, medical term “encephalomyelitis.” | Mich., will be the principal speaker. Encephalomyelitis has occurred in pane 32 states since 1931, it being carried , by mosquitoes. The severity of an! outbreak will depend on two things. |! the natural resistance of the horses} and the number of mosquitoes. | Evangelical Church Jamestown, N. D.. Mi SaEIMa Gani aL The seventeenth annual FINGAL MAN DIES |North Dakota conference of the Fargo, N. D., May 7.—(P)—Andrew | pyangelical church will be held here Mickelsen, 78, of Fingal, N. D.. died May 12 to 17. A mceting of the con- Wednesday in a Fargo hospital.) ference board of examiners will open Burial will be at his former home in |the session. Features of the program Canby, Minn. He leaves Mrs. Mick- | include a meeting of the North,Dakota elsen and a son, Erwin A., at Kthryn,/ Conference Missionary society and N. D., and two daughters, Mrs. Laura | Pioneer night May 13. Christian edu- Plank of Fingal and Mrs. Alfred |cation service m¢ Aamoth of Hollywood, Calif. ing of the Albi STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO. LEGAL RESERVE COMPANY RATED A-PLUS We can save you money. Call us for RATES. More cars insured with us than any company in the United States. Hundreds of satisfied custom- ers in Bismarck and Mandan. Let us figure with you and save you money Gerald Craig — 207 Bdwy. Phone 820 — H. C. Hanson ness session, aj Conference Slated) state capitol; Olaf Nielson at Gackle; y 7—\Pi—| Theodore W. Hoffer sion of the! Jacob Esch, Jr., | Transfer, both at Hazelton. ting May, 14, meet- ght brotherhood, mis- sionary pageant May 16, and ordina- tion services May 17. Out-of-state speakers on the pro- gram include: Rev. Carl Heinmiller id Rev. A. H. Doescher, Cleveland. O., Bishop E. W. Praetorius, St. Paul, Minn., and Rev. E. G. Frye, Harris- burg. | Hearings Scheduled For Freight Service Nine applications for special certi- ficates to furnish motor freight ser- vice in North Dakota will be consid- ered at hearings scheduled May 12 to 14, it was announced Thursday by the ;State railroad commission. Hearings will be held on five ap- plications May 12, including those of Andey Froehlich of McClusky at the at Streeter; and the Hazelton On May 13 testimony will be taken in connection with applications of J. |M. Carlson of Edgeley at Edgeley; Charles Wahl at Ellendale; and on May 14 of Sandy C. Satre and Ivan Shafer. at Courtenay and Oakes, re- spectively. Mary Jane Alguire MODERN MINSTREL| Ringside Figures |WPA ATTACKED AS. | SHOW SCHEDULED IN} BISMARCK MAY 13-14 Episcopal Church Guilds Pro- ducing Entertainment With Cast of 40 One of the first minstrel shows in Bismarck in a number of years, the Guilds Minstrels, produced ‘under the auspices of the guilds of the Episco- pal church, will give two performances here at 8:15 p. m. May 13 and 14 in the city auditorium, There are 40 members in the cast which is being directed by Ralph Warren Soule under the general management of J. B. Belk. There are 20 members in the chorus, the majority of them members of the Bismarck Male chorus, four end men, seven in the orchestra and four dancing girls. “This is a minstrel show in the mod- ern manner,” Mr. Belk declared. “Its songs and its lines are clean and en- tertaining and have been tested in other cities of the country. “Its cast includes some of Bis- marck’s most outstanding talent and its success in other cities assures the Capital City of a delightful evening,” he said. KENMARE BANKER, H. H. STEELE, DIES Former State Senator and Tax Commissioner Once Re- sided in Mandan Kenmare, N. D., May 7.—(?)—Hen- ry Herbert Steele, 64, for many years a banker and lawyer at Mohall and owner of a bank here, died in a hos- pital here early Thursday morning. He had served in the state senate and as a member of the state tax commission. He had lived in Aberdeen, 8. D., Mandan, Oakes and Leeds before moving to Mohall in 1903 and estab- }lishing the First National bank there. Mrs. Steele. the former Maud Ada Benson of Faribault, Minn., died in 1932 of a heart attack. Funeral arrangements have not been made definitely but probably will be held here Sunday. Steele Masons Will Stage Camp Benefit Steele, N. D., May 7.—For the bene- fit of Camp Grassick children’s health camp on Lake Isabel near here, the Chancellor Walworth lodge, No. 102, jA. F. and A. M. Friday night will | sponsor a social evening, all proceeds Wins Oratory Event) to revert to the camp. Feature of the evening will be two Hebron, N. D., May 1.—()—Miss | PuPPet shows staged by children of Mary Jane Alguire of Beach defeated \five other contestants in the regional Masonic oratorical contest here and | won the right to enter the state con- test at Grand Forks. Joe Schroeder of New England placed second. Imagine —you can have a Kelvinator, the handsomest, most con- veniently designed refrigerator you've ever laid eyes on—right away, without paying a penny down. You can enjoy it without bothering to mail monthly or weekly remittance or making endlessly repeated visits back to our store to meet the installments. You simply drop as little as 15c a day in the handy little Meter-Ator which we install for you when we deliver your Kelvinator. Just 15c a day; and the Kelvinator is paid for almost before - you know it. Why, Kelvinator’s economy will save you that much money! So why wait any longer? Come in and choose gewr Kelvinator today. the Driscoll school seventh grade un- der the direction of Miss Harriet | Hanson, teacher. There will be card playing and a lunch, according to Leo Mayer, lodge master, in charge of arrangements. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1936 at OARP Probe The anxious interest with which legions of Townsend adherents are following investigations into the plan which promised them $200 monthly pensions at 60 seems mirrored in the faces of these two spectators at the con- gressional probe in Los Angeles. Former California Congressman Charles Randall gravely watch- es the proceedings as the woman behind him strains to catch the testimony, Poultry Thieves in For Trouble in 1936 Trouble and lots of it will be the reward of thieves who steal poultry from North Dakota flock owners from now on, according to the State Poul- try association. An arrangement has been made by the association to have private individual identification marks of poultry producers recorded with the secretary of the association in Fargo, and also with the commis- sioner of agriculture in Bismarck, at no cost to the producer. Methods of marking will include toe-punching, initialed aluminum wing bands, tatooing and the use of sealed log bands. Whatever marking system is used will be recorded so as to permit quick identification of the birds in event of theft. Poultry raisers who want to avail themselves of this protection service may secure application blanks for registering their marking system from O. A. Barton of the North Dakota Agricultural college poultry depart- ment, who is secretary of the state poultry association. Landon Holds Slight Edge on Borah in S. D. Sioux Falls, S. D., May 7.—(?)— Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas won South Dakota's eight Republican presidential preference delegates in Tuesday's primary by fewer than 1,000 votes on the face of nearly complete but unofficial returns tabulated Thurs- day. Returns from 1,910 of the state's 1,958 precincts gave the Landon- pledged slate, which was listed as un- instructed on the ballot, 42,702 votes compared with 41.729 for Senator William E. Borah, a majority of 973 for the Kansan. Although not legally bound to vote DEFICIENCY ACT IS BROUGHT ON FLOOR $75,000,000 Is Transferred From Relief Fund to CCC Operating Budget Washington, May 7.—(P)—A §2- 364,229,712 deficiency appropriation bill carrying $1,425,000,000 for relief went to the house floor Thursday for a show-down fight over WPA policies. The big money bill was reported by the appropriations committee with $75,000,000 of the $1,500,000,000 orig- asked by President Reosevelt for continuing work relief activities shifted to the Civilian Conservation corps. This made a $306,000,000 total for that agency, a fund designed to keep the strength of the corps up to 350,000 and provide an average of 2,066 camps in the nine-month periot until March 31, 1937. Other major items in the last big measure to be cleared before adjourn- ment were $458,631,860 for the social security program, $65,550,000 for pub- lic buildings and $39,900,000 for the Tennessee Valley authority. The relief money was allowed by the committee subject to maximum limitations on specified classes of ex- penditures, but with a 15 per cent leeway permitted between classes. Administration leaders expressed confidence the bill as reported would pass the house this week or early next. General allocations of the $1,425,- 000,000 relief money subject to the 15 per cent flexibility clause: Highways, roads and streets, $413,- 250,000 or 20 per cent; public build- ings, $156,750,000, 11 per cent; parks and other recreational facilities $156,750,000, 11 per cent; public utili- supply and purification, airports other transportation facilities, $171,- 000, 12 per cent; flood control and conservation, $135,000,000 or 9 per cent; white collar projects, $85,500,- 000, 6 per cent; women’s projects, $85,500,000, 5 per cent; miscellaneous work projects, $71,250,000, 5 ner cent; National Youth administration, $71,- 250,000, 5 per cent; rurs’ rehabilita- tion and relief to farmers, $65,500,- 000, 6 per cent. Land Board to Study Hanson Resignation The state board of university and it board. which he declared two years he has been partment. A half million full required to equal HERE'S THE TIRE 10 SEE / Don’t miss getting our price onthe New''G-3” biggest-selling of ALL tires! Seetread-prints we've taken—they prove that ‘‘G-3” All- Weathers give local users ThejGoodyear Margin of Safety for quickest stopping— Plus 43% MORE MILES of real non-skidgrip— Plus BLOWOUT PRO- TECTION in EVERY ply- All at "0 extra cost— for thicker, wider, flatter tread with 16% more non-skid blocks than previous All-Weathers. Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Chrysler-Plymouth Distributors for western Dakota and eastern Montana Before you decide on any newcar Get that of’ for Landon at the Cleveland conven- tion next June, the delegates have pledged themselves to support him as long as he appears to have a chance for the presidential nomination. Long Time Resident Of Cavalier Is Dead Langdon, N. D., May 7.—(®)—Fu- neral services will be held here Sat- urday morning for Alex Chaput, 83, long time resident of Cavalier county who died Wednesday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. T. Crawford. Cha- put had been ill six weeks following a paralytic stroke. Born in November, 1852,.in Quebec, Chaput settled at Olga in Cavalier county in 1879. His wife died 20 years . Survivors are Mrs. Crawford and a stepson, Anthony Forest. Debating Teams to Clash at Jamestown Jamestown, N. D. May 7.—(?)— High school debating teams from at least six cities will compete in the Jamestown Sun trophy tournament here Friday and Saturday, according to an announcement by Dr. W. E. Lillo, head of the department of speech at Jamestown college. Teams have been entered from Fargo, Bis- marck, Valley City, Jamestown, Car- rington and Wahpeton with a tenta- tive entry from Larimore. Zeling / Nal ' won't take you five minutes to realize why the Ford today is in a class by itself. Why families with several cars find it’s the Ford that’s always in demand. Why over 2,500,000 have become V-8 fans in the past four years. For here is the type of modern power plant used formerly Here, too, you find the comfort of a 123” springbase— 11 inches longer than the wheelbase. You enjoy the pro- tection of a steel body, new Super-Safety brakes, safety glass throughout. And you'll be delighted with the proved overall economy of a car that is built to the Ford ideal of giving the utmost for every dollar you spend. We urge you to drive this great new 1986 Ford V-8 now. We say sincerely that no one should buy any car at any powerful. \ . More BORROW A CAB FROM YOUR FORD DEALER TODAY UNIVERSAL MOTOR COMPANY Authorized Dealer for Ford, Lincoln and Lincoln-Zephyr in Bismarck Telephone 981 & ae i A Hi

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