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GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS
NORTH DAKOTA'S GREATEST
rANT ADS
SUYING THEY GET RESULTS SELLING[
RATES: [
8c per word--no ad less than $I .00 [
6c word each additional issue J
8end or Bring Your Want Ads to the Publisher of this Paper. of J
8end Direst to i
NORTH DAKOTA NLrWSPAPER ASSOCIATION [
Bismarck, North Dakota J
:es Says Fighi
Jusi Begun
John Modes has said
have just begun to fight" for
: inclusion of the O'Mahoney a-
in the rivers and har-
and flood control bilks now
in congress.
assertion was made in a pre-
statement issued by the SOy-
discussing failure of the sen-
i commerce committee to include
amendment safeguarding the
of the upper Missouri rive
to priority use of Missouri
water for irrigation.
that the 17 western
represented by 34 senators
with the senatorial repre-
of 12 eastern states, will
on the fight for the O'Mah-
amendments to these bills
the proposed legislation
the floor of the senate," the
said. '~rhe amendments
prepared by a group of sen-
headed by Wyoming's Sena-
headed by Wyoming's Senator
and supported by Gov-
Ford of Montana and myself,
with other representatives
the northwestern states when
bills came up for hearing--
May and June.
sub-committees of the
committee appeared to
domi~tated by the navigation in-
and by the corps of engin-
Moses said that under
examination the army engi-
generally admitted that the
provisions of the amend-
were well written and would
but they maintained that
provisio~s should be left to
discretion of the army engi-
rather than written into law.
order to enable the western
to carry or~ the fight in the
legal and engineering coun-
have been retained. One of the
irrigatio~ lawyers in the
Judge Clifford H. Stone of
Colorado, has spent more
three months in Washington
on the legal phase of the
5. Tipton, consulting en-
Denver, has also been re-
i~ connection with the engi-
pha~e of the subject."
Moses said' the states of
Dakota, Montana. Wyoming, i
Washington, Oklahoma, Ne-
Colorado, and Utah have a-
to finance expenses involved
North Dakota state water con-
commission contributing
for this purpose.
'~he fight on the senate floor is
of u~. We are prepared to
to the fullest extent in l
fight. North Dakota is fightir, g i
the lsre~ervation of our right to i
our economic and agricul-i
possibilities, through the jud-!
use of run-off waters on our i
This is the greatest single l
m facing North Dakota. ItsI
n will be the greatest single i
~u ion to post-war develop-i
of our natural resources and J
Dakota is in this fight to
You cau embroider these tulips
onto your luncheon cloth,
you can do them in cut-work,
are lovely either way you do
Pattern envelope contains hot-
transfers for eight designs, 4
About 8~ ,by 4, 4 about 3 by 3 in-
and many other sugges-
ter dressing up your home
yourself is now available.
your request for this book
the address listed below, eno
twenty cents (20c) in coins
cover the cost and mailing
ONE OF THE MOST SPECTACULAR, and yet tragic, pictures ever
taken, this photo was snapped as flames consumed the main tent of
the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey circus at Hartford,
BREEDING, FEEDING, better cows if possible, he advises.
HELP IMPROVE HERD t Use purebred sires with high pro-
Herds of high production are theI duction records in their breeding.
result of breeding, selection andI Feed gain to each cow according
feeding along with proper manage- to prod~ction. One pound of grain
ment, says Do~ Murray, NDAC Ex- for each 2 quarts of milk for lower
~ension Srvice dairyman. Cull out testing cows or 1 pound of grain
poor cows from the herd and buy for each quart and a half for high-
Conn., taking a death toll in excess of 142, many of the vlctlms
being children. Five officials of the circus faced manslaughter
char~es as the result of the tragic "fire. (InternationM)
er teseting cows is a general rule
to follow, Murray says.
Every. nine days 40,000 passenger
automobiles in the United States
reach the end of the road--become
completely worn out and unusable.
BLITZ BACTERIA BATTALIONS
BY FOLLOWING SIMPLE RULES
Victory on the home-canning front is easily won by those who under-
stand the ruthless nature of the enemies--yeasts, moulds, and bacteria
--that sneak into jars of food to cause spoilage. Usually they go into
the jar on the food. Decayed spots and crevices or broken places in the
skin of fruits and vegetables serve as their favorite foxholes.
Sometimes they float in on the air~
~nd at others steal a ride on a spoon
or dirty dish cloth. A small bat-
talion is easier to destroy than a
large one so the first thing to con-
sider is how to keep a jar of food
from being occupied by a huge army
of these detestable, microscopic or-
ganisms.
The soil of the earth, and fruits
and vegetables which are stale, or
over-ripe, or bruised, or broken, or
dirty, or decayed, serve as head-
quarters for yeasts and moulds and
bacteria. That is why sound, strictly
fresh, home-grown produce must be
chosen for canning.
Bacteria, the hardest-to-kill of the
enemy group, multiply rapidly in
vegetables, such as corn, peas, lima,
and other shell-out beans, and are
hard to kill once they are estab-
lished, because the vegetables con-
tain no natural acid to help make it
easier for heat to destroy the bac-
teria.
stitch illttstrations and~ full Gladys Kimbrough, Home Service
Director for Ball Brothers Compa-
I ny, gives 13 rules which, if followed
60-page multicolored book in every detail, will insure victory
Arts containing five free for the home canner all along the
line. They are:
8end 11 cents (coin) for pattern
1L2100 to N. D. Newspaper[
Needle Arts Dept., 400 West
Street, Room 1956, Chica-
Ill.
I. Use jars made for home-can.
sing purposes. All home-canning
Jars have a name molded in the
side. Jars with names or letters on
the bottom only are intended as one-
trip containers for factory-lmcked
foods. They are made as thin as
possible in order to hold: down ship-
ping costs. Because of this, their
reuse is doubtful economy.
Examine every Jar, cap, lid,
)
and rubber before using. True, these
are inspected before they leave the
factory but many things can happen
to them before (and after) they
reach the home kitchen.
3. Remember that people who
make things know more about them
than anybody else; so use jars,
caps,lids, and rubbers by the manu-
facturer's instructions.
4. Unless vegetables grow in your
own garden or can be bought from a
grocer who will gather them early
in the morning of the day they are
to be canned, forget about canning
them. Vegetables that have had a
i night out of the garden arc not in
fit condition for "canning.
5. Don't expect good results un-
less the vegetables are right for can-
ning.
6. Every vegetable should be
washed clean before its skin is bro-
ken. Washing away particles of dust
and soil also washes away bacteria,
yeasts, and moulds. Green beans
and okra require special attention
because the short thick nap or fuzz
on them holds dust. The blossom
end of okra may hold both dust and
insects.
7. All non-acid vegetables should
be precooked and packed hot for
processing.
8. Vegetables should be packed in
jars loosely enough to permit the
liquid to circulate between the
pieces. Food values are higher when
vegetables are canned with the wa-
ter in which they were precooked,
provided the water is not wastec
when the food is used, but the flavor
and poss~ly the keeping qualifies
Photo Courtesy Ball Bros. Co.
of some foods is better when they
are canned in fresh boiling water.
9. Vegetables usually have bet-
ter flavor if a small amount of salt
is added at the time of canning, but
they keep as well without it.
10. Remember that every minute
wasted between the steps of prepar-
ing,~acking, and processing is a
minute in which bacteria grow
stronger. This is particularly true
of the bacteria which cause fiat-
;our. Fiat.soured food may look
good but tastes bad and often smells
that way. Flat-sour can and does
begin before processing if the vege-
tables are stale or over-ripe, or left
standing two or three hours in a
hot kitchen, or if the food is not
cleaned, prepared, and packed right.
11. When possible, use a steam
pressure cooker for processing all
vegetables except tomatoes, and
even use it for tomatoes if you like.
But the use of a pressure cooker
will not guaranfbe success unless it
is in good condition and operated
according to the manufacturer's in-
structions.
12. If you have no pressure cook-
er, process vegetables by boiling in
a water-bath canner. Yes, the vege-
tables will keep if all rules are kept,
and they will be safe to eat if they
are boiled for fifteen minutes before
they are tasted.
13. Never taste canned vegeta-
bles, regardless of how processed,
until they have been boiled fifteen
ninutes. There is one type of bac-
terium that may get into the jar and
muse spoilage which is odorless,
tasteless, and dangerous. The toxin
caused by these bacteria is de-
stroyed by the fifteen minutes boil-
ing. The boiling d oe~'t necessa~ly
destroy the bacteria ma~ cause me
toxin; so left.over canned vegetables
should be reboiled before serving.
Canadians Can
Help With Harvest
Governor Johrt Moses has been
advised that arrangements have
been made for suspending certain
border crossing formalities that
will permit Canadian threshing out-
Its to help harvest the western
Great Plains gram crops and that
United States crews may move into
Canadia to help harvest the crops
of that country.
Canadian threshing outfits may
remairt in this country until Sept-
ember 15, while United States ma-
chines and crews may enter Can-
ada when their services are requir-
ed and remain until" December 31.
The Department of Agriculture
said the arrangement will be effec-
tive on July 7 and will contin~e in
operation for each wartime grain
harvesting season.
The Department said that of the
one billion bushel wheat crop in
prospect for this season in the U-
nited States, about 536 million bu-
shels are in the States that will uti-
lize Canadian help.
In 1043 the Cawadian prairie pro-
vinces produced 294 million bushels
of wheat. An increase of 22 per
cent is expected this year.
Governor Moses, who for over a
HELP WANTED
WANTED AT ONCE: Rawleigh
Dealer in nearby County. Write
Rawleigh, Dept. NDG-24-F, Minne-
apolis, Minn. 45
MAN OR WOMAN WANTED--Full
or part time for Rawleigh Route.
No experience or capital necessary.
Sales easy to make and profits
large. Start immediately. Write
Rawleigh's, Dept. NDG-24-190, Min-
neapolis, Minn. 44
AMBITIOUS, Experienced Grocery
manager. Capable, permanent
full charge thriving business on
salary and percentage. Under 55;
good health essential. Also c~erks,
meat cutters. Send details, snap-
*shot, references, own handwriting.
SuccessfUl small chain. Box 2096
Billings, Mont. 36-40
HELP WANTED ~ FEMALE
WOMEN WANTED EVERY-
WHERE. Sell America's finest
pop. price dresses, $2.98 up. Best
comm. earnings. Fall line ready.
For irffor, write MAISONETTE
FROCKS, Bx. 537, Minneapolis. 45-48
CARS & TRUCKS FOR SALE
1933 DESOTA, just overhauled.
7-15 tires in A-1 shape. $400.00
Wayne McMullen, Moffit, N. D. 44
FOR SALE: 1938 Ford 60-coupe.
Good condition, good rubber.
Must be sold immediately. Owner
in service. Answer Ad. 7344, Box
90, Bismarck, N.D. 44
NURSERY STOCK FOR SALE
COLORADO BLUE SPRUCE traus-
plants, size 1-1~z ft. Price $21.80
per hundred, Delivery in August.
Supply limited Write for complete
information. CHRISTIANSON
LANDSCAPE SERVICE, Fargo, N.
Dak. 44-47
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: One new Coca-Cola
cooler; 42 Ford and Chev repairs;
1935 V-8 Ford Sedan. One 3 ton
hoist. H. B. Hauson Garage, Steele,
Steele. N.D. 45
MY 8-ROOM RF_~IDENCE Property,
904 13~ Street, Bismarck; gas
heat, heaters, ranges, bath; with
rented semi-basement aparment and
shower; ½ of growing garden,
poultry house, ~rees, shrubbery;
school 1 block; $2,95~. Possession
year has made a fight for such re- July I. Nelson A. Mason, Bismarck.
ciprocity arrangements betwee~ the 45
two countires, discussed the situa-
tics with federal officials on a re- PRE-WAR NEW tubes, 2 sizes,
cent trip to Washington. The Gov-
ernor said he was highly gratified
with the result.
Aging Owner
Retiring
Sells Successful Three Story
Hotel Property
In Thriving N. D. County
~t
Its good for three essential tea.
sons:
FIRST: Owner's 15 years exper-
ience have been a financial suc.
cess.
SECOND: Three good reasons for
value Increases.
THIRD: Business can be ECO.
NOMICALLY operated. Due: Vol-
unme business, capacity, located in
good trade terrltory.
SOME FEATURES: 52 rooms;
steam heat; fully modern; foun-
tain service; ample refrigeration;
attractive office, lobby. Many
others.
=RICE AND TERMS: Well below
value. $15,000 will handle. Balance
terms. Cash preferred. We will
gladly show this property and give
detail~ Owner's retirement creates
four opportunity. Lawrence Real
Estate Agency, 1235. 2641.W. BIs.
merck, North Dakota.
450x21 475x19 send certificate.
Used tubes, all sizes Passenger
truck tractor and implement; 150
up. No certificate needed, new and
grade III tires. Write for price
state size wanted, sent certificate.
600x16 grade III. 445 up, 4 ply
cord reliner, $2.25 each. Gust John-
son, Tire Co., 724 North 3rd St.
Minneapolis, Minn. 43-46 tf.
BUSINESS OPPORTLrNITEES
WILL SELL Large seven unit
apartment house, exceptional in.
vestment and home. Don't walt
buy now. See Mrs. Dale, 20~ W
Rosser, Bismarck.
LrvE~rOCK
I~URE BRED Polled Hereford bulls.
A. E. Nelson, Wilton, N. D. 38-t/
Livestock and Production
Loons at 41/2 % a Year
are made to farmers by the
Mandan Production Credit
Association
~A~, N. D.
Brsnoh offices In Abberson BIds,,
Dioklnson
Your Guarantee
ABERDEEN-ANGUS Bulls pure-
bred and registered. Best type
and breeding at prices every far-
mer can'afford to pay. Hartley
Stock Farm, Page, N.D. 36
~~ t~
NOTICE
WE ARE IN THE Market for good
quality pop corn. Golden Maid
Ice Cream Store, Bismarck. 45-46
I OWqVED, PLOTTED and ~ld all
of Clifford's subdivision to Bis*
marck. My prices are always -right.
I have 2 homes, 2 rooming houses,
priced to sell. See me, S. S. Clif-
ford. 217 Eighth Street, Bismarc4~k,
N.D.
FOR EVERY HOME: An unusual
remedy for the home, well named
the family medicine cabinet in one
bottle. Sold on money-back guar,
_ , antee. For complete information
PRODUCE ¢0. wrke Lin-Ox-O1 Laboratory, Far O.
[North Dakota, or send $1.00 goCr
• UlOSe~ oresm neeumo [family size bottle. 43-52
• No Middleman I~~- ,
a No Weitl---Fslt ~ [ ~d "" ~V~L,~G ~ve gU, Oil
• ShtJ~ o~t o~ no.,w ~o oar me I W~m~ ~y uang the terry at
FARM LANDS FOR SALE
FOR SALE: 640 Acre improved
farm. Nichols-Shepard Threshing
machine. Six room house. One good
young horse. Two new tractor ~'rain
drills (permit required). Braddock
Lumber Company, Braddock, N. D.
45-46
FOR SALE Twenty acres near Bis-
marck. Inquire Chas. Morton 520
Ave. C West, Phone 2039-M, Bis-
Bismarck, N.D. 45-46
IMPROVED And unimproved Red
River Valley farms in Cass, Trail,
Richland in North Dakota and Clay,
Norman and Wilking counties in
Minn.; also farms in Barnes, Steele,
Griggs, Foster, Wells, Stut.sman,
Ransom, and LaMour counties.
Some of the best farms in the
northwest. Advise size and location
wanted. Large number at old prices.
Buy now, you may pay more later.
List farms for sale with us. Houses,
Apartment buildings, and business
blocks for sale in Fargo and Moor-
head. Send for farm circulars. State
cash pymt. and all details first let-
ter. A. Y. More Real Estate,, 110½
Broadway, Fargo, Phone 4205 45-46
311 ACRES, 220 tilled, 91 yard and
fenced pasture, running water.
House, barn, granary, well or soft
water. ½ mile from Sydney, 14
miles to Jamestown. $1,000. cash
payment, 20 year payments, 4 %
interest.
160 ACRES, 150 tilled, 10 yard and
hay. 20 acres seeded down. Fencing
for 40 acres. Fine house, barr~
granary, hen house, sheepshed, well
with windmill. 1 mile to school. 3
towns on gravelled roads. 6 to 7
miles. $1,000. cash P~yment. 20
years on balance. 4% in~eres~.
640 ACRES. 10 miles Southwest
Jamestown. 2 miles ~o town with
high school. 425 tilled. 215pasture.
fenced and hay groun& 2 barns, fine
house, granary, hen house, garage,
well with windmill $2.000. cash
payment, 20 years on balance. 4%
interest.
BUY THIS summer and be sure of
your own farm, for the years to
come. Paul E Simmons. Box 1654,
Jamestown, N.D. 45-46
THREE Quarters improved land
near Bentley with fine large build-
ings. Mile from town.
HALF Section with fair buildings,
8 miles from town in Mercer county.
900 Acres unimproved land in Bur-
leigh county.
FINE Modern dwelling well locat-
ed in Bismarck. Three complete
apartments, brings $130, vent every
month. Fine investme~ t. JoseDl~
Coghlan, Bismarck, N. Dak. 45
BURLEIGH COUNTY Stock and
farm land, bargain for cash. J.
Little. General Delivery, Bis-
marck.
44
HIGHLY DIVERSIFIED 960 acre
farm. SW Jamestown, N. D.
House, barn. garage, large granary,
.2 wells, running water in Pasture,
360 acres fine pasture, 600 acres
level cropland black loam. $2000
down paymertt, annual payment
$1331 including interest at 4%. Imo
vest $2000, pay off balance instead
of paying rent. Paul E. Simmons,
Bo~ 1654, Jamestown, N.D. 39-40
1300 ACRES of farm lands includ-
ing buildings. Good quality at
reasenable price. For further in.
formation, write Box 10~5, Bts.
marck. 39-42
FARMS
With Good Buildings, Roods,
Schools; units of 320, 480,
640, 960, acres, $1~ Stuts-
man Co., N. D. Buy now~
Possession October 1, 1944.
Low Down payments, Low
taxes, Low interest. Write
or come down and see our
farms. Box 1654, James-
town, ~orth Dakota.
PAUL E. SIMMONS
L
William M. Schantz
emetic4
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
------and-..--
TAX CONSULTANT
Bismarck, North Dakota
• ~dmte r4e nmsdsme U
I
North Dakota NewsPaper AJmoo/ation.
Bisn~arck, N. D.--45.L=44"