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in w4 jT A 1 "I s# I I 'X':' 1 j. -Vl t*. -$* v' ijf V V- O 1 S' »a $ A i' 4 DR. O. C. GAEBE, Physician. #H«S! W. H. GAEBE, Mgr. Farmers' Mer. Co. One of the fastest growing towns of the stato is the village of New Salem, situated in Morton county on the main line of the North ern Pacific railroad about thirty milos west of Mandan. the county seat. New Salem is a typical example of the rap id growth of the towns of the state ind especially of the business houses ihat cater to the wants of the rapidly growing population. New Salem has many of the finer The peculiar consistency of corn meal, which is a disadvantage under some circumstances, is an advantage In making griddlecakes or waffles, for it renders them very tender. Among the recipes which a now farmer's bulletin (No. 565) of tho department of agrlcul tuie recommends are the following: Corn Mral Pancakes. Two cups flour, one-half cup corn ineal, 1% tablespoons baking powder, I Va teaspoons salt, one-third cup sugar, I Va cups boiling water, 1H cups milk. 1 egg. Add meal to boiling water and boil live minutes turn into bowl, add milk i and remaining dry ingredients mixed c. and sifted, then the egg well beaten, i and butter. Cook on a greased griddle. Com Meal and Wheat Waffle*. 1 cups water, one-half cup white orn meal, lVs cups milk. 3 cups flour, tablespoons sugar, l1/* tablespoons linking powder. 1% teaspoons salt, yolks 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons melted but ter. Cook the meal in boiling water twen ty minutes add milk, dry ingredients mixed and sifted, yolks of eggs well beaten, butter and whites of eggs |f 'beaten stiff. Cook on a greased waffle rj iron. jj There is also a large variety of pop !j ular and very nutritious puddings that may be made with corn meal although rice is probably more frequently used. The department's experts in nutrition suggest that the housewife try these: Indian Pudding. •s Five cups milk, one-third cup corn ft meal, one-half cup molasses, 1 teaspoon jj salt, 1 teaspoon ginger. Cook milk and meal in a double boil er twenty minutes add molasses, salt, and ginger pour into buttered pudding dish and bake two hours in slow oven serve with cream. Corn Meal and Fig Pudding. One cup corn meal, 1 cup molasses, Resinol Ointment (50c and $1.00), M.*and Resinol Soap (25c), stop itching Instantly and speedily heal eczema, and other skin humors, dandruff, spres, burns and piles. Sold by every druggist. Don't be fooled by "substi tutes" for Resinol offered by a few & unscrupulous dealers. For free trial, -write to Dept. 43-R, Rssiuol, Haiti* ia r. »•*. vf*' v'" -y-wv -t v ~-cv/* V- t^v *$ rM- fc *. •j •4^-^ f-r* 4M& «. -1 fy^qkyji ^Irr, W 14 ^55 ,ii*' If -If $' ••»*. OLIVER LEVERSON. Attorney-at- Law. things that are absent from many towns of an equal size in the state it has a fine operahouse. a creamery, three banks, five grain elevators, a flour mill, three hotels, a fire depart ment, a Oerman paper and one of the best weekly English papers in the state. The grain industry is the principal one of the section, but the coal mines in the immediate vicinity are assum ing large proportions in the business world and the industrial future of the :*r- k S&t 5- 1' s _y i v -A Some Special Uses For Corn Meal cups milk (or 4 of milk and 2 of when the food is put into the cooker. cream), 1 cup finely chopped figs, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon salt. Cook the corn meal with four cups FACE COVERED WITH PIPLES- OLCO 11 1.1. AJ Atlanta, Ga., April 24, 1913.—"My *f face was covered with pimples which £L defied creams, soaps and cosmetics, ly They were a source of constant humil ia iation to me, coming in contact with 4f. many strangers as I do. as a business woman. &v "By the time I had finished a cake of Resinol Soap, and half a jar of •S.Iiesinol Ointment, my skin was soft as velvet, and as smooth. My friends ?'i were stunned, and everyone asked me .'•J what I had done. When I told them, I think they hardly believed it, for the •Sf.. transformation was simply wonderful. "Since then I have been using Resl \'t-noI Soap and I shall never be without i.it again, for I have learned the de lights of a clear, soft, beautiful com plexion that may be attained by its constant use." (Signed) Miss E. P. -Gaddis, 284 South Pryor St. v V( N 5A ,,r' W r/ 11 r' DAVID DIETZ, Grain Dealer. of the milk, add the figs and salt. When the mixture is cool, add the eggs well beaten. Pour into a buttered pud ding dish and bake in a moderate oven for three hours or more. When partly cooked add the remainder of the milk without stirring the pudding. Com Meal and Apple Pudding. For the figs in the above recipe sub stitute a pint of finely sliced or chop ped sweet apples. It is often possible to substitute corn meal for part of the flour in mak ing cakes. In some cases there is no special advantage in using it but it is well to know that it can be used in emergencies. In making doughnuts, however, there is a decided advantage in substituting corn meal for part of the flour, for doughnuts so made are more likely to be tender. Indian-Meal Doughnuts. Three-fourths cup milk, 1% cups very line white corn meal, 1% cups wheat flour, V* cup butter. cup sug ar, 2 eggs well beaten, 1 teaspoon cin namon, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1 level teaspoon salt. Put milk and meal into a double boiler and heat together for about ten minutes. Add the butter and. sugar to the meal. Sift together the wheat flour, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt. Add these and the eggs to the meal. Roll out on a well-floured board cut into the desired shapes fry in deep fat drain and roll in powder ed sugar. Corn meal, because it requires long cooking, is peculiarly adaptable for preparation in the fireless cooker. Al so, like all finely divided foods which are cooked in water, it can easily be brought to a uniformly high tempera ture, and there is no danger, as there is in cooking large pieces of meat, for example, that some parts will be cool The large amount of water with which it is combined is also of advantage, for water has a very high specific heat, and for this reason cools off compara tively slowly. In cooking corn meal in the fireless cooker, five hours at least should bo allowed. A recipe for corn meal mush made in the fireless cooker is as follows: One cup meal, 1 teaspoon salt, 4% cups water, milk, or milk and water. Mix the 'ingredients and bring them to the boiling point. Place the pail in the cooker and leave for from five to ten hours. If the pail holding tho mush is set into another pail of hot water before being placed in the cook er, the heat will toe retained better, but whether this is necessary or not depends on the efficiency of the cooker. The new bulletin just issued, which gives these recipes and others, is en titled: Corn Meal as a Food and Ways of Using It, and may be bad free upon application to the U. S, Department of Agriculture. The New Frenlh -Woman.,, Chicago Record-Herald: Is woman in France expected to pop the question on even terms with men? The French government, in drastic endeavor to combat race suicide, is considering a bill which will subject unmarried people of either sex to an Increase of 20 per cent in the tax on incomes. Is the money of the taxpaying French girl to be made to speak for her? Or is she to take her courage and her modesty in both hands and speak for herself? If so, we see a social revolu tion if not. we see a social rebellion. In either case we see a new motive added to French literature and expect much clamor raised as the new ques tion is thrashed out with all the fervor and artistry the race is capable of. Yes, the world moves, and France does her full share pushing it, along. yw.—u'Mumwtf £&*£ ma eorum Jl, -r^f.rW^^hni'imrtitMi.'' *w£ $&!». & 5|^f1* 1 «V*„ )#fA,Vt, 1 «... ,, -fr V E. M. HOLMBOE, Photographer. ^Sa^jfey' A. 4 a vfe 15J: 1 5 v-i v a. */$• hi 1 17" v. v '^V.Xy^n-yr^!^- JOHN BLOODGOOD, Real Estate and Loans. village is assured by the abundance of the best grade lignite which is easily mined. The shipments of livestock are grow ing and the farmers of that section are paying more attention to the raising of cattle and hogs than at any time in the history of the state. The banks of New Salem are all on a sound financial basis and they do a large business with the business in terests. The business men are all possessed with the true booster spirit NEW IDEA IN BULLETINS The department of agriculture has taken a lesson from the commercial book publishers and hereafter will an nounce its publications in such a way that the public will know at once whether it is a bulletin designed for popular reading, or information for professional use or of service only to a special class of manufacturers or to a specific geographical section. Here tofore the brief titles used in the monthly list of publications and on the bulletins themselves, it has been found, were misleading to many people. As a result lay readers would ask for bul letins that could be of service only to skilled veterinarians or scientists, or would write from the west for a bul letin dealing with practical matters but in a way applicable only to cer tain sections in the south or east. In other cases farmers would write for bulletins designed wholly for manu facturers or shippers, or technical workers would request material in tended wholly for popular reading. As a result of this system of titles the re cipients of bulletins in many cases were disappointed and either found the bulletins too technical for use or else entirely inapplicable to the section in which they were engaged in agricul ture. To avoid this waste of circulation and make certain that the bulletins go directly to those to whom they will be of service, the department has in every list the title of the bulletin will be accompanied by a brief statement telling accurately the nature of its material, the class of reader for which intended, and the section of the coun try to which the information is ap plicable. To make doubly sure that each recipient of a bulletin will un derstand clearly the class of readers for which it is intended, this brief description will be repeated at the foot of the title page of each pulication. Here are typical titles under thenetw system: The Abutilon Moth—A technical pa per, giving the habits, synonymy, de scription, experiments in control, and bibliography of a pest that badly in jured okra, hollyhock, and abutilon at Diamond Springs. Va., in 1909. American Grown Paprika Pepper— Tells how to grow, cultivate and cure the crop, and discusses the economic, as well as the agricultural phases of cultivating and marketing red peppers of the type furnishing the Hungarian paprika. It is specially interesting to the farmers of the South Atlantic and Gulf states or other localities with a long growing season and ample and well-distributed rainfall. The yearbook of the department will hereafter be published under a new standard which will limit it to illus trated papers of a magazine type deal ing in a simple and interesting way with crop production and important industries. Technical matter and much of the statistical material here tofore found in the yearbook will be eliminated. Effort will be made to improve the quality and character of the colored plates and illustrations, and typography and type, size of pages, binding and external appear ance of the book, without increasing the expense of the publication. Early official estimates indicate that the gold production of the United States last year was tho smallest since 1905, while that of silver was the greatest for quantity on record. rsapari Ask Your Doctor. Icl Oldest, Safest, Strongest, Best. Standard family medicine. No alcohol. Sold for 60 years. «T. C. Aver 1/ewsll, MCo.. M. ri w.uMmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm THE FARGO, FORUM AND. DAILY REPUBLICAN, MONDAY EVENING,: FEBRUARY 16, 1914. jfii i 4 v i" tSK' 4 I. i '. **t s V V^' s 1 •-v-r GU E. CARTWRIGHT, Lands and Loans. and any movement for the good of the town that can stand rigid investiga tion receives th© enthusiastic support of the business men of the community. The religious interests of the people are cared for 'by two congregations, the Presbyterian and the German Lutheran. Bach one of these churches is well supported and the population of 800 people is proud of the church edifices. A live commercial club are always on the lookout for anything that will be of a benefit to the .town and they are possessed of that earnestness that brings success to any enterprise that they endorse. New Salem has had a steady growth and the future looks bright for a con tinuance of th© advance of the town. It is far enough away from any other town to make it a sure thing that it will always be a supply point for a large number of people and in the years to come it is a safe prediction that among the best towns in the western part of North Dakota there will always be a place for New Salem. Saint Valentine's Day. Edwin L. Saibin in February Lippin cott's: It seems a long, long time ago when we sent out valentines. Those were pleasant little missives: I refer not to the caricaturcs, by which th© romance of the day was much impair ed. but to the lacy, heart-and-arrow, poetic kind, some of which cost as much 10 cents. The feverish distribution of these did no harm on the contrary, it must have worked good. The sentiments expressed were at least read, even if not always believed, sometimes not understood. Few of us but can recall excerpts, which we repeat with a cer- PARIS NEWS LETTER Paris, Feb. 16.—In case of war the city of Paris would probably find it self without bread within four days. This alarm has been sounded by the municipal council after a thorougn study of tho possibilities and the an nouncement has resulted in a popular demand for measures to assure an am ple food supply in case of a conflict. The minister of war and the under secretary of state have decided to take' up the whole question with the muni cipal council for further study with an endeavor to solye the problem. Military authorities point out that during the first few weeks of mobiliz ation in case of war, all railroad trains and lines would be reserved exclusive ly for military trains and no supplies for the civil population could be trans ported. It has been proposed among other things to 'buy 10,000 tons of flour to be kept in a public warehouse and to be used as necessity arises. It is suggested that the state contribute Immediately 590,000 as a first payment toward this and the municipality $40, 000. While the problem of a sufficient supply of flour and wheat is consider ed most important, the authorities are also planning to conserve stocks of other necessary things, including wood, coal and oil. If, says Commander Driant, a well known retired army official, ''an order of mobilization were given on Thurs day, Paris would have neither bread, milk nor meat at the beginning of next week. Another important question is that of the water supply. I would ask what Parisians would drink were Par is invested and cut off from its water supply. This is a phase of the prob lem that the commission which has been studying the subject might con sider thoroughly. We have arrived at a time when all the problems of na tional defense must be considered without delay. There is no nation naturally mu sical according to Henri Bidou, critic and historian. If a nation is musical, he says, it is because it has passed through such tribulation that it has been driven to express its sorrow and anxiety in its airs and compositions. Bach, he declares, is the culminating expression of the sufferings induced in Germany by the thirty years' war, fifty years before Bach's time. People sing "like cowards" he con tinued, to keep up their spirits in bad moments, and he finds that the real countries of music are nearly all fron tier provinces exposed to eternal vicis situdes. England he finds to be exempt to a large extent from the occasions in which poets "learn in suffering what they celebrate in song" because it ia protected from invasion by the girdle of the seas. Music, then, the argues, is not an art of peace it originates in strife and anxiety—not in tran quility and concord. The over pros perous countries, he discovers, "not only have no history they have no music." Consul General Mason has brought together the figures of French export to the United States during 1913. They were $140,016,549 or $3,733,384 larger than those of 1912, thus pass ing the total of any previous year. The net again in three years has been $21,000,000. The reports from the Paris dis trict show that the exports of auto mobiles and automobile accessories which amount to $1,209,413 in 1912 was cut in half during 1913. The ex-^ ports of paintings, precious stones, and hides show considerable advances, and the increases in textiles was about 60 per cent. Paris exports have risen in eleven years from $41,000,000 to $80,000,000.. Army experts are experimenting1 with a new monoplane which is to be the dreadnought of the French air fleet. One of those machines already tried out is protected with armor plates and carries a quick firing ma chine-gun. It was designed from unofftfiiaaUoan £hhumcu£ fev Ftwiii "4 W# 'v- "•,••?*//', r* NORTH DAKOTA "7?5'st vs TT^ i A. B. REIF, Furniture and Harness. mm1 C. H. BLANK, Hardware and Implements. tain wistful zest that decries age. We appreciate them now more than we did then. Why not really revive Saint Valen tine's day? We need It. We need more of the sentiment that is cheap not cheap sentiment. We need this authority to pause in our hurly-burly, our pursuit of the tangible and the material, and to give ourselves over to one general indulgence in the romance and chivalry. All the world loves a lover. The fact can never die. And although Saint Valentine's day is but a masque and a mummery, wherein wc play at a court army aviation corps after a careful study of the requirements in was as shown by th© action of aeroplanes in Africa and in the Balkan wars. The current is switched into a new electric screw driver automatically the instant pressure is applied. CARL GANTVGORT leading role in "Robin Hood" "I ahoaysfill my pipe withcZ?w9cdo. tuxedo and I arc firm friends." JACK HENDERSON :. ,-pt the "Pink Lady" Company" 4*Loud cheers for cUuxedo.~ M$ faooritc—always. I put new zest into my singing after a pipeful of Ijuxedo. i find tuxedo a real voice help." DONALD BRIAN •tarring In "The Marrjajje Market'* hate found that the me of ^Zuxedo does not interfere with my singing. On the contrary, Foe never indulged in a more satisfying,, more really beneficial smoke.* *&£ f4 HENRY ENGELTER, Postmaster. of love, its twelve hours of pretty pre tense distill dew upon the most sordid heart. We in America have few gentle ob servances we do much for practical gain and much out of patriotism but we devote ourselves—we as a people— little to the purely fanciful and ethic al. We have lost May day, a graceful custom doomed, perhaps, by natural progress. However, may we not have back upon our national calendar good Saint Valentine's day, in all its inno cence of eternal vows to sweeten the workaday heart? Though it come as a fad, let it come. She Knew the Place. After-Dinner Stories: The elderly matron with the bundles who was journeying to a point in Wisconsin and occupied a seat near the middle I I 5 "*^1 1 I gig: I tV'- A. J. GRAY, Mgr. Dak. Coal & Produce Co. ANOTHER BLUFF. The ground hog treads the path of fame And wags his fierce prophetic head, And takes the credit or the blame For things ho never did or said. —Washington Star. MEN Great Singers Must be "Tobacco Wise" Tuxedo is theTobacco Chosen by Opera Stars who depend upon their voices come to know tobacco as the ordi nary smoker never knows it. A sen sitive throat or mouth feels the slightest sting, bite or scorch of tobacco. Tuxedo is the one tobacco which singers, actors, public speakers—all men who guard their throats zealously cbn smoke with pleasure and safety. Tuxedo tobacco cannot tate the delicate membranes of the mouth oithroat. Leading men in all walks of life—well-known doctors, lawyers, min isters, lecturers, etc.— smoke Tuxedo and testify to its soothing influence on the throat. YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Famous s 6 k 1 S k v i ,H ix 1 Jfr» /0r $ i? A. F. BANKS, Pianos and Organs. r?! JL* fW v V 1 ifH 1 FRED F. LERSCHEN. Prop. Pool Hall, "f the car had fallen asleep. On the eat in front of her sat a little boy. The brakeman opened the door of the ar and called out the name of the tation the train was approaching'. Che elderly lady roused herself with jerk. "Where are we, Bobby?" she asked. "I don't know, grandma," answered ihe little boy. "Didn't the brakeman say some think just now?" "No, he just stuck his head inside) the door and sneezed." "Help me with these things, Bob by!" she exclaimed hurriedly, "this is Oshkosh." FOR SALE-SEED CORN Acclimated Northwestern dent, picked early in September and dried under my own supervision took first prizo at Casselton corn show. Write for samples and prices. H. R. -Spence, Mapleton, N, D.—Advt. -stitfgC bite "Or irri The Perfect Pipe Tobacco Tuxedo tobacco has made thousands of men converts to the pipe, because it has made pipe smoking possible for them. Under the famous "Tuxedo Process" the mild, tender leaves of highest grade Burley tobacco are so skillfully treated that Tuxedo burns slowly and affords a cool, mild, thoroughly enjoyable pipe snoioke. siCTlS 10c green tin with gold l«t tering, cawed to fit the pocket Coovsnsesit pouch, inner'lined with sassissUEre-piMjof papeif Jit GIomm Humidor* SOc and 90c THC AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY the v I n c* I Y I- 5.