The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 22, 1937, Page 11

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q ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1937 3 met BRANDENBURG SEES HORSE SLEEPING SICKNESS ON WANE State Veterinarian Conducting Comprehensive Survey to Check Fever’s Status A comprehensive survey to deter- mine the number of North Dakota horses affected this year by sleeping sickness and the number that died of the brain disease is being conducted under the direction of Dr. T. O. Brandenburg, state veterinarian, Brandenburg has enlisted services of county agents who are mailing “questionnaires to farmers. He said he hopes the survey will either prove or disprove his contention the disease is “over, the hump and now on ial decline. The veterinarian said first repute of encephalomyelitis in North Da- kota were received in 1933. The fol- lowing year there were a few more cases and in 1935 large numbers of animals died when wet weather brought mosquitoes. “The stage was set for heavy fatal- ities among horses in 1936,” Branden- burg said, “but that was the year of drouth and there were no mosquitoes which serve as carriers.” “There were large numbers of horses affected and killed this year but I believe the fever has run its course and I hope the survey this fall will prove that point,” he declared. The veterinarian said severity of the outbreak depends on the natural resistance of horses and the number of mosquitoes. It has caused “serious Josses in the horse business because farmers are afraid to replace their animals and are turning to power equipment on the farms,” he said. Fall From School Bus Fatal to Boy Glenwood, Minn., Oct. 22. — (>) — Floyd Voit, 6 years old, of Sedan, was accidentally killed when he fell from & school bus driven by an older brother. The youngster received fatal injuries when the school bus door suddenly swung open while in motion. He sustained a skull fracture when a car wheel struck him. . dovit reach “Ever have that experience? Ever find even two or three sprinklings of soap flakes failed to produce that rich, creamy suds every woman knows is essential to white clothes and sparkling dishes ? There’s a reason for that... the old story of hard water and grease that won’t come off! Grease, science says, is the basis of all dirt! Grease is the stubborn foe that water and even repeated use of soap can’t budge. My grocer told me about that. He also told me about CLIMALENE, the won- derfully quick, safe, grease- cutting cleanser. % I tried CLIMALENE ... sprinkled a tablespoon or 80 in my cleaning water! It did cut the grease. It re- moved the last trace of ‘soap scum’ from my dishwashing! No reaching twice for soap flakes now. I just sprinkle them in once... after CLIMALENE »». and use only 14 as much!” eee apse 100 for BOWLENE... makes closet bowls sparkling white... Get it at your grocers. Smoke-Him-Out | Strike Failure Connersville, Ind, Oct. 22—(P) —When H. W. Ingram refused to close his grocery on Thursday- afternoons, rival storekeepers came into his place, bought black cigars and stood around puffing huge clouds of smoke. The other grocery operators had agreed to suspend business on Thursday afternoons, but In- gram insisted he was not a pasty to the agreement. Barely able to see through the dense smoke, Ingram stumbled over to the telephone and asked Police aid. Officers who came to Ingram’s rescue told the 30 members of the delegation to blow their smoke somewhere else. Hurt in Football Game, Boy Dies Philadelphia, Oct. 22.—()—Fred Hunter, 12-year-old suburban Yeadon shcoolboy, injured in a football game nine days ago, died Friday of peri- tonitis which physicians said de- veloped from a ruptured appendix. ‘ He ‘i struck in the abdomen when e fell, The University of Maine has a modern unicorn. By transplanting the horn buds of a day-old calf, both * |horns were made to grow into one massize spike, in the center of the forehead. INRS. BROWN GOING, FOR GROCERIES. IN ALL THIS RAIN IGA Soap Grains ....... IGA White Naptha Soap, 10 MEMBER PHONE 371 its SYRUP na eis cone ane Pop Corn BR. & W., Jello Pudding, fone SOUP ces, large cane We Feature the Canada Dry 2 Pounds neck bones (pork) and 1No, 2 Can Kraut, 8. & W.. average, half or whole, per pound (“LIMALENE Peaches, No. 10 tin... Pears, No. 10 tin... Apricots, No. 10 tin Prunes, No. 10 tin. . 18K Pumpkin, No. 2 IGA Chu-Wee Peanut Butter, 16 oz. jar ....... 5 Cars. Gwce (Cream of Tomato, Mushroom, Chicken Noodle) slicers, 2 for ...... HEAD LETTUCE, Meat itd aia Short Ribs, 2 Ths.......280 | ae ARMOUR'S STAR HAM, 12 to 16 Ib. Fancy Chickens — Fresh Oysters — Bismarck’s Only Complete Food Market Welcome te State Corn Show, Hollywood, Oct. 22—(P)—If hubby Art Jarrett will’ just wait until Elea- nor Holm, swimmer turned film Tar- zaness, finishes her first set of thrills- a-minute, she'll get that divorce, Jarrett, appearing in a Pan-Ameri- can exposition revue at Dallas, an- nounced Wednesday night he will divorce shapely Miss Holm as soon as he completes Texas’ one-year resi- dence requirement. But that’s six months hence. So, just to make things easier all around, he added, it'll be fine if Elea- nor goes to Reno, which has a six- week residence law. The beatutous 1928-32 Olympic backstroke champion who champagne- waltzed herself out of the 1936 Olymp- _ jad-cordially accepted the invitation,” but, she explained: “I’m busy working in a picture. If he want’s to wait until I’m through T'll get a divorce.” ELIXIR KILLS 6; 6 MORE UNHARMED Mississippi Residents Who Took Medicine ‘Like People Fac- ing Death Sentence’ Mt. Olive, Miss., Oct, 22—(#)—Dr. A. 8. Calhoun, Covington county health officer and veteran physician of this rural community, said six pa- tients for whom he innocently pre- scribed a new elixir had died but that six others had shown no ill effects. Dr. Calhoun reported the deaths Thursday night after his friend, the Rev. J. E. Byrd of Mt. Olive, died ‘Thursday at Knoxville, Tenn. The physician said the six living patients have “shown no ill effects. Art Jarrett Fematn in vessel undisturbed until cool, For a thinner sauce just bring water and sugar to a boil—then add berries and let them cook until they stop popping. Put 10-minute cranberry sauce in sterilized jars—pouring the sauce hot into the jars and sealing tightly. Keep in a dark, cool place for future use. Cranberry Sundae Method: Place a generous table- Spoonful of 10-minute cranberry sauce But they are like people facing a death. sentence. Nobody knows whav tomorrow may bring.” Today’s Recipe With the approach of the Thanks- giving and Christmas holidays the place of cranberries in the dinner menu becomes increasingly import- ent, for cranberries are usually con- sidered a necessary addition to the turkey dinner. The cranberry is a versatile fruit, lending its sprightly flavor to scores of dishes, many of them new 6n the housewife’s list. - Since the fruit is now on the market ® number of cranberry recipes will appear in this column during the next, several days, Ten-Minute Cranberry Sauce 1 pound or quart (4 cups) cranberries 2 cups water "1% to 2 cups sugar. Method: Boil sugar and water to- gether 5 minutes; add cranberries and boil without stirring (5 minutes is us- \ually sufficient) until all the skins pop open. Remove from the fire when the popping stops, and allow the sauce to AND EVERVTHING WILL BE Vy, tin, 2 for. ...25¢ aoe over a portion of vanilla ice cream. Molded Strained Cranberry Sauce 4 cups cranberries 2 cups granulated sugar 2 cups water Method: Boil cranberries with wa- ter until berries stop popping. Strain through fine sieve; add sugar and stir; then boil rapidly for 8 to 10 minutes— or until a drop jells on a cold plate. Turn at once into a wet mold and cool. Cranberry Ham Slices 3 cups cranberries . 1% cups strained honey 2 tablespoonfuls whole cloves 2 slices ham (% to 1 in, thick) Method: Mix cranberries and honey, gash edges of fat on ham. Place one slice ham in a baking dish. Spread the center with a mixture of cra berries and honey. Top with second i slice. Cover with remaining cran- berry and honey mixture. Garnish with whole cloves. Bake until done in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) about 144 hours—basting occasionally with liquid in dish. Piquant Salad Dressing 1 cup mayonnaise or 1 cup cooked salad dressing 1 cup raw cranberries, chopped fine. Pretty Eleanor Holm Will Oblige © /MOTHER OF IOWA Ex-Hubby-to-Be, And Go to Reno CRASH BABY DIES, Victim of Bronchial Pneumonia 7 Weeks After Accident; Didn't Know of Child Des Moines, Iowa, Oct. 22 —)— Mrs, James Welborn’s long battle for life is over. | _The 90-pound “crash mother” died (Thursday night of bronchial pneu- monia nearly seven weeks after she suffered a fractured skull in an auto- mobile accident early on the morn- ing of Sept. 4. ’ Four hours after she was received at the hospital after the accident she gave birth to a son, born three weeks premature, but now healthy and normal. Then, three days later, she became a widow when her husband died of a fractured skull. Both died without knowing they were the parents of a second baby son, The first son, James, is two years old, ——_—_______-o | Riverview By RITA MAE WORST Mrs. Herman Worst and daughter Rae Worst and Mrs. Viola Taylor and son Dennis were dinner guests of Mr, and Mrs, Paul Schonert and family, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Borgois were visitors in Bismarck, Wednesday. Mr, and Mrs, Gus Hogue, Sr., en- tertained at a dinner Saturday after- noon, in honor of their daughter Clara whose marriage to Yarl Fristad took place at twelve o'clock Saturday. A wedding dance was held at the bride's future home in the evening. A large number of friends and relatives were present, Mr. and Mrs. Fristad are to reside nineteen miles northwest of Mandan, Dave Ryburg and Walter Paul were guests of Mr. and Mrs, Gus Hogue, Jr., Sunday, Richard Frike and Harry Ingle- mann were dinner guests of Herman Worst and family Sunday. Painted Woods By MRS. JOE BROWN Miss Emily Anderson and sister of least of Wilton, were callers at the Fred Brown home Tuesday afternoon. Mrs, Lars Jacobson entertained the Painted Woods Homemakers’ club Wednesday afternoon. A large crowd attended the dance Saturday night held in honor of Miss Myrtle Binsfield and Bob Biesterfield who were married this week. Mr, and Mrs. David Riebe visited at the Arvis Adams home Sunday eve- ing. Miss Myra Johnson, Dolores and Lorene Erickson called on Mrs. Joe Brown Sunday afternoon. CIVIL WAR BELLE DIES Washington, Oct. 22 —()— Mrs. Charles Ewing, widow of a union army general and a Washington belle in post-civil war days, died Thursday at the age of 91. Method: Mix cranberries with dressing and serve with salads, Ten per cent of the residents of Fall River, Mass., are illiterate. yi ¢ samee a JANES ROOSEVELT MADE COORDINATOR FR's Son to Coordinate ‘Execu- tive Work of Independent Government Agencies’ Washington, Oct, 22—(#)}—President | Roosevelt set up his son and secre- tary, James, Thursday, as “a co- ordinator of the executive work of independent government agencies.” This description of his job was given by young Roosevelt as heads of nearly & score Of agencies sat down at a White House luncheon to receive from him an explanation of the new pro- gram. He told reporters the president hopes the plan will cut down his call- ing list and increase the efficiency of the executive branch. James said he will receive the head or acting head of each of the inde- pendent agencies at a set time each week. The program also is designed to keep the independent agencies in- formed of work of other agencies which affects them. Heads of the following agencies will ‘be among those to participate in the program: Federal Reserve Board, Power Com- mission, Civilian Conservation Corps, Civil Service Commission, Farm Credit Administration, Social Security Board, Bituminous Coal Commission, Farm Security Administration, Agricultural Adjustment Administration, Inter- state Commerce Commission, Works Progress Administration, National Youth Administration, National La- bor Relations Board, Federal Hous- ing Administration, Securities and Exchange Commission, Reclamation Bureau, and Maritime Commission, June, 1938, will be observed as the ‘tercentenary of the establishment of ie Sweden” in the Delaware val- ley. A REAL BARGAIN AT TODAYS LOW PRICE AMERICAS FINEST COCOA 2 Cor FREE DELIVE 2 CORNER “ON THE SQUARE” SOAP, White, FLOUR, Pancake, maw. 3% Ib. pkg. Zoe fam WHITE 6 giant tas 2DC maple, Line of Mixes - FOR. rox.27¢ Lamb — Mutton Oct, 26-27-28 A CASH Yee 9 for 21c Jonathans, 20- tb, wood box... Apples Large, fancy, 2 heads . Lettuce 65c Crackers fies? t.29C We Deliver P co 7 All Orders Free 228; ~~ Filtay ana and 17c |speciaLs HERE| Oranges —IN OUR MARKET— Ground Beef... lb. 182¢ | Bacon Eggs %-Ib. cello pkg. Dos, in carton.. ate Sweet, juicy, dosen .. 23c Wie] Beef | Roast Ib. 16, 19¢ Morrell’s ‘Co-ordinator’ di | Dhseice pesmln ton and underwent a 2 Wottas posted als work tnithe ere Home; Resumes Work fice of the adjutant general as senior instructor from the regular army de- Major Thomas S. Smith, 715 Man-| tailed to National Guard troops in | dan St., arrived home Tuesday from/ North Dakota. | Hot Springs, Ark, where he had been meen a Pe ja patient at the Army and Navy hos- fo types minelayers were de- pital for the last two months, While|Véloped by the Germans, the short there Major Smith had annual|range and the distant minelayer. Maj. Smith Returns | 1 eis RRIDGEMAN RUSSETE co CREAMERY But eR Ch LENED IN cover SS You'll find it perfect for every purpose. It is churned from selected cream. It has a sweet and pleasant taste. Its uniformity and fine flavor makes it ideal for cooking and baking. For your convenience, it is wrapped in quarter-pound pieces, Your grocer has Grand Valley Butter for you Churned and distributed by BRIDGEMAN - RUSSELL CO. Phone 740 Bismarck, N. D. BILLS. Phone } 1080 K2 “Grocery See Big IGA Adv. for More Values — Free Delivery GOOD PARKING SPACE APPLES 22:3:. BUTTER lb. 38c ..$1.99 : %4-pound prints Flour ree ae Toilet Tissue Pork & Beans fie Ore Tin on tan, 8 toc 2OC Lard Baking Powder Bec an LIC Coffee Blue “G,” (Dinner plate free) 1 Ib, cartons, 2 for 29c Peanut Butter 18 08 fa eres BOC per pound 1 Can Hominy 1 Can Spaghetti 1 Can Pork and Beans 1 Can Kidney Beans 1 Can Lima Beans.... Welcome to State Corn Show, Oct. 26-27-28 Farell art hrrretd CS) ED Bras ered Twilling’s Grocery@) - - Libby’s Food Sale - - Stock Up At These Prices _ Ure gi Bantam Whole ernel Corn, 29 c No, 2 can, 2 for. 6 cans for . ooo Blo Pho! 1613 601 10th Libby's Diced (CSD Carrots No. 2 can llc Libby's Cut Beets, No, 2 can. 3 cans for Libby's Stringless Green Cut Beans, No, 2 can, 29 c siitees nab Libby’s Sauerkraut, No. 2 can ... 3 cans for Libby's Mixed Vegetables 17 os. can llc Peas, No. 2 can . Libby's Deep Brown Beans with sauce, large 25 os. tin.. LIC

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