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THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1937 Sixty-six years ago next urday, Mrs, O'Leary's cow lost its temper, kicked over a lantern and started the fire that destroyed “Chicago in one of the most disas- trous conflagrations in history. Forty years later it was sug- gested that the week containing Oct. 9 be set aside for the pur- pose of bringing home to the American public the much-needed lesson on fire prevention. how Fire Prevention week, which will be observed here and throughout the nation next That's week, was born. Fire Prevention week will be marked from Oct. 4, Monday, to Oct. 9, Saturday, this year, with Bismarck public, civic and pri- vate agencies co-operating in an t to put it over, Pointing out that most human misery and financial loss caused by fires can be eliminated by ed- ucation of the public to these dangers and by the exercise of proper care, Mayor Obert Olson of Bismarck Saturday officially proclaimed next week Fire Pre- vention week here and asked that the public co-operate with fire . Fire Prevention Week Proclaimed by Mayor underwriters of the community as one way of lowering losses of health, life and property through fire in the city. First presidential proclamation setting aside Oct. 9 as Fire Pre- vention day was issued in 1920, but it was not until 1922 that the whole week containing that date was officially set aside for special observance. Since Pres. Warren G. Harding issued that proclamation in 1920, each president in turn has fol- lowed his example and the week of Oct. 9 has been set aside as Fire Prevention week. Bismarck business men and merchants, co-operating to put the lesson of Fire Prevention week across, Saturday urged that private citizens do their part in the campaign also. Advertise- ments in The Tribune Saturday carried the - messages of local firms calling attention to the week's significance. Meetings of luncheon clubs and other civic organizations will be turned over largely to fire pre- vention discussions next week and special programs are to be held in the city’s schools. MRS. M. 5. RIPPLEY, TUTTLE, DIES HERE Mother of 11-Year-Old Son Was 28 at Time of Death; Was Born in Kansas (Mrs. Martin &. Rippley, 28, Tuttle, @ied at 2:45 p. m., Friday, in a local * hospital after an illness that had kept her in the hospital here only: two days, She leaves her husband and on, William, 11. Dakota from Nebraska, Moffitt; Tony Faust, Born at Wichita, Kas., Feb, 22, 1909, the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. William Faust, Mrs. Rippley had lived at Tut- tle since 1931. Previously she had re- sided in Moffit after moving to North Besides her husband and one child she leaves six brothers and two sis- ters, The brothers are Charles Faust, Fargo; Fremont Faust, Denver, Colo.; Albert Faust, Moffitt; Alfred Faust, Met. Opera Ass'n Starts Today METROPOLITAN OPERA AUDITIONS OF THE AIR KFYR 4 P. M. Tre SHERWIn-WitLiams Co. —_—_—_____—_——_——— 306 Main Get Your Furnace Repaired Now We will be only too glad to gi i fore nee Me neo give your heating plant a Demon to warn you. Rey through fuel economy. fire insurance obtainable. French & Welch Hardware Repairs will pay for themselves And a safe furnace is the best Neb.; and Arthur Faust, Fall City, Neb, The sisters are Mrs. William Green, and Mrs. L. R. Peckham, both of Lincoln, Neb. The body will lie in state at the Calnan funeral home here until 9:30 4, m. Monday when short services will be conducted there preparatory to be in the Moffit cemetery. — _ ||. Today’s Recipe | Spiced Grape Juice 10 pounds blue grapes, sugar, 2 quarts boiling water, 1 four picking over and removing stems. spices, pour over the boiling water the skins are pulp. When this reached let boil for 5 minutes. move from fire, pour bag, and let dri pover night. Pour the juice into a kettle, bring to the boiling point andthen add the sugar. Boil just 1 minute. Pour into sterilized bottles. Seal and keep in a cool dark place. This recipe is for a small quantity—about 2% quarts. For larger amounts, multiply the in- |gredients, keeping the same propor- | tions, separated Minced Ham and Green Peppers | , on Toast ! (4 to 6 servings) ; Three cups minced ham, 1 green | Pepper, 2 cups milk, 2 tablespoons ; butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 1-2 tea- spoon Worcestershire sauce. | | Chop pepper fine. Melt butter, may be used in this recipe. Don’t wait for the Fire Phone 141 (SEVERAL INDICTED: BY FEDERAL GRAND JURY; 3 SENTENCED Men Who Pleaded Guilty to Il- legal Entry Into U. S. Get 10 Days, Deportation Fargo, N. Oct. 2.—(#)—Three men who pleaded guilty in federal district court Saturday to illegal en- try into the United States from Canada were sentenced to 10 days in jail and will be deported at the end of their terms. The men are William Bell, John Pate and Terrace Moynagh. Following indictment by the grand jury, several accused have been ad- mitted to bond by the court. They are: Severt Odegaard and Alfred Ander- son, Sheyenne, charged with violating Indian liquor statute. Emanuel Werner, charged with transporting untaxed liquor near New Rockford. William F. Billestein, under same charge from Carrington. Clarence Evemden, Harvey, charged with sale of untaxed liquor. Emery Mochamp, Fargo, and James Leo French, McHenry, charged with forging endorsement on government’ checks. Edward P. Licklidger and Edward Canadians, facing three , resisting an of- ficer and conspiracy to enter the sending it to Moffit where last rites}@nd George Albert, Dunseith; Mrs. will be held, Father Feehan will offi-|Cida Beushlinch, Fort Totten; Joe ciate at the services here. Burial will|Denneny, George Poitra and Leo Weinand, Devils Lake, charged with {selling liquor to Indians. ntil| John Evans, Selfridge; pnd, sumer, Over a owt ai Ee Grenora; Ervin J. Anderson, Larson and Mrs. Belinda Perkins, Elbowoods, | the hour, “she’s housebroken.” Berea Das Peer forging indorsement on government into » Jelly | checks. Dyer act. breaking into and stealing merchan- dise in interstate commerce. | Saute*pepper in it, add flour and milk | and cook, stirring constantly until thick. Add ham, serve on toast. Add Worcestershire sauce and salt if necessary. Half veal and half ham United States illegally. Henry Robillard, Albert Laverdure Lyle Golder and Frank Mayer, Dev- ils Lake, charged with violation of ADD HIGHER EDUCATION Dyer act. . Ben Peters, Flasher, violating liquor 2 pounds | tax law. John Kuntz and Mrs.: Eva Brave inch stick cinnamon, 8 whole cloves.| Bull, Fort Yates, violating Indian | go tricks, Prepare the grapes by washing, | liquor statute. Frank Lockdean, Wilton, charged Put them in a large kettle, add the| With violating the liquor tax law. Maynard A. Towle, Dawson; Robley John Oien, Milton Clark, Hebron, violating Robert Applegate, charged with Sam Drabols, Mike Enright and James Johnson, Van Hook, violating Indian liquor statute. People’s Forum Note—The Tribune jubjects of ints ing with contr if subjects, which a individuals unfairly. oF which offend good tasté and £1 play will be d to tl ers. All i JUST b Tt you wish sign the pseudony’ letters as may Fy conform to this policy quire publication of a writer's name where justice and fair play make it advisable. Letters must be limited to 600 words. APPROVES EDITORIAL Baldwin, N. D., Sept. 27, 1937 Editor Tribune: In your yesterday's daily on the third page I noticed an article “Criticizes Editorial” signed “Wm. B. Falconer.” I have carefully read the “Editorial” that Mr. Falconer criticizes, but nevertheless Iam of the opinion that the Governor’s speech over the radio Monday night, Sept. 20, will have some effect on those farmers who will not be able to retain enough grain for seed next spring. Supposing a friend of mine wanted seed grain. I know him well. He al- ways used me right. The law, “Chap- ter 96 of the Compiled Laws of N. D. for 1913” gives me the right to file a seed lien and according to aforesaid chapter of law the lien has a prior- ity over all other liens and encum- brances thereon, except a threshing lien. Now the harvest is done and s0 is threshing and I come for a settle- ment and now what happens—I am treated like a chicken thief. I just don’t know how a chicken thief is treated, but allow me to tell you what I would do if I would see a chicken thief in our coop. I would, the -first thing, grab for my shotgun, call my wife and say “Sophia, there is a thief in our chicken coop. ‘Damn it, let's get him.” You bet your life I am not going ipipell anysneed on inne and! takeje n. Mr. Falconer refers to Mussolini, Stalin and Hitler as dictators, 1 would suggest that Mr. Falconer re- ven the situation in North Dakota ist. : Yours very truly, JULIUS MEYER. Ex-Track Star Kills Wife and ‘Sweetheart’ Detroit, Oct. 2—()—Willlam Haw- thorne, 23-year-old former collegiate track star, faced a charge of murder Saturday for pumping deadly bullets from two guns at his wife, Catherine, and John M. Barrett in the Barrett home. After the shooting Friday Hew- pene went to a police station and sald: “I have just shot my wife and her sweetheart.” fIBS, fACTS and fANCIES KRAUT PROMOTER This introduces to a wider public Mayor Emil Borchardt of Underwood, in the news this week as promoter of a Sauerkraut Day at the McLean county city. He got the idea, he said, from Springfield, Minn., and didn’t see why Other folk threw in with him and the enterprise was a success. in Rochester, Minn., moved with his parents to Springfield, when four months old, grew up there. Since then he has engaged in many differen: businesses at many different places. Once he worked for a witow who owned a lumber yard, and one of his jobs was to act as coachman when she went out to Ladies’ Aid meeting. This polished his social and political instinct to such a high degree that getting ciected mayor was a cinch. He arrived at Underwood a year be- fore Underwood was born. He gives the date of the town’s birth as Sept. 25, 1903, and has lived there ever since. A small party held a picnic there on that date and that is the time they count from. He observes that “Underwood is the best place to farm, taking in the whole world. The farmers only work about two months of the year and look for amusement the balance of the year. The last two years the Lord thought . that was too much so he sent the Emil Borchardt grasshoppers to do the harvesting and the farmers had more time.” After that crack, Emil, you'd better run for office in the cities. The farmers might not like it. ee eee N.D. CITY PREPARES FOR PRESIDENT AL RECEPTION MONDAY it couldn't be applied in Underwood.| Roosevelt to Arrive in Grand Forks at 9:30 A. M.; to Speak at 11 A. M. Grand _ Forks, N. Greater Grand Forks officials and citi- zens Saturday plunged into the final stages of preparation for the recep- di tion of President Roosevelt and his official party Monday morning. The president is due to arrive here at 9:30 a. m., on the Great Northern railroad and will immediately be taken on an hour's trip through the two cities ending at the fair grounds, where he will give a half-hour ad- dress dedicating the new grandstand. An official holiday has been de- clared in the city for‘ Monday morn- ing. All, public offices and business places will be closed. Governor Langer has declared a holiday for state, county and city fictals along the route of the presi- dents journey to Grand Forks where he makes his most important stop in this section of the country. Early arrivals in Grand Forks were ‘Thomas Moodie, state WPA adminis- trator, and Lee O. Hughes, state safety of the WPA who was de- WHAZZAT, JUDGE? Attaches of the Burleigh county district court are telling this one, which developed at the recent examination of applicants for citizenship: Examiner: Have you ever been arrested? Applicant: No, sir. ' ' Examiner: Weren’t you arrested once for making wine during prohibition times? i Applicant: Why, no sir. I was pinched for that. ar . Oral English students up at the high school were assigned to illustrate to the class something they liked to do, Constance Cole, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Cole, 210 Park St., brought Haggis, her little black scottie to class, to show how she could make the dog At the last minute before she “went on” Constance dashed into the sup- erintendent's office for a piece of candy to make sure Haggis would sit up when she (Haggis is a girl) was told. Haggis did, and Teacher Pearl Bryant said she supposed Constance would be taking Haggis out now. “Oh, no,” said Constance as she and Haggis settled down to wait out ee eee THE ARTS This column's editor is on his vacation, so the matter will have to be referred to him on his return, but the public ought to know: “Tovarich” was written, not by North Dakota’s Maxwell Anderson but by 2 erenchimad, named Jacques Deval. The English adaptation is by Robert erwood, . “You were probably thinking of Anderson’s ‘High Tor’,” writes in Louise Johnson, Bismarck high English teacher. (She didn’t really write in—just scribbled it on a piece of paper and give it to somebody who gave it to a ‘Tribune carrier), eee ee MORE FROM HIGH SCHOOL A nice lady from Duluth has written Bismarck high school authorities asking them if they can’t do something about the two Bismarck boys (giving two names) who are catching cats and throwing them into bonfires. No one in high school has ever heard of either of the boys, se eee STRICTLY LOCAL Gustav A. Anderson’s McLean County Journal, published at Turtle Lake, declined to take the broad view last week. First item in its column of local news, parked conspicuously under the heading “LOCAL HAPPENINGS,” was this: “Today is the first day of autumn.” * . DON’T LIE AWAKE NIGHTS High-powered coffee advértising isn’t new. Advertising agencies who swear their products are good to the last drop, are rushed from the factory to you, or won't give you coffee nerves, are pikers. Hark to the claims of the first coffee advertisement ever printed in England. It appeared in 1657: “In Bartholomew Lane, on the back side of the Old Exchange, the drink called coffee, which is a very wholesome and physical drink, have many excellent virtues, cloces the orifice of the stomach, fortifies the heat within, helpeth digestion, quickeneth the spirits, maketh the heart lightsome,’ is good against eye-: , coughs or cold, rhumes, consumption, headache, €ropsy, gout, scurvy, King’s evil, and many others; is to be sold both in the morning and at th:ee of the clock in the afternoon.” TODAY'S TATTLED TALE What assistant attorney general of North Dakots attended an self with a needle he filed an affidavit with himself seeking work- man‘s’ compensation? HELLO, REX! Dd d ear Mi Mi ster tri tri bune: oseee aaa llriright, Ex ex pose mm mei if you m me at su su sunrise. Tt take me ou ou out for b b but be be befdre you do, I I I’m go go going (blub, blub) th that the rea rea reason there are in th th this coun coun country is be be because ‘wou wou woudn’t c c come a’a cross. Ju fu just 11 look,at Hea 4 droga oral dar Uareeieh oe 1 m m mny tear sca tn the iiss ah She ry ‘Ops 000 over weeks ago, Rex V. King, one of our best contributors, went high hat and wrote us that he wasn’t going to contribute anything more “1 hag Past Sour well started:* Such nerve. Stel od last we we warned him publicly that he had change mind or we'd expose him. , . aes sae HE WANTS A RAISE noticed an item in a paper saying that some Jersey was making from $25.00 to $50. their skins on the ‘market. Gosh, I of just sending in squibs to the papers for n fi Your’n, R, V, K. eeeee FIRE PREVENTION WEEK is the time to Replace ken Glass Broken windows and door glass may be an fire hazard in your home. A draft may feed a fire, may blow out a Piles lent and allow an accumulation of gas. Don’t take chances +++ Call us today. : 2 PAINT & GLASS CO. 313 Main Phone 544 111 Third 8t. sensible, human thing to do. an be protected by Good Fire Insurance But to be without a home is inconvenient; to lose all the a home contains is disturbing, but to n your sister, your father, your brother or loved ones in a preventable fire is an irreparable loss, ample cause for a broken heart. THE BISMARCK AGENCY sentimental articles lose your mother, PREVENT FIRES Not because it’s Fire Prevention Week, but because it is the Homes, clothes and “things” PREVENT FIRES W. A. HART, Mgr. ALWAYS. signated by Moodie to drive the pres- idential car. J. F. T. O'Connor, comptroller of the currency and former Grand Forks resident, has been in the city for sev- eral days arranging for the reception of the president. He was joined Fri- day by Judge L. E. Birdzell, chief » Oct, 2.—P)— counsel of the. Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation at Washington. Maj. Gen. Stanley H. Ford, com- mander of the Seventh Corps area, has announced he: will fly here Sun- day from Omaha to pay his respects to the president. Governor Langer has stated that he will join the presidential train at Grand Forks and go as far as Fargo. Members of the committee in charge announced that the president will speak at the fair grounds at 11 a. m. ident received denial of present Klan connect PRESIDENTIAL PARTY from his son and secretary, James. ARRIVES AT GRAND COULEE DAM| The president had a radio Ephrata, Wash., Oct. 2.—()—Presi-|own car, but James reported it dent Roosevelt arrived here Saturday | of order. by special train from Tacoma, and while a large crowd waited outside, he| The richest growth of bamboo is breakfasted and prepared to start &| tropical Asia, where the plants thrive two-hour drive to the Grand Coulee /as far north as Japan and to 10,000 feet or higher on the Himalayas. . to be manuf was made in Phila- Behrent, in 177: jam, ‘The special train was preceded by & pilot train with Gov. Clarence D. Mar- tin at the throttle. tl A cheering crowd gathered at the Fire Prevention Week, Oct. 3 to 9 is no respecter of persons or property. It attacks the rich as well as the poor, and none are immune. Reliable Fire Insurance is the best possible protec- tion. Let us protect you. J. S. FEVOLD fF Investments, Real Estate, Insurance, Bonds Sales and Rentals, City and Farm 405 Broadway Bismarck Phone 706 - a 205 Seventh Street Special —Ask about it— BISMARCK We respectfully call your attention to the three quarter-million dollar fires in Minneapolis, Chi- cago and Baltimore during the week just ending. Prevention isthe ves against fires. Kill fires while they H. A. THOMPSON & SONS Jobbers for American La France and Feamite Fire-Fighting Equipment. Gas Appliances - Sewer Tile - Commercial Refrigeration - Air Conditioning Fall Offer and heat with asromaccs | The Safe Fuel GAS BOILERS Then pay for this excellent, clean and eco- Montana-Dakota UtilitiesCo. are small with American La France and Foamite Corp. Extinguishers. : Plumbing ~ Heating - Gas Fitting Bierarck, N. Dak. Telephone 64 nomical fuel after you have enjoyed it. , PHONE 1030